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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20191014T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20191014T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20190806T151302Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190806T151302Z
UID:18220-1571052600-1571058000@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:The Monday Connection: Ed Clements
DESCRIPTION:The Monday Connection Welcomes\nEd Clements\nof KLBJ Radio\n\n\n  \n\nMonday\, October 14\, 2019  |  11:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m.\nWeeks Campus Center\nSeminary of the Southwest  |  501 E. 32nd St.\, Austin\, TX 78705 \n\n\n\nEd Clements\, veteran news talk show host and sportscaster\, will share his wealth of experience of over 30 years in radio. \nRaised in Brownwood\, Texas\, Ed moved to Austin in 1989 and began working for KLBJ Radio and has remained with KLBJ ever since. He is a co-host on KLBJ’s Jeff and Ed Show\, Sports Saturday with The Fifteenth Club and The End Zone. He also hosts Crenshaw on Golf on Sirius XM PGA Tour Radio with Ben Crenshaw. \nEd has contributed greatly to numerous organizations in Austin\, such as the American Heart Association\, and as a current board member for Alzheimer’s Texas Association\, and Arc of the Capital Area. Clements also works closely with the Austin golf community\, working with two-time Masters champion Ben Crenshaw\, volunteering for the First Tee of Austin\, and supporting Swinging Fore the Arc annual golf event. \nClements is married to Betsy Kellogg Clements and is the father of two sons\, Ben and Ferris Clements. He is a member of Good Shepherd Episcopal Church.  \n\nQuestions? Please contact Karla Gillan at 512.439.0333 or karla.gillan@ssw.edu\n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/clements/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20191015
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20191016
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20191001T201056Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191001T201056Z
UID:18395-1571097600-1571183999@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Fall Open House: Clinical Mental Health Counseling and Spiritual Formation
DESCRIPTION:Seminary of the Southwest will host a vocational degrees Open House this fall for the Master of Arts in Clinical Mental Health Counseling and the Master of Arts in Spiritual Formation. These events will include an opportunity for you to learn about each program directly from the faculty. There will also be time to ask admissions/financial aid questions\, and campus tour. \nClick to register to register for Tuesday\, Oct. 15th @6pm \nClick to register for Tuesday\, Nov. 12th @6pm \nMore information about our Center degree programs:\nMaster of Arts in Clinical Mental Health Counseling\nMaster of Arts in Spiritual Formation \n  \nQuestions?\n \nContact: \nBritt James\, Center Enrollment Manager\n512-439-0374\nbrittany.james@ssw.edu \nFAST LINKS\nEncounter\nVideos – “The Center”\nAdmissions\nFinancial Aid\nApply Now! \nLooking forward to having you on campus soon.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/fall-open-house-clinical-mental-health-counseling-and-spiritual-formation/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20191107
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20191110
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20190716T182243Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190716T182243Z
UID:18204-1573084800-1573343999@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:2019 Blandy Lectures and Alumni Convocation
DESCRIPTION:We invite you to the 2019 Blandy Lectures and Alumni Convocation!\nhttp://ssw.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/curry_blandy.mp4\nJoin us for the convocation on November 7–9\, 2019.\nAlongside thoughtful programming\, Blandy offers alumni\, students\, faculty\, and friends of the seminary an opportunity to reconnect through worship\, fun\, and fellowship. In addition to the thought-provoking speaker and programming\, attendees are invited to worship in Christ Chapel\, a fun Friday night dinner\, and to cheer on the ThuriBulls at the annual Polity Bowl. \nIn a world where our awareness and understanding of mental-health issues is growing\, Blandy lecturer Dr. Warren Kinghorn will speak to the convocation about the intersection of Christian communities and mental-health care\, especially around the issue of moral injury. \n  \nRegister today: \n\n \nLearn more about the entire 3 day event below: \nKeynote Lectures by Dr. Warren Kinghorn\nThursday\, November 7: Walking with Veterans After War: Combat Trauma\, Moral Injury\, and the Journey Home\n\n\n\nAround 1 in 5 veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan\, as well as many veterans of other conflicts\, meet criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)\, and many veterans live with difficult memories of actions witnessed or done in war\, which is often described as “moral injury.”  The experiences now known as moral injury were deeply connected to the rise of the diagnosis of PTSD\, were systematically forgotten\, and are now being recognized and remembered.   But moral injury cannot be reduced to a clinical category; rather\, in pointing beyond individual veterans to the social and moral context of war and military life\, moral injury demands that veterans be recognized not as bearers of unwanted psychiatric symptoms but as moral and spiritual agents who are seeking to survive in a morally fragmented world.   Veterans with moral injury\, in other words\, are not machines that need fixing but wayfarers who need connection and accompaniment.  Engaging clinical\, ethical\, political\, and theological dimensions of moral injury\, we will explore steps for walking faithfully and helpfully with returning combat veterans in ways that honor agency\, promote connection\, and encourage vocation.\n  \nDr. Kinghorn’s lecture on Thursday\, November 7 at 7:30 p.m. is free and open to the public. \n  \nFriday\, November 8: From Control to Wonder: Action\, Contemplation\, and Modern Mental Health Care\nMental health care\, especially the practice of psychiatry\, is often focused on establishing and maintaining control over distressing or disvalued emotion\, experience\, and behavior.   Control over one’s body and one’s life is an important human good\, especially for survivors of trauma.   But control is not the highest good\, and programs of mental health care that focus on control may promote unhealthy practices of self-surveillance and subjection to technologies of control.   By contrast\, Christian reflection on action and contemplation has often emphasized that control is a proximate good that enables and points toward the higher goods of love\, wonder\, and contemplation.   What would it look like for mental health care practices to be oriented not toward control but toward wonder?   Focusing on St. Thomas Aquinas’ treatment of the active life and contemplative life (Summa theologiae IIaIIae qq. 179-182)\, we will explore the role of prudence and the moral virtues in framing healthy strategies of control that yet point beyond themselves toward the capacity for love and wonder for God and for all that God has made-and how mental health care would look different as a result. \n\n\nContinuing Education\nSeveral continuing education sessions will be offered\, including: \n\nUndoing Anti-Judaism in the Liturgy presented by The Rev. Dan Joslyn-Siemiatkoski and Rabbi Neil Blumofe.