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CTSA Members are encouraged to post and join the conversation, log into the CTSA website using the email address you have provided to the CTSA and your member number.  Then visit the CTSA Newsfeed and click on "Add Post" or "Comment" below a posting. 

The Newsfeed is visible to the public; only members may post on the CTSA Newsfeed.  Postings are to be related to the scholarship of theology or related to the mission of the CTSA, e.g. items of academic interest; CTSA Board statement announcements; INSeCT updates/outreach; World forum on Theology and Liberation (WFTL) updates/outreach; consultation, topic session and interest group outreach, etc.  Also posted on the Newsfeed will be member memorials.

 All discourse on the CTSA Newsfeed, whether in postings or in comments posted by CTSA members, must abide by the standards of professional conduct and constructive criticism expressed in the "CTSA Statement on Professional Behavior" approved by the Board of Directors on June 7, 2018.  The CTSA  Board and Executive Director reserves the right to edit or delete any language proposed for posting or posted on the Newsfeed.  Spam, links to websites, petitions, and advertising will be removed.

Note:  Career Opportunity postings will be removed from the Newsfeed.  See https://ctsa-online.org/CareerOpportunities for further details on how to post a position with the CTSA.

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  • 12/11/2021 8:55 AM | Anonymous

    The CTSA remembers longstanding member Rev. Donald Cozzens who died on December 9, 2021.

    Author and lecturer Father Donald Cozzens is shown on the campus of John Carroll University in suburban Cleveland May 12, 2015. (CNS photo/William Rieter)

    Obituary in Cleveland.com

    NCR Article of December 10th

    https://www.ncronline.org/news/coronavirus/father-donald-cozzens-who-challenged-clericalism-church-dies-82

  • 12/02/2021 9:25 AM | Anonymous

    Lumen et Vita's* Spring Graduate Conference
    "The Great Waters of the Kingdom of Matter" 
    Saturday, March 26, 2022

    Keynote speakers will be Prof. Mary Evelyn Tucker (Yale Divinity School and Yale School of Environment) and Prof. Michael Ferguson (Harvard Divinity and Medical Schools). 

    Abstracts:  Due on January 20, 2022 and should be emailed to lumenetvita@gmail.com. Remote and virtual attendance and presenting are possible.

    Detailed Call for Papers link: https://tinyurl.com/LeVSpring2022

    *Lumen et Vita is the graduate theological journal of the Boston College School of Theology and Ministry. 

  • 11/04/2021 9:47 AM | Anonymous

    The National Black Catholic Congress - Online Event 

    Nov. 12 @ 4:00 p.m. - Nov. 13 @ 4:00 p.m.

    Theological reflections by authors of
    Desire, Darkness and Hope, Theology in a Time of Impasse
    Engaging the Thought of Constance FitzGerald, OCD

    Facilitated by CTSA member Dr. M. Shawn Copeland

    Passages from Darkness, Desire and Hope, edited by CTSA members Laurie Cassidy and M. Shawn Copeland, will be explored during the weekend.


    Register here: hope.baltimorecarmel.org

    See https://nbccongress.org/event/transforming-spirituality-in-a-time-of-plague/

  • 11/01/2021 9:26 AM | Anonymous

    The CTSA remembers long-standing member Brian David Berry who died on Tuesday, October 26th.  

      

    Brian Berry passed away from cancer on October 26 at the age of 64. He received his PhD in theological ethics from Boston College in 1995. Prior to his work as a theology professor at Ursuline College, Notre Dame of Maryland University, and St. Mary’s Ecumenical Institute, where he received multiple teaching awards, Brian worked in Jamaica in a Jesuit mission and as an assistant in a L’Arche community in Calgary. He published in areas of bioethics, social ethics, and the spirituality of Jean Vanier. Brian leaves behind his wife of 26 years, CTSA member Susanne DeCrane. As she reflects, Brian was a proud Canadian and had a particular concern for those “whom society deems insignificant.” (Written by Kristin E. Heyer and Brian's wife and CTSA member Susanne DeCrane.)

    Link to Brian David Berry's Obituary

  • 10/29/2021 7:53 AM | Francis X Clooney, SJ

    November is a precious month when, as the days grow shorter and darker, we remember the larger community of which we are a part, heaven and earth gathered in the Lord’s communion of saints.

    On All Saints Day, we remember all those holy women and men who have gone before us, many of whom have been inspirations to us in our own spiritual journeys. On All Souls Day, we remember all those who have died near and far, recently and long ago, sisters and brothers whose destinies are now held within the love and mystery of God. Let us pray for those we knew personally, family, friends, colleagues, but also for the very many people far and near who have died in the last year, from Covid and a host of other acts and systems of violence.

    It is timely then also to mark November 2 as the Día de los Muertos, a holy day celebrated particularly among Mexican-Americans, a solemn occasion marked with special altars, offerings, and prayers, and visits to cemeteries when possible. As we become a more multicultural and international Catholic Theological Society, let all of us find ways to make the images, rituals, and sentiments of the Día de los Muertos tradition part of our lives and spiritual practice.

