Author Rev. Dr. Allen Hilton Speaks with United Students on Bridging Political Divides.

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Is the emerging role of faith leaders to bridge political and theological divides? One biblical scholar is on a mission to do just that. Rev. Dr. Allen Hilton is the author of A House United and founder of House United Movement. Rev. Dr. Hilton previously taught Bible at Yale Divinity School and St. Mary’s College of California and has been a minister for congregations in Connecticut, Washington, and Minnesota. This July, Hilton spoke to United’s Religion and Politics in America class taught by Dr. Silas Morgan. Vice President for Marketing, Amee McDonald had the chance to speak with Rev. Dr. Hilton and Dr. Silas Morgan last Thursday.

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Amee McDonald: What role has critical thinking played in the House United Movement? Any methodologies you follow to bridge political and theology divides?

Allen Hilton: I have been watching it and grieving its growth, and watching Fox News and MSNBC shout from across the room, and becoming grieved about churches moving further apart, and nobody else is thinking much about it. It’s 2014 right, and so I start this book to blow the whistle on polarization. I’m three quarters of the way done when the 2016 election season blows up, and suddenly everybody knows we’re polarized. Everybody can feel it and is getting a little sick to the stomach about it.

The book changed because of that, and the mission changed. Because it was going to be … I hadn’t yet started House United, but the way that I did the world with ministry was going to be: let people know that we’re actually talking about folks on another side of the spectrum in a way that doesn’t seem to be treating them as brothers and sisters in Christ. By ’16 people kind of knew that, and weren’t very ashamed of it. The differences became more and more strident, and so my role became to make people aware of research, anecdotes, ways that they could access the value of difference as an asset rather than a threat. Birds of a feather flocking together produce smaller brains, for instance. Your brain shrinks if you’re with people who agree with you all the time. Segregation produces prejudice and stereotyping, and we have elective segregation.

I had a lot of friends on both sides, and my job became to try and get them in the same room, and if they weren’t yet in the same room, try to tell one side about the other side in ways that made them open to the idea that the others were human and Christian and trying to get it right. What that looks like tangibly is, I usually go into churches and seminaries, or colleges, I work with a couple colleges, a couple divinity schools, and help them navigate that political distance that makes people loathe people who are from the other side and help them figure out how to collaborate and build communities. We do courageous conversations in local churches and other civic groups, where I go in and help them talk about healthcare in a way that allows all voices to be heard.

The exercise isn’t about what the right answer about healthcare is ultimately; we can do that in other arenas. I want them to leave the room loving one another and actually experience having talked about hard things honestly and leave the room saying, “We didn’t die, and in fact I kind of like that person. I don’t like the idea any more than I did when I came, but I hear her or his authenticity. I hear motives that I would never have credited. This person’s trying to get it right.” So by the end of a few of these conversations in a local congregation, the people know the difference that they hold, and they’re starting to think that maybe there’s usefulness to the other position, that conservatives and liberals ought to be in the same room because we make better things if we stand in that tension.

Amee McDonald: How do you help them see the limitations of their beliefs, and also have compassion for the other perspective?

Allen Hilton: The frontal assault is, I take them to Jesus on arrogance.

Amee McDonald: Tell me more about that.

Allen Hilton: If you look at the parables in the teachings of Jesus, he so often has arrogance in the crosshairs. The Pharisee and the tax collector parable, where the Pharisee is so proud of what he’s done, and the tax collector just goes down on his face and cries out for mercy from God, and Jesus surprises everybody by saying the tax collector went home redeemed and the Pharisee didn’t. Jesus’ assault on arrogance is consistent, but we don’t read it that way. Instead we go and we find Jesus was for social justice, and so people who are about just salvation are wrong and bad people, or else they’re stupid people. Well Jesus was about salvation too, but I’ve taken a position that Jesus is this way, and I’m so sure that I’m right that I’m disqualifying the other person and really excommunicating the other person.

What I take people to is Jesus’ teachings, some from Paul, mostly Jesus’ teachings, that undermine arrogance and hold humility as a sort of cardinal way of doing the world. That may sound critical and maybe not the best way to get somebody to embrace what you’re talking about, but I do it in fun ways, and self-effacing ways, because I can associate with both sides who I run with. One week in January, I was with UCC pastors from the biggest chapters in the nation in the UCC, on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and I was with Missouri Senate Lutheran pastors from the biggest fundamentalist Missouri Senate Lutheran churches on Thursday and Friday, and I went at their arrogance in both cases but being able to get onboard with it, because I occasionally feel it from either side.

