What's New at GTU
For doctoral program announcements and deadlines, please visit the Dean's Newsletter
October 29, 2008
Center for the Arts, Religion, and Eduction (CARE) welcomes new director
Carin Jacobs has taken on the mantle of Acting Director of CARE replacing the void left by Kristin Mandia. Jacobs is already a faculty member with CARE, teaching courses in Museum Literacy. She has a background in museums in higher education, most recently at the education department at the Magnes in Berkeley. She anticipates spreading CARE’s visibility among local and regional art communities in addition to working intimately with the GTU. Jacobs can be reached at the CARE office at 510/849-8285 or by email.
October 28, 2008
In Memoriam: Mary Williams, 1932-2008
Mary Williams was director of the Flora Lamson Hewlett Library from 1991 to 1997. She served as head of Serials and head of Technical Services from 1981 until her appointment as interim library director in 1990. During her directorship, the library moved toward automation of the catalog and other library systems. She also oversaw the installation of Stephen DeStaebler's "Winged Figure" in the rotunda. Williams held a B.A. and M.L.S. from UC-Berkeley and a M.A. from San Francisco Theological Seminary. She was also an active elder in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).
September 25, 2008
GTU doctoral student curates exhibit chronicling the experiences of Italian Jews
David Rosenberg-Wohl, a joint doctoral student in Jewish studies at the
Graduate Theological Union and UC Berkeley, now also a curator, vividly
tells the stories of Jews living in Italy through his exhibit "Il
Ghetto: Forging Italian Jewish Identities 1516-1870" at the Museo
ItaloAmericano in San Francisco. The exhibit runs through February 15, Noon-4 p.m., Tuesday-Sunday at the Museo ItaloAmericano, Building C, Fort Mason Center, Marina Boulevard at Buchanan Street, San Francisco. (415) 673-2200. Free.
Read the article by the San Francisco Chronicle...
September 19, 2008
Center for Islamic Studies investigates Islam in the media thanks to grant from the Carnegie Corporation
The Carnegie Corporation awards $25,000 to the Center for Islamic Studies
(CIS) for studying how Islam is perceived and reported in the news. CIS Director Munir Jiwa is planning a two-day
workshop for collaborative study and work among scholars, journalists
and community leaders. Read more...
September 17, 2008
Rev. Dr. Victor Roland Gold, Henry C. Luckey Professor of Old Testament Emeritus, passes
Dr. Gold was born September 18, 1924, in Garden City, Kansas. He graduated from Wartburg College, Waverly, Iowa, in 1945, and attended Wartburg Theological Seminary, Dubuque, Iowa, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Divinity degree in 1946. in 1951 he received his doctoral degree in Old Testament studies from the John Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, a student of William Foxwell Albright.
In 1956, Dr. Gold was called to be Professor of Old Testament at Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary, where he served for more than 50 years. He retired from PLTS in 2004, but continued to teach courses part-time each semester until this fall.
Dr. Gold died Wednesday afternoon at Salem Lutheran Home in Oakland, CA. He is survived by his wife, the Rev. Frances Noreen Meginness; a son, Victor Jr, and his wife, Christine; a daughter, Joanne; two step-children, Shannon and Timothy and his wife Michelle; eight grandchildren and three great grandchildren. A son Stephan died in 1987. Read more...
Alumna Holland Honored with Appointment and Teaching Award
Suzanne Holland, University of Puget Sound religion department chair and professor of ethics, has been appointed Philip M. Phibbs Research Professor and honored with the 2008 President’s Excellence in Teaching Award, based on her “passion for teaching, ability to inspire, capacity to motivate students, and enduring intellectual capacity.” Holland graduated from the Graduate Theological Union in 1997 with a Ph.D. in Ethics and Social Theory. Read more...
September 11, 2008
The Koret Foundation and the Taube Foundation for Jewish Life and
Culture have awarded $900,000 to support the Center for Jewish Studies (CJS)
The Koret Foundation
awarded $600,000, both for the Center’s general operations and for the
president’s highest priorities. The Taube Foundation for Jewish Life
and Culture awarded CJS $300,000 for the Center’s general programs,
student field research fellowships, and conferences. Read more...
