L’Abri Rochester
Here we explore life’s issues with our weekly speakers from the Rochester L’Abri Community; aiming to give honest answers to honest questions from a Christian perspective.
Here we explore life’s issues with our weekly speakers from the Rochester L’Abri Community; aiming to give honest answers to honest questions from a Christian perspective.
Episodes

Wednesday Nov 08, 2023
Wednesday Nov 08, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - The Integration Of Faith And Learning - A Hard But Rewarding Task - AJ Poelarends
Click for Slides
Dr. Arend J. (AJ) Poelarends, native to the Netherlands, holds a PhD in Astrophysics from the University of Utrecht. His studies in astrophysics casued him to ponder questions of the cosmos and our place in it, leading him to earn an MDiv from Covenant Seminary. AJ now works with Anselm House in Minneapolis and previously as an Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Wheaton College.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023.
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Nov 01, 2023
Wednesday Nov 01, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - The Art And Craft Of Whole Person Christian Formation: Learning Through Creative Work - Sarah Chestnut
Click for Slides
Sarah Chestnut lives and works at L’Abri Fellowship in Southborough, Massachusetts with her husband and two children. Sarah’s poetry and creative non-fiction have appeared or are forthcoming in CRUX, Red Rock Literary Journal, LETTERS, The Rabbit Room, Three Things Newsletter, Bearings Online, Peacock Journal, and elsewhere. She hosts a local, monthly gathering, Poetry in the Round for conversation about and between poems. Sarah has a Master of Arts in Theological Studies from Regent College and was the 2009 recipient of the Luci Shaw Prize for Creative Writing.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Oct 25, 2023
Wednesday Oct 25, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - Aren't They All Just Dead White Males? Why Read The Classics? - Peter Merz
Click for slides.
Peter Merz was born in Melbourne and raised in New South Wales, Australia. He studied Classics at the University of Sydney and Education at the University of Western Sydney. Prior to university, he was educated at home for 7 years, and attended school for 6 years. He has spent a lifetime loving "old things" and sharing that passion with others. Peter has lived with his wife Dawn and their (now) six children at the English L'Abri for the past ten years. He enjoys languages (ancient and modern), literature, history, reading aloud, hiking, music, stand-up comedy and sport.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Oct 18, 2023
Wednesday Oct 18, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - For The Welfare Of The University: Finding Ways To Fill Gaps In Higher Education - Dan Daugherty
Click for slides.
Dan Daugherty currently executively directs Alcuin Study Centre. Previously, he taught literature, composition, and philosophy at a private high school in Minnesota for 12 years. He currently serves as the Director of Education for Muncie Fellows. He holds a BS in Journalism from BSU and an MA in Christian Thought from Reformed Theological Seminary in Orlando. He’s also quite keen on good books, good music, good beer, and good friends.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Oct 11, 2023
Wednesday Oct 11, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - From Canon To Wikipedia And Back Again: A Call For A Coherent Education - Clarke Scheibe
Click for slides.
Clarke Scheibe grew up in Memphis, TN. He graduated in 1998 with a Bachelors of Liberal Arts (University of Mississippi), with a Creative Writing emphasis. He moved to Canada in 2000 and graduated with a MDiv (Regent College) in 2004. His interests are in theology, philosophy, social critique, pop culture, literature, short fiction, sports, and music.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Oct 04, 2023
Wednesday Oct 04, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - The (Naked) Woke Public University: Is This The Future Of Higher Education? - Bob Osburn
Click for slides.
Dr Bob Osburn has a PhD in international education from the University of Minnesota (2005), where he also was an adjunct lecturer for seven years in the Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy, and Development. In 1978 he earned his ThM in Christian education at Dallas Theological Seminary, after earning a BA from the University of Michigan (1973). He has spent over 35 years serving in international student and academic ministry at the University of Minnesota.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Sep 27, 2023
Wednesday Sep 27, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - Schaeffer At The U: Christian Study Centers As A Vanguard And A Shelter - AJ Poelarends
Click for slides.
Dr. Arend J. (AJ) Poelarends, native to the Netherlands, holds a PhD in Astrophysics from the University of Utrecht. His studies in astrophysics led him to ponder questions of the cosmos and our place in it, leading him to earn an MDiv from Covenant Seminary. AJ now works with Anselm House in Minneapolis and previously as an Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Wheaton College.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023.
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Sep 20, 2023
Wednesday Sep 20, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - Can America Be Reformed When The University Is The Source Of Darkness? - Vishal Mangalwadi
Vishal Mangalwadi is an Indian philosopher and social reformer who has written several popular books on the Bible’s seismic influence. Vishal has lectured in over 40 countries, published seventeen books (including The Book That Made Your World), and contributed to many more.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023.
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Sep 13, 2023
Wednesday Sep 13, 2023
The first verses in Genesis 6 appear to be a brief and truncated prelude to the Flood narrative. Because of its brevity, there have been varying interpretations of the nature of the 'sons of god and the daughters of men' mentioned in this perplexing narrative. Interestingly, the passage is expanded upon in the New Testament (2 Peter and Jude), and especially in the extra-biblical book of I Enoch, which is quoted by Jude. However, we now have numerous documents from Mesopotamia that provide an interesting context to better understand this difficult narrative and to help us understand how it is a significant introduction to the Flood narrative.
Mark W. Chavalas is Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, where he has taught for over thirty years. He and his wife Kimberlee are the parents of six adult children and three grandchildren. Among his publications are the co-edited, Mesopotamia and the Bible (with K.L. Younger Jr.) and the co-authored IVP Bible Background Commentary (with J. Walton and V. Matthews).

