Our Summer Reading Recs
Need some fresh ideas for books this summer? See below for what we’re reading!
Karen
Brother Lawrence, a new translation
by Carmen Acevedo Butcher
Ashley
Betty Smith
Virginia
John O'Donohue
Christy
Makers by Nature: Letters from a Master Painter on Faith, Hope, & Art
Bruce Herman
Alexa
The Big Relief: The Urgency of Grace for a Worn-Out World
Dave Zahl
Is Your Nest Emptying? Guest post by Susan Yates
Empty Nest, Full Heart
This is a guest post by the author/speaker Susan Yates. Email this post to a friend and CC us (christy@theologicalhorizons.org) and we'll enter you in a drawing to win a copy of Susan and Barbara Rainey's book for both you and your friend!
Are you getting ready to send a child off to college or preparing to send your youngest to all day school? Or have you just had a wedding? If so, you may be an emotional mess. The empty nest hits us in different ways, at different times, and often when we least expect it!
How well I remember dropping our last child Susy off at college and beginning the long drive home. The week before, we had left her twin sister Libby at another college so not only was I sending off my last two at once, but it was the first time the girls, who are very close, had been separated. My husband John thought this would be a celebration of sorts for us! All those years of daily parenting five children would be finished and now we could focus more on us. So he planned an overnight on the drive home at a romantic lodge in the mountains. Ha.
As we pulled away from the college campus my tears started to flow. I felt like my life was over. My main job of parenting was done. What was my purpose to be now? I ached for the sadness the girls were experiencing in being separated. It had been their idea to go to different colleges but none of us anticipated the pain this would cause. In the midst of my tears I tried to explain my feelings to my husband. Feelings I couldn’t even understand. I felt lonely in my misery. I felt guilty. After all, this was a good thing! And I had a great husband who was trying to please me. Yet I was miserable. Needless to say our romantic getaway wasn’t very romantic!
You may not experience sadness at having just sent a child off. In fact you may be thrilled. Each one of us is different and we never know when the emotions of the empty nest will hit us. It may not be until your last child is married. Or you may grieve when they begin high school. This season is not neat. It’s messy. And there’s not much written about it to guide us through it. But God does have a new plan for each of us as we approach the empty nest. And it is exciting.
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If you are about to drop off your college freshman here are 4 great tips:
Before you go to campus research the fellowship groups on the campus. Groups like Cru, RUF, Christian Study Centers, Navigators, IV. Find out when and where they meet and tell your child that you want them to visit two at least twice and then join one. The same thing applies to church. Visit 2 and then commit to the one that feels right. This should be a clear expectation, similar to going to class. You are likely financing some of their costs and you have a right to make this a condition. They should commit to a fellowship group and a church within the first 2 months. Statistics show that the first 10 days of college life are crucial in determining what “group” your student will hang out with. We want to encourage our kids to seek healthy relationships.
Many college fellowships have move-in day luncheons. Sign up to attend one. You and your child will meet other believers and hear about fellowship groups on campus. The Center for Christian Study in Charlottesville, VA has one such lunch that my daughter Libby and I helped start nearly 20 years ago!
When you move in wear a t-shirt from a Christian camp or some logo. When our daughter Libby moved into her dorm she had on a Young Life t-shirt. Another girl moving in recognized this and the girls realized they were both believers. This was a huge connection for their first day!
Be positive, even if you are sad and your child is too. Communicate to your child that he or she is about to begin a great adventure and it is good! And continue to pray daily for them and for their friendships.
Barbara Rainey and I wrote a book which deals with various challenges of the empty nest including loneliness, redefining marriage, how to let go of your child, etc. The book contains a 4-session group study. We hope you will invite some friends to join you in an Empty Nest book club.
Summer Mystic Mocktail
As the temperature sizzles here in central Virginia, we’re finding creative ways to cool off. Out at our little farm, Buck’s Bend, I love to make up weeknight mocktails to keep me cool and relaxed. Reminiscent of a “shrub” - a sweet, vinegary drink - this drink speeds up the process as you can assemble spur of the moment. Feel free to adjust your sweet or tanginess and to sub-away with whatever you have on hand! Then name it and enjoy your signature house mocktail.
-Christy Yates, Associate Director
Summer Mystic Mocktail, Buck’s Bend Edition:
In a glass, add in this order:
1/2 tsp ground ginger (could sub turmeric or other spice)
2 TBS apple cider vinegar (or other vinegar)
2-3 TBS pomegranate juice (or other juice on hand)
Fresh mint broken up.
Mix with a spoon.
Add plain seltzer to fill.
Squeeze with a wedge of lime or lemon, spread the lime or lemon around the rim of you glass, stick it in your cup and enjoy!
July Prayers | On Perspective
“You may say to yourself, ‘My power and the strength of my hands have produced this wealth for me.’ But remember the Lord your God, for it is he who gives you the ability to produce wealth, and so confirms his covenant, which he swore to your ancestors, as it is today.”
Dear Friends,
Summer is a season that can offer us perspective - on the year behind us, on the ways we’re ordering our lives, our habits, our relationships, our priorities. Ideally, prayer offers such a space each day, but we often need more dramatic events like vacation and travel or reunions with friends and family to find renewed perspective on our lives. One small, perhaps strange, practice I write about below is the act of looking at your house (or a gathering) from the outside. I invite you to literally step away and look back on your life, on where you live or your friends or family gathered, from the outside. Or, perhaps you could look back over old photos or videos. Whatever form it takes, listen and reflect on what fresh perspective God might be offering you in this act of seeing and reflecting.
-Christy Yates, Associate Director
A recent piece of creative non-fiction by Associate Director, Christy Yates.
Some nights…
These days I’ve been picking off the crust of the real. Like a barnacle split from the rock which it thought was the whole of it, the bare openings left are tender and raw, exposed and bewildering.
