Project Staff

Charles Marsh - Project Director

Charles Marsh is Professor of Religious and Theological Studies and Director of the Project on Lived Theology. Marsh grew up in a minister's family in Alabama and Mississippi. He studied English literature and philosophy at Gordon College and philosophical theology at Harvard Divinity School and the University of Virginia, where he received his doctorate. In 1986 and 1987, he was a research fellow at the University of Zürich and the Baptist Theological Seminary, in Rüschlikon, Switzerland; in 1989 and 1992, he held a post-doctorate in philosophical theology at the Free University of Amsterdam and at the University of Heidelberg. Before coming to Virginia, he was a member of the Theology Department at Loyola College in Maryland, and served as the theologian-in-residence at the Episcopal Cathedral of the Incarnation in Baltimore.

After publishing Reclaiming Dietrich Bonhoeffer: The Promise of His Theology (Oxford, 1994), he began considering the religious and moral paradoxes of his white southern Protestant upbringing. He was struck by the complex ways theological commitments and convictions came alive in the Civil Rights Movement. The theological beliefs and social practices of ordinary people of faith illuminated a new way of writing theology for him, the first fruit being God's Long Summer: Stories of Faith and Civil Rights (Princeton, 1997) which won the 1998 Grawemeyer Award in Religion. His memoir, The Last Days: A Son's Story of Sin and Segregation at the Dawn of a New South (Basic, 2001), is a coming of age account of a Southern Baptist minister’s son in a small southern town in the late sixties, which Dennis Covington has called “a stunning portrait of family love". The Beloved Community: How Faith Shapes Social Justice, from the Civil Rights Movement to Today (Basic, 2005), offers a fresh interpretation of the American search for authentic community in the decades since the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement and includes a narrative of the rise and fall of the evangelical counter-culture.

Marsh's new book, Wayward Christian Soldiers: Freeing the Gospel from Political Captivity (Oxford, June 2007), is a theological meditation on the confusions and catastrophes of American civic piety. 

Marsh is currently in the early stages of writing a new biography of Dietrich Bonhoeffer.  This will be first major trade biography in several decades of the German theologian and dissident.  The book will be published by Knopf.

He is also co-authoring a book with John M. Perkins titled Building Beloved Communities: The Witness of Peace and the Practices of Mercy in Post-Civil Rights America, to be published in Fall 2008 by Intervarsity Press. The book is based on lectures by Marsh and Perkins at the Teaching Communities Conference at the Duke Divinity School Center for Reconciliation.

Kristina García Wade - Project Manager

Kristina was born and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii before unadvisedly leaving the tropics to pursue collegiate study. Kristina attended Dartmouth College and studied at la Universidad Autonóma de Yucatán and la Universidad de La Habana, where she conducted a research project on Cuban race relations in the post-Cold War era. She wrote her thesis on the concept of home in the borderland literature of Toni Morrison, Gloria Anzaldúa and Tara Bray Smith. After graduating from Dartmouth College with honors in the English major, Kristina worked in the publishing industry for three years at Smith and Kraus and at University Press of New England in the fields of marketing, publicity, and editing. She moved to Virginia in June 2007, where she was introduced to the Project on Lived Theology after writing an article on a Project participant. Kristina lives in Free Union, Virginia with her husband, a pediatric resident at the University of Virginia, and their two coonhounds.


Rebekah Menning - Coordinator for the Virginia Seminar

Bekah comes to the Project with significant domestic and international experience in faith-based community organizing. After completing her B.A. in Social Work from Hope College, she served as an Americorps VISTA volunteer in Hamilton, Montana. Though she enjoyed the spectacular scenery and the hospitality of the people she met in the rural west, Bekah felt called to be back in the city at the end of her VISTA year. She moved to Washington, D.C. to work with Call to Renewal and Sojourners magazine and later completed a Master of Social Work in Community Organization from Howard University, during which she interned with the Interfaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington. Upon graduation, she spent four months living, learning, and working in a predominantly Zulu township south of Durban, South Africa as project assistant for a church-based community center. Before coming to the Project, Bekah also worked for Charlottesville Abundant Life Ministries in Charlottesville,Virginia. She currently lives in New Haven, CT, where her husband, Willis Jenkins, teaches social ethics at Yale Divinity School.

