Agtarask

  • Read This Book: Emergent Strategy

    Read This Book: Emergent Strategy

    Each month, we ask a member of the Vanderbilt Divinity School faculty or administration to recommend a book they are currently reading. Our March recommendation is offered by Lyndsey Godwin, Assistant Director of the Carpenter Program in Religion, Gender, and Sexuality. Lyndsey recommends “Emergent Strategy” by adrienne maree brown (AK Press,… Read More

    Mar. 18, 2018

  • Religion in the Arts students create projects of community interest

    Religion in the Arts students create projects of community interest

    With Commencement on the horizon, students in the Religion in the Arts and Contemporary Culture (RACC) program at Vanderbilt Divinity School have been preparing final projects to complete the requirements for the program’s certificate.  Four of 2018’s certificate recipients are extending their creative reach beyond the Divinity School community to… Read More

    Mar. 13, 2018

  • For Penny

    For Penny

    A Nashville historical marker for LGBT activist Penny Campbell has been placed in front of her former East Nashville home, 1615 McEwen Ave. (Kristi Iving/Vanderbilt) Remarks delivered by Ellen Armour, E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Chair in Feminist Theology and Director of the Carpenter Program in Religion, Gender, and… Read More

    Dec. 30, 2017

  • Partial listing of Vanderbilt Divinity/GDR professors fall speaking engagements

    Partial listing of Vanderbilt Divinity/GDR professors fall speaking engagements

    Jaco Hamman “The Confession of Belhar,” First Presbyterian Church of Franklin, Sept. 6, Franklin, Tennessee “The organ of tactility: The eye, the internet, sexual pleasure and personal well-being,” Tennessee Pastoral Psychotherapy Association, Sept. 16, Franklin, Tennessee “Divinity Friendship House at Vanderbilt,” Governor’s Housing Conference, Sept. 20, Nashville “Toward a… Read More

    Nov. 14, 2017

  • READ THIS BOOK: November 2017

    READ THIS BOOK: November 2017

    The question of the "other" is a recurring one. Many scholarly volumes wrestle with this inquiry: who is the other? Toni Morrison enters the discourse with a decidedly reflective view of her own work alongside a plethora of writers who have produced both fictional and scholarly, literary and scientific contributions. Morrison’s particular reference to “origin” is a play on the folksy notion of creation as she weaves her literary prowess into the fabric of despair for those "othered," while concomitantly leveling seismic critique upon those whose literal and figurative expressions serve to “other” human beings, historically and presently. Read More

    Nov. 13, 2017

  • Rattling Bones: A Eulogy for Dale P. Andrews

    Rattling Bones: A Eulogy for Dale P. Andrews

    JANUARY 16, 2013- Martin Luther King Commemorative Program, Elon University (photo by Dan Anderson) RATTLING BONES Eulogy for Dale P. Andrews Emilie M. Townes 27 September 2017 Vanderbilt Divinity School Ezekiel 37:1-14 pastoral prayer if we die while being faithful, then death is not the end of life this redaction from an interview dale gave in 2011 was repeated many times on facebook and other social media in the days shortly after he died it was taken from a longer interview he did with faith and leadership—a resource from leadership education at duke divinity school in that interview, he talked about balancing the pastoral and the prophetic as an ongoing challenge for the church and the specific question he was responding to was: What about those leaders in the church who may say, “Well, social justice is a goal, but we are trying to keep our organization together, trying to keep it healthy, trying to keep it alive”? How do those two issues intersect? Read More

    Oct. 26, 2017