Hold on a minute, one might venture to ask in these off-kilter states: What is really going on here? Who’s in charge and… where’s this all leading? Questions like these are generally lost on us in the daylight hours. Like stars, they’re ever present. We just can’t see them.
Some nights, I slip out of our house in the dark and turn back to watch like one would a movie. It’s as if my spirit is floating free, detached from my limbs, looking askance at my life and observing it for what it is. It’s as if I’m a ghost and someone has cut the cords of drive and obligation. It’s as if I’m freed to simply be still and see.
The girls are busy, oblivious of their outside observer. One sits straight-backed at her desk studying algebra, savoring slow spoonfuls of mug cake, her face glowing faintly from the green light of her laptop. The other, below through another window, reluctantly washes dishes, occasionally checking her phone to find a good tune.
I recommend this practice, this watching your house from the outside at night. It gives you perspective one might say; how can it not? Life will surely go on without me just fine is one truth I surmise after only several minutes. I am watching it for myself!
And then gratitude, more gratitude than one might expect from such a simple scene snipped out of daily life, swells within me.
I inhale suddenly to catch my breath and shift my gaze up to the night sky, stars studded everywhere in the far off freckled space.
A meteorite suddenly scratches the blackness. Then another. And finally one more.
It’s almost too much.
Hospitality Book Recs
Our staff at TH love hospitality and we love books so it only seems natural to offer our community a (growing) list of books we recommend on hospitality! Have a favorite? Email: christy@theologicalhorizons.org!
The Art of Gathering: How we meet and why it matters, by Priya Parker (UVA alumna!)
Extraordinary Hospitality for Ordinary People: Seven Ways to Welcome like Jesus, by Carolyn Lacey.
Liturgy of the Ordinary: Sacred Practices for Everyday Life, by Tish Harrison Warren.
The Quotidian Mysteries: Laundry, Liturgy & Women’s Work, by Kathleen Norris.
Real Love for Real Life: The Art & Work of Caring, by Andi Ashworth
Wabi-Sabi Welcome: Learning to Embrace the Imperfect and Entertain with Thoughtfulness and Ease, by Julie Pointer Adams.
We Will Feast: Rethinking Dinner, Worship and the Community of God, by Heather Vanderslice.
June Prayers | On Rest
“Truly my soul finds rest in God; my salvation comes from him. Truly he is my rock and my salvation; he is my fortress, I will never be shaken.”
Dear Friends,
As we enter into the slower summer months, we pray that you will find deep moments of rest and restoration. That you can come home to yourself, to God, and to those around you. That you can soak up the beauty of our fertile world in which you take your steps. That you can uncover a fresh understanding of both your belovedness and a love for the world around you.
-Christy Yates, Associate Director
As if There Were Only One
In the morning God pulled me onto the porch,
a rain-washed gray and brilliant shore.
I sat in my orange pajamas and waited.
God said, “look at the tree.” And I did.
Its leaves were newly yellow and green,
slick and bright, and so alive it hurt
to take the colors in. My pupils grew
hungry and wide against my will.
God said, “listen to the tree.”
And i did. it said, “live!”
And it opened itself wider, not with desire,
but the way i imagine a surgeon spreads
the ribs of a patient in distress and rubs
her paralyzed heart, only this tree parted
its own limbs toward the sky – i was the light in that sky.
I reached in to the thick, sweet core
and i lifted it to my mouth and held it there
for a long time until i tasted the word
tree (because i had forgotten its name).
Then I said my own name twice softly.
Augustine said, God loves each one of us as if
there were only one of us, but i hadn’t believed him.
And God put me down on the steps with my coffee
and my cigarettes. And, although I still
could not eat nor sleep, that evening
and that morning were my first day back.
- Martha Spears
Why I give to TH | Caroline Ehler ‘21
We recently sat down with TH alumna, Caroline Ehler ‘21, to learn more about why she chooses to support the ministry of Theological Horizons.
About Caroline:
Caroline graduated UVA in 2021, Engineering School (SEAS), Computer Science. She was also a TH Intern '20, SEEK President '20, and XA Treasurer '21. She’s currently living in Orange County, California where she works at IBM as a sales engineer by day, and owns a jewelry brand, Orange County Pearls, by night. Caroline is also passionate about technology, mentoring, entrepreneurship, investing strategies, and real estate.
“Why give now?” This is what Caroline had to say…
Theological Horizons (TH) is celebrating 25 years of faithful presence and transformative ministry. For a quarter century, this community has been sowing, tending, and nurturing deep roots TH's impact goes far beyond Charlottesville. Now TH is expanding its legacy.
Year over year, more and more students experience the respite of Vintage lunch. Students in the Perkins Fellows program serve the Charlottesville community. Lives are impacted by the wisdom TH speakers deliver to the young minds on Grounds and our community members. Saints of the City delivers the teachings of Saints and Sinners to five cities nationwide. TH invests in other ministries worldwide, teaching them how to grow just as the Marshes grew TH.
To sustain and scale this work, Theological Horizons needs your support. Your gift helps provision the next horizon of ministry, making sure that this model of grace, curiosity, and belonging continues to bless future generations.
If you're a student who has ever enjoyed time with Karen Marsh, Christy Yates or other TH leaders, or been to all those free Vintage lunches, I ask if you could pay it forward, and donate, to bless another student who might be in your same shoes right now at UVA.
TH changed how I experience my faith—both during college and now as a graduate.
TH is one of the only truly inter-ministry spaces I found at UVA, where I could connect with students across ministries, across Grounds. And it was one of the few places that didn’t ask me to do, perform, or produce. Under Karen’s calming leadership, TH invited me to simply be. To breathe. To receive.
