Theology Webcast for the Week of December 17, 2023

A video of the 10 a.m. theology class from Sunday, December 17, is available. Subscribe to our theology playlist on YouTube.

Today’s Theology Talk was led by Dr. Nicholas Hayes-Mota Assistant Director of Boston College’s Clough Center for the Study of Constitutional Democracy.

This talk explored the historical connection between the Christian church in the U.S. and the Alinsky tradition of community organizing, from which contemporary “faith-based community organizing” derives. Starting from Saul Alinsky’s early work with immigrant Catholic parishes in Chicago’s Back of the Yards neighborhood during the 1930s, I showed how community organizing began as a practice for engaging churches in pursuing the common good of their local communities–and beyond. I then traced how organizing has continued to develop as a church-rooted practice from Alinsky’s day to the present. In surveying this history, I focused on two main themes. The first concerns how organizing has “broadened” its ecclesial engagement beyond its original Catholic base to include other Christian (and eventually) non-Christian traditions. The second concerns how organizing has “deepened” its ecclesial engagement, by more fully integrating theology and concentrating more intensively on personal and congregational development.

The Adult Education program at Saint Thomas Church offers sound Christian teaching presented with intellectual vigor, teaching that is grounded in Holy Scripture, mediated by the catholic tradition that is the inheritance of Anglicanism and set forth in the Book of Common Prayer. For more information about our theology program and to receive links for weekly Sunday Theology Talks, please contact Fr. Gioia.

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