Lancaster Theological Seminary: Digital Archive
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What Happens at the Table with Jesus
Sermon preached in weekly chapel service on Luke 24:13-35 by Rev. Dr. Carolyne Call, delivered in Santee Chapel, Lancaster Theological Seminary on April 24, 2019. Digital audio recording (mp3). Duration: 16 minutes, 3 seconds
Q&A #1 from "The Legacy of Philip Schaff on Race, Culture, and Slavery: Blessing or Bane?"
This is the question and answer portion from Dr. Lee Barrett's lecture, "The Legacy of Philip Schaff on Race, Culture, and Slavery: Blessing or Bane?" delivered at Lancaster Theological Seminary on Friday, August 16, 2019
The New Mercersburg Review, no. 61
Digitized copy of the Fall 2019 issue, Journal of the Mercersburg Society. Electronic PDF document. 60 pages.Contents: Re-Membered Bodies: Mystical Union with Christ & Women's Embodied Trauma / Alexandra Mauney -- Out of the Shadow & Into the Light: Reconsidering Schaff & Schleiermacher on the Meaning of Reformation / Samuel L. Young -- Sermon: "Remembering Who We Are in an Unfavorable Time" / Nathan Baxter -- Book Review: Walter Ray's Tasting Heaven on Earth: Worship in Sixth-Century Constantinople / John Mille
Addressing the Wounds of Racism Through the Lens of Moral Injury: A Qualitative Study Drawing on Black Liberation and Womanist Theology
Digitized copy of a D.Min. major project by Gene M. Gordon. 159 pages
The Legacy of Philip Schaff on Race, Culture, and Slavery: Blessing or Bane?
A lecture by Dr. Lee Barrett delivered at Lancaster Theological Seminary on Saturday, August 17, 2019. Philip Schaff was one of the premier leaders of the Mercersburg theology movement of the mid-nineteenth century. That movement, lauded by one church historian as the epicenter of innovative religious thought in America, powerfully shaped the spirit of Lancaster Theological Seminary for generations. Schaff's legacy is controversial, for he has been hailed as the precursor of radical ecumenism and multiculturalism, and also denounced as a proponent of cultural imperialism and racist ideologies. We shall explore the reasons for both of these conflicting characterizations, and attempt to situate Schaff in his always messy and often violent historical context
The New Mercersburg Review, no. 60
Digitized copy of the Spring 2019 issue, Journal of the Mercersburg Society. Electronic PDF document. 37 pages.Contents: Crash Helmet Worship and the Flow of Christ's Life / Tom Lush -- Reflections on The Rev. Dr. Gabriel Fackre: Doctor of the Church, Professor of Theology, Mercersburg Society Founder, Craigville Theological Colloquy Founder, Friend. / Herb Davis -- Dissertation Review: William Rader's 1978 Dissertation: The Church and Racial Hostility / John Pinde
Faith Decisions: Order or Novelty
Digitized copy of a D.Min. major project by Jonette Gay. 88 pages
How Christian Practices Are Used by Laypeople to Attract Others to the Christian Faith
Digitized copy of a D.Min. major project by Tracy Emmett Brown. 136 pages
Chapel and bell tower
Digitized copy of a color photograph of the exterior of Santee Chape
If These Stones Could Talk
Convocation address on the history of Lancaster Theological Seminary by Dr. Lee C. Barrett, Mary B. and Henry P. Stager Chair in Theology and Professor of Systematic Theology, delivered in Santee Chapel on August 23, 2019. Digital audio recording (mp3). Duration: 31 minutes, 2 seconds