\nNew Telemental Health Practices: Ethics\, Rules and Clinical Considerations presented by the Southwest Counseling Faculty\n\n\nWorship in Christ Chapel\nThursday\, November 7\n5:30pm Alumni Eucharist\nThe Rev. Eric Hungerford ’10\, Preaching\nThe Rev. Kathy Pfister ’10\, Presiding\nFriday\, November 8\n9:30am Morning Prayer\n11:45am Jazz Noonday Eucharist\nThe Very Rev. Cynthia Briggs Kittredge\, ThD\, Preaching\nThe Rev. Justin Lindstrom ’99 Presiding\n5:00pm Evening Prayer\nOrganized by The Loise Henderson Wessendorf Center for Christian Ministry and Vocation\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDinner\, Live Music and more!\n \n“Wendy Colonna is not just a singer-songwriter\, she’s a force of nature.” – Austin American-Statesman \nBlandy revs up as it winds down with dinner\, live music\, and a pep rally for our ThuriBulls in the next day’s Polity Bowl. Austin singer-songwriter Wendy Colonna will entertain with her soulful style that has been described as a soul singer\, who\, “delivers hard-hitting truths about loss\, anguish\, and love.” \n\nLearn more at wendycolonna.com \n\n\nFind the full Blandy schedule below.\nFor more information\, please contact Katherine Bailey Brown\, director of annual giving and alumni relations\, at katherine.brown@ssw.edu or 512.472.4133 ext. 333. \n  \nFull Blandy schedule:\nThursday\, November 7\n1:30                 Registration\, light bites\, and drinks \n1:45                 Welcome and Overview \n2:00                 Continuing Ed Session 1: Undoing Anti-Judaism in the Liturgy\, The Rev. Dan Joslyn-Siemiatkoski\, PhD & Rabbi Neil Blumofe \n3:00                 Break \n3:15                 Continuing Ed Session 2: Undoing Anti-Judaism in the Liturgy\, The Rev. Dan Joslyn-Siemiatkoski\, PhD & Rabbi Neil Blumofe \n4:15                 Break \n5:30                 Alumni Eucharist \n6:30                 Dinner & Presentation of Hal Brook Perry Award \n7:30                 Warren Kinghorn Lecture: Walking with Veterans After War: Combat Trauma\, Moral Injury\, and the Journey Home \n8:45                 Dessert Reception \n  \nFriday\, November 8\n8:30                 Breakfast with the Dean \n9:30                 Morning Prayer \n10:15               Warren Kinghorn Lecture: From Control to Wonder: Action\, Contemplation\, and Modern Mental Health Care \n11:15               Break \n11:30-1:30       Center Continuing Ed Lunch & Learn: Telemental Health- Ethics and Practice Considerations\, Southwest Faculty\n \n11:45               Holy Eucharist \n12:30               Lunch Panel Discussion \n1:45                 Share Shop Session 1 \n3:00                 Break \n3:15                 Share Shop 2 \n4:30                 Break \n5:00                 Evening Prayer \n5:30                 Polity Bowl Pep Rally \n6:00                 Celebration Dinner \n6:30                 Live Music \n  \nSaturday\, November 9\n10:00               Polity Bowl \n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/2019-blandy-lectures-and-alumni-convocation-2/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20191112
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20191113
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20191001T201305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191001T201305Z
UID:18398-1573516800-1573603199@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Fall Open House 2: Clinical Mental Health Counseling and Spiritual Formation
DESCRIPTION:November 12 at 6pm\nSeminary of the Southwest will host a vocational degrees Open House this fall for the Master of Arts in Clinical Mental Health Counseling and the Master of Arts in Spiritual Formation. These events will include an opportunity for you to learn about each program directly from the faculty. There will also be time to ask admissions/financial aid questions\, and campus tour. \nClick to register for Tuesday\, Nov. 12th @6pm \nMore information about our Center degree programs:\nMaster of Arts in Clinical Mental Health Counseling\nMaster of Arts in Spiritual Formation \n  \nQuestions?\n \nContact: \nBritt James\, Center Enrollment Manager\n512-439-0374\nbrittany.james@ssw.edu \n  \nFAST LINKS\nEncounter\nVideos – “The Center”\nAdmissions\nFinancial Aid\nApply Now! \nLooking forward to having you on campus soon.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/fall-open-house-clinical-mental-health-counseling-and-spiritual-formation-2/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20191201
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20191226
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20191201T131221Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191201T131221Z
UID:18617-1575158400-1577318399@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:2019 Advent Meditations and Prayers are here
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://ssw.edu/advent2019/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20191213
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200104
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20191113T174923Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191113T174923Z
UID:18475-1576195200-1578095999@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Winter Break
DESCRIPTION:Seminary of the Southwest administrative offices will be closed from Dec. 13\, 2019\, to January 3\, 2020.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/winter-break/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200113T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200113T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20191115T170101Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191115T170101Z
UID:18488-1578915000-1578920400@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:The Monday Connection: Steven Tomlinson
DESCRIPTION:The Monday Connection Welcomes\nDr. Steven Tomlinson\nAssociate Professor of Leadership and Administration at Seminary of the Southwest\n\n\nMonday\, January 13\, 2020|  11:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m.\nWeeks Campus Center\nSeminary of the Southwest  |  501 E. 32nd St.\, Austin\, TX 78705 \n\n\n\nSteven Tomlinson\, Ph.D.\, is Associate Professor of Leadership and Administration at Seminary of the Southwest and a Founding Master Teacher at the Acton School of Business for Entrepreneurship. He has taught economics and finance at The University of Texas at Austin where he designed and directed the MBA professional development program. He coaches Wall Street\, Fortune 500 and high-tech startup executives and managers on communication strategy. \nFor 27 years\, Steven has been a member of St. James’ Episcopal Church. In this past year he has preached at St. James’ and at Palmer Memorial in Houston; spoken to clergy conferences in the Dioceses of Northwest Texas\, Oklahoma\, Wyoming and Arkansas; and given keynote addresses for the National Association of Corporate Directors\, the Culturati Summit\, and the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice. He serves on the General Convention’s Task Force on Theology of Money and is the lead consultant on an Episcopal Church Foundation grant to design curriculum to teach seminarians about money\, finance and the economy. \nSteven is a playwright and actor and has performed his award-winning solo shows in Austin and off-Broadway. \n\nRegistration for this event is closed. \nQuestions? Please contact Karla Gillan at 512.439.0333 or karla.gillan@ssw.edu\n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/steven_tomlinson2/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200204T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200204T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20200107T171851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200107T171851Z