Each Friday at Vintage Lunch, I got to step away from the academic grind—deadlines, assignments, expectations—and receive a word, a story about a saint, wisdom, and warm community. The home-cooked or catered meals were such a delicacy. Knowing that a group of people had lovingly prepared them just for us made me feel like I had a place to come home to.
And that simple welcome? It grounded me.
I came to UVA from a modern, non-traditional megachurch background. I had always “poo-pooed” traditional churches, never understanding their appeal. Until TH. Here, I discovered the beauty of liturgy and the comfort of tradition. I learned how deeply tangible our faith can be—through dancing, sacraments, food, and our physical bodies. These practices were completely new to me, and they now shape my post-grad spiritual life in the most meaningful way.
TH also taught me to see art and literature as sacred. Karen’s reverence for the beauty created by saints and creatives helped me realize that God delights in art, too. I had never imagined that my creativity could be a form of worship. What a joy to realize that faith can be expressed through more than just sermons and theology—it can live in movement, poetry, painting, and presence.
TH is a space where everyone is welcome—seekers, creatives, overworked students, the Charlottesville community, and Christians from every denomination. No matter where you are on your faith journey, you are honored and invited in.
TH is also one of the most thought-provoking ministries I’ve ever experienced. TH was the only place on Grounds where I learned how faith and social justice are deeply intertwined. As an engineering student with a heavy workload, I never would have had access to this kind of learning otherwise. TH gave me the space to explore justice, history, and theology—offering honest, gracious conversations about race, equity, and the role of the Church. I learned from community voices, from Civil Rights heroes of the faith, and from my own peers. TH gave me language and grounding to live out values I already held but didn’t yet know how to express.
What a gift. Theological Horizons is more than a ministry. It’s a table where all are welcome, a space where beauty and justice meet, and a gentle invitation to receive, rest, and be deeply loved.
I’d like to share an excerpt I wrote in my journal for Karen:
Before TH, my framework for faith was built on rules and performance. By the time I arrived at UVA, like many of my peers, I was exhausted from chasing perfection.
One ministry I was involved in introduced me to other intellectual Christians—people who had read more theology books than I had. And still, I felt like I couldn’t escape the rules. It wasn’t respite. It was just more performing.
And then, I met you and the TH community. It was the end of my first year, second semester. I’ll never forget how mad I was that I hadn’t gone to Vintage Lunch earlier. I could have had this every Friday?!
Vintage was like stepping into a warm hug from Jesus. It was as if He said, “You’ve worked so hard this week, and I know you will again next week. But you are so much more to Me than what you produce. Be still. Rest. Know that I am God.”
I had never known that before. That I could receive from God without doing anything to earn it. That I was already enough. I didn’t have to strive or perform to belong.
Vintage was the first ministry I encountered that mirrored the heart of God in this way. No expectations. No obligations. Just love, welcome, and nourishment—literally and spiritually. Where other ministries asked me to give back, Vintage just asked me to receive.
And you, Karen—you embodied that. You were (and are) the most paradoxical and inspiring woman I’ve ever met: brilliant, successful, polished, published, beautiful, with a stunning home and magnetic presence. And yet, you carry the gentleness and lowliness of Jesus so effortlessly. I didn't know that was possible. That someone could “have it all” and still be so free from ego, striving, or judgment.
My time at TH was healing. And it changed me.
From you, I learned things I use to this day—in my tech sales job, my real estate business, my marketing agency, and now, in building my own jewelry brand. I learned about email campaigns, brand consistency, team leadership, and presence. But more importantly, I learned how to let myself be loved. Without earning it.
Theological Horizons gave me the courage to ask deeper questions of God. It made me fall in love with beauty, art, creativity, and stillness. When Vintage moved to the Bonhoeffer House, your home became a sanctuary that let me see that God loves beautiful things. That He is creative and joyful and gentle and playful. That my creativity is not frivolous, but worship.
TH also taught me the richness of other denominations. I had been taught to distrust them, to believe that anything outside of my church tradition was wrong. But your ministry changed me. It gave me new eyes—and that led me to SEEK, where I eventually became president and made it my mission to bridge divides and celebrate the Church in all its diversity.
I carry everything I learned with me. I’ve done so much healing since—healing that began at Vintage Lunch. I’m learning how to be playful and present. I’m learning how to create with joy. I’ve even started acting classes, stepping into parts of myself I had buried under performance and perfection. I am grateful indeed.
God’s Love Revealed Amidst Difference | Ava Flory ‘25
“Well, I just don’t believe that.” The blunt phrase hung in the air as the ten of us fellows realized just how different our views of God were.
Preempted by readings like Desmund Tutu’s “God is Not a Christian,” it was no surprise that this Horizon Fellows’ gathering gave rise to conflicting ideas. The meeting itself was called “Loving Our Neighbors Amidst Deep Difference.” But rather than feeling concerned by our newfound division, I was fascinated. More interesting than who did or did not believe in Hell was that our diverging beliefs were just now coming up. The ten of us fellows had been in an intentional community for eight months. We had heard each other vulnerably share life stories and asked empathetic questions to show they were seen and cared for. We had spent late nights gathered around a living room discussing callings and commitments. We exchanged energetic waves and big smiles when passing each other on our way to class. Somehow it had not mattered what words we used when describing the details of God. It was enough that we were all pursuing a relationship with a loving God and eager to pour out the love we found to those around us.
I used to care very much about people using the same words I do to describe God. When I first started dating my boyfriend several years ago, I remember countless conversations with me asking him to define words like “sinner” and “redemption,” just to make sure we were on the same page. In the process, I also asked a lot of people around me their definition of religious jargon, and I realized several things about the language we use. One, each person’s word associations were tinted by their own individual experiences. To fully understand what people were saying, I needed to try to understand where they were coming from. This injects empathy and “seeking to understand” into my work as a listener. It also frees me a lot. I do not have to agree with each person’s word choice at face value. Even better, I don’t have to convince them to learn my personal dictionary. I don’t have to do the exhausting, if not impossible, work of getting everyone to speak like me. Secondly, I think all words fall short of describing the indescribable. Our words just hint at our infinite God. And because I am not familiar with infinity, I am not surprised when some expressions of God feel unfamiliar.
