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An Interview with Intern Camille Loomis

Theological Horizons has been blessed this semester to have Camille Loomis as the new fundraising intern. Camille is a third-year from Fairfax, VA. She is majoring in Art History and Religious Studies and is involved in various organizations such as Hoos in Treble, First Year Players, and Phi Sigma Pi. Describe your internship with Theological Horizons. My internship focuses on the fundraising arm of Theological Horizons. It takes a lot of support to keep a non-profit growing, so part of my job is to learn and imagine how we can continue to bring the message of TH to more supporters, and to constantly expand our reach!

How did you get involved with Theological Horizons? I got involved with Theological Horizons by taking classes with Professor Charles Marsh, and learning about the extracurricular events going on at the Bonhoeffer House. I came to Vintage for the first time last spring, and have been coming ever since!

How has Theological Horizons impacted you and your time at UVa? I have stayed involved because I feel so welcome here. As someone without a traditional Christian education or upbringing, it is so wonderful to have found a faith home that is inclusive yet challenging. The Bonhoeffer House is a respite away from the student universe and a great reminder of the life outside our immediate concerns.

–Caroline Parsley, UVa ’14

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Along the Arabian Peninsula: Oman, Islam & Christian-Muslim Relations

Catholic theologian Hans Kung has said: “There will be no peace among nations without peace among religions.”As Christians in America we live at a very pressing intersection: How are we to relate well with our Muslim neighbors here and around the world? The roads of global urgencies in Egypt, Nigeria, and elsewhere often meet the path of great ignorance about Islam on the American street and in the American pew. All the while the trail of growing fears has a strong grip on many of us. Today's Vintage focused on these questions and issues. We had the privilege of hearing from a special guest, Nathan Elmore. Nathan is the Baptist collegiate minister at Virginia Commonwealth University and serves Peace Catalyst International, an evangelical peacemaking organization which concentrates on Christian-Muslim relations. He is pursuing a Doctor of Ministry in Global Christianity through Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary

In January, 2012, Nathan F. Elmore traveled to Oman for a graduate seminar on Christian-Muslim relations in Arabia. Today, Nathan shared pictures and stories from this recent trip, focusing on four stories. Each story provided a peculiar window into the larger narrative of Christian-Muslim relations:

  • Iowa, frankincense, and the man from Salalah.
  • What St. Thomas has to do with Muhammad.
  • The redemption of Sharia will not be televised.
  • Proximity and distance in the house of a sheikh.
After the talk, students had the opportunity of asking Nathan their own questions, such as how we can engage in the Muslim community here on grounds. A special thanks to Nathan for visiting and sharing with us today!
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An intellectual at prayer: Soren Kierkegaard

It's snowing in Charlottesville today!  More than forty students came at the promise of a fire in the fireplace, homemade comfort food and a reading from Kierkegaard, our favorite existentialist.  At the age of 22, Kierkegaard (1813-1855) struggled with an issue that is very much alive for us today: "What I really lack is to be clear in my mind what I am to do, not what I know, except in so far as a certain understanding must precede every action.  The thing is to understand myself, to see what God really wishes me to do; the thing is to find a truth which is true for me, to find the idea for which I can live an die."  What a challenge it is to not only sort out the intellectual ideas and beliefs that we hold about God, but to truly live out that faith in the world. Kierkegaard's journal entries and written prayers [sign up here to read them] take us into the intense inward life of a thoughtful person seeking "to will one thing", a life in God, even through doubt, anxiety and distraction.  The philosopher reminds us of the astonishing, reassuring truth that "the seeker does not always have to wander far afield since the more sacred the object of his search, the nearer it is to him; and if he seeks You, O God, You are of all things more near."

God, who loves us with an infinite love, is moved to respond to our prayer:  "You are the One, who is one thing and who is all!  So may you give to the intellect, wisdom to comprehend the one thing; to the heart, sincerity to receive this understanding; to the will, purity that wills only one thing." For students struggling to grow into a adult faith of their own, Kierkegaard speaks as a mentor who has gone before us---as an older brother who witnesses to God's faithfulness in our wrestling.

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Stories of Christian-Muslim Relations on Feb. 1

“Along the Arabian Peninsula:  Oman, Islam & Christian-Muslim Relations

with Nathan F. Elmore

Friday, Feb. 1 at 1:00 pm: a Vintage Lunch at the Bonhoeffer House

Catholic theologian Hans Kung has said: “There will be no peace among nations without peace among religions.”

