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  • 01/31/2025 12:02 PM | Anonymous

    The CTSA remembers and prays for longstanding member Keith J. Egan  who died yesterday, Wednesday, January 22.


    Eternal rest grant unto Keith, O Lord,
    and let perpetual light shine upon him.
    May his soul and the souls of all the faithful departed,
    through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen

    Keith Egan served as convener of two sessions that are recording in the CTSA Proceedings archives:

    Co-Convener Egan, K., & Dreyer, E. , “Seminar on Spirituality”,  CTSA Proceedings 41, (1986).

    Convener, Egan, K., “Historical Theology”, CTSA Proceedings 51, (1996).

    The Society offers its condolences to the members of the St. Mary's College, University of Notre Dame, community.

    Obituary - Kaniewski Funeral Homes, Inc.

    Obituary - South Bend Tribune


  • 01/23/2025 10:49 AM | Anonymous

    The CTSA remembers and prays for longstanding member Sr. Agnes Cunningham, S.S.C.M.  who died yesterday, Wednesday, January 22.

    Agnes Cunningham was awarded the prestigious John Courtney Murray Award in 2001.  She served as the CTSA's President in 1977 - 1978; twice as a member of the CTSA Board of Directors (1969 - 1970 and 1978 - 1980); and as CTSA Secretary from 1970 - 1976.  


    Eternal rest grant unto Agnes, O Lord,
    and let perpetual light shine upon her.
    May her soul and the souls of all the faithful departed,
    through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen

    The following work of Agnes Cunningham, S.S.C.M. are available via the CTSA Proceedings archives:

    Cunningham, A. “The Ministry of Women in the Church” Proceedings of the Catholic Theological Society of America, vol. 24 (1969).

    Cunningham, A. The Role of Woman in Church and Society. Proceedings of the Catholic Theological Society of America, vol. 28 (1973).

    Kosnik, A., Modras, R., Schulte, J., Carroll, W., & Cunningham, A., Research Report: The CTSA Committee on the Study of Human Sexuality. Proceedings of the Catholic Theological Society of America, vol. 30 (1975).

    Cunningham, A.. Presidential Address Theology for a Future Church: Science, Wisdom, Ministry. Proceedings of the Catholic Theological Society of America, vol. 33 (1978).

    Cunningham, A., (Convener) Panel: Toward a Theology of Peace: Foundations of Christian Peace. Proceedings of the Catholic Theological Society of America, vol. 38 (1983).

    Cunningham, A. (Convener) Modernity / Postmodernity: The State of the Question for Contemporary Catholic Theology. Proceedings of the Catholic Theological Society of America, vol. 46 (1991).

    The following article was shared with the CTSA when Sr. Agnes Cunningham Professed for 80 years:


    The CTSA offers its condolences to the Servants of the Holy Heart of Mary Community. 

    Link to Obituary and Funeral Arrangements 

  • 01/19/2025 3:37 PM | Anonymous

    For over five decades, The Ecumenist, edited by Gregory Baum, published essays and reviews of books engaging societies, cultures, and churches in the North Atlantic hemisphere from an emancipatory perspective rooted in the gospel. In 2018, The Ecumenist revitalized its name to Critical Theology, to more accurately reflect its mission and values, and added two new editors. The journal continues to be published by Novalis and to produce four issues a year, which feature theological reflection with liberative intent and praxis. In 2023 the journal adopted an open-access online format. Subscriptions are now free. The website for the journal, along with back issues of The Ecumenist and Critical Theology, can be found at https://criticaltheology.net/.

    If you share this theological orientation or are interested in it, please consider subscribing to Critical Theology or asking the library of your affiliated institution to subscribe. To register for a  subscription, go to https://en.novalis.ca/products/critical-theology.

    If you are interested in contributing an article or book review to Critical Theology, if you would like a book reviewed therein, or if you require further information, please contact Don Schweitzer at don.schweitzer@saskatoontheologicalunion.ca .


  • 01/16/2025 6:00 PM | Anonymous
    Lumen et Vita, the graduate theological journal of the Boston College Clough School of Theology and Ministry, invites graduate students to submit abstracts for our 2026 Spring Conference titled, Faith in Fractured Times.”  The conference is scheduled for Saturday, March 14, 2026 on the Boston College Brighton Campus. Abstracts of 200-300 words should be submitted to this form by Friday, January 23 extended to Monday, January 26.  Selected presenters will deliver a 10-minute presentation followed by a 5-minute period for questions and discussion. All presentations will be given in person.

    Our call for papers invites submissions from across disciplines. We welcome work that explores how people of faith navigate moments of rupture, disorientation, transition, polarization, or disunity. Papers may consider how historical, doctrinal, devotional, moral, biblical, literary, artistic, spiritual, pastoral, contemporary, or interpretive approaches—along with the embodied practices of everyday life—help bridge past, present, and future in fractured times. Papers are encouraged to address questions related to current fractures in our world or in the Church, but papers are not limited to contemporary research.

