Cleveland's Got Spirit! A Blessing of the Week from FutureChurch Staff |
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When I became a member of the FutureChurch staff a few months ago, it was exciting to learn about the depth and breadth of the FutureChurch network. This community spans coast to coast (and beyond!), working together to support one another as we each navigate what it means to be people of faith in our complicated church.
While I couldn’t be more grateful for phone calls, emails, and zoom rooms that connect us across the miles, there is and always will be something particularly beautiful about gathering together in the same physical space. When coffee is brewing and sticky notes are out, the pump is primed for innovation and imagination. There’s energy in the room. And there’s Spirit, too. At least there was this past week in blustery Cleveland, Ohio.
This week our core programming staff gathered together to envision the year(s) ahead for FutureChurch. Where do we, individually and communally, feel drawn to use our gifts? Where do we have energy? How can we best support our communities? How can we extend our reach?
Two days of dreaming and scheming left us exhausted yet energized, full of ideas and dreams and holding tight to lingering questions and curiosities. It was exhilarating to imagine and re-imagine what FutureChurch– and the future of the church– could look like. And while we don’t have all the answers, we couldn’t be more excited for a whole new year of becoming.
Cheers to the year ahead!
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Martha Ligas (for Russ, Olivia, and Ann Marie) |
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Catholic Women Preach
Preaching for the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time, Laura Boysen-Aragón offers a reflection on living into our God-given potential:
"God always sees our full potential. But living into our full-God-given potential can be perceived as a threat to some...Society won’t change unless we speak out and act out and live into God’s potential for us - even when we are scared."
Laura Boysen-Aragón (she/her) is the Development Director at the Loyola Institute for Spirituality (LIS) in Orange, CA. Laura is passionate about the intersection of spirituality and antiracism, and she is active in antiracism education and advocacy. She holds an M.A. in Theology from Loyola Marymount University, a J.D. from Columbia Law School, and a B.A. in English from Gonzaga University.
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The Just Word
Today Cassidy Klein invites us to explore the phrase “Here I Am” with the help of Jewish philosopher Emmanuel Levinas; engage the Catholic Social Teaching principle of subsidiary, and its implications for harm reduction; and embody these ideas with the help of the Catholic Sisters of Charity, the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users (VANDU), and the AIDS Memorial Quilt.
"In the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), the command to welcome the stranger is mentioned 37 times, while the command to love the neighbor is mentioned only twice. The stranger is someone who is totally unfamiliar, unknown and unassimilable to me, and they are who I am called to respond 'Here I am' to."
Cassidy Klein (she/her) is a writer and journalist based in Chicago. She lives in an intentional community called The Fireplace.
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January 16 at 7pm ET
African American Readings of Paul with Lisa Marie Bowens, Ph.D.
Last Chance to Register!
Lisa Marie Bowens' ground breaking book, African American Readings of Paul: Reception, Resistance, and Transformation (Eerdmans 2020), is the first book to investigate a historical trajectory of how African Americans have understood Paul and utilized his work to resist and protest injustice and racism in their own writings from the 1700s to the mid-twentieth century. In her text, Dr. Bowens takes a historical, theological, and biblical approach to explore interpretations of Paul within African American communities over the past few centuries. She surveys a wealth of primary sources from the early 1700s to the mid-twentieth century, including sermons, conversion stories, slave petitions, and autobiographies of ex-slaves, many of which introduce readers to previously unknown names in the history of New Testament interpretation. Along with their hermeneutical value, these texts also provide fresh documentation of Black religious life through wide swaths of American history. African American Readings of Paul promises to change the landscape of Pauline studies and fill an important gap in the rising field of reception history.
Lisa Marie Bowens, PhD, associate professor of New Testament at Princeton Theological Seminary, earned a BS (cum laude), MSBE, and MLIS from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, an MTS and ThM from Duke Divinity School, and a PhD from Princeton Theological Seminary. She is the first African American woman to earn tenure in Princeton Seminary’s Bible department. Her research interests include Paul and apocalyptic literature, Pauline anthropology, Pauline epistemology, discipleship in the gospels, African American Pauline Hermeneutics, and New Testament exegesis and interpretation. She is a member of the Society of Biblical Literature, the Society of Pentecostal Studies, Society for the Study of Black Religion, American Academy of Religion, and a past Fund for Theological Education fellow. Her current projects include working as a contributor and co-editor with Scot McKnight and Joseph Modica on Preaching Romans From Here: Diverse Voices Engage Paul’s Most Famous Letter (forthcoming), contributor and co-editor with Dennis Edwards on Do Black Lives Matter?: How Christian Scriptures Speak to Black Empowerment, and two commentaries, one on 2 Corinthians and one on 1-2 Thessalonians.
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January 23 at 7pm ET
How Everyday Americans (Don’t) Talk About Abortion with Tricia C. Bruce, Ph.D.
Using data from in-depth interviews with hundreds of everyday Americans, Sociologist Dr. Tricia Bruce underscores the imperative of productive conversations about abortion in a post Roe v. Wade era. Her research exposes the limitations of available labels, assumptions, and boundaries separating Americans' moral and legal views. Study insights help to forge pathways beyond polarization, making room for greater complexity, ambiguity, understanding, and cross-cutting collaborations.
Tricia C. Bruce, Ph.D. (University of California Santa Barbara) is a sociologist of religion with expertise in organizational, attitudinal, and generational change. Her award-winning books and reports include Parish and Place; Faithful Revolution; American Parishes; Polarization in the US Catholic Church; and How Americans Understand Abortion. Her writing has appeared in The Wall Street Journal; Time Magazine; Science Advances; Review of Religious Research; U.S. Catholic Historian; and more. She is President-Elect of the Association for the Sociology of Religion, Past-Chair of the American Sociological Association’s Sociology of Religion Section, and an affiliate of the University of Notre Dame’s Center for the Study of Religion and Society.