Wednesday Sep 06, 2023
Wednesday Sep 06, 2023
The role of alcohol in the Bible is a contentious topic, with even greater debates attending the question of how we might apply the biblical material to our lives. Dr. John Anthony Dunne will be addressing this topic with readings from the final chapter of his forthcoming book, Mountains Shall Drip Sweet Wine: A Biblical Theology of Alcohol, which will be published by Zondervan next year.
John Anthony Dunne (PhD, University of St Andrews) is Associate Professor of New Testament and the Director of the Doctor of Ministry program at Bethel Seminary.

Wednesday Aug 30, 2023
Wednesday Aug 30, 2023
One of the dismissive phrases that has powerfully gripped our culture lately is “We rely on the science.” This is often uttered by people who have no idea what it even means; nevertheless, there is a great confusion between basing things on knowledge and basing things on faith. These are often seen as conflicting: knowledge comes from science whereas religious belief comes from faith. This just means that knowledge is about evidence, but faith comes from blind belief. Consequently, religion is frequently dismissed as nothing more than personal, blind belief, which has no connection to knowledge and no real authority for everyone.
This common account is a complete confusion. In fact, life separated from knowledge quickly becomes untenable—we are now witnessing this in every part of our collapsing culture. This lecture will explore what faith and knowledge actually are, and how faith in the Bible cannot be separated from the context of truth and knowledge. Finally, we will look at Christianity’s unique stand on knowledge and how knowledge of the truth is the most practical thing in the world.
Greg Jesson’s long journey took him from UCLA and USC (where he studied under Dallas Willard) in Los Angeles, where he earned a BA and Masters degrees, to L’Abri in Switzerland where he studied under Francis Schaeffer, and finally to the University of Iowa, where he competed his PhD in philosophy, writing on what the structure of the mind must be in order for knowledge to be possible. He has published articles on the nature of thought and knowledge, philosophy of mathematics, Francis Schaeffer, Dallas Willard, apologetics, the truth and relevance of Christianity, and the portrayal of ultimate issues in movies. Over the decades he has taught at eight colleges and one seminary, and lectured extensively in America including Stanford, the University of California at Santa Cruz, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, the Pentagon, and the National Cathedral. He has also lectured widely in Europe in the last few years. He was most recently a professor of philosophy and director of the Center for Ethics and Public Life at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa. He now spends his time writing, lecturing, restoring an old Porsche and an older house, while trying to keep up with his energetic puppy, Dr. Watson.

Wednesday Aug 16, 2023
Wednesday Aug 16, 2023
In her lovely book, L’Abri (1969), Edith Schaeffer writes that she and Francis determined the purpose of L’Abri would be “To show forth by demonstration, in our life and work, the existence of God.” It sometimes appears that being a disciple of Jesus can be summarized in a series of classes or booklets, so that we become effective in such habits as prayer, Bible reading, witnessing, and living a sanctified life. As important as those things are, in this lecture I want to ask the question, “How can ordinary Christians demonstrate the existence of God in the ordinary routine of our lives?" And I will suggest that living moment by moment at the interface between the visible and invisible realms of created realty provides some practical and attractive answers.
Click For Slides
Denis and Margie Haack co-directed Ransom Fellowship from 1983-2020. They continue a ministry of conversation and listening, as well as writing, no longer in print (Critique & Letters from the House Between), but on their website (https://www.critique-letters.com/). They are enjoying being grandparents while Margie collects eggs laid by her four hens, Pecorino, Brie, Fontina, and Velveeta. They live in Savage, MN and are members of Church of the Cross (Hopkins, MN).