  As Christians in Americawe live at a very pressing intersection: How are we to relate well with our Muslim neighbors here and around the world?

The roads of global urgencies in Egypt, Nigeria, and elsewhere often meet the path of great ignorance about Islam on the American street and in the American pew. All the while the trail of growing fears has a strong grip on many of us.

In January, 2012, Nathan F. Elmore traveled to Oman for a graduate seminar on Christian-Muslim relations in Arabia. For this Vintage talk, he'll explore Oman through four stories, each providing a peculiar window into the larger narrative of Christian-Muslim relations.

  • Iowa, frankincense, and the man from Salalah.
  • What St. Thomas has to do with Muhammad.
  • The redemption of Sharia will not be televised.
  • Proximity and distance in the house of a sheikh.

Nathan is the Baptist collegiate minister atVirginiaCommonwealthUniversityand serves Peace Catalyst International, an evangelical peacemaking organization which concentrates on Christian-Muslim relations. He is pursuing a Doctor of Ministry in Global Christianity through Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary.

All are welcome.  For more information or to rsvp, contact Karen Marsh  karen@theologicalhorizons.org

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Strength in Weakness: Martin Luther King, Jr.

Last week’s Vintage welcomed back students after winter break with some Italian comfort food and thought-provoking discussion. In honor of his recent birthday, we read and discussed a passage from Martin Luther King Jr.’s autobiography. King is most often remembered as a prominent leader in the Civil Rights Movement who delivered the legendary “I have a dream” speech. However, at Vintage we learned about the more private and less known side of King, which revealed his struggles and weakness. In the particular passage we read, MLK Jr. experiences fear, despair, and self-doubt in the midst of pressure and threats from the Civil Rights movement. King even admits that at one point, he had decided that he would quietly back out of the protest. He describes that moment : “It seemed that all my fears had come down on me at once…And I got to the point that I couldn’t take it any longer. I was weak.”

It was in this moment of utter weakness that Martin Luther King Jr. found strength. He came to the point where he couldn’t face life alone, and it was then that the Lord spoke to him. In this amazing moment with God, King says that “He promised never to leave me alone. At that moment I experienced the presence of the Divine as I had never experienced Him before. Almost at once my fears began to go. My uncertainty disappeared. I was ready to face anything.” And it was true; King was ready to face anything. He pressed on in his fight for rights, despite the endless threats on him and his family.

All the students at Vintage, including myself, were moved by the story. We were especially struck by MLK Jr.’s vulnerability and honesty with his own self-doubt and fears. These are struggles that every individual experiences, no matter how outwardly strong and confident one might seem. Yet paradoxically, King was strengthened in his weakness because it was in that moment of despair that he came to the end of himself and looked to God for strength. It was the divine strength of God in him that allowed him to face the dangers and toils that lied ahead. This reading was a wonderful reminder to us of an important truth—that strength can only be found while relying on God rather than ourselves.

--Caroline Parsley, UVa '14

To see the Vintage reading by Martin Luther King, Jr., go to the Member of this website.  It's free to join!

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The Breakfast Bible Study is back January 23

"The Breakfast Bible Study at Bonhoeffer House has become a midweek respite for me in the last year and-a-half.  It is neither easy to be quiet in the midst of life’s noise nor to find God’s peace in the midst of its craziness.  But each Wednesday morning, ironically with a rather large group, I find them both. This wonderfully eclectic group of students, faculty, clergy and community members points me to Jesus week after week with their wise words, their challenging discussions, their gracious prayers and their welcoming smiles.  I leave with a greater sense of the Spirit's presence within and around me, the Father's provision, and the Son's compassion and call.  And the (strong) coffee and delicious breakfast only add to the blessings of this fellowship.  I hate when I have to miss – and I hope you will consider joining us."

 Kristan Livingston,
community member
 
Learn more about the weekly Breakfast Bible Study,
Wednesdays at 9:00 a.m.
 
The new semester of our study begins on January 23 --
the perfect time to join us!
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We're a 2012 Top-Rated Nonprofit 2012!