    We encourage proposals from all fields, including (but not limited to):

    • Historical case studies of how communities or individuals have responded to periods of crisis

    • Theological or doctrinal reflections on fragmentation and hope

    • Liturgical, spiritual, or pastoral responses to fraction or rupture

    • Contemporary practices of faith and practical applications

    • Systematic theological explorations of fracture, unity, ecclesiology, sacramental theology, eschatology, or Christian hope

    • Biblical Studies: examinations of fracture, tension, exile, or discontinuity within Scripture and its interpretive traditions

    • Philosophical, literary, artistic, or cultural analyses from a faith perspective

    • Interdisciplinary or creative approaches that shed new light on the theme

    We welcome students’ contributions and look forward to receiving their proposals.


    Sam McCarthy

    On behalf of the Lumen et Vita editorial team


  • 01/16/2025 9:24 AM | Anonymous

    2025 Corcoran Chair Conference

    Responding to Crisis: Reparative Reasoning in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
    Center for Christian-Jewish Learning, Theology
    Boston College

    Sunday, April 6, 2025, 1 - 6 p.m. (ET)

    How do Abrahamic traditions respond to societal and religious crises? Conference sessions will examine such issues as climate change, sexual abuse, and dangerous technologies. Participants will raise such questions as: What religious groups lead efforts to address such crises? What assumptions and beliefs guide them? What skills and methods do they bring to this work? And what processes of investigation, reasoning, reflection, and testing can assess this work?

    Corcoran Conference Panelists
    Lisa Cahill (Boston College)
    Boyd Taylor Coolman (Boston College)
    Nauman Faizi (LUMS, The Lahore University of Management Sciences)
    Kevin L. Hughes (Villanova University)
    Daniel Joslyn-Siemiatkoski (Boston College)
    Ruth Langer (Boston College) 
    Seyd Zainuddin Moulvi (University of Virginia)
    Paul Murray (Durham University)
    Peter Ochs (Boston College / University of Virginia)
    Stephen Pope (Boston College)
    Ilma Qureshi (University of Virginia)
    Randi Rashkover (William & Mary University)
    Matthew Tapie (Saint Leo University)
    Jason Welle (Boston College)
    Laurie Zoloth (The University of Chicago)

    RSVP to attend in-person: Email cjlearning@bc.edu
    RSVP to join virtually: Zoom registration


  • 01/14/2025 6:18 AM | Anonymous

    The CTSA remembers and prays for M. Kathleen Flanagan, SC, a former member of the Society.

    Eternal rest grant unto Kathleen, O Lord
    and let perpetual light sine upon her.
    May she rest in peace. Amen.

    Kathleen was a theology professor at the College (now University) of Saint Elizabeth, Convent Station, NJ.  As a Sister of Charity of Saint Elizabeth, NJ., she was a member of the group that transcribed, annotated and published the collected writings of (St.) Elizabeth Bayley Seton.  Kathleen died on January 6. (Sister Regina Bechtle, SC, CTSA member, 1/14/25).

    Sister Kathleen Flanagan's Obituary

  • 01/13/2025 6:53 AM | Anonymous

    The CTSA remembers and prays for longstanding member Eileen Burke Sullivan.  The CTSA Board of Directors, the membership and I offer our condolences to her brother, Kevin F. Burke, S.J., Regis University, and family.

    Eternal rest grant unto Eileen, O Lord
    and let perpetual light shine upon her.
    May she rest in peace. Amen.

    Eileen Burke-Sullivan, S.T.D., professor emerita at Creighton University, died on November 30, 2024, and was buried at St. John's Church on the Creighton campus on December 7th. Eileen was a member of the CTSA during the years after completing her doctorate in 2003 and joining the Creighton theology department. 

    Eileen Burke-Sullivan's Obituary


     

  • 01/10/2025 6:17 PM | D Thomas Hughson, SJ

    Thomas Hughson SJ published Neanderthal Religion: Theology in Dialogue with Archaeology, Foreword by Neil Ormerod (Wipf and Stock Pickwick Publications, 2024)

  • 01/07/2025 11:50 AM | Nancy Pineda-Madrid (Administrator)

    It is our pleasure to invite you to participate in the next WFTL webinar:

     

    Gaza & Middle East: The Theologians’ Global Call and Responsibility

     

    January 24th, 2025

    11 AM- 1 PM EST

    [English-Spanish – translation will be provided)

     

    Speakers:
    Dr. Kwok Pui-lan (USA)
    Dr. Nicolas Panotto (Argentina/Chile)
    Dr. Carlos Mendoza Álvarez (Mexico/USA)
    Dr. Viola Raheb (Palestine/Austria)

     

    The war in Gaza and the Middle East, ignited on October 7, 2023, has global repercussions far beyond geopolitics, intersecting with religion, neocolonialism, and biblical imaginaries. These realities raise urgent theological and ethical questions, demanding a global response.

     

    Three non-Palestinian theologians will reflect on how Palestine intersects with their own theological workDr. Kwok pui-Lan will discuss the topic from a Asian and American perspective; Dr. Carlos Mendoza Alvarez will do the same, especially from a Mexican perspective; and then Dr. Nicolas Panotto, from an Argentinian and Chilean perspective. How do they figure out their theological responsibility to Palestine, the Middle East, Israel, and justice? In a Liberation perspective, how do they connect Palestine and their own contexts? Then, the Palestinian theologian, Dr. Viola Raheb, will assess what has been presented, exploring its relevancy for the people of Palestine.

     

    REGISTER NOW  https://bit.ly/GazaWebinarWFTL

     

    PLEASE SHARE   https://www.facebook.com/events/770515811926807

     

     

     


     



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