Wednesday Aug 09, 2023
Wednesday Aug 09, 2023
Dostoevsky said that beauty would save the world. But how? What does this mean? We can begin to apprehend what Dostoevsky so profoundly said only when we understand what it means to have a Christian poetic and once we have grappled with the nature of true Beauty. However, lest we relegate Beauty to a dry lecture, we will read through Flannery O'Connor's short story, 'Parker's Back', which displays the danger and redemptive power of Beauty by using vivid images, broken people, and fantastic humor. O'Connor's writing is beautiful in its form, but more than that, it communicates in a visceral way the desperate state of our souls and the power that beauty has to save us.
Click for Slides and Reading.
Originally from Oklahoma, Amanda Daxon graduated valedictorian from Oklahoma Baptist University and subsequently worked for several years as a pediatric ICU nurse before realizing that her true passion was historical study. She graduated in 2011 from The Catholic University of America with a Master of Arts in Medieval History. She subsequently worked as the Program Coordinator for the Byzantine Studies Department at Dumbarton Oaks, a Harvard University research institute located in Washington, D.C. In addition, she volunteered at the Folger Shakespeare Library, performing bibliographical analysis on 16th-18th century Flemish imprints before relocating to Germany for three years, where her husband was stationed with the US Army. There, she honed the art of having children and finding obscure medieval structures to explore. She has resided in Rochester for six years with her husband, Ben, and three children, Macallan, Gwyneth, and Sullivan. She currently teaches literature and rhetoric at Schaeffer Academy.
Flannery O'Connor Reads "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" (1959) Click here.

Wednesday Aug 02, 2023
Wednesday Aug 02, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - Responding to the Inevitable Unravelling of Higher Education - Greg Jesson
The forth and final of our interim 'conference highlights' series, Professor Greg Jesson asks how we should define and respond to the great shifts in higher education.
Greg recently retired from teaching philosophy at Luther College and the University of Iowa. He was also the Director of the Center for Ethics and Public Life at Luther College.
Greg’s long journey from Los Angeles to Iowa took him to Switzerland where he studied philosophy at L’Abri with Francis Schaeffer, to UCLA where he finished his undergraduate degree in philosophy, to USC where he completed an MA in philosophy under Dallas Willard, and finally to the University of Iowa where he received a PhD in philosophy.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023.
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Jul 26, 2023
Wednesday Jul 26, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - The University Next Door - Christian Education in the Modern World of Identity Politics - Mike Sugimoto
The third in our interim 'conference highlights' series, Professor Mike Sugimoto discusses the growing and tumultuous presence of identity politics within universities and its relationship to Christian education. Insightful, witty and well-paced, this lecture summarises recent approaches to education which place identity at the fore. Professor Sugimoto then goes on to offer a reasoned Christian alternative.
Mike Sugimoto is Professor of Asian Studies at Pepperdine University with a focus on cinema, sociology and philosophy.
Click for slides.
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023.
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Monday Jul 24, 2023
Monday Jul 24, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - The Foundations of Liberal Education: On the Birth and Purpose of the Medieval University - John Hodges - Rochester L'Abri Conference
The second in our interim 'conference highlights' series, this lecture looks again to the past in order to fully understand our present. A fascinating insight into the origins of Liberal Education during the Medieval period.
John Hodges (currently the director of the Center for Western Studies) is a conductor and composer, holding degrees in Music from the University of Maryland, and Indiana University. He served as Music Director for various symphony orchestras and church music programs in Memphis from 1983-2009. He also held the position of Associate Professor of the Arts and Cultural Apologetics at Crichton College where he taught art and music history, philosophy of the Christian Faith, directed theater and founded and directed the Institute for the Arts and Cultural Apologetics.
Click for Slides
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023.
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Jul 12, 2023
Wednesday Jul 12, 2023
2023 Conference Highlights: Higher Ed. - Western Education and its Telos (Purpose) Through Time - Peter Merz - Rochester L'Abri Conference
The First in our interim 'conference highlights' series, this lecture deals with the changes in western education's purpose through time. Peter Merz of English L'Abri takes us from the ancient Greeks right up to our present moment, illuminating many ubiquitous but confusing cultural trends.
Click for Slides
The Rochester L'Abri Conference 2023
G.K Chesterton once wrote “Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” And passing the baton onto the next generation has always been part of the Biblical mandate. Evangelicals have long wrestled with good models for educating minors, but arguably the greater challenge today is in higher education, and, equally, if we are to ‘disciple the nations’, then the Church’s role in shaping the mind of believers more generally is a critical issue. At this year’s Conference, we want to look at all aspects of a Christian approach to Education - its motives, methods and models.