The large strategy is to try to strike some humility into what is a very self-righteous setting, both on left and right. Because when self righteousness rises, it usually disqualifies the humanity of the other side. I see that happening when people don’t interface. They get more and more able to say, “Those people aren’t worth having in church, those people aren’t worth having on land,” on terra firma. That’s the large strategy: humility. On the way I help them figure out that they can experience that humility if they sit in a room with smart people from the other perspectives. Does that make sense?

Amee McDonald: Yeah. To say it back to you, to make sure that I’m following, really your methodology is to tackle arrogance head-on using scripture to strike humanity in a self-righteous setting.

Allen Hilton: Yeah. Jonathan Haidt wrote a book called The Righteous Mind that is an evolutionary tracing of why we make groups and then feel superior to other groups, whether it’s people in Indiana, who are Hoosiers, or Republicans or Democrats or, name the group. We’re built to do that because it worked when we had to hunt and gather. Being in a group was an advantage over being an individual, and identifying safe people was advantageous. But that’s been true of all human societies. Ours is off the charts polarized. What has happened to raise the level, put ours on steroids, over basic human tribalism? I try to help people realize that what’s put it on steroids is an absence of experience of the other in any kind of real setting with people in a room.

A lot of what I do is tell people to deal with the person in the room not the banner under which you think they fly. When they do, when they actually listen, they sense the humanity and even Christian brotherhood and sisterhood, but they have to get that far, in a way, to have that work. I’m stumbling a little bit because the way that this actually happens is, people experience it. It’s not primarily a rational argument, it’s an argument from experience. You now know this person.

Example: North Dakota has the highest per capita refugee population in the nation, which is interesting. There aren’t many capita in North Dakota, but they’ve got all these Somalis and other ethnic groups who have come for refuge. The white North Dakotans and the Somalis can’t understand one another, and so a group came in and decided they would try to help with reconciliation and interface. They had a first day when the North Dakotans listened to the Somalis, –They paired up one-on-one– and on the second day, the Somalis listened to the North Dakotans. On the third day the project had each person then introduce their opposite, but in the first person. You’ve done the, “Silas was born in X and he went to Y schools,” you’ve done that before, but if I have to say, “I’m Silas Morgan and I was raised in X place, everything kind of moves when I have to take on that “I,” the first person.

I try to get people to that experience as often as possible. Why does somebody believe what she believes or he believes? I should be able to state it from her or his perspective, and not just describe it third person. I should own it, and then I might be able to understand it. That experience changes people, in my work.

Amee McDonald: Is that process rooted in some methodology that you use?

Allen Hilton: Yeah. We do restatement a lot, the things you find in marriage counseling, and just any interpersonal communications class, but people have shut down those skills when it comes to the political sphere, and so I just re-up on those, and have people practice them and listen beyond five words and get to a better way of interacting with one another.

Amee McDonald: Would you say that the House United movement really leads with those processes and then supplements with faith and the teachings of Jesus, or would you say that you really lead with the teachings of Jesus?

Allen Hilton: It depends on where I am. I started out just going to churches or audiences wherever I found them, and getting them all excited about, “We can come together across difference for the common good.” Then I’d go away, and of course they didn’t do anything about it because they didn’t know how. What I do now is engage for longer periods of time, and I go on. Contractually I go on a retainer for a year, and I just help them do the practice sort of including multiple perspectives in their lot.

One piece of that is teaching them Christ conversations, and that comes out of speaking the truth in love, which is scriptural. If I’m in a church audience we start with John 17, “That they all may be one”. We then move to First Corinthians 12 and Romans 12, where the gifts vary but they’re all given by God, and ask: in an age where we think politics may be genetically inherited, is it possible to say,this person is oriented genetically to be conservative, and oriented genetically to be liberal, so how do we deal with that theologically? Is it one of the gifts? Is being conservative one of the gifts of the spirit? Is being liberal one of the gifts of the spirit? How do those things work together, as Paul saw the gifts working together in the church? In a environment of Christian assumption, I go to Jesus and Paul, and then Jeremiah.