UID:18644-1580821200-1580828400@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Payne Lecture - The Rt. Rev. David E. Bailey
DESCRIPTION:Tuesday\, February 4\, 2020 | 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. | Knapp Auditorium \nThe Board of Trustees of Seminary of the Southwest is proud to announce that the 2020 Payne Lecture will feature The Rt. Rev. David E. Bailey. \nThe Rt. Rev. David E. Bailey has served as bishop of Navajoland since Aug. 7\, 2010. He served on the Executive Council of the Episcopal Church. His episcopate in Navajoland has centered on melding Navajo tradition with Episcopal Church customs; raising up indigenous ordained leadership; developing programs to combat substance abuse and domestic violence and to support veterans; and developing new sources of income. When he was elected bishop\, he was serving as canon to the ordinary in the Diocese of Utah. \nRead David’s full Bio \nHosted by the seminary’s board of trustees\, this annual event honors the Rt. Rev. Claude E. Payne\, former chair of the seminary’s board of trustees and bishop of the Diocese of Texas retired. \nThe lecture is open to the public and will be followed by a reception in the Weeks Center.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/payne-lecture-david-e-bailey/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200222T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200222T123000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20200217T154349Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200217T154349Z
UID:18708-1582360200-1582374600@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Central Texas Colloquium on Religion
DESCRIPTION:On February 22 the Seminary will be hosting our 10th annual Central Texas Colloquium on Religion\, a graduate student conference for religious studies students.\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSessions run from 9-10:30 and from 10:45-12:15 in room 261. Schedule of events is below.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n8:30 – Welcome and Introductions (In Maddux Lounge) \n9:00 – St. Therese of Lisieux’s Spirituality Recontextualized Today \nJessica Guerriero\, St. Edward’s University \n9:20 – Without Shaking the Dust Off: The Ending of Acts and the Questions of Anti-Judaism and Jewish Mission \nSung Soo Hong\, The University of Texas at Austin \n9:45 – Soteriology\, Sacraments\, and Sanctification: The Necessity of a Free Human Will in the Logos \nMary Freiberger\, Seminary of the Southwest \n10:10 – BREAK \n10:30 – The Forgotten Marys and the Venerated Sara La Kali in Romani Culture \nDestiny Nicoll\, St. Edward’s University \n10:50 – Therapy Before Theology: A Hermeneutic Phenomenology Approach to the Debate on Sexuality \nElise Bjork\, Seminary of the Southwest \n11:15 – The Controversial and Orthodox Teresa of Avila \nEva McNabb\, St. Edward’s University \n11:35 – Philatutia or Philadelphia? How Loving Our Neighbor Should Shape Christian Political Engagement \nKathryn Freeman\, Baylor University\, Truett Seminary \n12:00 – Woman Wisdom: The Feminine Features of God Illuminated in the St. John’s Bible \nAnisa Zepeda\, St. Edward’s University
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/central-texas-colloquium-on-religion/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200227T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200227T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20200114T152009Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200114T152009Z
UID:18654-1582824600-1582831800@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Black History Month 2020 Celebration Service
DESCRIPTION:  \nA February tradition at Seminary of the Southwest\, this year’s Black History Month events focus on the theme “Tracing Our Roots.” You are invited to join us as we honor the legacy of African Americans in the U.S. and confront the future of race in the country and the church.\n  \n  \n  \nThursday\, February 27\n\nBlack History Month Celebration of the Holy Eucharist\n\nGuest preacher: The Rev. Randy Callender\nRector\, St. Philip’s Episcopal Church\, Annapolis\, MD \nMusical guest: Ian Spencer \n5:30 p.m.  |  Christ Chapel \nDinner reception to follow  |  Howell Dining Hall \n  \nThis event is free and open to the public. \n  \n \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/black-history-month-2020-celebration-service/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200408
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200413
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20200302T200318Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200302T200318Z
UID:18729-1586304000-1586735999@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Triduum 2020
DESCRIPTION:‘In response to the COVID-19 pandemic\, Triduum at Seminary of the Southwest will not be held in its traditional format. Please visit the link below for details of how the community of Southwest will observe Holy Week’ \n\nHoly Week at Southwest
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/triduum-2020/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200508T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200519T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20200508T160143Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200508T160143Z
UID:19057-1588935600-1589886000@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Soul by Southwest 2020 Release Party
DESCRIPTION:  \nThe latest edition of Soul by Southwest is out now! Find it and video commentaries from the artists here.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/soul-by-southwest-2020-release-party/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200519
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200521
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20200302T200333Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200302T200333Z
UID:18665-1589846400-1590019199@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:69th Commencement for Seminary of the Southwest
DESCRIPTION:Seminary of the Southwest will hold two virtual ceremonies this year – a Service of Evening Prayer and a Service of Midmorning Prayer and Awarding of Degrees– to recognize and celebrate graduating students and award degrees in divinity\, religion\, counseling\, chaplaincy and pastoral care and spiritual formation and diplomas in Anglican studies and in theological studies. \n\nBoth services will be premiered on Southwest’s Youtube Channel at their regularly scheduled times (see below).\n\nThis year’s Commencement speaker will be the Very Rev. Miguelina Howell\, 10th Dean of Christ Church Cathedral\, Hartford\, CT. \nA message of congratulations and hope will be delivered to the senior class by the Most Rev. Michael Curry\, Presiding Bishop. \nIn addition to conferring degrees on graduating members of the Class of 2020\, Southwest will award a Doctor of Divinity honoris causa to Southwest alumna the Right Reverend Kathryn M. Ryan. \n  \n  \n\nTuesday\, May 19 at 5:00 p.m.\nEvening Prayer on the Occasion of the\n69th Commencement of Seminary of the Southwest\nwith the Presentation of the Seminary Crosses and Remembrances\n\n\n \n–>>Click here to view service bulletin for Order of Worship for the Evening on the Occasion of the 69th Commencement \n\nWednesday\, May 20 at 10:00 a.m.\nThe 69th Commencement Exercises of\nThe Episcopal Theological Seminary of the Southwest\nA Service of Midmorning prayer and Awarding of Degrees\n\n \n–>> Click here to view service bulletin for Midmorning Office with the 69th Commencement Exercises \nCommencement speaker:\nThe Very Rev. Miguelina Howell\n\nPrior to her appointment as the Tenth Dean\, Miguelina served as Vicar of the Cathedral.    