500 episodes

Expand your understanding of the ways religion shapes the world with lectures, interviews, and reflections from Harvard Divinity School.

Harvard Divinity School Harvard Divinity School

    • Education
    • 4.4 • 23 Ratings

Expand your understanding of the ways religion shapes the world with lectures, interviews, and reflections from Harvard Divinity School.

    Chaplaincy Across Fields: Nurturing Resilience and Compassion 031924

    Chaplaincy Across Fields: Nurturing Resilience and Compassion 031924

    This alumni webinar explored the role of chaplaincy in fostering resilience and navigating complex challenges. Representing different religious traditions and fields, HDS alumni—Celene Ibrahim, MDiv '11, Faculty and Muslim Chaplain at the Groton School; Naomi Tzril Saks, MDiv '10, Palliative Care Chaplain at University of California, San Francisco; and The Venerable Priya Rakkhit Sraman, MDiv '17, Buddhist Chaplain at Emory University—shared their insights and experiences on providing spiritual care in diverse settings. The conversation was moderated by Kerry Maloney, Chaplain and Director of Religious and Spiritual Life at Harvard Divinity School.

    The global impact of Harvard Divinity School is realized through generations of remarkable alumni like Celene, Naomi, and Priya. You can help HDS continue to educate leaders who serve with empathy and care by making a gift this year: www.hds.harvard.edu/give.

    This event took place March 19, 2024.

    A full transcript can be found online: https://hds.harvard.edu/news/2024/04/16/video-chaplaincy-across-fields-resilience-compassion

    • 1 hr 1 min
    Religion in Times of Earth Crisis: The Practice of Wild Mercy: Something Deeper Than Hope

    Religion in Times of Earth Crisis: The Practice of Wild Mercy: Something Deeper Than Hope

    This was the fifth event is a six-part series, Religion in Times of Earth Crisis.

    Can personhood be granted to mountains, lakes, and rivers? What does it mean to be met by another species? How do we extend our notion of power to include all life forms? And what does a different kind of power look like and feel like? Wild Mercy is in our hands. Practices of attention in the field with compassion and grace deepen our kinship with life, allowing us to touch something deeper than hope. Great Salt Lake offers us a reflection into our own nature: Are we shrinking or expanding?

    Speaker: Terry Tempest Williams, HDS Writer-in-Residence
    Moderator: Diane L. Moore, Diane L. Moore, Associate Dean of Religion and Public Life

    Terry Tempest Williams joined HDS as a writer-in-residence in 2017. She is the author of numerous books, including the environmental literature classic "Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place." Her most recent book is "The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America’s National Parks," which was published in June 2016 to coincide with and honor the centennial of the National Park Service. Her writing has also appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Orion Magazine, and numerous anthologies worldwide as a crucial voice for ecological consciousness and social change. While at HDS, Williams has taught seminars on the spiritual implications of climate change, apocalyptic grief, and centering the wild and non-human voices, among others.

    For more information on the full series, "Religion in Times of Earth Crisis: A Series of Public Online Conversations," visit https://hds.harvard.edu/news/religion-times-earth-crisis

    This event took place on March 4, 2024.

    For more information: https://hds.harvard.edu

    A full transcript is forthcoming.

    • 1 hr 30 min
    Black Religion and Mental Health Symposium Plenary II

    Black Religion and Mental Health Symposium Plenary II

    Plenary II:
    Plenary Chair: Dr. Melissa Wood Bartholomew, Associate Dean for Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging, Lecturer on Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging, Harvard Divinity School

    Panelists: Sevonna Brown, National Director of Black Women’s Blueprint, Safer Childbirth Cities Initiative, Merck for Mothers, Dr. Henry Love, inaugural Obama Foundation U.S. Leaders Fellow, Vice President of Public Policy and Strategy at Women in Need, Dr. Joshua Louis Gills, Rutgers Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow at the Aging and Brain Health Alliance, Yolo Akili Robinson (he/him/his) is a non-binary award-winning writer, healing justice worker, yogi and the founder and Executive Director of BEAM (Black Emotional and Mental Health Collective)

    Professor Ahmad Greene-Hayes (Harvard Divinity School) and Professor George Aumoithe (FAS, History and African and African American Studies) proposed this two-day interdisciplinary symposium, integrating mind, brain, and behavior insights into the exploration of Black religious practices and their impact on mental health. They questioned how Black religious spaces can enhance mental health outcomes, considering their dual role as sanctuaries and potential impediments to open discourse.

    The symposium brought together experts from history, public health, psychiatry, African American studies, religious studies, and civic society, focusing on understanding the neurobiological and socio-behavioral dynamics contributing to mental health stigmatization within Black communities. The symposium aimed to illuminate how societal stressors, such as racism, influence brain function and behavior, thereby affecting mental health, while also exploring resilience mechanisms among Black religious communities. This project aligns with the Harvard Mind Brain Behavior Interfaculty Initiative’s mission of facilitating interdisciplinary collaboration to address complex issues, contributing to a broader understanding of the interplay between mind, brain, and behavior in the context of Black mental health.