I did my first interfaith thing in Lincoln maybe two months ago, three months ago, and of course went to Jeremiah 29, because the main people there were Abrahamic folks. In those settings I might go to a more perfect union language, more national or cultural sense of belonging to one another, and know that I’m motivated by Christian warrants but I’m not going to be able to use those primarily in the way that I talk to people. Make sense?

Amee McDonald: Yes.

Allen Hilton: I start in a local place with Christ conversations, and then once they can do those a little bit on their own, I do what I call Christian mingle, which is, I do yenta work with them. You know what a yenta is, a matchmaker, a Jewish word for matchmaker, or Hebrew word for matchmaker. I try to find, for a progressive church an evangelical church and say, “Both of you like to do service outreach; why don’t you build a habitat house together. Don’t talk politics yet, just help these people and talk about where your kids go to school, and get to know one another and build a trusting community.” Then we’ll get around to courageous conversations with that crossover group.

The first step is, get the internal part of the organization, or the church, talking to one another across their difference. The second part is, if your church or organization leans left or right, find your opposite in another community and get together. The third step is, now that you’ve done that, there are a lot of people who don’t have assumptions of Christianity, so why don’t you help them learn the skills you’ve learned and be an asset to your city.

In Westport, Connecticut, four months ago, they had three consecutive planning and zoning meetings where they had to call in the police to keep the meeting going. Because people don’t know how to talk to one another. If the church becomes highly skilled in that, and becomes a resource, then, what I call it in the book is Mission 4.0, it’s not evangelism, it’s not service, and it’s not justice; it’s community as mission. We’ve figured out how to talk to one another in a world that can’t be thankful to one another, so we’re going to offer them that skill and host their hardest conversations.

For what it’s worth I’m booked through March now, every available date, because churches and other groups need help. The book is helping unearth those concerns, but the level of need that people are now recognizing in themselves is high enough that, I don’t do very well at marketing, you’ve seen my website, it’s placeholder basically, I do a little Facebook-

Amee McDonald: Fairly active on Twitter.

Allen Hilton: Little bit, every once in a while. But I can’t fight off the people who want help doing this. It’s mostly by word of mouth, but they say, “We need that because we aren’t getting along very well,” or they read the book and they say, “We feel like we’re on the left edge, all of us are, and we can’t fathom that 81% of white evangelicals who voted for Trump. We can’t even understand that people like that exist.” So they call me, and I help them try to meet people like that.

DSC04905(Rev. Dr. Allen Hilton speaking in Religion and Politics in America course at United)

Amee McDonald: Knowing how busy you are, and how in-demand what you’re offering is, why are you here today with our students?

Allen Hilton: Because Silas asked me. Silas is using the book in the class, and I was so excited when I saw that. It happened that I was in Minnesota on vacation, and we worked it out for me to come. I love the idea of a political theologian. I haven’t many political theologians, or at least who call themselves that. There are a lot of people who are theologians who are political, but you focus on the very things that this enterprise is about addressing. I’m excited to meet the students, and I’m excited to strike relationship with Silas, because we care about some of the same things.

Amee McDonald: Anything you would add, Silas?

Silas Morgan: Yeah. We’re reading this book in the course, and I invited Allen because our students, as graduates of a seminary, will be called to serve communities and engage people, and work in congregations where addressing theological and political differences is part of their vocation. It’ll be precisely what it is they are called to do as faith leaders, as thought leaders, as nonprofit leaders. They will be responsible to be on the front edge of doing this work. I wanted them to hear from someone who had done it, someone who has done it in the congregation, and now someone who is serving a broader community, who had a method, approach, a style, that could model for them what it looked like on the ground. I wanted them to have a book on their shelf that they could go to as they find themselves looking for inspiration about how to do it. Because they’re going to have to give a sermon, and they’re going to have to be at the bedside of someone with a Make America Great Again hat on their dresser. They’re going to have to think about what it means for them as a faith leader, as a thought leader, as someone who’s been shaped by a religious tradition, to engage that person in both pastoral ways, but also deeply prophetic ways.