2012 has been an exciting year for Theological Horizons, and we're excited to announce that we're wrapping up the year with an award: a top-rated nonprofit by Great Nonprofits for 2012! Friends of the Bonhoeffer House submitted reviews of the work coming out of Theological Horizons, the leadership, and our mission. It was great to hear from recent students, parents, and community members share their varied experiences. What I love about Theological Horizons is that there is something for everyone. Supporting Christians in academia is at the heart of our mission, but is expressed in many ways. Students gather for Vintage discussions and lunches on Fridays, friends gather for Wednesday morning Bible study with Saranell, and Karen brings in great speakers throughout the semester.

Molly's review expressed the warmth of the ministry when she said, "[Theological Horizons] provides students, parents and community members to engage in thoughtful discussions and events that empower individuals to understand culture, thought, faith and life. As a student at the University of Virginia, I found Theological Horizons as the place where I could escape and be fully known--where I could ask the tougher questions in life."

We hope that this place of escape and questioning can be true for many new UVA students and academics in the future. Thank you for your support in ensuring this ministry continues doing such good work!

See our full profile and all of the reviews here!

Sarah Salinas  UVa 2014

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My experience of Morning Prayer

Morning Prayer has been a tremendous blessing in my life at UVa. It has been a perfect outlet for me to fulfill my desire to have a close, intimate relationship with my God, while allowing me to share my spiritual gifts with others. Waking early and spending 30 minutes praying and worshiping in our beautiful UVa Chapel really sets the tone for the day and allows all of us who join in Morning Prayer to offer praise and petition. It puts me in a place to hear the Holy Spirit speak into my life and provide direction for the day. -- Cameron Archer, graduate student, UVa, Mechanical Engineering

Join us for Morning Prayer in the UVa Chapel.  Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 8:15 - 8:45 a.m.

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Celebrate GIVING TUESDAY

National GIVING TUESDAY is a day to support more than 2,000 charities from all 50 states of the United States. Theological Horizons is a 501(c)3 registered charity and all of your gifts to us are tax deductible... so GIVE BACK generously on Giving Tuesday, November 27! Support us in the work of meeting students where they are on their spiritual journeys and partnering with us to transform lives, by the grace of God.  Students come to the Bonhoeffer house as a place of refuge in the midst of the hectic college world.  They are met by people who welcome them, walk alongside and invest in the matters of the heart.

During this season of giving, we welcome you to join us in the ministry of Theological Horizons and to partner with us in the work of sharing the Good News with this special community.

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Vintage Reflections: Henri J.M. Nouwen

Henri J.M. Nouwen (1932-1996) Today's Vintage lunch welcomed students in from the cold and included hearty ham biscuits, sweet apple cider, and a heaping of warm welcomes. It's hard to believe that we're nearing the end of the fall semester, and today's reading of Henri Nouwen on gratitude and grace could not have been more fitting as students prepare for the Thanksgiving holiday.

Nouwen was an intellectual, a priest, and a servant of God. Born in war-time Holland, he would go on to teach at Notre Dame, Yale, and Harvard, write thirteen books, and serve as pastor of a L'Arche community church, serving and assisting the handicapped. His experiences shaped his conclusions on gratitude, and Nouwen sincerely believed that gratitude was a choice in rather than a reaction to circumstances.

Students remarked on feelings of gratitude. Many feel gratitude when overwhelmed by positivity or when given an opportunity or a gift. Others feel gratitude when they're reminded of simple blessings such as the ability to walk or the chance to celebrate a healthy and happy family, but for Henri Nouwen, gratitude is not an occasional or spontaneous feeling. It's an active decision and habitual response to all situations - the good, the bad, the unexpected. Rather than remarking on intermittent reminders of blessings, individuals should practice gratitude with sincere effort. As Nouwen explains, "the call to be grateful is a call to trust that every moment of our life can be claimed as the way of the cross that leads us to new life". Therefore, the Lord enables our gratefulness and peace in all circumstances through grace.

As discussion over Nouwen's writings continued over the hour, I started to feel grateful for the challenges that the Lord has put in my path lately. Not because they may end with rewards, but because they are opportunities to practice the choice of gratitude. Nouwen explained, "each time I make it, the next choice is a little easier, a little freer, a little less self-conscious... until finally, even the most normal, obvious, and seemingly mundane event or encounter proves to be filled with grace".

A very happy Thanksgiving, indeed. Sarah Salinas, UVa 2014 

Click here for the Henri Nouwen reading from this week.

Click here to join the website (free of charge) and access all past Vintage readings.

 

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Vintage Reflections: Dorothy Day

Dorothy Day (1897-1980) The living room of the Bonhoeffer House this week was more crowded and buzzing than I’ve ever seen at a Friday Vintage lunch. After a long and busy week, chili casserole hit the spot, and the aroma of hot apple cider filled the air.