Miguelina is originally from the Dominican Republic where she holds a license in clinical psychology.   She was ordained in 2002 in the Episcopal Diocese of the Dominican Republic. She is a member of the Episcopal Church Latino/Hispanic Ministries Council of Advice\, member of the Board of the Society for the Increase of Ministry and was appointed to serve on the General Convention 2015  Task Force on Sustentability and Development of Latino/Hispanic Ministries. Miguelina serves as a faculty member of CREDO\, a wellness program of the Church Pension Group. She was the seventh Rector of the Church of the Epiphany\, Diocese of Newark\, and served as a member of the Task Force for Re-imagining the Episcopal Church.  In the Episcopal Diocese of the Dominican Republic she was Priest-in-Charge of three congregations\, executive director and administrator of the Diocesan Camp & Conference Center\, and coordinator of Young Adult Ministries. Miguelina has also served as a member of the Presiding Bishop’s Staff at the Episcopal Church Center\, as a member of the Council of Advice of the President of the House of Deputies\, and as a member of Executive Council of the Episcopal Church. \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/69th-commencement/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200830T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200830T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20200730T142101Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200730T142101Z
UID:19231-1598788800-1598799600@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:2020 Matriculation
DESCRIPTION:2020 Matriculation – Welcoming the Incoming Class\n \n  \nPlease join us on Sunday\, August 30\, 2020 at 5pm for Southwest’s Matriculation service where new students are welcomed and begin their important journey of leadership formation. \nThis year’s event will be virtual and available for viewing by the greater public\, premiering on Seminary of the Southwest’s Youtube Channel. \n  \n>>>Watch 2020 Matriculation Service Here\n>>>For the Order of Service\, click here  \n\nDr. Scott Bader-Saye\, Academic Dean\, will preach and the Very Rev. Cynthia Briggs Kittredge will preside. \nSouthwest will also be presenting the 2020 Charles Cook Servant Leadership Award to The Cumberbatch Family for their ongoing work within and commitment to our community. \nThe Charles Cook Servant Leadership Award was created in 2009 by the faculty to honor their colleague and Seminary of the Southwest alum Charlie Cook on the occasion of his retirement from the Seminary. Charlie’s entire ministry–from his parish work\, to his time as the professor of pastoral theology\, to his continued devotion to the mission of the church–has been one continuous example of servant leadership. Each Fall\, another Academic Year begins\, the community pauses to remember this common calling we have and to honor one who especially embodies the Christian commitment to selfless service on behalf of others. \n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/2020-matriculation/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201006T064500
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201006T090000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20200831T163323Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200831T163323Z
UID:19396-1601966700-1601974800@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:John Hines Day
DESCRIPTION:Celebrate the Ministry of Southwest’s Founder\nThe community of Seminary of the Southwest invites you to John Hines Day\, a celebration of the ministry of the founder of Seminary of the Southwest. \nThe legacy of Bishop John E. Hines is invaluable not simply to Southwest but to the Episcopal Church as a whole. In honoring this legacy we seek to embrace the remarkable courage with which he spread the gospel and led the church. The call for social justice in our modern world is no less important than at the time of Bishop Hines\, and it is the great privilege of the seminary\, in partnership with our John Hines Legacy Society members\, to help form the future leaders of the Church. \nTuesday\, October 6\, 2020\n\nMore details to follow.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/john-hines-day-2020/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201019
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20201024
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20200831T163414Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200831T163414Z
UID:19397-1603065600-1603497599@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Reading Week
DESCRIPTION:Seminary of the Southwest Reading Week.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/reading-week/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201124T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201127T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20201016T131939Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201016T131939Z
UID:19622-1606204800-1606496400@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Thanksgiving Holiday
DESCRIPTION:No classes and offices will be closed for Thanksgiving.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/thanksgiving-holiday/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201129
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20201130
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20201016T132013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201016T132013Z
UID:19623-1606608000-1606694399@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:First Day of Advent
DESCRIPTION:The first day of the Advent meditations for 2020.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/first-day-of-advent/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201221T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210101T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20201016T132051Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201016T132051Z
UID:19624-1608537600-1609520400@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Christmas Holiday
DESCRIPTION:No classes and offices will be closed for Christmas.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/christmas-holiday/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20210114T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210114T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20201214T174857Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201214T174857Z
UID:19912-1610650800-1610658000@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:52nd Annual Blandy Lecture and Symposium