That’s a big theme of the course that this book is specifically designed to address, this tension between pastoral care and prophetic truth telling. United is really good at embracing the prophetic truth telling, and I think Allen provides a theological and pastoral look at how to do, how to think, them both together. That this distinction is as false and as perilous as all the differences that mark the body politic and the body ecclesia. I’m incredibly grateful he’s here.

Allen Hilton: To piggyback on that, I think it’s malpractice for any seminary right now not to offer some kind of training on what you do when you run into a hat. Because otherwise we turn out people who preach as if nobody’s in the room except their tribe, and that’s hardly ever true, unless you work really hard at being obnoxious to everybody else from the pulpit. You can do it, but you’re going to have a mixed crowd, and so you have to ask, what’s my role in the life of somebody who is from the other tribe, and how does Christianity address that?

Because frankly, if Jesus were telling the parable of the Good Samaritan right now, it might be of the good Make America Great Again guy. It might be the guy with the hat who stops and helps the person on the side, if you were telling it at United. If you were telling it at Dallas seminary it would be, Barack Obama stopped. In order to understand the shocking nature of Jesus’ illustrations that undermine arrogance, you kind of have to be able to reverse the polarity, or reverse the assumptions of rightness, for a second, I think. I loved the way you put it, that they’re going to be encountering this, and they have to be prepared for it.

DSC04898(Religion and Politics in America Class, left to right: Current Student Claire Klein, Dr. Silas Morgan, and Rev. Dr. Allen Hilton)

Amee McDonald: Are there other seminaries that are using your book and your materials, and how have you seen that work?

Allen Hilton: Princeton seminary is, I’m doing some con-ed with them. I’ll be teaching a seminar class there this fall. When I go back to teach the con-ed class I’m going to also sit with a political theology seminar. Duke Divinity School has me come out for their summer institute for reconciliation, which is a gathering that involves Duke people and a whole lot of other people from around the world. Yale Div, I worked on the pastoral advisory committee of their Center for Faith and Culture initiative on joy, and we took up joy as a shared value on left and right, and what does that mean, and does it look different in different contexts. I have worked with those, and Fuller, we’re kind of probing if they want me to do some work on campus.

Seminaries are a place where … Tim Keller got an award at Princeton last year and nearly blew the place up. You know who Tim Keller is? Okay, Redeemer Church was a planned, he’s a PCA person, really popular kind of evangelical, but in many ways accessible more widely than the far right, but he’s from a far right place that doesn’t ordain women and doesn’t ordain gay people. They gave him an award for the excellence of his church planting, and the place nearly blew up because of his other beliefs, or his denomination’s other beliefs, and so they called me in and had me do some things there. Because it’s an idea-based community, and they can’t talk about ideas, in a way, very well with one another. Because they had people on campus who were PCA, and then they had a lot of people who weren’t, and they tried to figure it out.

It’s really fun work, but when I tell people what I do they just laugh and say “Good luck”. I go into places and try to bring left and right into conversation, they say “Good luck” at that. But when I preach at any given place, I preach a lot, but when I preach on this people stand up and clap.It’s not because I’m a great preacher, because on other things I preach they don’t. They just don’t want to have enemies in their own town, and they want to figure out how they sort these emotions that make their Thanksgiving table blow up. Or, I think one out of every 10 divorces in the year after the last election was caused by a Hillary-Trump rift. They want help with that, and it’s fun to offer the help. It’s just kind of pushing a rock up a hill.

Amee McDonald: Last question is, is there anything I should’ve asked you that I didn’t?

Allen Hilton: Yeah, that’s a good question. I think the “Is it fun” question that I insinuated in my comments just now. The prophets of Israel had a hell of a time. People who go against the grain of their culture get lonely, so it’s a decent question, why do people do that? For me, and the irony is, as Silas said, on the left House United is accused of diminishing prophecy because you can’t claim anything stridently, and truth gets relativized. Of course neither of those things are true, but the idea of bringing people together rings on the left, as you can’t really ever tell the truth. Does that make sense? So I can’t speak prophetically because I have to be nice to those people.

Ironically I think it is a prophetic thing to say the church is falling apart at the seams, and Jesus said he wants us to be one. Which means the very things that you hold dearest in your sense of yourself may need to be put in conversation with things that somebody else holds dearest if Jesus’ prayer for unity is going to ever happen. It’s really–and this is back to the fun thing–it’s really fun to see people’s light come on about that. To see people who had disqualified a whole block of Christian population, open themselves to the fact that God may actually not only love them, but may be able to use them in their lives. It’s fun to see people’s epiphanies.