These two realizations introduced a powerful emotion when encountering people with religious differences: curiosity. With this addition, I surrender the temptation to pronounce my judgement over other’s ideas and instead create space for God to reveal God’s self and great Love for me in a myriad of ways. Imagine a kid so busy flapping his gums talking about what his birthday cake looks like (the icing colors, the swirls, etc) that he never pauses to let his father spoon the cake into his mouth. Rather than being preoccupied with labeling people’s expressions of God, I hope I can take enough time to stop flapping my gums and instead taste the sweetness of a God who pours out his infinite Love in creative and original ways.
Moreover, I believe God is desperate to show love to us. My personal belief is of a God who took on flesh and died a painful death on a cross because God so desired an intimate relationship with us and to show God’s great love for us. If God was willing to do that, I think God just may be willing to work through a variety of different words, denominations, and religious expressions to show God’s self and God’s Love. I need only to open my eyes and listen with curiosity. What I find incredible is when I start to look for God’s Love all around me, I see it.
This has deep implications for forming a community amidst religious differences. When I start to see God’s Love through the diverse expressions of others, I tend to like them and their diverse expressions a lot more. When I don’t feel a responsibility to make us all talk the same, I can create freedom-filled spaces for others. And perhaps most importantly, when I look for it, I see how God is breathing through all of us.
It becomes a lot easier to be in community with people who are different from me when I start to see God and God’s Love revealed through them. So bring your original words, denominations, and differences. I am eager to see more of God and God’s Love. And who knows, we might just end up being in a tight knit community of ten college students for 8 months; a community with differences, but with differences that can’t negate that we have been sharing God’s Love with one another the whole time.
Bonhoeffer Blueberry Pie
A summer favorite from the Bonhoeffer House kitchen as the blueberries come in! Can substitute strawberries or other berries.
Pie:
1 cup sour cream or yogurt (can use non-dairy if need)
¼ tsp. salt
2 Tbs. all-purpose flour (can use GF flour if need)
1 large egg, beaten
¾ cup sugar
2 ½ cups fresh blueberries, washed, drained
1 tsp. vanilla extract
pastry for 9” pie shell, unbaked
Topping:
3 Tbs. all-purpose flour (use GF flour if need)
3 Tbs. chopped pecans or walnuts
3 Tbs. unsalted butter
Preheat oven to 400°. For the pie, blend sour cream, flour, sugar, vanilla, salt, and egg until smooth. Fold in blueberries. Pour filling into pastry shell and bake 25 minutes. Make the topping by thoroughly combining flour, butter, and nuts. Sprinkle topping over pie and bake 10 additional minutes. Chill before serving.
On What Binds Us | Ben Benson ‘25
Socrates said the only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing. When I read this quote, I honestly always think that it sounds a little bit dumb. But of course, it probably does hold some profound truths considering its so widely regarded, and voiced by maybe the greatest thinker of all time.
The other day I was walking to class and in front me at the corner of the brick wall that surrounds my house, and my attention was grabbed by a squirrel sprinting at seemingly full speed down the runway made by the top of the wall. It seemed as though it was running straight at me before it quickly veered on the rounded corner of the wall and lept some 5 feet in the air just a few feet in front of my face. It lept and met a lamp post that I had hardly noticed prior to this event, and before I could even register how it was able to catch itself on a shear vertical surface it had scurried to the top of the lamp post, leaping again some 30 feet in the air to another tree and out of sight.
It is in moments like these where I think I can empathize with Socrates. Where you have to take a step back and grapple with how incomprehensibly different your experience is from those things that are all around us in each moment. I can not possibly know what it is like to be a squirrel confidently leaping onto a branch not more than 3 inches wide 30 feet in the air at top speed, or what it’s like to be the tree into which the squirrel lept, or even what it’s like to be Walker, the friend I am sitting next to as I write this.
Even when I am with the person or people I am closest with in the whole world, I know that I can never truly, fully know their mind, their experience, their life. And yet I do know that there is something there. There is something between us, a sort of connection that even when you try your hardest to break it down to its smallest component parts there is always something in the explanation that fails to truly encompass that which “is”.
But despite all this, sometimes I do feel known. When I’m laughing with my friends, when I’m looking into the eyes of someone that I love, and even when my confidence is necessarily inspired by the bravery of a squirrel.
Countless artists, philosophers, and scientists have tried to tie a bow on what exactly it is that ties it all together. What it is that creates who we are, moves us in the right direction, and brings us together not just in our minds but also in our hearts. I’ve once heard it described and described it myself as the universe, as energy, as chi. But to me, now, that is God.
God in All Things | Zac Toimil ‘26
God knows what He’s doing, and you don’t. That is an uncomfortable yet necessary truth to digest, and it’s one that I still struggle with. I often feel as though I need to have a detailed, concrete plan for all things I do. I try to plan my days down to the second.
My main motivation in life prior to coming to UVA was to attain success. I thought that being successful meant being busy and always having something else to do. I was constantly trying to “make moves” so I could reach some sort of status in this world. However, since coming to UVA and growing in my faith, my definition of success has changed. To me now, being successful means being faithful and trusting in God in all I do.
Being a Perkins Fellow this year challenged me to view the issues of the world and serving others through a theological lens. As a newer Christian, I’ve been slowly learning how to mix faith with all aspects of my life instead of them naturally separating, like oil and water. I do religious things, school things, and work things—but the one thing I never did was mix the faith into the school things and the work things, despite God’s calling for us to prioritize Him in all we do.
