A Message from Rev. Dr. Sonja B. Williams, Dean of the Seminary  

Eden Theological Seminary is blessed by the administrative leadership of its faculty. For the last two years, Rev. Dr. Damayanthi Niles has served as Interim Academic Dean. As she returns to full-time teaching as the Allen and Dottie Miller Professor of Mission and Peace, Rev. Dr. Christopher Grundy has agreed to serve as Academic Dean as he continues in his teaching and worship leadership roles as Professor of Preaching and Worship and Dean of the Chapel.

After graduating from Carleton College in Minnesota and Union Theological Seminary in New York, Dr. Grundy served churches in Iowa and Kansas for eight years before seeking an M.T.S. and PhD. in liturgical studies from Garrett Seminary. He is the author of Recovering Communion in a Violent World: Resilience, Resistance, and Risk (see www.belovedcommunion.org) and co-author of The Work of the People: What We Do in Worship and Why. Dr Grundy has also been writing and performing music for local, regional, and national church gatherings for more than two decades. You can find his music on Apple Music, Spotify, Amazon, www.convergencemp.com, and many other platforms. He is married to Dr. Carla Tellor Grundy, and they have three sons: Ross, Liam, and Gabriel.

“It’s an honor to work with Eden’s outstanding leadership team,” he says, “and to serve a school that has such an important and distinctive role, both in the St. Louis region and the world. I look forward to collaborating with Eden’s faculty and network of partners as we move into the new era of theological education that is emerging.”

Eden is glad to welcome Dana McNamara, as the Interim Director of Admissions. 

Please share this with others you know who have an interest in theological education.

Contact Dana at [email protected]

As a lifelong member of the United Church of Christ Dana grew up attending worship and church camps in Colorado where she heard her call to ministry. Dana completed her Bachelor of Science in Organizational Management and Christian Leadership from Colorado Christian University in 2012 and earned her Master of Divinity from Eden Theological Seminary in 2016.

Dana comes to this position with eight years of Seminary admissions experience. As an Eden alum she can testify firsthand to the inclusiveness and growing accessibility of Eden’s programs. As the Interim Director, she hopes to engage students who are feeling God’s call on their life to expand their theological training, leadership, and knowledge of the Progressive Christian Movement.

Since she’s been in Missouri, Dana met and married her husband, Ryan. Dana and Ryan have a gaggle of dogs and cats in their household and enjoy taking the dogs, Mars and iO hiking as often as possible. 

MEDIA ADVISORY

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 11, 2022

Contact: Rev. Cynthia Owen Jarrold, Sr. Advisor for Funding Strategies and External Affairs
[email protected] /(913) 219-3198

 

The Gamaliel Network announces new partnership with Eden Theological Seminary

Chicago, IL – April 21, 2022 – The Gamaliel Network is pleased to announce that it is entering into a partnership with Eden Theological Seminary (ETS) as part of our ongoing effort to dismantle structural racism through our Race and Power Institute.

“The partnership with Eden Seminary in the development of Gamaliel’s Race and Power Institute is a testament to the recognized need for faith leaders to help to repair the soul of our nation or in the words of Kelly Brown Douglas, the ‘moral imaginary,’” said Rev. Dr. John C. Welch, Chairman of the Gamaliel Board of Directors. “Seminaries are where formation happens and where the conversations can begin.”

ETS is a Progressive Christian institution located in St. Louis, MO. Since 1850, ETS has been committed to the theological and spiritual formation of Christian leaders and the pursuit of justice. According to Eden President Deborah Krause, “This partnership empowers Eden to combine impactful resources of theological education for social justice with Gamaliel’s proven capacity to move people to change systems of domination and structures of oppression. We are excited for what this means for ministry and for justice organizing!”

Through this partnership, courses focused on race and power in community organizing will be taught to ETS students and will launch on May 31, 2022. A certificate in Race and Power will also be added to ETS’s course offerings.

These efforts are part of Gamaliel’s ongoing effort to launch the Race and Power Institute (RAPI), an entity within Gamaliel that aims to create a bridge between race analysis and organizing work and provide ongoing professional development and resources for organizers and leaders within and outside the Gamaliel Network at the intersection of policy, praxis, and philosophy. Already at work to fulfill its purpose, the Gamaliel Race and Power Institute will fully launch at Gamaliel’s biennial Race and Power Summit in December 2022.