This interview is the first of three blog posts we will be publishing about Dr. Hilton’s work in the conversation with United’s Religion and Politics in America class. The forthcoming posts will include responses to Hilton and A House United from current students Nathanael Welch and Lisbeth Rivera.

 

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United Receives Grant from Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion

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It cannot ignore the destructive arc of human hubris that felled forests, reconfigured rivers, overtook habitat from plants, animals, and native cultures, and cratered and covered the land with impervious surfaces and structures. 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It advocates and reconfirms the trinitarian relationship of God-humanity-nature to approve the sacredness of the natural world and to realise the harmonious coexistence between human beings and the cosmos.4   Origins of Eco-Theology Seyyed Hossein Nasr, an Iranian-American scholar and philosopher born in 1933, articulated a tie between spiritual dimensions and the environmental crisis in a series of lectures at the University of Chicago in May 1966, marking the first historical identification of the environmental crisis as being rooted in a spiritual crisis. In 1968, the lectures were published in an innovative and pioneering book titled Man and Nature: The Spiritual Crisis of Modern Man. 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Ecothology respects Earth and its inhabitants’ ability to suffer from human-created crises, as well as the power to resist injustice.    The Theology of Eco-theology One salient teaching of religious wisdom bearing on solutions to the environmental crisis is that the rupture of the balance between humanity and nature is rooted in a preceding rupture in the balance between humanity and Heaven. “The Earth is bleeding from wounds inflicted upon it by a humanity no longer in harmony with Heaven and therefore in constant strife with the terrestrial environment.”12 Poets, scientists, and clerics have long agreed that there is something divine within our natural world. George Washington Carver, a prominent agricultural scientist and inventor whose life spanned the 19th and 20th centuries, once wrote, “I love to think of nature as an unlimited broadcasting system through which God speaks to us every hour, if we only tune in.” In his 1854 book, Walden, naturalist, philosopher, and transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau asserted, “The pure Walden water is mingled with the sacred water of the Ganges.” In more recent times, as a largely agrarian society gave way to rampant colonization and industrialization, many people have lost touch with a contemplative, selfless spirituality of nature. These effects are most acutely felt in indigenous communities. In Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer—Distinguished Teaching Professor and Director, Center for Native Peoples and the Environment at State University of New York, Environmental Science and Forestry—writes, “For all of us, becoming indigenous to a place means living as if your children’s future mattered, to take care of the land as if our lives, both material and spiritual, depended on it.”13 By reminding believers that Earth and its environment are sacred, Christian theologians can promote similarly relevant moral and ethical principles. As Willis Jenkins, the John Allen Hollingsworth Professor of Ethics and chair of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Virginia, explains, “pragmatic theological creativity already characterizes lived Christian experience. As concerned communities confront problems by producing new ethical capacities from their traditions, they rediscover or invent the ecological dimensions of Christian experience.”14   Eco-Theology in Practice Eco-theologian Heather Eaton, professor of Conflict Studies at Saint Paul University in Ottawa, Ontario, suggested in 2004 that there are four clearly defined religious approaches to the present ecological crisis. The first tactic, promoting ecological stewardship among congregants, she notes, includes both “a biblical motif as well as an easily acceptable ecological paradigm for many Christians.”15 Theologically, the largely New Testament invitation is to take care of God’s creation by preserving and conserving natural resources. The second approach, which reveals a greater level of complexity within the ecological crisis, is eco-justice. Consonant with liberation theologies, eco-justice, Eaton asserts, illustrates how “ecological problems are enmeshed with other systemic social problems, such as discrimination based on ethnicity, class, or gender.”16 In this approach, the theological focus is on justice—how to make certain finite resources are distributed equitably to all, particularly to those who are disenfranchised or at society’s margins.  