Through volunteering at the Habitat for Humanity ReStore in Charlottesville this past year and discussing explicitly how my time there has shaped my faith through conversations at our Perkins Fellows meetings, I have been able to watch as God worked in and through me for building His kingdom here on earth as it is in heaven.
God works through the mundane. In all things, God is at work. In every item I measured, every tag I placed, every rug I hung up on display, God was using the hands and feet He gave me, along with the time He blessed me with on this earth, to play a part in orchestrating His great plan. In all things, there is God.
This past year in Perkins Fellows has taught me that we do not need to know what God’s plan is for us in order to faithfully execute it. He will use us as He wishes, and it is just our job to obey. Even if it seems insignificant, God works all things—not just big things, but ALL things, big and seemingly insignificant—for His glory.
Congratulations Horizon Fellows ‘25!
It was a joy to sit in the Bonhoeffer House garden on the cusp of their final finals and bless these 4th Year Fellows. I began with a brief recounting of all we had wrestled with throughout the year and reminded them of their Belovedness in Christ. Then I layed hands on each one and read a blessing from their mentors. Fellows each shared final reflections around their understanding of faith & calling at this point in their lives. What a joy!
Enjoy the summary below. - Christy Yates, Associate Director
FALL SEMESTER: Who/se am I and from what story am I called?
Psalm 139:23 (NIV) - Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.
We started with sharing our faith journeys, one of the most powerful and vulnerable acts of knowing another and being known.
Calling & Constraint - we then considered whether “constraints” and “limits” could be forces that shape our vocation and we asked whether we should let go of the ideal of finding that perfect place where our passions meet the world’s needs and meet a paycheck.
“If we are freed from the burden of finding the specific vocation to express and fulfill ourselves, then the process of discerning one’s work and career becomes much less anxiety-ridden and self-absorbed. When we see how God intends work to be creative rather than alienation, then we can imagine labor that works toward the support and liberation of others.” - Russell Jeung, At Home in Exile
Calling & Commitment - next we hung out at Buck’s Bend with our resident philosopher Chris Yates and asked what we pay attention to and how might that shape our vocation? Simone Weil writes “Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity”? What if we paid attention to what we pay attention to? We noted that technology is a powerful force that shapes our attention.
Calling out & Calling In - finally we turned to look at how America’s racial history has affected our own story within that. Jim Wallis (Sojourners) has said that racism is America’s original sin and MLK has said 11am is the most segregated hour in America still. We wondered together, what does it look like to be called out while also called in, both personally and as a church/campus ministry?
SPRING SEMESTER | To whom and to what am I called?
Matthew 22:36-40 (NIV) Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?” Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.
Loving our Neighbors through Place - Here we learned about the life & legacy of John and Vera Mae Perkins as well as the Christian Community Development Association - the movement to bring wholeness to communities through spiritual, social and economic development which focuses not just on felt needs but the assets and strengths of communities previously seen just as problems. We asked one another, who has been a good neighbor in our lives and how can we each love our neighbors wherever we find ourselves next year?
Loving our Neighbors Amidst Deep Difference - One of my favorite though challenging discussions, we looked at what it means to love one another across the theological & political differences dividing the church today. Jesus’s final prayer in John 17 was that the ‘believers’ would all be one. How do we maintain our own beliefs while being in relationship with those who believe differently, especially around issues like universalism and gay marriage? What might it look like moving forward for us to foster friendships across not only ethnic differences but political and theological?
Loving our Neighbors with Beauty, Joy and Hope - Where is the place for art, beauty, joy & hope? Given the complexity of pain and joy in the world and in my own life, how do I move forward in hope and joy knowing I am beloved?
My greatest prayer for you as you leave is that you have tasted a bit of God’s shalom (right relationships between God, others, land, yourself) and that you can move forward with a sense of security in your belovedness as you love God, others and this created world. That you can see Christ as holding all the broken and beautiful things together and that you’d experience the Joy that comes out of that knowledge.
Mary Oliver: “Don’t Hesitate”
Don't Hesitate by Mary Oliver
If you suddenly and unexpectedly feel joy, don’t hesitate. Give in to it. There are plenty of lives and whole towns destroyed or about to be. We are not wise, and not very often kind. And much can never be redeemed. Still, life has some possibility left. Perhaps this is its way of fighting back, that sometimes something happens better than all the riches or power in the world. It could be anything, but very likely you notice it in the instant when love begins. Anyway, that’s often the case. Anyway, whatever it is, don’t be afraid of its plenty. Joy is not made to be a crumb.
Colossians 1:9-14, 17
We continually ask God to fill you with the knowledge of his will through all the wisdom and understanding that the Spirit gives,[c] 10 so that you may live a life worthy of the Lord and please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God, 11 being strengthened with all power according to his glorious might so that you may have great endurance and patience, 12 and giving joyful thanks to the Father, who has qualified you[d] to share in the inheritance of his holy people in the kingdom of light. 13 For he has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the Son he loves, 14 in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins;....Christ, who is before all things and in him all things hold together.
A Conflict of Interests: I Majored in Commerce and Minored in Studio Art | Annelise Eden Wolfe ‘25
Where do passion and career intersect? Should passion and career intersect? These are two questions I have been exploring as I grapple with my inclination towards the arts and my pursuit of a career in marketing. I’ve come to acknowledge two truths: First, there is nothing wrong with developing a God-given gift, while also practicing wisdom by working a full-time job. Second, there is nothing wrong with taking a risk within your means to be obedient to a call the Lord has placed on your life, even if it doesn’t seem like the most financially attractive decision.