DESCRIPTION:Seminary of the Southwest presents the 52nd Annual Blandy Lecture and Symposium\, featuring the Very Rev. Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas\, Dean of the Episcopal Divinity School at Union Theological Seminary and the Bill and Judith Moyers Chair in Theology at Union. \nDean Douglas will present a talk on ‘Being Church in the Time of Black Lives Matter.’ \nThis year’s Blandy Lecture – rescheduled from November – will be presented in an online format. Given the change in format required by the pandemic\, Southwest will offer the lecture and follow-up symposium without charge this year. \nWe invite registrants to generously honor our speaker and event organizers with a voluntary gift to the Southwest Annual Fund in support of our students. \n  \n52nd Annual Blandy Lecture and Symposium\nWith the Very Rev. Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas\nThursday\, January 14\, 2021 at 7PM CST\n \n  \n“A significant and powerful theological voice\, Kelly Brown Douglas is a person that our alums\, current students\, and faculty are eager to be ‘with’ for this year’s Blandy Lecture. While we will miss our normal ‘in-person’ fellowship\, these unique circumstances allow for us to share a vital perspective within The Episcopal Church\,” said the Very Rev. Cynthia Briggs Kittredge\, dean and president. \nIn keeping with early church practice of moral conversation\, participants preparing for the Blandy conversation\, will receive a biblical reflection to guide their preparations and encounter with the lecture. The seminary’s Iona Collaborative staff will facilitate a “symposium” conversation for registrants immediately following the lecture. Participants will be invited to reflect on Dr. Douglas’ presentation and then speak about how her words might influence and even transform particular practices in their own local church communities. \n\n	Biblical-Reflections-for-Blandy-Lecture-and-Symposium\n\n  \n“In many early Christian churches\, there was a structured time for moral conversation immediately following the celebration of the Lord’s Supper. It was the Church’s adaptation of the second part of a formal dinner party called the Symposium – a time for drinking\, music\, dancing\, and other entertainment. This was a revelatory and transformative practice where church members reflected on their lives and spoke prophetically about where and how God was working among them. This conversation built up the church community and encouraged and consoled individual congregants in the challenging work of daily faithfulness\,” said the Rev. John Lewis\, director of the Iona Collaborative. \nParticipants will receive a certificate acknowledging one hour of contact time for continuing education credit. \nAbout The Very Reverend Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas \nThe Very Reverend Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas was named Dean of the Episcopal Divinity School at Union Theological Seminary and Professor of Theology at Union in September 2017.  She was named the Bill and Judith Moyers Chair in Theology in November 2019.  She also serves as the Canon Theologian at the Washington National Cathedral and Theologian in Residence at Trinity Church Wall Street. \nPrior to Union\, Dean Douglas served as Professor of Religion at Goucher College where she held the Susan D. Morgan Professorship of Religion and is now Professor Emeritus.  Before Goucher\, she was Associate Professor of Theology at Howard University School of Divinity (1987-2001) and Assistant Professor of Religion at Edward Waters College (1986-1987). \nDean Douglas is widely published in national and international journals and other publications.  Her groundbreaking and widely taught book Sexuality and the Black Church: A Womanist Perspective (1999) was the first to address the issue of homophobia within the black church community.  Her latest book\, Stand Your Ground: Black Bodies and the Justice of God (2015)\, examines the challenges of a “Stand Your Ground” culture for the black church. \nDouglas’ other books include The Black Christ (1994\, 25th Anniversary edition 2019)\, What’s Faith Got to Do with It?: Black Bodies/Christian Souls (2005) and Black Bodies and the Black Church: A Blues Slant (2012)\, which seeks to move the black church beyond its oppressive views toward LGBTQ bodies and sexuality in general. \nIn addition\, Dean Douglas is the co-editor of Sexuality and the Sacred: Sources for Theological Reflection (2010).  She has been a pioneering and highly sought-after voice in regard to addressing sexual issues in relation to the black religious community.  She has been very active in advocating equal rights for LGBTQ persons. \n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/52nd-annual-blandy-lecture-and-symposium/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20210209T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210209T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210112T154212Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210112T154212Z
UID:19964-1612872000-1612879200@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Payne Lecture - Ruby Sales
DESCRIPTION:Tuesday\, February 9\, 2021 | 6:00 p.m. CST | Virtual \nCo-Presented by St. James’ Episcopal Church\nThe Board of Trustees of Seminary of the Southwest is proud to announce that the 2021 Payne Lecture will feature Ruby Sales. \nHosted by Seminary of the Southwest’s Board of Trustees\, this annual event honors the Rt. Rev. Claude E. Payne\, former chair of the seminary’s board and bishop of the Diocese of Texas\, retired. \nThis year’s Payne Lecture is co-presented by St. James’ Episcopal Church\, and is included as part of Southwest’s Black History Month. \nThe lecture is free and open to the public. Registration is required. \n‘Where Do We Go From Here: Community or Chaos’  – Ruby Sales\n(Title is taken from Martin Luther King’s book\, Where Do We Go From Here: Community or Chaos.) \n \n  \n“This question requires us to interrogate\, from all of our multiple identities\, the meanings of community without erasing our particularities or our universality. As spiritual guides\, what is our understanding of chaos and what is our understanding of community? Within this context\, how do we read Moses’ ascension to the mountaintop and being the beneficiary and carrier of what we call the Ten Commandments or the law. Finally\, how do Christians build a social gospel for the 21st century that speaks to the question of community or chaos in a capitalist White male elitist technocracy where very few lives matter and Black\, Brown and indigenous lives matter least of all.” \nTuesday\, February 9\, 2021 \n6pm CST \nRUBY NELL SALES \nPublic Theologian\, Historian\, Activist\, Social Critic\, and Educator \nRuby Nell Sales looks at her work as a calling rather than a career. She answered the call to social justice as a teenager at Tuskegee Institute where she joined the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and worked on voter registration in Lowndes County\, Alabama. \nSales received a B.A. degree from Manhattanville College and attended graduate school at Princeton University.  Sales received a Masters of Divinity degree from the Episcopal Divinity School where she was an Absalom Jones Scholar. While there\, she developed a reputation as a preacher and has preached at churches and cathedrals around the nation.  After divinity school\, she founded and still directs a national nonprofit organization\, the SpiritHouse Project. \nAs a social justice activist\, Sales’ work is cited in several books\, journal articles and films such as Taylor Branch’s At Canaan’s Edge: America in the King Years 1965-68; Broken Ground: A Film on Race Relations in the South; Dan Rather’s American Dream Segment; and Blood Brother: Jonathan Daniels and His Sacrifice for Civil Rights by Rich and Sandra Neil Wallace.   Sales was one of the founders of SAGE Magazine: A Scholarly Journal on Black Women.  As a social critic\, Sales has published works in several journals\, newspapers and magazines and is a frequent guest on Sirius XM Radio Inside the Issues with Dr. Wilmer Leon.  Sales was keynote speaker at a gathering of nationally renown theologians to discuss “Public Theology Reimagined” hosted by and later broadcast on the NPR program\, On Being with Krista Tippett. \nSales has received numerous awards and honors.  