Eco-feminism, an amalgam of ecological and feminist perspectives, draws from the nexus between women, nature, and their common mistreatment across time. As eco-feminist theologian Rosemary Radford Ruether wrote in 1974: “Women must see that there can be no liberation for them and no solution to the ecological crisis within a society whose fundamental model of relationships continues to be one of domination.”17 The role of cosmology, the important fourth approach, Eaton explains, is to illuminate “both the scientific understanding of the universe as well as the macro-narratives through which human communities appreciate their existence.” In her article in the 1990 book, Liberating Life: Approaches to Ecological Theology, theologian Sallie McFague states, “I propose that one theological task is an experimental one with metaphors and models for the relationship between God and the world that will help bring about a theocentric, lifecentered, cosmocentric sensibility in place of our anthropocentric one.”18 McFague’s cosmological reframing of “the world as God’s body” wrests eco-thelology from the yoke of destructive humanity.   Eco-Justice: A Call to Action “Ecology, ” observes Conradie, “touches on virtually every single academic discipline so that the biophysical, geological, political, economic, health, safety, ethical, philosophical, religious, and theological dimensions of ecology all need to be factored in.”19 Eco-justice, precisely because ecology is so complex, strives to reveal and address multivalent consequences of environmental degradation that disproportionately affect impoverished and marginalized human communities as well as the rich profusion of plant and animal species. As German reformed theologian Jürgen Moltmann proclaimed in “The Great Ecological Transformation:”  We need both a “great transformation” and ecological justice that gives the nature of the earth and the animals their rights. We also need to recognize that ecological justice is related to social justice and, especially, to the rights of future generations. We need a new understanding of nature that liberates the nature of the earth from its modern, alienated status as a mere object. We need a new understanding of humanity that embeds human beings in the community of creation. Finally, we need a new cosmic spirituality that sanctifies lived life and engenders “respect for life” for everything that lives.20 Centuries of environmental pillaging has wrought mass destruction of fragile ecosystems. Too often, as in the case of industrial pollution, toxified land and underground water supplies harm communities who have few resources to fight or no voice at all. The erosion of topsoil, essential for food production, can hurt us all, but will mostly harm those who are already food-insecure. In almost all cases, the effects of climate change will displace and destroy those life forms that lack the resources or adaptability to move to safety. Eco-justice concentrates on the attendant ills intrinsic to environmental degradation on a global scale. It fights ethically for what eco-theologians Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Grim describe as “new forms of equitable distribution of wealth and resources” worldwide.21 It asserts the rights of chronically disadvantaged populations and threatened species, and propels society toward a more sustainable model of existence.   Pursuing an Eco-Justice Degree at United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities United added an Eco-Justice concentration to its MA degree program in early 2022. The MA in Eco-Justice offers students the opportunity to become uniquely prepared faith and spiritual leaders and academics in the areas of environmental ethics, ecological justice, and eco-theology. Equipped through the lens of a religiously-formed and scientifically-informed framework, these students will have the knowledge and skills to address pressing issues facing our planet: climate change, environmental crises, and ecological harm, as well as their embeddedness in spiritual and intellectual matters The Eco-Justice program at United seeks justice for the environment with recourse to the wisdom of religious traditions around the world. Dr. Munjed Murad, who successfully defended his ThD dissertation, “A Tale of Two Trees: Unveiling the Sacred Life of Nature in Islamic and Christian Traditions,” at Harvard Divinity School in 2022, joined United’s faculty the same year. In early 2023, he was installed into the Johnson-Fry Endowed Chair in World Religions and Intercultural Studies. In his courses, Dr. Murad helps students draw upon religious traditions from around the world for wisdom with which they can respond to the Anthropocene. He writes, “To undo [the global environmental crisis], we need a rediscovery of nature through the sacred. It is the sacred alone that can affirm fully and objectively the spiritual value of non-human creatures.”22 United has long supported greater awareness and action on issues related to ethics and eco-theology. For example, we regularly host the Picard Lecture on Environmental Theology and Ethics, supported by an endowment made possible through the generosity of United alum, the Rev. Frank Picard (’02), and other Picard family members.  