“Moving Along the Arc: Women and Men Religious as Agents of Reconciliation and Transformative Action Towards a More Racially Just Church and World”
Together with The National Black Sisters’ Conference (NBSC), the Center for the Study of Consecrated Life (CSCL) at CTU continues the conversation about the role of consecrated religious women and men play in dismantling racial injustice through the current the “Moving Along the Arch” project.
The original sin of racism in the United States is surging and those in consecrated life have a critical role to play in systemic healing through their own growth in becoming more strongly promoters of justice, opposing racism, and through enabling others to do so through their ministries, and through programs dedicated to reparations.
The center is inviting you to their April 18th and 19th 2024 symposium discussing issues with racism racial/ethnic identity, social justice and consecrated religious life.
This symposium will be of interest to social justice scholars and academics, religious and interfaith leaders, social activists and advocates, theologians, and community organizers who have made significant contributions to issues of racial justice, reconciliation, and transformative action within the context of the church and the broader world.
Our keynote presentation from Fr. Bryan Massingale, STD of Fordham University.