 

Ethan Richardson - Undergraduate Research Assistant

Ethan is a fourth-year undergraduate English and Religious Studies major at the University of Virginia, concentrating primarily on philosophical theology and ethics, while also taking classes in creative writing and American literature. In the summers, he has served as a pastoral intern at Imago Dei Community in Portland, OR (2006) and as a camp counselor (2007). In addition to researching with Professor Marsh, he is currently working for the Charlottesville Quality Community Council's (QCC) urban farming initiative, while also serving in UVa's Environmental Sustainability Committee. As a part of the Distinguished Majors Program in Religious Studies, Ethan plans to write his thesis on Bonhoeffer and the Harlem Renaissance, the expansive and communicative ability of theology, through the arts, to enter into a community of change. His current interests include literature and theological aesthetics, the culture of agriculture, and learning the banjo. 



Project Alumni

Sarah Azaransky - Graduate Research Assistant

Sarah Azaransky received her Ph.D. in Religious Studies from the University of Virginia in 2007. Her dissertation, The Dream is Freedom: Pauli Murray's Theology of American Democracy, argues that Murray offers a vision of democratic community that is rooted in a theological understanding of reconciliation and fueled by a robust democratic faith. Sarah is currently a postdoctoral teaching fellow in religious ethics at the University of San Diego.

 

Kendall Cox - Graduate Research Assistant

Kendall is a Ph.D. student in Religious Studies at UVA. She is in the "Theology, Ethics, and Culture" program and her focus is philosophical theology. Kendall earned her BA at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, NC, where she studied Religion and Studio Art. She graduated with The John Allen Easley Medal and Award for excellence in Religious Studies (May 2002). Kendall completed her Master of Divinity at Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia (2006). During her time in Vancouver, she was a pastoral intern at Grandview Calvary Baptist Church and worked at the Crossroads Community Project as an art therapy assistant. After finishing her masters she returned to Charlottesville with her husband Stephen Hitchcock, who is pursuing ordination in the Presbyterian Church (USA). Kendall spent the year working as an assistant art teacher and full time artist before beginning doctoral studies. One of her research interests is the way different understandings of the Trinity inform ecclesial practices, structures, and relationships. Her essay “The Trinitarian Dialectic of Creative Fullness and God’s Shared Mission of Suffering Love” won the 2006 Richard and Louise Goodwin Prize for Excellence in Theological Writing.

 

Ashley Diaz - Project Assistant

Ashley Diaz, Graduate Research Assistant Ashley Diaz finished an M.A. in Theology, Ethics, and Culture at the University of Virginia in the spring of 2006. She received her B.A. from Rhodes College in 2001 with a double major in Religious Studies and Philosophy. While at Rhodes, she began volunteering in the South Memphis community and conducted research there with the Nation of Islam for her senior thesis on creation myths in the Nation of Islam and the Aryan Nations, published in the Fall 2002 Journal of Theta Alpha Kappa. Before coming to UVA, she worked as a church community organizer in North Memphis and then returned to South Memphis in the fall of 2001 to join the full time staff as the educational director of Streets Ministries (www.streetsministries.org), a community development organization and youth ministry started in 1987 and located in the Cleaborne-Foote housing projects. There, Ashley ran a college preparatory mentoring program for middle and high school aged students and directed Summer Institute, a five week intensive study for neighborhood high school students, emphasizing economic development, African-American history, and reconciliation movements. An essay about her time at Streets is in the upcoming publication Transformations. Ashley's scholarly interests include the relationship of theology and race, the sociological and theological constructs of community building, and reconciliation movements.

 

Jacob Goodson - Graduate Research Assistant

Jacob is a doctoral student in the department of religious studies at UVa. He works in the area of "Theology, Ethics, Culture" with a concentration in philosophical theology. He is currently writing his dissertation on William James and the logic of biblical interpretation. Jacob's articles have been published in Contemporary Pragmatism and Streams of William James. He is co-editing with Brad Elliott Stone a collection of essays on the American philosopher Richard Rorty tentatively titled Rorty, Religion, and the Religious: Confessional and Critical Engagements. He is co-editor of The Journal for Scriptural Reasoning and he leads both Biblical Reasoning and Scriptural Reasoning community groups in Charlottesville.

Jacob is a member of the Atlantic Coast Pragmatist group (which he founded), the Society for Scriptural Reasoning, and Young Scholars of the Baptist Academy. He is an adjunct professor at the Baptist Theological Seminary in Richmond. His wife, Angela, stays home with their two daughters Sophia Grace and Seraphina Rose. He enjoys baseball, playing with two daughters, and watching comedies about marriage with his wife.

