Duke Chapel Conversations

Duke University Chapel

Public conversations held at Duke University Chapel.

  1. Faith, Mental Health, and Community

    10/03/2023

    Faith, Mental Health, and Community

    Dr. Bryant is president of the American Psychological Association (APA) and a tenured professor of psychology in the Graduate School of Education and Psychology at Pepperdine University, where she directs the Culture and Trauma Research Laboratory. Her clinical and research interests center on interpersonal trauma and the societal trauma of oppression. She has raised public awareness regarding mental health by extending the reach of psychology beyond the academy and private therapy office through community programming, organizational consultation, popular books, and media engagement. Duke Chapel's annual Few Lecture takes its name from Duke's first president who articulated a vision of education promoting the courage to seek the truth and the conviction to live it. The series is funded by the William Preston Few Endowment for Duke Chapel, which was established in 1986 by Kendrick S. Few '39 as a memorial to his father, William Preston Few, the first president of Duke University. A triple-graduate of Duke University, Dr. Bryant completed a doctorate in clinical psychology and also earned a master of arts and bachelor of arts at Duke. She is host of Homecoming, a mental health podcast, and director of the mental health ministry at First AME Church in South Los Angeles. She is author of the book Homecoming: Overcome Fear and Trauma to Reclaim Your Whole Authentic Self and co-author of The Antiracism Handbook: Practical Tools to Shift Your Mindset & Uproot Racism in Your Life and Community. She is editor or co-editor of the APA books Womanist and Mujerista Psychologies: Voices of Fire, Acts of Courage and Multicultural Feminist Therapy: Helping Adolescent Girls of Color to Thrive.

    58 min
  2. Scholars Discuss 'Becoming Human'

    03/07/2023

    Scholars Discuss 'Becoming Human'

    TRANSCRIPT >> Dr. Smith: Well, good evening. My name is Patrick T. Smith. I direct the bioethics at the bioethics for the history of medicine. I want to take this moment to welcome you to our webinar this evening. I am so glad that you're able to join always for our discussion of Dean Luke Powery's new book, "Becoming Human: The Holy Spirit and the Rhetoric of Race." For our panel discussion, Dean Powery at the Duke Divinity School will be joined by two leading scholars in the fields that are important to the book. the Reverend Dr. Willie Jennings is from the Yale University Divinity School and Dr. Charmaine royal, professor of African studies, biology, global health, and family medicine and community health at Duke University. I have the privilege and pleasure as serving for the moderator for this session. Dean Powery sees race as essential in valuing some bodies over others that are shaped by the biblical Pentecost that sees the diversity of human bodies as one of the gifts of the holy spirit. Published by Westminster John Knox Press and the winner of the 2023 book of the year award from the academy of parish implementationy, the box gets its title from the 1968 eulogy by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. When he says, Dr. King was killed in one sense, because humankind is not quite human yet, Dr. Thurman said. May he live, because all of us in America are closer to becoming human than ever before. As Dr. Powery says many times in his book, the turn to the spirit is the turn to becoming much more human. Now, we will begin with some conversation with Dr. Powery and then invite the panelists into the discussion. We will have some time at the end to take questions for those of you who are in attendance, so feel free to submit your questions at any time during our conversation in the question and answer box that you can see at the bottom of your screen. We will get to as many as we can. I will do my best in that regard. So, let's get to it. I want to welcome each of you here. So glad to see you here in this space. Dean powier, first powery, congratulations on the book and your recent award. >> Dean Powery: Thanks so much, Dr. Smith. It is a joy for me to be in this conversation with dear friends and colleagues and these esteemed colleagues. >> Dr. Smith: That's great. Why don't you begin by telling us why you wrote this book. >> Dean Powery: All right, I will make it short. [LAUGHTER] You quoted Howard Thurman, because that is where I was going to begin. In his memorium for Dr. King, we are not quite human yet. He does that in the wake of the assassination of Dr. King. We see the ongoing violence against blackness, war, hatred, tension, struggle, it continues. Inside the church and outside of the church, especially as it relates to what I call racialization, racism. And this concept of race. So, what I tried to do is really, we have one of the key thinkers in the theology of race, Dr. Jennings on this call, what I tried to do is add a contribution, thinking about the work of the spirit in racialization in the history of the church and the world. I would say there would be size of hope underneath the words of the book. One of the hopes is that we would, as I draw on Pentecost as a metaphor that we would find a new tongue. We would find a new language, a new way of engaging one another, but talking about one another, and talking about this idea, this social construct of race. And so, the prayer in many ways undergirding this book is we would discover and become more fully human with each other, and ultimately that can only happen through the work of the spirit. It is an invocation for the spirit to come and help us in this endeavor, and in this challenge, ongoing challenge. >> Dr. Smith: Yeah, it was interesting as you mentioned throughout the book, the dynamic between the spirit's work in transcending some of these challenges that we're facing and bringing folks together, but it is also d

    1h 16m
  3. Bridge Panel: The Enduring Challenge of a Moral Economy

    04/19/2018

    Bridge Panel: The Enduring Challenge of a Moral Economy

    Duke University Chapel hosts a public conversation with U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders and the Rev. William J. Barber II, "The Enduring Challenge of a Moral Economy: 50 Years After Dr. King Challenged Racism, Poverty, and Militarism." The event was to be part of Duke's 2018 Martin Luther King, Jr. Commemoration and Duke Chapel's Bridge Panel series, which seeks to connect people from disparate walks of life to discover shared pathways toward the community of God. "In joining with others to begin organizing the Poor People's Campaign 50 years ago, Dr. King was working out of a Christian conviction that racial equity, economic justice and peace among nations were interrelated issues -- and all matters of faith," said Chapel Dean Luke A. Powery, who moderated the talk held on April 20, 2018. "Through this public conversation, we have an opportunity to bring together the insights of a preacher and a politician on the present-day work toward a just, moral economy." Barber is a national co-chair of the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival, an initiative that aims to address issues of systemic racism, poverty, the war economy, ecological devastation and the nation's morality. He is also the president and senior lecturer of Repairers of the Breach, a nonprofit organization that seeks to build a moral agenda. An alumnus of Duke Divinity School, Barber is the pastor of Greenleaf Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in Goldsboro, North Carolina. Sanders is an Independent senator from Vermont. His 2016 campaign for the Democratic nomination for president focused on policy issues that included universal health care, free tuition at public universities and a $15-per-hour minimum wage. He was first elected to public office in 1981 as mayor of Burlington, Vermont, and has since served 16 years in the U.S. House of Representatives and 11 years in the U.S. Senate. In addition to his role as dean of Duke Chapel, Powery is an associate professor of homiletics at Duke Divinity School. His most recent book is "Rise Up, Shepherd!: Advent Reflections on the Spirituals." Ordained to the Ministry by the Progressive National Baptist Convention, he was inducted in 2014 into the Martin Luther King, Jr. Collegium of Scholars at Morehouse College for his ethical and spiritual leadership in the academy, church, and broader society. Co-sponsors of the event include Duke Divinity School and Duke's Sanford School of Public Policy and Office for Institutional Equity.

    1h 46m

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Public conversations held at Duke University Chapel.

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