    November 4 is Diwali, the great Hindu festival of light, marking the conquest of good over evil. In a world where dark hatred and blinding violence too often seem to triumph, we can join in pray with our Hindu sisters and brothers, that the light pierce and overcome the gloom around us.

    In these times when we are becoming more sensitive to the history of the land in which we live, it is timely also to note that November is Native American Heritage month. During this month we are called to remember and reflect on the lives of the original inhabitants of the land, people whose stories need to be told and rights must be acknowledged and honored, particularly in the places where we live and work. Much more information on this heritage month can be found online, including at the Bureau of Indian Affairs site.

    Let us hope and pray that by Thanksgiving we will find this month of remembrance culminating in a spirit of thanksgiving for the bountiful gifts of people and places that make our lives possible, even in the most difficult of times.

  • 10/11/2021 9:44 AM | Anonymous

    The CTSA is continuing to dialogue on the question of fossil fuel divestment.  To aid the discussion, Board members recently viewed excerpts from an expert panel hosted by the Global Catholic Climate Movement (recently renamed the Laudato Si Movement).  The 45 minute recording explains the current state of the climate crisis, outlooks for global energy needs, and responses from ethical and faith perspectives. 

    Click on the blue button to view the video:

    Excerpts from Net Zero by 2050:
    A Laudato Si Movement Webinar (July 2021)

    Please take the time to view this fascinating panel, with the following speakers:

    • Tomás Insua, Executive Director, Global Catholic Climate Movement (GCCM)

    • Dr.Fatih Birol, Executive Director, International Energy Agency (IEA)

    • Richard Brooks, Climate Finance Director, Stand.earth 

    • Joan Brown,osf, Executive Director of New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light, Sisters of Saint Francis 

    Comments are welcome in the comment box below.  Thank you for contributing to this critical dialogue.

    CTSA Ad hoc Committee on Fossil Fuels
    Erin Lothes Chair
    Daniel DiLeo
    Nancy Rourke
    Matthew Shadle


  • 10/07/2021 8:55 AM | Anonymous

    "Keeping Scientifically Informed: A Duty for Theologians and the Church Magisterium"

    by Jame Schaefer, Marquette University

    Designee of the CTSA Workshop of the Committee on Doctrine
    with the Learned Societies Laudato Si':
    Science, Responsibility, and Solidarity. 
    United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (March 11, 2021).

    CTSA member Jame Schaefer would enjoy any comments and questions--especially regarding her three recommendations to the Committee on Doctrine (p. 184).  A link to the paper she presented follows along with the three recommendations to the Committee on Doctrine.  Join the conversation!

    Click here to access Jame Schaefer's paper (pdf)

    1. Become an advocate for the quest for scientific information--encourage and affirm the quest for knowledge about God's creation.  In this role, you are not confirming scientific findings because confirming them does not fall within your purview.  Instead you are confirming the search for scientific knowledge that may help you teach about our faith in cogent, meaningful ways.
    2. Establish a scientific panel to (i) alert you to scientific findings, (ii) meet periodically on issues at the boundaries of doctrine/faith and science, and (iii) provide scientific clarity that can inform magisterial discourse.  To identify scientists who are eminently qualified to serve, consider asking the American Association for the Advancement of Science to request its Dialogue on Science, Ethics, and Religion to recommend highly qualified scientist for you to invite.
    3. Initiate within your seminaries and in continuing education of priests opportunities to become informed by the natural sciences and to probe their significance for preaching and teaching our faith in ways that make sense to an increasingly educated "people in the pews." Our priests need basic scientific knowledge about God's creation.  Our priests need to be ecologically informed so they can help the faithful discern how to respond morally to human-forced climate change and other complex issues.


  • 09/29/2021 7:52 AM | Anonymous

    The Reverend John J. Connelly passed into the hands of God after he had served for seventy-one years as a priest. He was 98 at this time of his death on June 28th, 2021.


    Son of the late John J. and Helen (Murphy) Connelly and brother of the late Mary Margaret Connelly and Helen Connelly, Fr. Connelly, a Boston native, attended Boston Latin School and Boston College before entering the U.S. Army in 1943, serving until 1945. He was ordained from St. John’s Seminary by Cardinal Richard Cushing in 1950. He then earned a Doctorate in Theology from The Gregorian University in Rome. He served on the St. John’s Seminary faculty for 26 years, followed by 30 years as Pastor of Sacred Heart Parish in Newton Center. Since 2013 he had been serving as a Priest in Residence at St. John the Evangelist Parish in Wellesley. 

    Text from Rev. Connelly's obituary posted by Eaton Funeral Home.  Accessed on 9/29/21 at <https://www.eatonfuneralhomes.com/obituary/FrJohn-Connelly>.

  • 09/27/2021 9:20 AM | Anonymous

    The Wabash Center announces four faculty workshop opportunities for 2022. Deadline for applications is December 15, 2022.

    For more information see: https://wabash.center/


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