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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Lumen Christi Institute
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TZID:America/Chicago
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190502T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190502T193000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165256Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260322T200021Z
UID:10000416-1556818200-1556825400@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:The Legacy of Fr. Theodore Hesburgh\, CSC
DESCRIPTION:Listen to the panel discussion as a podcast episode. You can subscribe to the Lumen Christi Institute Podcast via our Soundcloud page\, iTunes channel\, Stitcher\, TuneIn\, ListenNotes\, Podbean\, Pocket Casts\, and Google Play Music. \nTo view photos of the discussion\, visit Lumen Christi’s Facebook page. \nTo read the National Catholic Reporter‘s coverage of the event\, click here. \nA reception and panel discussion on the occasion of the publication of American Priest: The Ambitious Life and Conflicted Legacy of Notre Dame’s Father Ted Hesburgh by Fr. Wilson D. Miscamble\, C.S.C. \nCopies of the book will be available for purchase by the Seminary Coop Bookstore.  \nAccording to the great University of Chicago President Robert Maynard Hutchins\, Fr. Hesburgh’s record at Notre Dame in the 1950’s and 1960’s was “one of the most spectacular achievements in higher education in the last 25 years.” \nConsidered for many decades to be the most influential priest in America\, Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh\, CSC\, played pivotal roles in higher education\, the Catholic Church\, and national and international affairs. In American Priest\, historian and Notre Dame priest-professor Wilson D. Miscamble\, CSC\, tracks how Hesburgh transformed Catholic higher education in the postwar era and explores how he became a much-celebrated voice in America at large. \nUnderstanding Hesburgh’s life and work illuminates the journey that the Catholic Church traversed over the second half of the twentieth century. Exploring and evaluating Hesburgh’s importance\, then\, contributes not only to the colorful history of Notre Dame but also to make sense of the American Catholic experience. \nSCHEDULE \n5:00pm   Registration\n5:30pm   Welcome & Introduction\n5:35pm   The Legacy of Fr. Ted Hesburgh\, CSC\n6:45pm   Open bar & Hors d’oeuvres Reception\n7:30pm   End
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-life-legacy-of-fr-ted-hesburgh-csc-william-t-cavanaugh-jennifer-mason-mcaward-fr-bill-miscamble-csc-kenneth-woodward/
LOCATION:Skadden\, Arps\, Slate\, Meagher & Flom LLP\, 28th Floor\, 155 North Wacker Drive\,\nChicago\, IL 60606\, Downtown\, IL
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/American-Priest-103-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190509T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190509T170000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165251Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260322T200125Z
UID:10000415-1557421200-1557421200@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:The Hope of Exodus in Black Theology
DESCRIPTION:Listen to the panel discussion as a podcast episode. You can subscribe to the Lumen Christi Institute Podcast via our Soundcloud page\, iTunes channel\, Stitcher\, TuneIn\, ListenNotes\, Podbean\, Pocket Casts\, and Google Play Music. \nTo view photos of the lecture\, visit Lumen Christi’s Facebook page. \nTo listen to Prevot’s podcast interview with the Archdiocese of Chicago’s Black Catholic Initiative podcast hosted by Deacon John Cook\, click here. \nFree and open to the public. Part of the Lumen Christi Institute’s Black Catholic Initiative. Cosponsored by the Martin Marty Center for the Public Understanding of Religion\, the Center for the Study of Race\, Politics & Culture\, Alchemy in Color at the Divinity School\, the Theology Club at the Divinity School\, and the Ethics Club at the Divinity School. Persons with disabilities who may need assistance should contact us at 773-955-5887 or by email.  \nFor generations\, black Christians in the United States have found hope in the biblical story of Exodus. Refusing the white supremacist interpretation of Christianity as a religion requiring obedience to masters\, black Christians have used the Exodus narrative to develop an interpretation of Christianity as a religion promising deliverance from slavery and oppression. This was a central motif in James Cone’s black theology\, as it emerged from the late 1960s struggles for black liberation. In subsequent decades\, black scholars of Christianity such as Delores Williams\, Eddie Glaude\, Kelly Brown Douglas\, and Willie Jennings have approached the story of Exodus in critical new ways that both complicate and renew the hope that it offers. In his lecture\, Prevot will sketch this recent history of black Christian interpretation of Exodus and considers its implications for Christian theology today. \nAndrew Prevot also taught a master class on Hans Urs von Balthasar on Mystical Theology and “The Metaphysics of the Saints” on May 10.