She was selected and honored as a Veteran of Hope by Vincent G. Harding in 2004 and taught a class with him at Morehouse College on “After the March on Washington” in 2012.  She continues to write and observe on Movement History.  Sales became a national HistoryMaker (www.HistoryMaker.com) in 2009. In August 2013\, Sales was awarded the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference Living Legacies Civil Rights Recognition Award.  In 2014\, she was inducted into the Morehouse College Martin Luther King Jr. Board of Preachers and became a recipient of the Beautiful Are Their Feet Award from the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference. In May 2015\, Sales received an Honorary Doctorate Degree from West Chester University in Pennsylvania.  Sales was honored with the national Martin Luther King\, Jr. Peace Award from the Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR) at their centennial celebration in November 2015. An oral history of Sales is housed at the Library of Congress\, and she was selected as one of fifty African Americans from the Civil Rights Movement to be spotlighted in the new Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington\, DC which opened September 2016.  Sales was also one of the honorees of the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) spotlighted at the opening of the new National Memorial for Peace and Justice and the Legacy Museum: From Enslavement to Mass Incarceration in April 2018 in Montgomery\, Alabama.  In February 2019\, TED.com released Sales’ TED Talk entitled\, “How we can start to heal the pain of racial division.” \nSales has made the struggle for racial justice one of the centerpieces of her work through the SpiritHouse Project.  Since 2007\, she has worked to expose the state sanctioned deaths of African Americans by White police\, security guards and vigilantes by compiling a national database on these events; offering spiritual\, financial and organizational support to families; and by exposing these activities through church and community meetings\, forums\, and press conferences around the nation.  In fall 2014\, she co-sponsored a Teach In / Preach In with the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference\, Eden Seminary and Christ the King Church in St. Louis\, Missouri in response to the police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson\, Missouri.  During the spring of 2015\, she organized a Teach-In in Philadelphia which exposed the Means and Tools of Oppression that plague most communities of color. In March 2016\, Sales and SpiritHouse Project organized a national Day of Action in Washington\, DC entitled\, Stop the War on Our Children\, during which women from around the nation gathered to acknowledge young victims of state sanctioned violence with a silent procession from the White House to the US Capitol\, a public hearing hosted by Dr. Wilmer Leon\, and the delivery of caskets containing the names of victims to key Senate\, House and Supreme Court leadership. \nRecognizing a need to nurture the hope that still resides in young people as well as to revive an intergenerational community and human compassion\, in 2016 the SpiritHouse Project introduced Hope Zones.™  They are alternative learning spaces designed to strengthen the hope\, courage\, reason and will of young people to individually and collectively stand up for themselves with dignity\, clarity and nonviolent persistence. Hope Zones™ are sanctuary sites of learning\, intergenerational connection and community formation which offer diverse communities an opportunity to work toward the common goal of advancing democracy and non-violence. \nSales continues to teach and preach at colleges\, universities\, churches and cathedrals around the United States.  Funded by the Duke Endowment\, she is currently creating Racial Justice Cafes in North and South Carolina. \n  \n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/payne-lecture-ruby-sales/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20210225T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210225T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210119T164028Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210119T164028Z
UID:19973-1614274200-1614281400@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Black History Month 2021 Celebration Service
DESCRIPTION:A February tradition at Seminary of the Southwest\, this year’s Black History Month events focus on the theme “Our Legacy of Hope.” You are invited to join us as we honor the legacy of African Americans in the U.S. and confront the future of race in the country and the church.\n  \nThursday\, February 25\n\nBlack History Month Service of Evening Prayer\n\nGuest preacher: The Rev. Yolanda Norton\nThe Crump Visiting Professor and Black Religious Scholars Group Scholar-in-Residence \n5:30 p.m.  |  Virtual \n  \nThis event is free and open to the public. It will be available live on our Facebook Live page. \n  \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/black-history-month-2021-celebration-service-2/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210308
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210322
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210128T182300Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210128T182300Z
UID:20005-1615161600-1616371199@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Our Lenten Window - Icon Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Our Lenten Window \nIconography Exhibition \nStop by the Booher Library and/or check out the virtual gallery here.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/our-lenten-window-icon-exhibit/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20210310T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210310T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210223T163903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210223T163903Z
UID:20103-1615402800-1615408200@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:African American Biblical Studies Discussion
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \nSeminary of the Southwest and the Black Religious Scholars Group (BRSG) are pleased to present: \nMaking It Plain: The Sacred Tradition and Civil Discourse of African American Biblical Interpretation\nMarch 10\, 2021 \n7pm CST \nvia Zoom Webinar \nClick Here to watch a recording of the event\n  \nPlease join us for this panel of current BRSG scholars\, as they discuss this important perspective in biblical interpretation\, moderated by Dr. Scott Bader-Saye\, academic dean. \nPanelists include:\n \nDr. Valerie Bridgeman is Dean and Vice President of Academic Affairs\, as well as Associate Professor of Homiletics and Hebrew Bible at Methodist Theological School of Ohio. She also is founding president and CEO of WomanPreach! Inc. —the premiere non-profit organization that brings preachers to full prophetic voice. She has been in licensed or ordained ministry since 1977. Dr. Bridgeman is active in several professional guilds and has been inducted into the Society for the Study of Black Religion. She also sits on several boards\, including the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference. \nShe served as general editor and consultant for the United Methodist Church’s Africana Worship project and has published several book chapters and articles. Her publications also include her roles as associate editor and author for The Africana Bible: Reading Israel’s Scriptures from Africa and the African Diaspora (2009)\, Norton’s Preaching with Sacred Fire: An Anthology of African American Sermons\, 1750 to the Present (2010)\, and co-editor of Those Preaching Women:  A Multi-Cultural Collection (2008). Her most recent work is a co-authored volume on Hosea for the Wisdom Commentary series\, due out soon. She currently is working on a commentary on Job\, also for the Wisdom Commentary series. \nDr. Bridgeman earned her Ph.D. in biblical studies (Hebrew Bible concentration) and secondary studies in ethics from Baylor University.  