HIU Events

Loving the Wild: What Is Eco-Spirituality?

October 19, 2024
from 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM

Labyrinth opening 2014

PLEASE NOTE: THE HARTFORD MARATHON CONFLICTS WITH THIS DATE, SO IT WILL BE RESCHEDULED. STAY TUNED!

What do your heart and spirit and body long for, in relation to Earth – or what does it mean to fall in love with the Sacred Wild? Join Dr. Lisa Dahill at Hartford International University for Religion and Peace for a thought-provoking and heart-opening day. We will explore and deepen our connection to nature and the divine through a range of eco-immersive practices, as well as stimulating presentation and discussion. This will be a rich and wild experience, open to all and with space for you!

This program, sponsored by the Center for Transformative Spirituality at HIU, will be offered in person as a full-day of learning, sharing meals together, and outdoor exploration. The morning session will also be offered to participants online.

Price includes light breakfast and vegetarian lunch for all-day participants.

Both groups of participants will receive a certificate of completion.

Please choose the morning (Zoom) or all-day option. A Zoom link will be sent by email to those who want to participate online.

EARLY BIRD REGISTRATION PRICING IS AVAILABLE THROUGH OCT. 6!

REGISTER

Tentative Schedule

8:30 a.m. – Arrival (Coffee and light breakfast)

9 a.m. – Program begins with both in-person and online participants 

12:30 p.m. – End of hybrid session; Break for lunch 

1:30 p.m. – In-person outdoor experiential session begins

4 p.m. – Ending ceremony at the labyrinth

4:30 p.m. – Program ends
 

About the Dr. Lisa Dahill

Dr. Lisa E. Dahill is Miriam Therese Winter Professor of Transformative Leadership and Spirituality and Director of the Center for Transformative Spirituality at HIU. She holds a Ph.D. in Christian Spirituality from the Graduate Theological Union (Berkeley, CA), a Master of Divinity from the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, and a Bachelor of Arts in Religion and German from Gustavus Adolphus College (St. Peter, MN).  She also studied for a year at the Eberhard-Karls-Universität in Tübingen, Germany. She is past president of the Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality, convener of the Ecology and Liturgy Seminar of the North American Academy of Liturgy, and a rostered clergy member of the New England Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

Dr. Dahill comes to HIU most recently from California Lutheran University, Thousand Oaks, CA, where she was Professor of Religion from 2015-2022, and co-chair of the university’s Sustainability Committee. Her previous appointments were as Associate Professor of Worship and Christian Spirituality at Trinity Lutheran Seminary, Columbus, OH (2005-2015) and Research Associate at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Stanford, CA (2001-2005). 

Her research interests center in the expansion of spiritual, ritual, and contemplative practices to encompass place-based approaches and the inter- and multi-species relationships that comprise our human lives on Earth. She has published and lectured widely in both Christian and interreligious contexts exploring these questions and is also an internationally noted scholar of the legacy and writings of Holocaust theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Her books include Eco-Reformation: Grace and Hope for a Planet in Peril, co-edited with James Martin-Schramm, and Reading from the Underside of Selfhood: Bonhoeffer and Spiritual Formation, as well as several books on traditions of prayer. She is currently at work on two book projects: one titled Jesus in the Earth: Rewilding Christian Spirituality, attempting to open Christian liturgical and contemplative traditions into multi-species relationality, and the other a place-based interspecies reading of Bonhoeffer’s theology, titled One Reality: Reading Bonhoeffer Ecologically.

Dr. Dahill is a passionate cyclist, hiker, gardener, and eco-nerd who loves swimming and kayaking in rivers and oceans. She is probably exploring local trails and native plants right now with her pug, Tiger – if not out with friends or reading in eco-philosophy and poetry. Her programming at HIU’s Center for Transformative Spirituality centers around the conviction that restoring and re-animating human relationships with the larger wild communion of beings is the key both to deepening healthy human souls and to revisioning multi-species communities and societies able to thrive in the collapse of the extractive industrial economy. Living close to Earth and its holiness and creatures is also just a lot more fun!

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