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-hope-of-exodus-in-black-womanist-theology-andrew-prevot/
LOCATION:Swift Hall\, First Floor Common Room\, 1025 E 58th St\,Chicago\, IL 60637\, Hyde Park\, IL
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190510T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190510T170000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165247Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T145336Z
UID:10000414-1557496800-1557507600@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Hans Urs von Balthasar on Mystical Theology and “The Metaphysics of the Saints”
DESCRIPTION:To view photos of the master class\, visit Lumen Christi’s Facebook page. \nOpen to current students and faculty. Copies of the readings will be provided for registrants. \nHans Urs von Balthasar (1905–1988) was one of the most prolific and controversial Catholic theologians of the twentieth century. Responses to his work have ranged from the effusive to the dismissive. Instead of favoring any such one-sided judgments\, however\, I invite participants in this seminar to focus on two tasks that require considerably more scholarly effort. First\, there is the task simply of understanding Balthasar—that is\, making sense of his claims\, their historical and intellectual contexts\, the arguments that he offers in support of them\, the style in which he expresses them\, and the current debates surrounding them. Second\, there is the task of evaluating his work—that is\, clarifying what critiques may be warranted within the space of a sufficiently charitable interpretation and what positions theologians attuned to contemporary needs and realities ought to take on various aspects of his thought. \nIn particular\, this seminar considers Balthasar in connection with the Christian tradition of mystical theology. Like many great figures in this tradition\, Balthasar believes that theology and sanctity\, thought and prayer\, contemplation and action\, knowledge and love ought to go together. As a mystical theologian\, he is not content merely to comment on Christian doctrine (though it remains absolutely essential). He seeks to clarify the conditions under which the creature can be drawn into union with God through Christ and the Holy Spirit. He is interested as much in the lived experience of grace as in its theorization. The first part of the seminar offers some important context for understanding Balthasar (with help from Peter Henrici\, S.J.) and highlights Balthasar’s famous essay\, “Theology and Sanctity\,” which offers a more or less adequate snapshot of his mystical theology. The second part of the seminar delves a bit deeper to study his complex genealogical arguments in the section of The Glory of the Lord\, volume 5\, called “The Metaphysics of the Saints.” Here Balthasar both exposes the mystical theological roots of certain modern conceptual and practical maladies and attempts to identify their mystical theological antidotes. \nThe recommended readings may be helpful to seminar participants who are interested in the question of Balthasar’s gender essentialism (see Corinne Crammer’s “One Sex or Two?”) or in the ecumenical potential of Balthasar’s mystical theology in the midst of debates between Karl Barth and Erich Pryzwara\, and their intellectual descendants\, about the analogia entis (see my “Dialectic and Analogy”). \nREQUIRED READINGS \n      For session 1: \nHenrici\, Peter\, S.J. “Hans Urs von Balthasar: A Sketch of His Life.” In Hans Urs von Balthasar: His Life and Work. Edited by David L. Schindler. San Francisco: Ignatius Press\, 1991. 7–43. \nBalthasar\, Hans Urs von. “Theology and Sanctity.” In Explorations in Theology\, volume 1\, The Word Made Flesh. San Francisco: Ignatius Press\, 1989. 181–209. \nFor session 2: \nBalthasar\, Hans Urs von. “The Metaphysics of the Saints.” In The Glory of the Lord: A Theological Aesthetics\, volume 5\, The Realm of Metaphysics in the Modern Age. Translated by Oliver Davies\, et al. San Francisco: Ignatius Press\, 1991. 48–140. \nSUGGESTED READINGS \nCrammer\, Corinne. “One Sex or Two? Balthasar’s Theology of the Sexes.” In The Cambridge Companion to Hans Urs von Balthasar. Edited by Edward Oakes\, S.J. and David Moss. New York: Cambridge University Press\, 2004. 93–112. \nPrevot\, Andrew. “Dialectic and Analogy in Balthasar’s ‘The Metaphysics of the Saints.’” Pro Ecclesia: A Journal of Catholic and Evangelical Theology 26\, no. 3 (Summer 2017): 261–77. \nAndrew Prevot also gave a lecture on The Hope of Exodus in Black Theology on May 9.