Ms. Angela James, a 30-year veteran faith-based community organizer and national staff member in the Gamaliel Network, and racial equity specialist, is the Director of the Gamaliel Race and Power Institute. Rev. Dr. Dietra Wise-Baker, Eden Assistant Professor of Community Engagement and Contextual Education, serves as Organizing Director of the Gamaliel Race and Power Institute at Eden Theological Seminary.

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Gamaliel is a grassroots network of non-partisan, faith-based organizations in 13 states and 43 regions that has, for 35 years, trained ordinary people to effectively participate in the political, environmental, social and economic decisions affecting their lives. Gamaliel’s work is rooted in a shared set of values like diversity, inclusion, and democracy. Gamaliel is committed to a long-term transformational agenda that creates structural racial equity, builds the people’s control of government and the economy, and expands the public sphere. Gamaliel builds power to transform the world as it is into a new world marked by equity, compassion, hope, shared abundance, and radical inclusiveness.

Download the full press release here.

On February 19th the St. Louis City NAACP will present the Freeman/Seay Commitment to St. Louis Award to presidents and alumni of schools of higher education in the St. Louis area. Eden Theological Seminary is honored to be among them. Congratulations to Eden’s president, Rev. Dr. Deborah Krause and alumni, Rev. Dr. Cassandra Gould on receiving this award. The award is presented annually in recognition of exemplary service, distinguished leadership and commitment to improve the cultural, social and economic growth and development of the St. Louis area. The award is named in honor of the late Attorney Frankie Muse Freeman and the late civil rights activist Norman R. Seay.

Ordained in the Missouri Conference of The United Methodist Church, The Reverend H. Russell Ewell II currently serves as The Pastor of Terrace Lake United Methodist Church (Kansas City MO). Additionally, he is the Chair Emeritus of The United Methodist Association of Ministers with Disabilities, and serves as a board member of Missouri Faith Voices. As a person with a disability in pre- ADA America, his personal and systems advocacy skills began to develop the day his parents enrolled him in kindergarten. There, ophthalmologists and educators forewarned, “Blind students could not succeed in integrated classrooms.” So “don’t bother dreaming of one day seeing your son graduate from high school with a diploma.”

Proving conventional wisdom wrong, Russell graduated from Normandy Sr. High (St. Louis MO) and earned a B.S. in Sociology from Southern Illinois University (Edwardsville). In 2009 he distinguished himself by becoming the first blind student to graduate from Eden Theological Seminary in its 168-year history. He also has the distinction of being the first blind person to be ordained in The Missouri Conference of the United Methodist Church.

Rev. Ewell advocates for people to realize their power and apprehend their life goals. He gives talks across the country on Disability Advocacy and Awareness, The Disability Rights Movement, The Intersections of Religion and Disability, and The Intersectionality of Disability and Black Theology. Russell is a tireless advocate for a more liberating and inclusive theology of disability. He is passionate about empowering the disenfranchised and assisting all people in realizing their potential, purpose, and worth in The Church and society. Rev. Ewell is the proud husband of The Reverend Adrienne Denson Ewell.

Join Chalice Press for a FREE author Q&A with guests who were in the frontlines of the protests, including Eden’s president, faculty, and alumni. We will discuss the lasting changes and hope from this movement.

Monday, January 31st, 7 pm CST

Register with Chalice Press over on their event page.

Did the protests that started in Ferguson, Missouri in 2015 have a lasting change or effects?

About this event

Faith after Ferguson, Leah Gunning Francis’s follow-up to her landmark book Ferguson and Faith, revisits the activists who took to the streets in 2014 to protest the killing of Michael Brown, a young Black man, by a white police officer. In this livestream, Gunning Francis is joined by others who participated in those protests and have seen what has — and has not — changed as a result of those protests and the political changes locally and nationally. How has social activism changed the lives of the protestors? What barriers must still be overcome? How can we be better allies? Hear from those who have seen first-hand what remains to be done.