After the chatting students quieted, Karen introduced the life of Dorothy Day, the founder of the Catholic Worker newspaper and movement, a devoted follower of the Lord, and a radical activist. She was an active member of the women’s suffrage movement, she spent days in and out of prison, and she opened various hospitality houses to serve the hungry and homeless during the Great Depression. Her biographer, Jim Forest, said it best when he wrote “there you have Dorothy Day in two words: saint and troublemaker”.

Day’s writings grappled with the idea of loving and serving others in the most humblest and selfless of ways. She recounted a day in which she cared for a man in need. Day brought him into her house on a Sunday afternoon, gave him a bed for a nap, helped him look for a job, and made him coffee and sandwiches, and after the man left, she discovered he took her wallet as well. When most would take the opportunity to be angry or vengeful, Dorothy Day instead wrote of how she was in to place to understand or judge the man’s situation. Her role was simply to love and serve others to the best of her abilities, and God would take care of the rest.

Students discussed the contradiction of how we should love and how we should judge. While they came to many different conclusions they settled on one universal truth. It’s easy to forget that we all face times of trouble and hardship, but Dorothy Day spent her life seeking these people who were at their lowest lows. And not only did she serve, but she served in the name of God. Day understood that Christ did not neglect the weak and hungry, rather he sought them in a crowd, and that was the impetus for the growth of the Catholic Worker movement all over the world.

I believe Day understood the urgency of living after God when she wrote, “we are not expecting Utopia here on this earth. But God meant things to be much easier than we have made them. A man has a natural right to food, clothing, and shelter… A family needs work as well as bread… We must keep repeating these things… Eternal life begins now”.

Click here for the Julian of Norwich reading from this week.

Click here to join the website (free of charge) and access all past Vintage readings.

Sarah Salinas, UVa 2014

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Vintage Reflections: Martin Luther

Martin Luther (1483-1543) Today’s Vintage was a wonderful amalgam of barbeque, slaw, Martin Luther’s thoughts on anxiety, and pecan pie.  Martin Luther is considered the Father of the Protestant Reformation.  He devoted himself to Augustinian monasticism at the age of 20 and was ordained at 24 years old.  Luther became concerned with his salvation – where to seek it, where it was embodied, and how to secure it.  He resolved that his salvation relied more so on his personal relationship with and faith in God and set his life to come to a biblical understanding of Christ.

Yet through Luther’s commencement of the modernity in the Church, he struggled with crippling anxiety.  At Vintage, we looked at 3 passages on this topic, each from his preaching on the Sermon on the Mount.  Luther speaks on distinguishing greed from the concern of love.  We decided that the difference lies in showing concern for others or allowing self-concern and self-interest to dwell in our hearts.  Luther also declares birds as schoolmasters and teachers.  Birds are made to preach through their song.  They are oftentimes caged, relying upon owners for food, care, and shelter.  However, Luther believes that birds were created to be free – happier, singing praises, and relying solely on the provisions of the Creator.  Birds “exhort you with this Gospel. Not with mere simple words, but with a living deed and an example.”  A wonderful idea – to appreciate each bird’s song heard on Grounds as a testimony of “the art of trusting Him and of casting cares from themselves upon God.”

 We students replaced the word “anxiety” with “worries”, and then applied it to our college lives – overwhelmed by grades, social scenes, and academic challenges.  However, encouragement was found in Luther’s words in the final passage:

“So forget your anxieties, since you cannot accomplish anything by them.  It does not depend upon your anxiety but upon His knowledge and concern.”

Reflect upon anxiety with us by accessing this week’s Vintage reading – click here!

To access past Vintage readings and become a TH member (free of charge) – click here!

Boldly and without hindrance,

Betty Li, UVa 2015

 

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Vintage Reflections: Julian of Norwich

Julian of Norwich (1343-1413) Today's Vintage discussion focused on the life and writings of Julian of Norwich, a theologian, anchorite, and daughter of the Lord who lived in England in the 14th century. Apart from her life's commitment to God's work and her intimate understanding of his grace, Julian of Norwich was an example of a godly life in a time of great suffering. Julian was moved by God's goodness and how that translated into his loving care for us, his children, and as we consider her profound thoughts today, I cannot help but smile at the simplicity of them all. It took the tiny object of a hazelnut to remind Julian of God's creating, loving, and preserving power. Because she understood that God loves even the smallest of and seemingly insignificant things, she clung to God's life giving goodness. How trivial is one life in a million? It's small, but made valuable and powerful through the goodness of God.