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-master-class-on-von-balthasars-theological-method-andrew-prevot/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190515T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190515T200000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165243Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T145333Z
UID:10000413-1557945000-1557950400@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:What is Contemplation? Reflections of a Monk
DESCRIPTION:6:30pm Dinner | 7:00pm Discussion\nOpen to current students and faculty. Dinner will be served. Cosponsored by Calvert House and the Catholic Students Association. Made possible by a grant from the Our Sunday Visitor Institute. \nFrom mindfulness while brushing one’s teeth\, to Yoga at Rockefeller\, to new meditation apps\, there is a renewed interest today in the contemplative life as a counterbalance to the active life. But what exactly is contemplation and how is it relevant to the life of a student? Come and join University of Chicago alumnus and Benedictine Monk Fr. Peter Funk\, OSB\, for a conversation about why he was drawn to a life as a contemplative monk and how the monastic vision of the interior life can enrich our busy lives. \nWe will also organize a trip to Fr. Peter’s Benedictine Monastery of the Holy Cross on Saturday\, May 18.
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-what-is-contemplation-fr-peter-funk/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190518T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190518T200000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165242Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T145329Z
UID:10000412-1558197000-1558209600@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:"The Spirit of the Liturgy" at the Monastery of the Holy Cross
DESCRIPTION:Transportation will be provided from Hyde Park. Open to current university students and faculty. Cosponsored by Calvert House. \nJoin us for an edifying evening of prayer\, dinner\, and conversation with Benedictine monks at the Monastery of the Holy Cross on the south side of Chicago. Attendees will participate in prayer of the Divine Office (Vespers and Compline)\, have dinner\, and discuss Romano Guardini’s classic work The Spirit of the Liturgy with Prior Peter Funk. Following the monastic tradition of the oral reading of a text during meals\, the students will listen to selections from The Spirit of the Liturgy while they eat\, then discuss what they’ve heard\, relating it to their own experiences and to the liturgy at the monastery. \nMore information about the monastery can be found HERE. \nSCHEDULE \n4:15pm   Meet at Gavin House (1220 E. 58th St.)\n4:30pm   Depart from Hyde Park\n5:00pm   Arrive at the Monastery\, welcome by Prior Funk\n5:15pm   Office of Vespers\n6:00pm   Dinner & Discussion\n7:15pm   Office of Compline\n8:00pm   Arrive back in Hyde Park \nStudents are also invited to a discussion with Fr. Peter on May 15 on “What is Contemplation?”
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-benedictine-monastery-visit-fr-peter-funk/
LOCATION:The Monastery of the Holy Cross\, 3111 South Aberdeen St.\nChicago\, IL 60608\, Chicago\, IL
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/2Vespers_Monks284.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190520T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190520T183000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165239Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T145326Z
UID:10000411-1558377000-1558377000@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Notre Dame de Paris : Devastation and Reconstruction
DESCRIPTION:To watch the video of the discussion\, visit the Alliance Française’s Facebook page here (first half) and here (second half). \nTo view photos of the discussion\, visit Lumen Christi’s Facebook page. \nOrganized by the Lumen Christi Institute with co-sponsor and host the Alliance Française de Chicago. \n\nFree for Alliance Française members/ $10 for non-members.  \nNotre Dame de Paris in flames. Smartphone and television screens across the world light up one after the other\, sending shockwaves as the heart of Paris burns. What is it about the old stones\, the stained glass rosette\, and the 800 year old charpente (wood roof frame) called “the forest” that brought people together for a few hours? \nArtifact of a medieval faith; icon immortalized by Victor Hugo and turned into a hit on Broadway; haut-lieu of the most touristic city in the world; pawn in renewed political and architectural high stakes. What does the cathedral in the heart of Paris mean for them\, and for each of us? \nTo sort out the history\, the meaning\, and most of all\, the future of Notre Dame de Paris\, the Alliance Francaise de Chicago welcomes Jean-Luc Marion\, theologian\, member of the Académie Française and an active participant in the founding of the Lumen Christi Institute. Jean-Luc Marion will be in conversation with Thomas Pavel\, professor at the Department of Romance Languages of the University of Chicago.