My greatest passions in life have always revolved around various forms of art: painting, graphic design, songwriting, and writing poems and short stories. At present, I sell digital designs and physical stickers, with plans to expand my portfolio. I also write and perform songs, and I released my debut single, “October,” last Fall, with ambitions to release more music in the coming years. When I reflect on the Lord’s hand in cultivating my passions, my heart overflows with gratitude. I am so grateful for the ability to release different forms of my art into the world. I am certain that I was made to create, even if just for the process rather than any monetary success.
As for a future career, I plan to work in digital marketing as a project manager, where I will contribute to the development of brand identities, digital experiences, and other creative strategies. Working a 9-to-5 isn’t my passion per se, but it is purposeful, and the Lord will be with me in it. Where God opens a door, I will follow–praying continually and inviting Him into every day and every transition.
The Lord has been teaching me to trust Him and rest in the security of knowing He has His best in store for me, because I serve God who loves me. I believe that He has placed passions in my heart to be used, and I believe that He has something more abundant for me than the world’s definition of success. I am assured of this when I read Romans 8:28, which says, “we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to His purpose.” Although the future is largely uncertain, God is sovereign. In seasons of uncertainty, I can choose to have a heart full of joy and contentment because of the Savior I serve. I seek a future where I walk in step with the Lord, whether He leads me to pour more into my passions or pursue the meaningful, albeit sometimes mundane, path of a career.
Perhaps passion and career can, and do, intersect, but they absolutely do not have to for us to be faithfully following the Lord. As for my own passions and career, I will attempt to pursue both with excellence. However, I stand firm in this truth which stems from John 15:5: apart from Jesus I can do nothing. So, I will pursue every endeavor with the Lord at the center of my life and listen to His voice as I navigate my next step. I plan to begin my post-grad life working a corporate 9-to-5, practicing art, and most importantly, seeking the Kingdom first.
Print by Annelise Wolfe.
On Gratitude | Walker Hill ‘25
“I pray for a heart of faith. A heart of gratitude. A heart of love. One that is quick to love my neighbor, and my enemy. One that learns to love and learns to be loved. I want to sit with God. To trust Him. To trust others. To grow in trustworthiness. I want to learn to wait. To wait for God. To wait for others. To wait patiently for myself. Life will move quickly... I want to move slowly. Make time to praise. To relish. To awe. And to love.” - End of the year Faith & Calling Statement for Horizons Fellows
“Oh give thanks to the Lord, for He is good; for His steadfast love endures forever” - 1 Chronicles 16:34
The last day of class holds many emotions: joy, sadness, love, sorrow, hope, doubt, excitement, uncertainty. It holds life and it holds loss. How do I stay present? How do I cherish my last walk to class? How do I fully take in the sight of the Rotunda?
I have found myself asking these questions daily, but especially today. What can I possibly do to remember, to embrace, to cherish, and to hold onto these precious, fleeting moments? I don’t have an ideal answer for these questions. I don’t have a perfect memory that will hold these moments forever. I don’t have a phone with unlimited storage to take photos. But I do have a simple practice that each and every one of us is capable of: gratitude. Oh of course, gratitude! The cliché encouragement to all struggles. And while that may be your initial response (and mine too), I firmly believe it is the only way to stay present, to cherish my last walk to class, and to fully take in the sight of the Rotunda.
With that, I want to thank You, Lord. I want to thank You for these moments with friends. I want to thank You for my last walk to class and I want to thank You for the stroll I took around the Lawn today. Thank You for the beautiful gifts, the precious moments and the wonderful friends that You have blessed me with at UVA. Thank You for the memories of driving down Garth Road. Thank You for the nights we stayed up dancing. And thank You for the nights we fell asleep crying. Thank You for the sad, lonely times. And thank You for the heart-filled, joyful laughter. Thank You for 4 years that brought me closer to You, that made me wrestle with You, that made me doubt You, that made me praise You, and that ultimately has left me with two words: thank You.
I pray for more moments and memories that leave me speechless - moments in which my only option is to say, “thank you, Lord”. When I walk the Lawn alongside my best friends on May 17th and when I say my last goodbyes and when I am too exhausted and sad to make conversation, I want to have enough gratitude in my heart to say, “thank you, Lord”.
On Immigrants, Exile & Community | Eden Abebe ‘26
Have you ever felt the need to be special? Not just different, but set apart in a way that makes you feel seen and significant? As the eldest daughter of an Ethiopian refugee, I often carried this desire. I wanted to believe that my experience, my heritage, and my story were distinct. I wore this “first-generation Ethiopian-American” identity with pride, as though it were a badge that could explain everything, my perspective, my purpose. But as I’ve grown, I’ve come to understand that I am not unique in this story. I’m not the exception. I’m part of a much larger pattern of displacement, sacrifice, and survival that shaped my father’s life and so many others'. And that realization has far from diminished me, but rather has helped me find deeper meaning in who I am and what I am called to.
In At Home in Exile (our spring reading for Perkins Fellows), Russell Jeung explores what he calls “the cult of specialness.” In American Christianity and society at large, we are encouraged to seek uniqueness, to build ourselves up through personal growth, self-esteem, and privatized faith. I resonated deeply with his story in which he shares how he once saw his Chinese Hakka heritage as something that made him stand out. But as he traced his family’s history, he discovered a story not of uniqueness, but of common suffering, of discrimination, displacement, and exclusion. And yet, in this shared struggle, he found something even more powerful than specialness. He found the call to embrace this side of his story.
This identity, once a source of shame or otherness, became for him a lens to see the Kingdom of God. The Hakka people modeled for Jeung a theology of exile. Rather than striving for comfort or upward mobility, he invites us to embrace a guest mentality that reflects Jesus himself, the ultimate outsider.