 

Jennifer McBride - Graduate Research Assistant

Jenny earned her Ph.D. in philosophical theology from the Religious Studies Department at the University of Virginia. She received a 2006-2007 Louisville Institute Dissertation Fellowship for the Study of Protestantism and American Culture for her dissertation, “The Church for the World: A Theology of Public Witness Constructed from Bonhoeffer’s Thought.” An article from her dissertation appeared in Religion, Religionlessness and Contemporary Western Culture, edited by Stephen Pland and Ralf K. Wüstenberg and published in 2008 by Peter Lang in Franfurt, Germany. Jenny has taught Accelerated Academic Writing in the English Department and received the 2005-2006 Outstanding Graduate Teaching Assistantship Award in the Department of Religious Studies. After graduating from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1999 as a Bernard Boyd Fellow in Religious Studies, she worked at The Southeast White House (SEWH), an inner city community house in Southeast Washington DC . (To learn more about the SEWH see McBride's essay.) Jenny was startled by the dichotomy between the nation's powerful and powerless and began to wrestle with issues surrounding poverty, privilege and race, particularly from a theological perspective. She writes about this in her essay, "Living the Questions: Privilege, Poverty and Faith," published in Get Up Off Your Knees: Preaching the U2 Catalog (Cowley, 2003). Her interest in the Protestant church’s engagement in public life has led to participation in programs like the Civitas Fellowship and Summer Institute, to trips like the 2006 Centenary Study Tour of Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s Life and Legacy in Germany and Poland, and to speaking engagements with the local Left of Center, and the national Erasing Hate Dialogue Series, which commemorated the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the slave trade in February 2007. She is co-editor of a forthcoming Fortress Press volume that interprets Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Martin Luther King, Jr. and their legacies together in relation to Christian social thought. Jenny is currently a post-doctoral fellow in Religious Practices and Practical Theology at Emory University, a position funded by the Lilly Endowment. She will be teaching at Emory Candler School of Theology during the 2008-2009 school year.

Peter Slade - Graduate Research Assistant

Peter Slade, Graduate Research Assistant Peter Slade received a doctorate degree in Religious Studies at the University of Virginia in the spring of 2006. His dissertation, Open Friendship in a Closed Society: Mission Mississippi and a Theology of Friendship, brings the lived experience of an ecumenical racial reconciliation initiative in Jackson, Mississippi into conversation with academic theologies of reconciliation and friendship. His research and teaching marry his interest in Practical Theology and History with a particular focus on Race, Social Justice and the American South. Prior to studying at UVa, Slade earned an M.A. in Southern Studies from the University of Mississippi and a B.D. with Honours in Christian Ethics and Practical Theology from St. Andrews University, Scotland. He also worked for 5 years as a community development worker for the Church of England during which time he also studied at Ruskin College, Oxford. Slade held a dissertation fellowship from the Louisville Institute for The Study of Protestantism and American Culture and was a fellow at UVa's Center on Religion and Democracy. In 2004, he was an honoree in the Seven Society Graduate Fellowship for Superb Teaching. Pete is currently an assistant professor in the Religion Department at Ashland University in Ashland, OH.

 

Richard Wills - Graduate Research Assistant

Richard, a Ph.D. graduate of the University of Virginia in the area of Religious Ethics, is the former pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, Montgomery, AL and is currently on faculty as assistant professor of Ethics and Systematic Theology at the School of Theology, Virginia Union University. His most recent publication by Oxford University Press entitled Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Image of God, is scheduled for a Spring 2009 release. The book provides a reconsideration of King’s position as mediating theologian, and the subsequent implications of his theological anthropology for cause of the civil rights. While unapologetically filtered through the lens of his Christian faith, the doctrine of imagoDei provided King with a theological rationale that was capable of addressing community beyond provincial notions of justice for its own pursuit, so as to offer the broadest possibility for human interest and participation.

 

Aurelius Wilson - Graduate Research Assistant

Aurelius K. Wilson, Esq. will begin his second year as doctoral student in the Theology, Ethics and Culture program at the University of Virginia in the fall of 2006. Originally from Los Angeles, Aurelius received his B.A. in Philosophy from Morehouse College, his J.D. from George Washington University and a M.A. in Religious Studies from Howard University. His masters thesis, "Living Within The Divine Presence: Howard Thurman's Worldview and its Implications for Spirituality, Theology and Ethics," revisits the deep insights Thurman provides for embodied theology as a continuous mode of being/way of life. Aurelius's doctoral studies will explore theology, philosophy and culture in a comparative framework (East/West, First/Third World) to assess diverse worldviews and competing articulations of normative ideals. These interests will ultimately coalesce around religious experience, spiritual formation, multiculturalism and social justice. With his extensive experience in the law, Aurelius hopes to engage issues of equity and justice in American society at the systemic level.