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-notre-dame-de-paris-devastation-reconstruction-jean-luc-marion-thomas-pavel/
LOCATION:Alliance Française de Chicago\, 54 West Chicago Avenue\nChicago\, IL 60610\, Downtown
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190521T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190521T200000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T145323Z
UID:10000410-1558461600-1558468800@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Weekly Non-Credit Course: "The Prophets and Christian Prayer"
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE\n6:00 Dinner | 6:30 Lecture \nThis weekly non-credit course is open to current students and faculty. Registrants are free to attend as many sessions as they choose. Sessions do not presuppose previous attendance or prior knowledge of the subject. \nIn its broadest sense\, biblical prophecy—in both the Old and New Testaments—includes the activities and utterances of seers\, dreamers\, ecstatics\, diviners\, mystics\, and declaimers of unmediated divine discourse: oracles\, instruction\, admonition\, consolation.  This course will examine literary and non-literary prophecy as a supernaturally accomplished conduit of God’s will\, along with the various instruments by which that will is communicated.  In addition\, we will look at the ways in which prophetic action and discourse shaped the contemplative and liturgical life of the early Church\, as well as the prayer of the later centuries. \nApril 9 | Introduction to Biblical Prophecy \nApril 16 | Amos & Hosea & the nəbîʾîm \nApril 23 | Isaiah \nApril 30 | Jeremiah \nMay 7 | Elijah & Elisha \nMay 14 | Ezekiel & Daniel \nMay 21 | New Testament Prophets & Prophecy
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-weekly-non-credit-course-biblical-prophecy-christian-prayer-paul-mankowski-sj/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Moses_&_Bush_Icon_Sinai_c12th_century_1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190523T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190523T170000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165236Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260322T200233Z
UID:10000409-1558630800-1558630800@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Symposium on "The Cross: History\, Art\, and Controversy"
DESCRIPTION:Listen to the symposium as a podcast episode. You can subscribe to the Lumen Christi Institute Podcast via our Soundcloud page\, iTunes channel\, Stitcher\, TuneIn\, ListenNotes\, Podbean\, Pocket Casts\, and Google Play Music. \nTo view photos of the symposium\, visit Lumen Christi’s Facebook page. \nCosponsored by the Martin Marty Center for the Public Understanding of Religion\, the Medieval Studies Workshop\, the Early Christian Studies Workshop\, and the Research in Art and Visual Evidence Workshop. Free and open to the public. Copies of the book will be available for sale at the event by the Seminary Coop Bookstore. Persons with disabilities who may need assistance should contact us at 773-955-5887 or by email.  \nJoin us for a symposium discussion of the recent book by Robin Jensen\, The Cross: History\, Art\, and Controversy (Harvard University Press\, 2017). \nIn The Cross\, Robin Jensen takes readers on an intellectual and spiritual journey through the two-thousand-year evolution of the cross as an idea and an artifact\, illuminating the controversies—along with the forms of devotion—this central symbol of Christianity inspires. Her wide-ranging study focuses on the cross in painting and literature\, the quest for the “true cross” in Jerusalem\, and the symbol’s role in conflicts from the Crusades to wars of colonial conquest. The Cross also reveals how Jews and Muslims viewed the most sacred of all Christian emblems and explains its role in public life in the West today.