Launched in 2005, the purpose of the lectureship is to explore questions and issues concerning the state of the creation from theological and ethical perspectives. It 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. In April 2019, our guest speaker was Dr. Nathaniel Van Yperen, chair of the Religion Department at Princeton Theological Seminary, speaking about his 2019 book, Gratitude for the Wild: Christian Ethics in the Wilderness. Eco-feminist theologian Dr. Catherine Keller, the George T. Cobb Professor of Constructive Theology at the Theological School and Graduate Division of Religion within Drew University, appeared over Zoom in April 2022. Her speech was titled “Apocalypse After All? Climate, Politics and Faith in the Possible.” Held in October 2024, Dr. Kiara Jorgenson, associate professor of Religion and Environmental Studies at St. Olaf College, delivered an address titled “Hope through Tears.” Two respondents, Dr. Timothy Eberhart and Dr. Munjed Murad, presented brief reflections on Dr. Jorgensen's remarks. Even our Susan Draper White Lecture turned to eco-eschatology in 2022, when adjunct professor Rev. Dr. Nancy Victorin-Vangerud spoke. Her lecture—titled “Re-soil/ing the New Jerusalem: Dream-Reading Revelation (22:2) and Women’s Speculative Fiction for a Future that Feeds Us”—started with this startling statement: “Since colonization, erosion of the soils in Minnesota has increased 100-fold.” Because the need to address the world’s environmental crisis in meaningful ways grows more dire every year, United’s MA in Eco-Justice can allow students to pursue careers such as: A scholar or professor in a seminary, divinity school, or college An ethics teacher in a private school, church, or religious community A “public theologian” whose primary audience is society or the wider culture An environmental program leader A leader in a progressive eco-justice think tank A minister who makes eco-justice a central component of their church mission   Conclusion “The Great Work now,” noted renowned cultural historian and religious scholar Thomas Berry in his 1999 book The Great Work: Our Way into the Future, “is to carry out the transition from a period of human devastation of the Earth to a period when humans would be present to the planet in a mutually beneficial manner.”23 Berry, who died at age 94 in 2009, knew what was at stake. The damage to our ecosystem from centuries of exploitation is incalculable, and the consequences are dire. The global climate crisis, caused largely by human activity, will continue to worsen without a worldwide effort to stem activities that exacerbate it. Empowered by religious understanding and a clear ethical compass, faith leaders can work at the vanguard of eco-theology and eco-justice. Their work is imperative since the effects of environmental degradation are too often visited on those least equipped to withstand them, and we all stand to lose as the environment deteriorates.   References/Credit:  Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Man and Nature (Chicago, IL : ABC International Group, 1997). Ernst M. Conradie, “Towards an ecological biblical hermeneutices: a review essay on the Earth Bible Project: review article,” Scriptura 85 (2004): 123–135. https://journals.co.za/doi/abs/10.10520/EJC100654 Lawrence Troster, “What Is Eco-Theology?” CrossCurrents 63, no. 4 (December 2013): 380–385. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/19393881/2013/63/4 Kelebogile Thomas Resane, “Moltmann Speaking at the Ecoenvironmentalists’ Conference: Ecology and Theology in Dialogue,” Scriptura 120, no. 1 (2021):1–16. https://scriptura.journals.ac.za/pub/issue/view/173  Nasr, Man and Nature (Chicago, IL : ABC International Group, 1997): 20. Nasr, Man and Nature (Chicago, IL : ABC International Group, 1997): 3.  Lynn White, “The Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis,” Science 155, no. 3767 (March 10, 1967): 1203–1207.  White, 1207. Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Religion and the Order of Nature (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996). Conradie, “Towards an ecological biblical hermeneutics,” Scriptura 85 (2004): 128  Ibid. 127  Nasr, Religion and the Order of Nature, 3. Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants (Minneapolis, MN: Milkweed Editions, 2013): 9. Willis Jenkins, “After Lynn White: Religious Ethnics and Environmental Problems,” Journal of Religious Ethics 37, no. 2 (June 2009): 283–309. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-9795.2009.00387.x Heather Eaton, “This Sacred Earth: At the Nexus of Religion, Ecology and Politics,” Sciences Pastorales, 2004, pages 35-54. [ISSN: 0713-3383] Ibid. Rosemary Radford Ruether, New Woman/New Earth: Sexist Ideologies and Human Liberation (New York: Seabury Press, 1974): 204. Sallie McFague, “Imagining a Theology of Nature: The World as God’s Body,” Liberating Life: Approaches to Ecological Theology, eds. Charles Birch, William Eakin, and Jay B. McDaniels.  (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books: 1990), 201–227. Ernst Conradie, “A Green Reformation of Christianity? Anthropological, Ethical, and Pedagogical Reflections on Ecology as an Ecumenical Theme,” Scriptura 120, no. 1 (2021): 1–10. https://scriptura.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/2006 Jürgen Moltmann, “The Great Ecological Transformation,” trans. Steffen Lösel,Theology Today 80, no. 1 (2023): 9–17. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00405736231151651 Mary Evelyn Tucker and John A. Grim, “Introduction: The Emerging Alliance of World Religions and Ecology,” Daedalus 130, no. 4, Religion and Ecology: Can the Climate Change? (Fall 2001): 1–22. Munjed M. Murad, “Perceiving Nature: Rūmī on Human Purpose and Cosmic Prayer,” I of the Heart: Texts and Studies in Honor of Seyyed Hossein Nasr, eds. Muhammad U. Faruque, Atif Khalil, and Mohammed Rustom (Leiden: Brill, 2025): 261–275. Thomas Berry, “The Great Work,” The Great Work: Our Way into the Future (New York: Bell Tower, 1999): 3.