She earned her Master of Divinity from Austin Theological Seminary in Austin\, Texas and a Bachelor of Arts degree with a double major of Communication and Religion from Trinity University in San Antonio\, Texas. \nShe is a peace activist and advocate for human rights\, and was inducted into the 2010 class of Martin Luther King\, Jr. Collegium of Scholars and Preachers at Morehouse College in Atlanta\, GA. \nHerbert R. Marbury researches the Bible’s textuality—that is how biblical texts come to meaning both in the ancient world and in the contemporary worlds of modern U.S. communities. Although he turns to cultural studies\, he grounds his work in both historical-critical and hermeneutical methods.  In the ancient world\, he focuses on Judah under Persian and Hellenistic imperial domination\, which are the societies from which much of the literature of the Hebrew Bible emerged. In his first book\, Imperial Dominion and Priestly Genius (Sopher Press\, September\, 2012) he focuses on Ezra-Nehemiah and asks\, “What meaning(s) might Ezra-Nehemiah have held for elites in Persian Jerusalem?” He investigates the Second Temple community’s counter-narratives of resistance against imperial domination. \nSince 2012 Marbury has served as co-chair of the African American Biblical Hermeneutics section of the Society of Biblical Literature. There\, he raises the question of meaning for African American communities. In Pillars of Cloud and Fire: The Politics of Exodus in African American Biblical Interpretation (New York University Press\, 2015)\, he uses cultural studies as a mode of inquiry and builds on the method developed in Imperial Dominion. Pillars of Cloud and Fire recovers trajectories of counter-history in examples of African American biblical interpretation heretofore unexamined by biblical scholars. Focusing on figures such as Absalom Jones\, David Walker\, Zora Neale Hurston\, Frances E. W. Harper\, Adam Clayton Powell\, Martin Luther King\, Jr.\, and Albert Cleage\, Marbury asks\, “What meaning(s) has the exodus story held for successive African American communities in the U.S. from the antebellum period through the era the Black Power Movement?” \nDr. Mitzi J. Smith\, J. Davison Philips Professor of New Testament\, Columbia Theological Seminary\, is an AME itinerant elder. She received a Ph.D. in Religion from Harvard University and M.Div. from Howard University School of Divinity. Smith authored The Literary Construction of the Other in the Acts of the Apostles (2011)\, Insights from African American Interpretation (2017)\, Womanist Sass and Talk Back: Social (In)Justice\, Intersectionality\, and Biblical Interpretation (2018); co-authored Toward Decentering the New Testament (2019); edited Teaching All Nations (2014) and I Found God in Me: A Womanist Biblical Hermeneutics Reader (2015); and co-edited Minoritized Women Reading Race and Ethnicity (2020). She writes for workingpreacher.org. \n  \nThe Rev. Yolanda Norton is the Crump Visiting Professor and Black Religious Scholars Group Scholar-in-Residence for the 2020-2021 academic year at Seminary of the Southwest. Norton will be the third visiting scholar as part of the five-year partnership between Southwest and BRSG. \nNorton is a Ph.D. candidate in Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel and Theology and Practice Fellow at Vanderbilt University. Her current research interests include womanist interpretation\, narrative and literary criticism\, and the Persian period. In particular\, her work focuses on the books of Genesis and Ruth\, and how each text treats foreign women\, and considers the ways in which insider-outsider paradigms in Scripture influence constructions of identity and facilitate the vilification and/or oppression of women of color who encounter the biblical canon in the modern world. \nCurrently\, Norton is Assistant Professor of Hebrew Bible and H. Eugene Farlough Chair of Black Church Studies at San Francisco Theological Seminary\, a Visiting Instructor at Moravian Theological Seminary\, and adjunct faculty at Wesley Theological Seminary. She is ordained in the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and has served in various ministerial capacities in the Washington\, D.C. area and Nashville\, TN. \nNorton is also creator/curator of the notable Beyoncé Mass\, which evolved out of a chapel service developed by students in Norton’s class “Beyoncé and the Hebrew Bible” at San Francisco Theological Seminary. The class explored female-centric interpretations of the Bible and how Scripture reflects Black female identity. Like the worship service\, the class explored how Beyoncé’s personal life\, career trajectory\, music and public persona reflects aspects of Black women’s stories.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/brsg-southwest-panel-on-african-american-biblical-interpretation/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20210331T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210403T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210325T150611Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210325T150611Z
UID:20291-1617206400-1617480000@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Holy Week 2021
DESCRIPTION:Holy Monday\nMid-Morning Prayer\, 9:30 am on the Motte \nSpanish Evening Prayer\, 5:00 pm via Zoom \n\nHoly Tuesday \nMorning Prayer\, 9:30 am via Zoom \nEvensong\, 5:00 pm on the Motte \n\nHoly Wednesday \nChoral Morning Prayer\, 9:30 am on the Motte \nEvening Prayer\, 5:00 pm via Zoom \n\nVia Crucis (Stations of the Cross)\n\nWednesday\, March 31 \n4:00 p.m.\n \n\nPlease join the Pláctica conversation group from 4-6 on Wednesday for a workshop style Stations of the Cross/Via Crucis in Spanish. We will briefly discuss its historical background\, make a traditional “tapete” or carpet\, and walk a shortened Via Crucis\, sharing ways that the body of Christ throughout Latin America continues to suffer the way of the cross.\n\n\n\nTenebrae Service\n\nWednesday\, March 31 \n7:00 p.m.  \n\nPlease join us on the Motte on Holy Wednesday\, March 31st for a service of shadows\, Tenebrae\, at 7 pm. It will be a shortened service of chant and scripture and light. Bring your children in their PJs\, and let us enter into the Triduum in prayer.\n\n\n\nMaundy Thursday\nMorning Prayer\, 9:30 am via Zoom \n\nMaundy Thursday: Holy Eucharist followed by Community Meal\nThursday\, April 1 \n5:30 p.m.  \n RSVP here \nThis will be live on the Motte and will be streamed to our Facebook page. We will be holding a simple Agape Meal in the Motte following the Maundy Thursday Service. Please RSVP so that we have an idea of how many people will attend. Bring a chair and or a picnic blanket and join us.\n\nFind the Order of Service here.\n\n\n\nCommunity Vigil\nThursday\, April 1 to Friday\, April 2 \n\nAfter the Maundy Thursday service and Agape meal\, we will hold a symbolic all night vigil in Christ Chapel beginning at 8:00 pm with the final shift starting at 7:00 am.  All members of the community (students\, faculty\, staff\, members of your household) are invited to participate.  So if you\, or members of your household\, are interested in signing up for a one hour time slot\, there is still time.  Follow this link to sign up.\n\nWe hope this can be a prayerful time for our community.  Bring journals\, prayer books (there won’t be any in the chapel)\, bibles\, sketchbooks\, prayer beads\, or simply your whole self.\n\n\n\n\nGood Friday: The Service of Solemn Collects\nFriday\, April 2 \n11:45 a.m.  \nThis will be live on the Motte and will be streamed to our Facebook page.\n\nFind the Order of Service here.\n\nHoly Saturday: The Liturgy of Holy Saturday \nSaturday\, April 3 \n9:30 a.m.  \nThis will be shared via the ChapelVue Zoom link (found in Populi).\n\nFind the Order of Service here.\n\n\n\nGreat Vigil of Easter followed by Community Gala\nSaturday\, April 3 \n8:00 p.m.  \nThis will be live on the motte and will be streamed to our Facebook page.\n\nFind the Order of Service here.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/holy-week-2021/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20210412T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210412T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210302T154704Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210302T154704Z
