Check out PLT Fellow Traveler, The Online Journal of Public Theology!
The Online Journal of Public Theology promotes the church being engaged with the issues and powers of the day but ultimately captured by no one political perspective. Read More
The Online Journal of Public Theology promotes the church being engaged with the issues and powers of the day but ultimately captured by no one political perspective. Read More
Although the Episcopal Church was the first to establish a black congregation, African Americans are still working to achieve a unified body in which their beliefs are recognized not through social prejudices but the lens of the Catholic faith. Read More
The Third Reconstruction: Moral Mondays, Fusion Politics, and the Rise of a New Justice Movement is Rev. Dr. William J. Barber’s memoir of the 2013 grassroots movement in North Carolina that protested restrictions on voting and demanded a make-over of the state government. Read More
Becca Stevens reflects on a journey of triumph for impoverished tea laborers, hope for café workers, and insight into the history of tea. Read More
Susan R. Holman, member of the Project’s Virginia Seminar and senior writer at the Global Health Education and Learning Incubator at Harvard University, won the 2016 Grawemeyer Award in Religion for her new book, Beholden: Religion, Global Health, and Human Rights. Read More
The Project on Lived Theology is now accepting applications for the 2016 Summer Internship in Lived Theology. Read More
Among the many contributors to our resource collection we are also gathering a number of Fellow Travelers. Fellow travelers are scholars, activists, and practitioners that embody the ideals and commitments of the Project on Lived Theology. We admire their work and are … Read More
Project Contributor David Dark’s newest publication, Life’s Too Short to Pretend You’re Not Religious, is to be released in February 2016. Read More
The video recording of John M. Perkins delivering the 2015 fall CAPPS lecture, entitled “Has the Dream Become a Nightmare? Prospects for Reconciliation in the Wake of the New Racism,” is now ready to be viewed. Read More
On Thursday, December 3 at 5pm, Dr. Jennifer McBride will present a lecture entitled “Lived Theology on Death Row: The Story of Kelly Gissendaner,” at St. Paul’s Memorial Church,1700 University Ave., Charlottesville, VA. Read More
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