Dr. Ginger Morgan Announced as New Associate Professor and Program Director for Interreligious Chaplaincy

Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States, April 16, 2026 — United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities is thrilled to announce that Dr. Ginger Morgan will join its faculty as the new Associate Professor for Pastoral and Spiritual Care and Program Director for Interreligious Chaplaincy. Dr. Morgan will come to United from Madison, WI, where she is concluding her role at the Presbyterian Student Center Foundation as director of Candid and Community Initiatives. She is a highly qualified program director and chaplain with experience in healthcare, campus ministry, and higher education. With a PhD in Religion and Psychological Studies from Iliff School of Theology at the University of Denver, as well as a Master of Theological Studies (MTS) from Vanderbilt Divinity School, Dr. Morgan draws from her theological and multidisciplinary education in her work. Interreligious studies is one of United’s four pillars, and the Interreligious Chaplaincy (IRC) program—unique among peer institutions—constitutes the largest and fastest-growing of the seminary’s programs over the past five years. In alignment with United’s ethos, Dr. Morgan is a gifted scholar of religious pluralism, highly educated in progressive theological education, and foregrounds justice in chaplaincy and pastoral care. These values are evident in a chapter titled “Many Doors: Expanding Thresholds for Grace,” written by Dr. Morgan for the upcoming book Dispatches from Campus (Augsburg Fortress Press). Dr. Morgan’s career also reflects her personal experiences and identity. Writing to the search committee, she shared, “My formation includes reconciling my lesbian identity with my faith and living as a religious minority in India during high school, both of which shaped my intercultural perspective and vocational commitments.” She continued, “Throughout my career, I have sought to create inclusive spaces of belonging, whether supporting LGBTQIA+ students, young adults in recovery from addiction, or building programs attentive to justice and equity." Rev. Dr. Molly T. Marshall, President, reflects, “United welcomes Dr. Ginger Morgan with confidence and great enthusiasm. Her varied leadership roles, especially in chaplaincy, equip her uniquely to lead our robust IRC program and to teach pastoral and spiritual care.” In his announcement to the student body, Dr. Kyle Roberts—Dean and Vice President for Academic Affairs—noted that Dr. Morgan’s “career in chaplaincy spans hospital, hospice, and higher education contexts, and extensive program leadership experience.” He added, “I want to thank Dr. Demian Wheeler for leading this search process, especially during its formative stages during my sabbatical.” After participating in a months-long faculty search and on-site candidate lecture, being recommended by a unanimous faculty vote, and gaining approval from the Board of Trustees’ Academic Committee, Dr. Morgan will officially begin on July 1. Students, faculty, and staff are eager to welcome her to United for this exciting new chapter. For more information about United’s Interreligious Chaplaincy program, click here. About United Founded by the United Church of Christ (UCC) as a welcoming, ecumenical school that embraces all denominations and faith traditions, United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities has been on the creative edge of progressive theological thought and leadership since it was established in 1962. Today, United continues to educate leaders who, through the eyes of faith, engage in the dismantling of systems of oppression, exploring multi-faith spirituality, and pushing the boundaries of knowledge. Contact Nathanial Green (he/him) Director of Marketing and Communications press@unitedseminary.edu • (651) 255-6138 Admissions and Enrollment admissions@unitedseminary.edu