UID:20128-1618246800-1618257600@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Harvey Lecture 2021 with The Rev. Carissa Baldwin-McGinnis
DESCRIPTION:  \nThis year’s Harvey Lecture\, “Jesus Speaks: The Call to Prophetic Preaching\,” will be given by The Rev. Carissa Baldwin-McGinnis\, Class of 2007. \nThe Eucharist preceding the lecture will be celebrated in Spanish. \nRev. Baldwin-McGinnis\, the Priest / Pastora at Northside Episcopal Church\, a bilingual church plant in Northeast Houston. Rev. Baldwin-McGinnis is a native of Austin and was a member at All Saints Church on the University of Texas campus. She is a graduate of Wellesley College and began her nonprofit vocation in Washington\, D.C.\, in the field of human rights. Her wife\, Pam\, and two children support her in her ministry. \nThe event will be Monday\, April 12\, 2021\, live on the Motte and streamed to our Facebook page. \nLiturgy will begin at 5:00 p.m. and the lecture will start at 6:30. \n\nThe Harvey Lectures were conceived at Seminary of the Southwest as a way of honoring the late Dean Hudnall Harvey\, who died unexpectedly in 1972\, after serving as the seminary’s dean for just five years. \nDuring Dean Harvey’s tenure\, following some institutional turbulence during the 1960s\, the seminary had begun rebuilding: in terms of enrollment\, financial strength\, and earning back the trust of many dioceses through the church. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe seminary community established the Harvey Lectures an annual series that would be overseen by student leaders and that would address the relationship between pastoral leadership and contemporary issues confronting the church. \nOver the years\, these Lectures have become a lasting and vital resource for the seminary\, bringing important and diverse theological voices to our campus.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/harvey-lecture-2021-with-the-rev-carissa-baldwin-mcginnis/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210518
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210520
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210415T144305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210415T144305Z
UID:20495-1621296000-1621468799@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:70th Commencement Exercises of Seminary of the Southwest
DESCRIPTION:>>>Click Here to View Both Services\n\nSeminary of the Southwest will hold two ceremonies this year – an Order of Worship for the Evening and a formal morning Commencement – to recognize and celebrate graduating students and award degrees in divinity\, religion\, counseling\, chaplaincy and pastoral care and spiritual formation and diplomas in Anglican studies. These events will be in-person\, invitation only\, and socially distanced. They will be viewable online here. \nThis year’s Commencement speaker will be the Rt. Rev. C. Andrew Doyle\, IX Bishop of Texas. In addition to the 42 members of the 2021 class\, honorary doctorates will be given to the Rt. Rev. C. Andrew Doyle\, Ms. Ora Houston\, and the Rt. Rev. Martha Stebbins. \n  \n\nTuesday\, May 18 \nOrder of Worship for the Evening on the Occasion of the\n70th Commencement of Seminary of the Southwest\nwith the Presentation of the Seminary Crosses\n5:30 p.m.\nSeminary of the Southwest \n501 E. 32nd St.\nAustin\, TX 78705 \n  \n\nWednesday\, May 19 \nThe 70th Commencement Exercises of\nThe Episcopal Theological Seminary of the Southwest\nA service of morning prayer\n10:00 a.m.\nSeminary of the Southwest \n501 E. 32nd St.\nAustin\, TX 78705 \n\n  \n\n\n  \n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/70th-commencement/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20210822T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210827T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210526T132638Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210526T132638Z
UID:20726-1629619200-1630083600@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:2021 New Student Orientation
DESCRIPTION:2021 New Student Orientation\nAll students\, Saturday\, August 21\nMDiv\, DAS\, MAR students\, Monday August 23-Wednesday\, August 25\nMDiv/DAS/MAR retreat Wednesday August 25-Friday August 27\nMore information coming soon.
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/2021-new-student-orientation/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20210829T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210829T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210525T212627Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210525T212627Z
UID:20724-1630256400-1630263600@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:2021 Matriculation Evensong
DESCRIPTION:August 29\, 2021\nCampus of Seminary of the Southwest \n2021 Matriculation Evensong and Reception\nPlease join us via livestream on Sunday\, August 29\, 2021 for Southwest’s Matriculation Evensong service where new students are welcomed and begin their important journey of leadership formation. \nThe service will begin at 5:00 p.m. CDT. \nIn the service we will also be installing new faculty members\, Nancy Fausto\, Jee Hei Park\, Dominique Robinson\, and Brandon Crowley. As we do each year at Matriculation\, Southwest will also be presenting the 2021 Charles Cook Servant Leadership Award – this year to Alan Graham\, Founder and CEO of Mobile Loaves & Fishes\, for his ongoing work within and commitment to Austin’s homeless community. \nThe service will be livestreamed at the seminary website and facebook page. \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/2021-matriculation/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20210923T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20210923T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T170033
CREATED:20210921T182318Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210921T182318Z
UID:21094-1632418200-1632425400@ssw.edu
SUMMARY:Hispanic Heritage Month Eucharist
DESCRIPTION:This Thursday\, September 23rd\, join us on the Motte at 5:30pm CST for our Hispanic Heritage Month Eucharist. \nThe Rev. Anthony Guillén\, Missioner for Latino/Hispanic Ministries and Director of Ethnic Ministries for the Episcopal Church\, will be preaching and Francisco Chávez will be playing a new song he wrote for this service as well as some old favorites. \nThe service will be livestreamed to the Southwest Facebook page. \nCome for the Eucharist\, stay for a party with food and music!
URL:https://ssw.edu/event/hispanic-heritage-month-eucharist/
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