Joseph Goss Joseph Goss

Faith & College Life: A Report on Student Spiritual and Intellectual Development

The Lilly Network of Church-Related Colleges and Universities is pleased to share the report, “Faith & College Life,” on the Lilly Network Survey on Student Spiritual and Intellectual Development. We give thanks to the 34 colleges and universities that administered the survey to their students in Fall 2023, 34 students who participated in focus group sessions, and to Springtide Research Institute for creating the survey, analyzing the results, and preparing this report.

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Union University Faculty Mentoring Program Kicks Off with Weeklong Retreat
Joseph Goss Joseph Goss

Union University Faculty Mentoring Program Kicks Off with Weeklong Retreat

From Union University’s website - click here for more information!

JACKSON, Tenn. — Aug. 13, 2024 — Union University faculty completed a weeklong retreat at the Scarritt Bennett Center in Nashville, Tenn., Aug. 4-9 designed to renew their sense of vocation.

The retreat was the first phase of a new mentoring program led by Union professors Gavin Richardson and Jean Marie Walls, supported by the provost’s office and largely funded by a grant from the Lilly Network of Church-Related Colleges and Universities.

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Announcing the Winner of the 2023 Lilly Network Book Award
Joseph Goss Joseph Goss

Announcing the Winner of the 2023 Lilly Network Book Award

After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging, by Willie James Jennings. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2020. ISBN: 978-0802878441.

After Whiteness addresses many of the most important contemporary themes in higher education—inclusion, access, racial justice, and diversity in the academy—and it does so in a truly novel way—a way that gives those of us in the academy, and especially those of us in theological education or who want to understand higher education within a Christian context, eyes to see and ears to hear. This is because Jennings roots his reflections on racial justice within a larger narrative of the academy, and in doing so sheds light on the way the contemporary academy’s goals and ideals of liberal education are marred in hidden ways by the wounds of colonialism, racism, and economic exploitation. While higher education in Jenning’s telling both liberates and forms us, these darker legacies also enslave and deform.

To enable us to see and hear, Jennings employs stories, poetry, and imagery in such a way that opens our hearts to the ways in which activities such as grading, faculty searches, and plagiarism involve practices that are complicit in this deformation but also hopeful sites of redemption. These vignettes, these stories, stick with the reader—they become opportunities for meditation, for reflection on why we think and do the things we do in higher education, and how we could rethink these activities in light of the gospel—the good news that Jesus meets those following him—the motley crowds—with love and offers them a home in which they belong. This book is meant to be read over and over again. It offers hope. It offers a path to learning—a path not just to integrating learning with faith but also towards learning that is animated by hope and love.

Check back with us for updates on the biennial Lilly Network Book Award.

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