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February 20 at 7pm ET
Co-Creating Beauty: Queer Bodies and Queer Loves Beyond the Anathemas with Craig Ford, Ph.D.
Dr. Ford's presentation, "Co-Creating Beauty: Queer Bodies and Queer Loves Beyond the Anathemas" explores how our roles as co-creators with God allows for new ways to understand the truth revealed by sexuality and gender identity beyond the boundaries of heteronormativity. Such redeployment of this theological status as co-creator, Ford argues, may provide a pathway beyond the impasse currently experienced at the level of official church teaching with respect to these topics.
Craig A. Ford, Jr., is Assistant Professor of Theology and Religious Studies at Saint Norbert College, where he teaches courses in Christian Ethics, Ecclesiology, and on Race, Gender and Sexuality while also serving as Co-Director for the Peace and Justice Interdisciplinary Minor. He is also on the faculty at the Institute for Black Catholic Studies—hosted at Xavier University of Louisiana, the nation’s only Catholic HBCU— where he teaches courses on Black Theology as well as on Topics in Moral Theology from a Black Perspective. A graduate of the University of Notre Dame, Yale Divinity School, and Boston College, Dr. Ford writes on topics at the intersection of queer theory, blac studies, and the Catholic moral tradition. His most recent book project, All of Us: The Future of Catholic Theology From the Perspectives of Queer Theologians of Color is a co-edited volume with Bryan Massingale and Miguel Diaz, drawing scholars and activists from North and South America, the Pacific Islands, Australia, and Europe who seek to chart new directions for Catholic theology when the oppressive realities of racism, heteronormativity, and sexism within church and world are engaged equally and fiercely. This volume is currently under contract with Fortress Press.
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February 29 at 7pm ET
Lenten Fasting and Body Hatred: A Feminist Critique with Jessica Coblentz, Ph.D.
Join us as Jessica Coblentz presents on her article “Catholic Fasting Literature in a Context of Body Hatred: A Feminist Critique” in which she argues that the social conditions of misogynistic body hatred and the culture of fasting during Lent perpetuates disordered eating.
Jessica Coblentz, Ph.D. is an assistant professor in the Department of Religious Studies and Theology at Saint Mary’s College in Notre Dame, Indiana, where her research and teaching focuses on Catholic systematic theology, feminist theologies, and mental health in theological perspective. She is a graduate of Santa Clara University and Harvard Divinity School, and received her PhD from Boston College. She was previously a resident scholar at the Collegeville Institute in Collegeville, Minnesota, and has taught at Saint Mary’s College in Moraga, California.
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March 28 at 7pm ET
Consent in the Context of the Annunciation with Megan McCabe, Ph.D.
Join us as Megan McCabe, Ph.D. discusses building a culture of consent in the context of the Feast of the Annunciation. Dr. McCabe will speak on her work on sexual justice and social sin in the United States with a special emphasis on consent in the context of the Assumption.
Megan K. McCabe, Ph.D. is assistant professor of religious studies at Gonzaga Univeristy. She works in the areas of Catholic moral theology, theological ethics, and feminist theologies. Her research and teaching respond to questions of human responsibility for suffering and the correlative duties to work for social transformation. She engages questions at the intersection of moral theology, social ethics, liberation and political theologies, feminist theologies and ethics, and issues of gender and sexuality. Her current research develops an understanding of “cultures of sin,” specifically in the context of an examination of the problem of the cultural foundation of sexual violence.
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DignityUSA "One Family Fund" Supports International LGBTQ+ People in Danger and Crisis |
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In response to the increased violence and passage of stricter laws criminalizing homosexuality and gender nonconformity, especially in Africa, DignityUSA established the One Family Fund. Unfortunately, we have witnessed a further escalation of violence following the Vatican’s announcement that same-sex couples can be blessed. The goal of this fund is to help mitigate the impact on some of our colleagues in Global Network of Rainbow (GNRC) Catholics member groups. To help those who have been forced to flee their countries due to violence or personal threats, who have lost their homes or livelihoods, the One Family Fund will provide small grants to individuals to help them transition to safety and stability. We encourage you to contribute as you are moved. The fund is being overseen by three individuals with long involvement in GNRC who can evaluate requests for assistance. To date, the Fund has granted money to help with rent, to purchase food and medicine, and to replace computers damaged in raids on the offices of people working to promote equality and justice for LGBTIQ+ people.
Contribute
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Becoming a Synodal Church: A Conversation with Massimo Faggioli and Maureen Sullivan, OP at The Center at Mariandale |
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Saturday, March 23 | 2:00-3:30PM, In-Person or via Zoom
The Roman Catholic Church is engaged in a three-year process of listening and dialogue, “The Synod on the Synodality,” which will conclude in October 2024.
This historic time for Catholicism raises important questions about the future direction of the church. Synodality implies a commitment to dialogue and an openness to voices that have been marginalized. Where is the Church now in the Synod process? What is the impact so far? Where does the Church seem to be moving in preparing for October 2024? What may be the implications for the future of the church if a model of synodality takes root in the leadership and day to day life of the church?
Please join The Center at Mariandale for a discussion with a leading church historian, Massimo Faggioli, and an expert on Vatican II, Maureen Sullivan, OP. This 90-minute session will provide opportunity to learn from key scholars, dialogue with people of the faith, and to ask questions important to you.
Fee: $20 Donation Register Here.
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We seek changes that will provide all Roman Catholics the opportunity to participate fully in Church life and leadership. |
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FutureChurch is a national 501(c)(3) organization and your contribution is tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.
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