August 13, 2008
GTU Student wins North American Academy of Ecumenists Essay Contest
The North American Academy of Ecumenists (NAAE) announces that Erin Brigham, doctoral candidate in Systematic and Philosophical Theology, submitted the winning essay on this year's topic, Ecumenical Ecclesiology: One Church of Christ for the Sake of the World. Brigham will receive her award, recognizing the accomplishment of her scholarly submission entitled A Habermasian Approach to Ecumenical Ecclesiology, at the NAAE Annual Meeting in St. Louis, MO, in September.
July 24, 2008
Peters Named Martin E. Marty Professor of Religion and the Academy
Ted Peters, professor of systematic theology at the Graduate
Theological Union and Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary, has been
named the Martin E. Marty Professor of Religion and the Academy at St.
Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota. Peters,
a renowned author and scholar focusing on the interplay between
theology and science, will serve in this capacity for the 2009 calendar
year. Read more...
July 11, 2008
Alumna Jenny Plane-Te Paa Makes London Daily Telegraph's 'Power List'
Dr. Te Paa, Ahorangi or Principal of Te Rau Kahikatea at the College
of St. John the Evangelist in Auckland, New Zealand, was named 20th
among the London Daily Telegraph’s 50 most influential Anglicans.
The Telegraph called her
“an influential voice in Anglican liberal circles,” for her
outspokenness in condemning homophobia, and her claim that the
obsession of the church with trying to determine who should be allowed
to remain within its fold distracted it from the suffering in the
world. Read more...
Note: 2nd on the Telegraph’s 50 most influential Anglicans list is Katharine Jefferts Schori, Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church of the US, who earned an MDiv and DD from GTU’s member school Church Divinity School of the Pacific.
June 4, 2008
Alumna Mary E. Hunt Receives Katzenstein Award from Harvard Divinity
The Harvard Divinity School Alumni/ae Association honored Dr. Hunt with the 2008 Rabbi Martin Katzenstein Award at
the annual Harvard Divinity School Alumni/ae Dinner in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. Hunt earned her doctorate from the GTU and is the co-founder and co-director of the Women's Alliance for
Theology, Ethics, and Ritual (WATER) in Silver Spring, Maryland. A
prominent feminist theologian and Catholic active in the women-church
movement, she lectures and writes on theology and ethics with
particular attention to liberation issues. Read more...
May 14, 2008
Consortial Registrar Sharon-Gay Smith Retires after 37 Years of Service to GTU
“My job isn’t a job. It’s a ministry. And the GTU has given me community and allowed me to practice my ministry.” Day in and day out, she has given students down-to-earth,
day-to-day practical help, ranging from advice about where to find
affordable housing to how to register for classes. “Throughout all those years, my attitude has been that we are here to
help the students.” Read more...
May 9, 2008
Jerome Baggett Receives 2008 Sarlo Excellence in Teaching Award
Snake-handling Pentecostals in Appalachia, Muslim feminists in the
Middle East, and leaders in the Central American peace movement: These
are a few of the many religious groups Jerome Baggett encourages his
students to explore and “to see.” “We conflate religion with ‘official’ religion, that is, clerical
authority, doctrines, hymns -- and we often mistake religion for ‘a’
religion,” says Baggett. “My goal is to get students out of my
classroom and into the Bay Area ‘religious classroom’ to experience a
diversity of lived religions.” Read more...
April 14, 2008
Papal Mass to Include GTU Student's Songs
Choristers
in the April 17 Papal Mass at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C. will
sing two songs by GTU Ph.D. student Ricky Manalo. Manalo’s
compositions, “Come, O Spirit of God” and “Pange Lingua,” will be featured in the prelude and communion. Read more...
February 8, 2008
Founding GTU President John Dillenberger Passes Away, 1918-2008
Dillenberger was a giant in the life and history of the GTU. In addition to his
distinguished career as a scholar of historical theology, he was
instrumental in the founding of the GTU. He was Dean and President of
the GTU from 1967-1971, and served in leadership roles in the GTU
throughout his career -- from Acting Library Director, to Acting
President (1999-2000), to GTU Board member.
For stories prior to 2008, visit our News Archive