    This event took place on March 1, 2024.

    For more information: https://hds.harvard.edu

    A full transcript is forthcoming.

    • 1 hr 39 min
    Black Religion and Mental Health Symposium Plenary I

    Black Religion and Mental Health Symposium Plenary I

    Plenary I:
    Plenary Chair: Dr. Tracey E. Hucks, Victor S. Thomas Professor of Africana Religious Studies, Harvard Divinity School

    Panelists: Rev. Dr. Monica A. Coleman, John and Patricia Cochran Scholar for Inclusive Excellence and Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Delaware, Dr. Martin Summers, Professor of History and African and African Diaspora Studies at Boston College, Dr. Stephanie Y. Evans, Professor of Black Women's Studies (WGSS & AAS) at Georgia State University

    Professor Ahmad Greene-Hayes (Harvard Divinity School) and Professor George Aumoithe (FAS, History and African and African American Studies) proposed this two-day interdisciplinary symposium, integrating mind, brain, and behavior insights into the exploration of Black religious practices and their impact on mental health. They questioned how Black religious spaces can enhance mental health outcomes, considering their dual role as sanctuaries and potential impediments to open discourse.

    The symposium brought together experts from history, public health, psychiatry, African American studies, religious studies, and civic society, focusing on understanding the neurobiological and socio-behavioral dynamics contributing to mental health stigmatization within Black communities. The symposium aimed to illuminate how societal stressors, such as racism, influence brain function and behavior, thereby affecting mental health, while also exploring resilience mechanisms among Black religious communities. This project aligns with the Harvard Mind Brain Behavior Interfaculty Initiative’s mission of facilitating interdisciplinary collaboration to address complex issues, contributing to a broader understanding of the interplay between mind, brain, and behavior in the context of Black mental health.

    This event took place on March 1, 2024.

    For more information: https://hds.harvard.edu

    A full transcript is forthcoming.

    • 1 hr 35 min
    Black Religion and Mental Health Symposium Opening Keynote

    Black Religion and Mental Health Symposium Opening Keynote

    Full Title: Black Religion and Mental Health Symposium Keynote, "Black Freedom and the Racialization of Religious Excitement in American Psychiatry” by Dr. Judith Weisenfeld

    Professor Ahmad Greene-Hayes (Harvard Divinity School) and Professor George Aumoithe (FAS, History and African and African American Studies) proposed this two-day interdisciplinary symposium, integrating mind, brain, and behavior insights into the exploration of Black religious practices and their impact on mental health. They questioned how Black religious spaces can enhance mental health outcomes, considering their dual role as sanctuaries and potential impediments to open discourse.

    The symposium brought together experts from history, public health, psychiatry, African American studies, religious studies, and civic society, focusing on understanding the neurobiological and socio-behavioral dynamics contributing to mental health stigmatization within Black communities. The symposium aimed to illuminate how societal stressors, such as racism, influence brain function and behavior, thereby affecting mental health, while also exploring resilience mechanisms among Black religious communities. This project aligns with the Harvard Mind Brain Behavior Interfaculty Initiative’s mission of facilitating interdisciplinary collaboration to address complex issues, contributing to a broader understanding of the interplay between mind, brain, and behavior in the context of Black mental health.

    This event took place on February 29, 2024.

    For more information: https://hds.harvard.edu

    A transcript is forthcoming.

    • 1 hr 36 min
    More Babies and More Birth Control: American Jews and the Politics of Reproduction

    More Babies and More Birth Control: American Jews and the Politics of Reproduction

    This event was sponsored by the Women's Studies in Religion Program at Harvard Divinity School. This lecture, "More Babies and More Birth Control: American Jews and the Politics of Reproduction," was given by Samira K. Mehta, who is the Visiting Associate Professor of North American Religions.

    This event took place on February 29, 2024.

    For more information, see: https://wsrp.hds.harvard.edu/

    A full transcript is forthcoming.

    • 1 hr 15 min

Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5
23 Ratings

23 Ratings

KaleChipCarrotTop ,

For those of us who HDS would never accept

I’ve never been one to follow the rules as they’ve been laid out by others. I don’t rebel for rebellion’s sake, but I DO ask myself with every breath, every choice, “is this in keeping with TRUTH, or is it in keeping with someone else telling me what’s true?” It can be a lonely path, and I often find myself longing for a spiritual community like the one I sense is formed at Harvard. Alas! I have no letter of recommendation from the Dali Lama (which is what I hear it takes to be accepted to Harvard Divinty School), so I am grateful for the public access—via this podcast—that I am granted.

This podcast can be a little pretentious (at times it feels like a long form commercial for the product that is HDS), but it also can open the door to phrases like “the most divine freaks” (Robin Coste Lewis). I’ve been reading the books written by guests and professors I meet here (Brian Morarescu and Todne Thomas, for example) and while my resumé may never include “Harvard grad,” my spiritual resumé continues to grow through offerings such as this. Thanks, HDS, for making this podcast available to us small-town divine freaks of the world.

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