"For the highest form of prayer is to the goodness of God. It comes down to us to meet our humblest needs. It gives life to our souls and makes them live and grow in grace and virtue. It is near and swift in grace, for it is the same grace which our souls seek and always will."

Students in today's discussion were encouraged by the idea that all goodness in life comes from God's goodness, and we were struck by the fact that a "vintage thinker" from the 1300s would have such insights into the things that concern us today. To understand the immense love of God, to Julian of Norwich, was to find rest and purpose in Him alone. As she wrote, "never can we stop the desiring and longing until he is ours in the fullness of bliss."

Click here for the Julian of Norwich reading from this week.

Click here to join the website (free of charge) and access all past Vintage readings.

Sarah Salinas, UVa 2014

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Guest Blogger Critiques a Vintage Recipe: Santa Fe Soup

Guest blogger: Sarah Salinas, Theological Horizons Intern and lover of all foods  Students were welcomed into the Bonhoeffer House this afternoon after one of the cooler weeks we've had in Charlottesville in a while. Karen mentioned that she'd be making soup on Tuesday, and I hadn't realized until I walked into the house today that I've missed that home comfort. After a long week of classes, soup can be a simple but effective remedy for stressful minds. I'm here to share the recipe, because this hearty soup should be a staple in everyone's kitchen this fall!

Santa Fe Soup

  • 2 lbs ground turkey or beef
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 2 5-oz. envelopes ranch-style dressing mix
  • 2 1.25-oz. envelopes taco seasoning mix
  • 1 16-oz can black beans
  • 1 16-oz. can kidney beans
  • 1 16-oz. can pinto beans
  • 1 16-oz. diced tomatoes with chiles, undrained
  • 1 16-oz. can tomato wedges, undrained
  • 2 16-oz cans white corn, undrained
  • 2 cups water
  • Sour cream, shredded cheddar cheese, and sliced green onions for garnish

Cook the meat & onion together until the meat is browned. Stir the ranch-style dressing mix & the taco seasoning into the meat. Add the remaining ingredients with their juices. Add the water and simmer for two hours. If the mixture is too thick, add more water. Garnish each serving with sour cream, shredded cheddar cheese, and sliced green onions, if desired. Serve with tortilla chips.

 

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Celebrate! Party Pics and News

There’s nothing we love more than to see the Bonhoeffer House filled with friends--so imagine how delighted we were to welcome more than 100 students, faculty and friends for the Celebrate! event on  Sept. 16. With the generous help of a great host committee, board members, and student volunteers, we celebrated 12 years of the Bonhoeffer House and  the warm community that God has created here.

Remarks by Karen Wright Marsh, executive director:

This place was a dream once.   It was named before we even saw it: the Bonhoeffer House.  We were inspired by the heroic German pastor, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who called Christians to live their faith at the center of the world.  Bonhoeffer embodied a very personal witness to God’s grace and truth, as “Christ for others” and in his life he showed us how powerful, how beautiful life in community can be.

Charles and I were living in Baltimore, where he was teaching at Loyola.   The two of us had founded Theological Horizons ten years before and begun the lifelong work of encouraging Christians in academia. Charles, ever the visionary, began talking about this Bonhoeffer House and we wondered what this dream might become.

When Charles accepted the faculty position at the University of Virginia in 1999, we searched Charlottesville for a “Bonhoeffer House”, this dream on our hearts.

We were looking for a place where faculty could talk about how their faith connected to their intellectual work and their teaching;

We were looking for a center of support the promising professors of tomorrow---graduate students following God’s call into academia;

We were looking for a home for our own family where we bring along students on their spiritual journeys,  welcoming their questions and speaking God’s truth;

We hoping to create a mentoring community within the university--a Bonhoeffer House which would be “a welcoming home for engaging faith, thought and life”.

With the board of directors of Theological Horizons, Charles and I affirmed something that Dietrich Bonhoeffer himself said once: “I believe that God is about to accomplish something that we can only receive with the greatest wonder and awe.”

