Advent Reflections

http://www.ctlibrary.com/ct/2004/decemberweb-only/12-6-52.0.html

Art with a Message

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=114328601

A helpful and informative blog on human trafficking

Research Ideas and Resources

Identifying, thinking through, exploring, gathering evidence and ideas… all a part of the learning process.

 This link from the Campbell Collaboration begins to identify “burning questions” on social welfare, justice, and education.

EXCITING POSSIBLITIES FOR RESEARCH!!! 

http://www.campbellcollaboration.org/burningq/index.php

Women in Pakistan

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32708511/ns/dateline_nbc-picture_stories/displaymode/1247/?beginSlide=1

Pictures are worth more than 1000 words… there is much work to do.

Why Women’s Studies Today?

 Because 500 days of Summer is NOT a love story, but a story about love…

And because women and children of the world remain the “poorest of the poor” of the world’s populations today. UNIFEM press release, www.unifem.org

And because “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth…So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.” (Genesis 1:1, 27)

Women’s Studies as an academic discipline was created to educate women and society in general of feminist thought and women’s rights during the mid-twentieth century. Women’s Studies at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary (NOBTS) is a thoughtful Christian response to the history and development of feminist philosophy in the academy and popular culture.

It is an opportunity to study the philosophies at play in culture regarding gender and sexuality as understood through the biblical narrative, resulting in compassionate and intelligent ministry in postmodern culture.

What is Women’s Studies?

-   Designed to equip students to understand questions related to human dignity and Christian belief today.

-  Focused on the philosophical components underlying gender related issues in ministry

-  Concerned with the practical aspects of how to address complex questions of gender through ministry praxis, such as social responsibility and justice issues.

Taking Women’s Studies courses will prepare you to:

-understand and minister to young adult and collegiate women

- work in helping professions addressing gender equity with women and children in the international and local arena

- research, write, and debate biblical and social justice issues in the Academy

Why would I major in Women’s Studies in seminary?

- You will learn to think critically and consider questions from various sources, inside and outside Christian orthodoxy, and learn to analyze those sources.

- You will study with scholars who challenge your ideas and expect your honesty as you debate and process those ideas.

- You will be challenged to apply the ideas you encounter as you minister in your community and the world.

Real Needs and Real Study

What are the needs and issues facing women today? A brief look at several cultural issues related to gender, and women particularly, reveals the tip of the iceberg.

 

-In March 2007 the United Nations Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking  

(UN.GIFT) was created because “human trafficking is a crime of such magnitude and atrocity that it cannot be dealt with successfully by any government alone.”

(www.ungift.org).

 

- Oxfam, a research institute founded to address needs of developing countries, states that the majority of the world’s poor are women: around 70 percent of the 1.3 billion people who live in extreme poverty, on less than one dollar a day, are women and girls. (Introduction to Oxfam, http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what_we_do/issues/gender/introduction.htm (Accessed June 8, 2007).

 

-The “Faces of AIDS” webpage sponsored by the International Mission Board asks for prayer for the caregivers of those affected by the HIV/AIDS pandemic because “the customs of the African culture make it difficult for women to protect themselves against AIDS. Many women are faithful to their spouse but discover they are HIV-positive since it is culturally acceptable for men to have multiple wives and many sexual partners.” (http://imb.org/AIDS/prayer.asp).

 

What do you do in the face of such tragedy and crisis? What kind of a response is required from concerned Believers who desire to see the Gospel affect the lives of so many in need? At New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, the new MDiv/ Women’s Studies degree was created to begin educating students not only of the monolithic crises related to gender issues that exist in the world today, but also the theological and philosophical concerns that lie beneath them. Ultimately, to the end that the whole counsel of God’s Word would be considered and appreciated as to its urgency in speaking to those issues; and the relevancy of the Gospel in reconciling lost humanity to God.

 

Students will take courses on international women’s issues, women and Islam, women and the early church, and theology of manhood and womanhood. In order to gain clarity on the magnitude of the influence this thought has had on gender related issues, students will take a course in comparative feminist theology, where various methods and beliefs are considered and the impact they had on the theology of the proponents’ views. To the end that students are prepared to understand and appreciate nuances these views create in worldviews today.

 

So, when the writers of Newsweek magazine ask, “What is gender anyway?”, students will be better prepared to address such questions. Ultimately, in fact, to help them understand the broader realities related to those questions. For example, how biblical statements like, “Let Us make man in our image, after our likeness, and let them have dominion” should inform and instruct twenty-first century Believers to live lives and to lead ministries that are both socially aware and biblically faithful.

 

The task of understanding what it means to be created in the image of God and the implications of the dominion entrusted to humanity at Creation has always been challenging. Anything related to who we are as men and women is intensely personal, therefore introducing a potential minefield of secondary and tertiary issues related to this discussion. However, in an age when meaning and significance is increasingly difficult to discern, time is of the essence in assisting future generations rediscover the beauty and the importance of human essence and existence. Helping students today recover this connection theologically and biblically is the goal of the Women’s Studies MDiv at NOBTS.

 

Who is Macrina?

Macrina was the spunky, intellectual sister of church fathers Basil the Great and Gregory of Nyssa. She was known for loving theological debate and fervent spiritual devotion. Macrina served everyone around her, and especially her family, in her ancient world context through challenging them to live their life honestly and intelligently before God.

This blog, Macrina’s Chronicles, will obviously not be original thoughts or posts by Macrina of the second century AD. However, it will be a consortium of opinions and ideas related to current theological, spiritual, philosophical, and cultural issues today by women of kindred spirit to Macrina who have similar concerns and passions in this postmodern world. 

Macrina’s brother, Gregory, once described the life lived with God as one from “beginning to beginning, where beginnings never cease.” This blog will attempt to encourage and inspire conversation and dialogue of issues related to living the Christian life today.