Waiting on the Word with Malcom Guite
A week before Christmas, we’ll discuss the work of waiting, the nature of our wonder-filled faith, and the hope of the incarnation. We hope you'll join us for our final Online Conversation this Advent season!
A week before Christmas, we’ll discuss the work of waiting, the nature of our wonder-filled faith, and the hope of the incarnation. We hope you'll join us for our final Online Conversation this Advent season!
This Public Dialogue, co-sponsored by the Catholic Mobilizing Network and Georgetown’s Initiative on Catholic Social Thought and Public Life, will bring together a U.S. bishop, a Christian pastor, and two national advocates for ending capital punishment to explore how the principles of Catholic social thought can offer direction and urgency in ending the death penalty, both in the United States and worldwide.
Theos’ Simon Perfect will discuss his new report, which calls for churches to become vocal champions of greater economic equality. The UK, along with the rest of the world, faces an unprecedented economic crisis due to the COVID–19 pandemic. The spread of the coronavirus is exacerbating deep inequalities, hitting the poorest the hardest. The UK […]
We invite you to join us as we welcome Dr. Carmen Joy Imes, who will share about her own personal engagement with scripture in this season, followed by a time of Q&A.
In the Facing the Anthropocene webinar series, Duke Divinity School Professor Norman Wirzba interviews leading scholars in political economy, history, anthropology, theology, philosophy, environmental humanities, and law, in order to examine the conditions under which a hopeful future might be imagined. To kick off the new series on Jan. 21, 2021, Wirzba interviews Tim Ingold, professor […]
Our society’s future would be radically different if people just had as many kids as they desired. What’s stopping them? In the new issue of Plough Quarterly, “What are Families For?,” Ross Douthat tackles the issue of falling birthrates across the Western world, and makes the case that large families will save humanity. In this online […]
On Friday, January 22nd in partnership with The Institute for Human Ecology, the Harvard Christian Alumni Society, and the Catholic Information Center, we are delighted to welcome author and New York Times columnist Ross Douthat. In Douthat's book, The Decadent Society, he provides an enlightening diagnosis of our modern condition which, he says, has been […]
No man or woman is an island, and no one should aspire to be one, either. In the new issue of Plough Quarterly “What Are Families For?” Leah Libresco Sargeant argues that we are never truly completely autonomous and that we need a re-appreciation of weakness. In this online launch event, join Leah as she discusses her […]
Is unity possible? Is it good? Join us on Tuesday, January 26, at 7:00 p.m. ET for a conversation featuring Shadi Hamid, Christine Emba, and Samuel Kimbriel.
Author Richard Beck will be in conversation with Cornelius Williams as we explore how we can renew traditions and practices from the past in order to improve on the present and make progress towards the future. Dr. Richard Beck is Professor and Chair of the Department of Psychology at Abilene Christian University. He is the author of Unclean and The Authenticity […]
Ideas That Matter is an online lecture series hosted by Regent College this academic year with the purpose of cultivating theological engagement with contemporary issues that are particularly relevant at this cultural moment. Regent College and the Regent College Bookstore are excited to welcome Rev. Tish Harrison Warren for the launch of her new book, Prayer in the […]
On January 29 in partnership with The Rabbit Room and Windrider Productions we are delighted to host artist, author, and senior fellow Mako Fujimura for a conversation around his brand new book, Art + Faith: A Theology of Making. Mako believes that in the act of making we are able to know and experience the […]