As I reflect on my own story, I realize how often I’ve been tempted to pursue the American dream of comfort and security. But the gospel calls us to something more disruptive. Scripture names us “sojourners and exiles” (1 Peter 2:11); people not defined by where we are but by how we live and walk in humility and hospitality.
Jeung’s writing invites us to reclaim our histories and not to glorify trauma, but to recognize how God redeems it. Just as he chooses to honor the values of his Hakka ancestors, I can choose to root myself in my father’s legacy.
This is why I continue to reflect deeply on what kind of community I want to build, and how my faith should shape the aspirations that I have in law. What would it mean if we stopped chasing uniqueness and instead embraced a shared identity as guests in this world, radically dependent on one another and on God?
Reflections on Vocation | Anna Deatherage ‘25
The idea of vocation has always seemed daunting and far away, something idealistic and ethereal, not substantive or concrete. In one sense, I still feel this way- I know vocation is not limited to a job, it’s larger and more complex, encompassing all of what we do and how we live. And yet, I am learning that there are practical, tangible steps to both discern what my vocation is and how to live it out in the everyday.
Through Horizons Fellows this year, and being in the transitory stage of life that is the last year of college, I have found myself in countless conversations talking about what comes next- what does it mean to live well, what are we called to, and how do we honor the Lord through all of this? Big, terrifying questions that seem to be, in some way, shape or form, at every turn- from presentations that I attend, to conversations I jump into among friends, to books I’m reading and sermons I’m hearing. While I often laugh off the questions of what comes next or give a genial, but vague, “We’ll see where I end up,” I can’t help but seriously consider what it is I am called to. Yes, I have interests, and yes, they’re important and meaningful, and I have ideas about how to use them and turn them into a job. But who knows if that will work out, and what do I do if it doesn’t?
What I keep returning to is this idea of “work” in the Bible. God worked before the fall. Period. Full stop. Work is not a consequence or a punishment or lemons to turn into lemonade but rather a way to be like God. It is the word he used to describe how he brought all of creation into existence. What I see in the Genesis story is work as an invitation, it is what he made us for, what he told us to do, and it is good. It makes me see vocation as a way to cultivate, and create, and enjoy, and care for the world, its creatures, and the people that inhabit it. To take them, myself, all of us- to the feet of the Lord, that we might serve him by rearranging and reshaping the world to orient it to his own pattern of work and rest. It’s less daunting to think of vocation in this way- if my plans don’t work out and I end up doing something completely different than I imagined, I can rest in the knowledge that whatever I do is pleasing to God as long as I am practicing love of God and love of neighbor, working to co-create his Kingdom.
It’s good to look at what I enjoy, and what I’m good at, and where these things intersect. And it’s even better to imagine a way in which that cross-section aligns with God’s plan for the world. The comforting reality is that God desires for us to work, he shows us how, and he invites us to partner with him in engaging with the world and cultivating his kingdom.
Theological Inquiry Across the University: Where Do We Go From Here?
April 24, 2025 | A Virtual Conversation
Below is the recording of the Virtual Panel Discussion in which three experts chart a path for Faith in the University, moderated by Karen Marsh. This was a companion event to the March 29 Scoper Lecture in Christian Theology.
Dr. Felicia Wu Song
Rev. Dr. Brandon Harris
Dr. John Kiess
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Felicia Wu Song is a cultural sociologist who studies the social effects of digital technologies on community and identity in contemporary life. She is author of Restless Devices: Recovering Personhood, Presence, and Place in the Digital Age (2021), Virtual Communities: Bowling Alone, Online Together (2009) and other academic articles on expectant women's online information-seeking habits and the cultural evolution of "mommy bloggers." Trained in history, communication studies, and sociology from Yale, Northwestern and University of Virginia, she has taught Mass Communication at Louisiana State University and been Professor of Sociology at Westmont College in Santa Barbara, CA.
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Rev. Dr. Brandon Harris is a higher educational professional and minister who now serves as the Director of Partnerships and Business Development at Forum for Theological Exploration where he focuses on Partner relationships (existing and developing) and matching constituents with programs. Dr. Harris has held several prominent positions, including Protestant Chaplain at Georgetown University, where he taught courses on African American religious thought and leadership, and was co-chair of the Martin Luther King Jr. Initiative. He also served as the youngest Senior Minister in the history of Peoples Congregational Church in Washington D.C. and most recently as Associate Dean for Religious & Spiritual Life at the University of Southern California. A passionate advocate for interfaith engagement and racial justice, Dr. Harris was ordained at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. He earned his Bachelor of Arts from Lincoln University of Pennsylvania, a Master of Divinity from Emory University, and a Doctor of Ministry from New York Theological Seminary, focusing on the impact of gentrification on Black churches.
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John Kiess is an associate professor of theology at Loyola University Maryland. He completed his PhD in theology and ethics at Duke University. As a George J. Mitchell Scholar, he earned an MA in comparative ethnic conflict at Queen’s University Belfast and MPhil in theology from Cambridge University. His doctoral dissertation explored the ethics of war through the lens of the Democratic Republic of Congo, where he conducted fieldwork in 2008-2009. In addition to his work on conflict and peacemaking, he is also interested in political theology, political theory, and philosophy, and is the author of Hannah Arendt and Theology, (T&T Clark, 2016).
Easter 2025
Easter 2025
Celebrate the Feast
Christ is Risen, and you, oh Death, are annihilated!
Christ is Risen, and the evil ones are cast down!
Christ is Risen, and the angels rejoice!
Christ is Risen, and life is liberated!
Every Easter since ancient times, Orthodox Christians have recited the Paschal sermon of John Chrysostom (c347-407), using the words he first preached to new believers baptized at the Easter vigil.
Join now with the glad company of saints, our family of faith, to joyfully proclaim Resurrection of Jesus Christ. Come to the Table, welcomed by the One who lived, died and lives again - for us all!