Wednesday Jul 05, 2023
Wednesday Jul 05, 2023
Church historians sometimes speak of the Greek East and the Latin West, as if Christian history were neatly divided between the two. This tidy division omits a third branch of the early church: Syriac Christianity. This lecture will introduce the Syriac tradition with special emphasis on the value of Syriac literature for Biblical studies, including textual criticism, translation, and the history of interpretation.
The Hill Museum and Manuscript Library (HMML) at St. John's University in Collegeville, MN is a premier center for the preservation and study of Syriac and other oriental Christian literature. In 2022, Grigory Kessel announced the discovery in HMML's physical collections of a hitherto unknown witness to the Old Syriac gospels — one of the earliest and most important translations of the Christian scriptures. Dr. Mills' lecture will highlight the work of monks and scholars at HMML to make these Christian traditions available to the rest of the world.
Click here for slides.
Ian Mills holds a Ph.D. in Religion from Duke University with a research focus on the New Testament and early Christianity. He is completing a short research fellowship on Syriac translations of the gospels at the Hill Museum and Manuscript Library in Collegeville, Minnesota. Dr. Mills is the Visiting Assistant Professor of Classics and Religious Studies at Hamilton College in Clinton, NY.

Wednesday Jun 28, 2023
Wednesday Jun 28, 2023
Nothings is more emblematic of Modernity than the ‘Machine’. Their power and efficiency have long entranced the Modern Mind. But, as the power of technique was applied not just to the Natural World but to Human Society itself, proper concerns arose. Were machines serving Man or was Man getting reduced to a cog in the machine. And today, with the rise of self-driving cars and Artificial Intelligence, the promise and peril of the machine is once more in the news.
In the context of these concerns, many thinkers, Christians among them, looked to the Humanities. If the Sciences were creating this powerful Machinery of the Modern world, then at least the Humanities could direct this power to the Common Good and offset their inherent reductionism – provide a Mind for the Machine, if you will. In fact, the PostModern turn, arising within the Humanities, very consciously promised to deliver us from the totalizing hegemony of Modernity. But as things have played out over the past 50 years, questions must be asked. Have the Humanities delivered? Or are they not as much a part of the problem as the solution? Come and join the discussion.
Click here for slides.
Jock McGregor, along with his wife Alison, has worked in L'Abri for over 30 years. With a B.Sc. and an M.Div. from Regent College, his interests are largely in the relationship of Christianity and Culture. He spent 10 years working at the English L'Abri before joining the Rochester team in 2000.

Wednesday Jun 21, 2023
Narnia and the Atonement - Charles Taliaferro - June 16th 2023 - Friday Night Lecture
Wednesday Jun 21, 2023
Wednesday Jun 21, 2023
This 40 minute lecture (followed by discussion) will introduce the vision of atonement (reconciliation and redemption) in C.S. Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia, the popular seven volume fairytale of magical beasts and the beloved lion, Aslan, a Christ figure. The atonement involves what is known as the Ransom Theory which can be found in some interpretations of the Bible and in early Christian theology by Gregory of Nyssa, Origen, and Maximus the Confessor. While controversial, Taliaferro argues that the portrait of Christ's being a ransom is illuminating and important for Christians and non-Christians today. The lecture will not presuppose everyone has read the Narnian chronicles, but he hopes you will read or re-read them again after this event.
Click here for handout
Charles Taliaferro (Ph.D. Brown) taught philosophy at St. Olaf College for 36 years, previously teaching at the University of Massachusetts and Notre Dame. He has authored, co-authored or edited 40 books, including 6 volumes on the history of evil; 5 of his books are published by Cambridge University Press; 3 are audio books. His most recent book is A Narnian Vision of the Atonement. He has given lectures widely, most recently at the C.S. Lewis Society in Oxford, England, last March. He loves working on philosophy and popular culture, and has published on the Hobbit, Harry Potter, Star Wars, Sherlock Holmes, Alice in Wonderland, and a chapter in Indiana Jones and Philosophy (due out in time for the film's release on June 30th). He embraced the Christian faith as a young adult at the English L'Abri in 1972.

Friday Jun 16, 2023
Friday Jun 16, 2023
Science and Faith -- for many Christians (and non-Christians) this can be a difficult combination. Major flashpoints are often around theories of origins (cosmology, evolution) and neuroscience, and are seen as the cause of doubt and the road to unbelief. And discussions about science, whether among Christians or with people who are not Christian, often devolve into rather technical discussions, scaring many people away.
AJ will make the case that it doesn't have to be this way. First of all, science opens up opportunities for wonder, not just for scientists, but for everyone. Besides that, the interface of science and faith also provides opportunities for questions that are relevant for everyone, and touch on the very essence of our existence. And these kinds of questions, for instance, about who we are, how we should live, and how we make decisions, can make discussions about science & faith inspiring, helpful and constructive for everyone.
Arend J. Poelarends is the director of the Center for Faith and Learning at Anselm House, a Christian study center serving the University of Minnesota (Twin Cities). He received a Ph.D. in Astrophysics from Utrecht University in the Netherlands and an MDiv from Covenant Theological Seminary in St. Louis (MO). Prior to moving to Minnesota, he taught Physics and Astronomy for 11 years at Wheaton College (IL), where he thought deeply about questions at the intersection of Science (cosmology) and the Christian faith.

