Multicultural
Lectures
MONDAY,
NOVEMBER 12, 7:30 PM
TUESDAY , NOVEMBER 13, 11:00 AM
Bigelow Chapel
Jin S. Kim, senior pastor, Church of All Nations,
Columbia Heights, Minn.
United
Theological Seminary and the Multicultural Student Alliance
host the 11th Annual Multicultural Lectures. Kim’s
topic will be “The Multicultural Church
as a Parable of Reconciliation”
For
more information contact Margaree Levy at 651.255.6118
or mlevy@unitedseminary.edu.
Lectures
are held in the Bigelow
Chapel and are open to the public.
The
goal of the annual Multicultural Lectures is to continue
developing strong, meaningful relationships with communities
outside the cultural mainstream to enhance recruitment,
provide mentoring services, and develop resources.
Speakers
from
past years include Owais Bayunus, Melva Wilson Costen,
Martin Brokenleg, Yvonne Delk, Kosuke Koyama, Charles
Amjad-Ali, Kim Mammedaty, Warren L. Dennis, and Jacqueline
Lewis.
Gustafson
Lectures in Biblical Studies
MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 11:00 AM
Bigelow Chapel
Prophetic Proclamation: Two Voices
October 6 - “John of Patmos: No Free Pass: An Apocalyptic Call for Prophetic Witness in the Book of Revelation”
October 7 - “Paul of Tarsus: Cooking Up Community: A Prophetic Perspective on the Eucharist Meal”
Brian K. Blount is president and professor of New Testament at Union Theological Seminary & Presbyterian School of Christian Education. His scholarly interests include the synoptic gospels, especially Mark; Revelation; and cultural interpretation of biblical texts. He was awarded the Emory University Graduate Division of Religion Distinguished Alumnus Award in 2004. The author and editor of numerous books, he wrote Can I Get A Witness? Reading Revelation through African-American Culture.
Free and open to the public. No preregistration is required. For more information contact Deb Olsen, 651.255.6168.
The
Gustafson Lectures is an endowed lectureship that brings
to campus an internationally recognized scholar in biblical
studies for the presentation of two original lectures.
The lectureship is made possible by an endowment established
with gifts from Nancy and Andris Baltins, Philip and
Carol Duff, and generous alumni/ae in honor of emeritus
professor Henry A. Gustafson for his contributions to
the academic life of United as a teacher and scholar
of New Testament studies.
Lecturers
have included Krister Stendahl, James Sanders, Mary
Ann Tolbert, Norman K. Gottwald, Sharon Ringe, Katherine
Doob Sakenfeld, Terence Fretheim, John Dominic Crossan,
Calvin J. Roetzel, Cain Hope Felder, Luise Schottroff,
Marvin Sweeney, Erhard S. Gerstenberger, and Dale B.
Martin.
Picard Lectures in Environmental Theology and Ethics
MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2008, 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2008, 11:00 AM
Bigelow Chapel

Christianity’s Ecological Moment:
Bread and Water
Bread
Monday, March 31
Water
Tuesday, April 1
The Rev. Dr. Larry Rasmussen
The Reinhold Niebuhr professor emeritus of social ethics at Union Theological Seminary (New York City), Rasmussen is the author of numerous books and articles including Earth Community, Earth Ethics; Ethics for a Small Planet (co-authored with Daniel Maguire); and Earth Habitat: Eco-Injustice and the Church’s Response (co-edited with Dieter Hessel). Rasmussen is directing a 10-year project on Earth Honoring Christianity at Ghost Ranch in Abiquiu, New Mexico.
The
lectures are free and open to the public. No registration is required. Parking is
free. For more information contact
Deb Olsen at 651.255.6168.
The
Picard Lectures in Environmental Theology and Ethics
are supported by an endowment made possible through
the generosity of United alumnus The Rev. Frank Picard
and members of the Picard family. The purpose of the
lectureship is to explore questions and issues concerning
the state of the creation from theological and ethical
perspectives. The lectureship seeks to raise questions
such as the relation between our spiritual life and
the state of the natural world and the response of religious
leadership to the decline of the planet. In establishing
the endowment, the Picard family especially wishes to
remember the deep appreciation for God’s creation
they shared with the late David and Roland Picard.
The
first lecturer was Judith Scoville.
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