The Lord is risen.
He is risen indeed!
Are there any who are devout and God-loving people here?
Let them enjoy this beautiful bright festival!
Are there any who are grateful servants?
Let them rejoice and enter into the joy of their Lord!
Are there any weary with fasting?
Let them now receive their wages!
If any have toiled from the first hour,
let them receive their due reward;
If any have come after the third hour,
let them with gratitude join in the Feast!
And any who arrived after the sixth hour,
let them not doubt; for they too shall sustain no loss.
And if any delayed until the ninth hour,
let them not hesitate; but let them come too.
And any who arrived only at the eleventh hour,
let them not be afraid by reason of their delay.
For the Lord is gracious and receives the last even as the first.
He gives rest to those of the eleventh
as well as to those who have labored from the first;
He is lenient with the last while looking after the first;
to the one He gives, to the other He gives freely;
He accepts the labors and welcomes the effort;
honors the deed, but commends the intent.
Let us all enter into the joy of the Lord!
First and last alike receive your reward;
rich and poor, rejoice together!
Sober and slothful, celebrate the day!
You that have kept the fast, and you that have not,
rejoice today for the Table is richly laden!
Feast royally on it, the calf is a fatted one.
Let no one go away hungry.
Partake, all, of the cup of faith.
Enjoy all the riches of His goodness!
Let no one grieve at his poverty,
for the universal kingdom has been revealed.
Let no one mourn that he has fallen again and again;
for forgiveness has risen from the grave.
Let no one fear death, for the Death of our Savior has set us free.
He has destroyed Death by enduring it.
He destroyed Hell when He descended into it.
He put it into an uproar even as it tasted of His flesh.
Isaiah foretold this when he said,
"You, O Hell, have been angered by encountering Him below."
Hell was angered because it was done away with.
It was angered because it is mocked.
It was angered, for it is destroyed.
It is angered, for it is annihilated.
It is angered, for it is now made captive.
Hell took a body, and discovered God.
It took earth, and encountered Heaven.
It took what it saw, and was overcome by what it did not see.
O death, where is thy sting?
O Hell, where is thy victory?
Christ is Risen, and you, oh Death, are annihilated!
Christ is Risen, and the evil ones are cast down!
Christ is Risen, and the angels rejoice!
Christ is Risen, and life is liberated!
Christ is Risen, and the tomb is emptied of its dead;
for Christ having risen from the dead,
has become the first-fruits of those who have fallen asleep.
To Him be Glory and Power forever and ever. Amen!
TH & Laity Lodge
Theological Horizons has a special friendship with the unique, ecumenical hidden paradise that is Laity Lodge, nestled along the Frio River in the hill country of Texas; both Karen and Christy have been invited there twice to share their speaking & artistic gifts. Karen has been the featured speaker for two of their annual women’s retreats sharing from her two books. Christy has been twice as the artist-in-residence to offer art workshops.
This past April, Christy was invited to a retreat for pastors with Winn Collier (author, Director of the Eugene Peterson Center for Christian Imagination, & Episcopal priest) and Kathleen Norris (author & poet). Christy led an exploratory abstract art workshop using homemade egg tempera.
The prompt for the retreat was belovedness. Explains Collier, “At his baptism, the Father spoke tender, thundering words over Jesus: you are my beloved. These are the first words we all must hear from the Father, the first words giving us our place in the world, our vocation. What followed, though, was the Spirit leading Jesus into the Wilderness for those grueling weeks of temptation—temptations to grab power and abandon his humanness and use God for his own purposes. This wilderness was Jesus commencing his public ministry, a harbinger of how ministry is often a place of wilderness tempting for many pastors. One of these seductive temptations is to make our sermons and our vocation about us (our personality, our pet issues, our insecurities), rather than allowing Scripture to illuminate the many ways God is calling his people to live out the concrete details of our lives. Faithful ministry — giving away the God who is alive in Scripture—requires first knowing we are the beloved.”
Browse photos below and check out the talks as well. For more information on the retreat & Laity Lodge, click here.
Spring 2025 Faith & Work Lunch
It was such a joy to host our Spring 2025 Faith & Work Lunch with Tim & Luke Tassopoulos at the UVA Batten School for Public Policy. See the video below as well as photos from the packed event!
Tim Tassopoulos, President & COO of Chick-fil-A (retired) was joined in conversation by his son, Luke Tassopoulos (UVA ‘18, Batten ‘19, Darden ‘26) to candidly share and tease out from their own stories legacies of leadership in the workplace (Tim) and in the Navy (Luke). With his wife, Maria, a former TH board member, Tim is a longtime TH supporter and UVA parent. Tim began his 46-year Chick-fil-A career as a teenager working behind the cash register. He rose through the ranks, joining the corporate staff to open the first standalone Chick-fil-A restaurant. From there, his commitment to servant leadership proved essential to the great success of the enterprise, guiding it to become a key industry force.
Throughout his life and corporate success, Tim remains faithful to beliefs he holds and to his community, teaching Sunday School to high schoolers in his native Atlanta. When it comes to leadership, Tim always asks: “‘What am I doing with what I've been given?’, and ‘Am I making a difference in someone else's life?’ For me the starting point [is], ‘Am I focused on achievement or contribution?’”
About the Faith & Work Forum
The Faith & Work Forum is a free, public conversation series held at the University of Virginia. We feature guest speakers with leadership experience from across a wide range of fields - from medicine and law to finance and the arts. Each brings authentic stories on the interplay between faith, work, and life and hard won insights on the search for meaningful, purpose-driven vocations. Tim will be interviewed by his son, Luke, who graduated from the UVA Batten School as an undergrad and is currently enrolled at UVA’s Darden School of Business.
Discover past talks at www.theologicalhorizons.org/faithandworkforum.