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-symposium-on-cross-history-art-controversy-robin-jensen-karin-krause-bernard-mcginn/
LOCATION:Swift Hall\, 3rd Floor Lecture\, 1025 E 58th St.\nChicago\, IL 60637\, Hyde Park\, IL
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/TheCross05232019-007-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190524T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190524T170000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165235Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T145317Z
UID:10000408-1558711800-1558717200@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Humanistic Liberal Arts Education\, the University\, and the Catholic Tradition: ﻿from the Age of Van Doren and Hutchins to Today
DESCRIPTION:Open to current students and faculty \n\n\na colloquium discussion with an introductory presentation by Professor F. Russell Hittinger\, William K. Warren Professor Emeritus of Catholic Studies at the University of Tulsa\, and a response by J. Columcille Dever\, PhD Candidate in the History of Christianity at the University of Notre Dame\n3:00PM Coffee & Tea\n3:30PM Colloquium Discussion\n5:00PM Close\, Wine & Cheese Reception\n\n\nToday with the emphasis on STEM and business education\, the tradition of liberal arts education in America (and elsewhere in the world) faces a challenging environment. The recent abolition of several humanities departments at the University of Tulsa sparked protest from faculty and students who value the liberal arts tradition at that institution. Hittinger will report on the lessons to be drawn from the situation in Tulsa.\n\nIn facing this challenge\, one can learn from the case made for a liberal arts education by figures such as Robert Maynard Hutchins and Mark Van Doren at The University of Chicago and Columbia University in the first half of the 20th century. At the same time\, the current situation is radically different\, given the loss of piety for the values of the “West” and its civilization in our multi-cultural\, globalized society. In a similar way\, the academic disciplines of the humanities are less able to make a case for themselves. And the Catholic intellectual tradition would be interpreted in a different manner from how it was seen in the first half of the 20th century.\n\nOne would expect leading Catholic universities to make the liberal arts tradition central to their mission and to be in a position to play a leading role in contemporary discussion of the relevance of a curriculum of humanistic education in a democratic society. Indeed this is done in a creative way on the margins of Catholic higher education\, but not by the most prestigious or leading Catholic colleges.\n\nIronically\, in an address to Catholic educators (cited by Msgr. John Tracy Ellis in his seminal article “American Catholics and the Intellectual Life”)\, Robert Maynard Hutchins urged Catholic colleges to emphasize the “the longest intellectual tradition of any institution in the contemporary world” and\, in the words of Ellis\, to “make it come alive in American intellectual circles.”\n\nCatholic colleges seem to have missed the pearl of great price pointed to by Hutchins\, while they took up his second order challenge of matching the best secular universities in terms of “high academic standards\, development of habits of work\, and research….”\n\nThe colloquium discussion will focus on the question of how scholars at Catholic and secular universities might make a case for a humanistic liberal arts education in today’s culture and how they see its relation to “the longest intellectual tradition of any institution in the contemporary world.”\n\n\nThe article of John Tracy Ellis can be found HERE.
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-humanistic-liberal-arts-education-university-catholic-tradition-from-age-of-van-doren-hutchins-to-today-russell-hittinger/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190530T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190530T160000
DTSTAMP:20260504T163830
CREATED:20241003T165228Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T145313Z
UID:10000407-1559232000-1559232000@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Mary at the Art Institute
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE\n\nOpen to all university students. Registration Required. Cosponsored with Calvert House.\nMary is the most-depicted woman in the history of Western art\, which means that images of her are both ubiquitous and bewildering in their variety. Marian images are used in the Christian liturgy\, for private devotion\, for political statements\, and for pushing boundaries—and for almost everything else as well.\n\nJoin University of Chicago graduate students Fr. Gabriel Torretta\, OP\, and Lauren Beversluis for a visit to the Chicago Art Institute as they explain the building blocks of Marian images by discussing works that span both Mary’s own life and its living history in painting.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSCHEDULE\n\n3:30pm Meet at Gavin House\, take rideshare to the museum\n4:00pm Meet in the South Garden at the Chicago Art Institute to pray the rosary\n4:30pm Museum visit (free admission with student ID)\n6:00pm Dinner at Terzo Piano
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2019-05-mary-at-art-institute/
LOCATION:Art Institute of Chicago\, 111 S Michigan Ave.\nChicago\, IL 60603\, Downtown
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END:VEVENT
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