When we walked through the door at 1841 University Circle that autumn morning, we knew we’d found it.  A place for community.  A place for conversation, peace and friendship.  A place for Christians and for seekers, too, inviting questions about spirit and life at the heart of the University.  It was crystal clear—with its red tile roof and stucco walls it even looked like the Bonhoeffer home in Berlin-- which had us saying, “Wow! This IS a God thing!”  We knew we were standing in the Bonhoeffer House.

Our family put in all we had to make this vision reality.  The Theological Horizons board of directors and many partners invested generously, too.  Together we claimed this Bonhoeffer House and put that plaque on the door, confident that God would provide for the future of the house.

Over the past 12 years, thousands of others have walked through this Bonhoeffer House door and stepped into God’s grace.  While there’s nothing uncommon about the cooking here-- the theological insights we offer echo what Christians have believed through the century, there’s the welcoming fulfillment of Jesus’ promise: “Where two or three have come together in my name, I am there among them." (Matthew 18:20)  Every time we offer up this space, we have truly opened the door for Christ.

And this happens often—just take the past four days.  God was present on Thursday night when summer interns, community friends and graduate students discussed experiences of theology lived out in Kenya and Richmond.  On Friday, Christ ministered among 35 college students reading C.S. Lewis over lunch in the living and then as a pack of middle school girls came for a Bible study.  Yesterday, 5 friends arrived with armloads of flowers and tablecloths to create a welcome for you today. And so it goes.

It is our hope that all who come receive a spirit-filled embrace that Christ gives so generously.  Even while the Bonhoeffer House echoes with the everyday sounds of our family and the barking dog, the antisocial cat, it has become something far more: the Bonhoeffer House is one small response to God’s call to be “Christ for others”.

You friends have been and continue to be critical to keeping the doors of the Bonhoeffer House open.  Your friendship and your involvement sustain Theological Horizons, with its heart at the Bonhoeffer House and its programs reaching lives far beyond these walls.  Today we thank you—and we offer gratitude for many partners who have walked with us all along the way-- for your prayers, for  living this dream with us, in making this welcome for Christ over the past 12 years.

Sometimes when the roof is leaking, lunch is overcooked or resources are tight, we ask if we’re making a difference in the midst of the American university?

The writer Andy Crouch has an answer I love.  He tells us to look to the fruit of our work.  “Do we see a divine multiplication after we have done our best?  Does a riotous abundance of grain spring up from a tiny, compact seed?  This is grace: unearned, unexpected abundance that can leave us dizzy with joy.  It is a return on investment that exceeds anything we could explain by our own effectiveness or efforts.”

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Vintage, Bible Study & Morning Prayer are happening

Now you can see the flyer for our fall semester programs! Wow,  these days are rich and full...Join us.

Step in for Morning Prayer in the UVa Chapel on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 8:15-8:45 am.  God, music, friends--the best way to start the day.

The Breakfast Bible Study is on Wednesdays at 9 am. Saranell is teaching a series guided by the book Fresh Air, The Holy Spirit for an Inspired Life by Jack Levison. We are studying the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives and will learn from Job, Daniel, Simeon, Chloe, Ezekiel, Jesus and Peter.  Come and expect to encounter God in unexpected places.  All are welcome!  Students, faculty, community folks.

We've had one Vintage lunch so far (BBQ chicken & Augustine!) and are really excited about the theme for the fall: The Vintage Life.  Each week we look at the lives of "Vintage" Christians throughout the centuries, enter their stories, read their words and seek to understand what they experienced.  We're discovering how they encountered God in their doubts, joys, conflicts, questions and pleasures--and asking the question, "What elements of the Vintage Life are fruitful for us today?"  Can't be here?  Become a member (it's free) and you can read along with us as we post the texts for each week.

There are lots of other things going on--lectures, brown bag lunch workshops, student presentations and discussions.

Check out our calendar--and add it to you google calendar--and you won't miss anything.

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Wahoo Welcomes (are you in the photo?)

Our intrepid team of upperclassmen & grad students delivered cookies to 57 first years in their dorms on Move In Day.  The welcome continued as we hosted our annual Wahoo Welcome Lunch on August 31. More than 86 students dropped by for the traditional Bonhoeffer House lunch offerings: homemade iced tea, crunchy romaine salad, Cane's chicken strips and chocolate dessert...A great beginning to a new year! Our weekly Vintage lunch and conversation group begins the following Friday, Sept. 7 from 1-2 pm and features our favorite readings from the classic Christian tradition.  All students are welcome!   To see a map to the Bonhoeffer House

 

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