Thursday 15 September 2011

The Future of Creation Order

Several ICS Senior and Junior Members attended the 2011 Christian Philosophy Conference titled "The Future of Creation Order" which was held at the VU University in Amsterdam last month, and participated in significant ways, representing ICS well.

Senior Member Lambert Zuidervaart presented two keynote lectures and served on the concluding panel at the conference. Lambert's lecture "Re-Ordering Truth" asked how a robust reformational conception of truth might change how we talk and think about creation order. His lecture "Macrostructures and Societal Principles" proposed a normative and structural critique of western society, building on Abraham Kuyper's notion of an "architectonic critique" of the social order. Lambert was joined on the concluding panel by Professors Nicholas Wolterstorff (Yale University), Eleonore Stump (St. Louis University), and moderator Gerrit Glas (VU University Amsterdam).

Senior Member Bob Sweetman was one of a number of people asked to give papers reflecting on Vollenhoven's legacy in philosophy. His paper "Reading Pre-modern Philosophers after Vollenhoven" dealt with evaluating what is useful and what is problematic in Vollenhoven's readings of ancient and medieval philosophy. Bob presented a few historiographical modifications in order to do better justice to the struggle for faithfulness that animated patristic and medieval Christian thinkers in their philosophical work.

Senior Member Doug Blomberg presented a paper titled "In Order to Learn", in which he argued that creational order is necessary for learning to occur and to be beneficial. However, change in the environment and change in the person are also prerequisites for learning, so there is always an interplay between constancy and contingency, between creational order and human responsibility.

Senior Member Nik Ansell presented a paper titled "For the Love of Wisdom", and Junior Member Joe Kirby presented a paper titled "Technology and the Christian Ground-Motive".

Annual General Meeting

A note to our voting members: This year, our Annual General Meeting is being scheduled for mid-November. If you would like to receive the materials electronically and did not sign up last year, please fax your e-mail address to 416-979-2332 or e-mail us at agm@icscanada.edu.

Also, if you have not yet renewed your membership for 2011, please click on http://www.icscanada.edu/support or give Vidya a call at 416-979-2331 X223.

"Art in Public" Goes Public

Senior Member Lambert Zuidervaart's new book Art in Public is featured in two recent publications. An interview with Lambert has appeared in the newspaper Friesch Dagblad (August 27, 2011), in a two-page spread written by Dutch journalist Tjerk de Reus. The article emphasizes the importance of the arts for a thriving democracy. The article (in Dutch) can be accessed via the home page of ICS's web site at http://news.icscanada.edu/2011/09/lambert-zuidervaart-in-friesch-dagblad.html.

Art in Public is also the topic of a favourable review written by Daniel Taylor. The review appears in Comment magazine published by Cardus, a think tank dedicated to the renewal of North American public life. You can find Daniel Taylor's review at http://www.cardus.ca/comment/article/2886/.

A Pastor's Journey from Faith to Doubt

Former ICS president John Suk has published a new book entitled Not Sure: A Pastor's Journey from Faith to Doubt. There is a good article about it at
http://eerdword.wordpress.com/2011/08/23/i-wish-i-could-be-afraid-by-john-suk/ and the book can be purchased at http://www.eerdmans.com/shop/product.asp?p_key=9780802866509.

CPRSE Launch Celebration

Please join us on the evening of Monday, October 24 for the Gala Launch Celebration of the Centre for Philosophy, Religion and Social Ethics. The festivities will be held at the Faculty Club at the University of Toronto, commencing with a reception at 5:30 p.m. This will be followed by a gala banquet, featuring an inaugural address by the CPRSE's founding Director Lambert Zuidervaart on "Living at the Crossroads: Ethical Scholarship and the Common Good", as well as a performance by internationally acclaimed violinist Barry Shiffman, Associate Dean of the Glenn Gould School at The Royal Conservatory, joined by musicians of the Royal Conservatory's Young Artists Performance Academy.

Tickets for this fundraising event are $125 per person and are available online or by calling Kathy at 416-979-2331 ext. 221 (or toll-free 1-888-326-5347). The deadline for ordering banquet tickets is October 7th.

For further information or to inquire about sponsoring a table for the banquet, please contact Lyle Clark, Assistant Director of the CPRSE at 416-979-2331 ext. 247 or by email to cprse@icscanada.edu.

Janet Read: Recent Work

ICS alumna Janet Read is participating in an art show titled "The Language of Abstraction" from September 15 to October 8 at Coopers Fine Art Gallery, 111 Bathurst St. (upstairs), Toronto.

Janet will also be exhibiting new paintings at Christensen Fine Art in Peterborough from September 30 to October 22. There will be an opening reception for this solo exhibition on Friday, September 30 from 6 to 9 pm. For more information, visit www.christensenfineart.com.

“God is Dead” and I Don’t Feel So Good Myself—a Christian Response to the New Atheism

Waterloo area readers, please mark your calendars: On the evening of Thursday, November 3, at Renison University College at the University of Waterloo, Dr. Ron Kuipers, an ICS faculty member and Jon Stanley, one of our graduate students, will be presenting a talk and leading a discussion, about how we, as Christians, can respond to the claim that God is dead, a claim being made by many prominent authors in Europe and North America.

The new atheism challenges Christians. Join us for a presentation and discussion on how faith can lead to dialogue rather than hostility between religious and secular people in our time.

8. Employment Opportunity—Senior Development Officer The Institute for Christian Studies is seeking an energetic, organized and committed individual to fill the role of Senior Development Officer, focusing on a major gift program, on a full-time one-year contract. For more information about this position, visit http://www.icscanada.edu/jobs. +

The Institute for Christian Studies is seeking an energetic, organized and committed individual to fill the role of Senior Development Officer, focusing on a major gift program, on a full-time one-year contract. For more information about this position, visit http://www.icscanada.edu/jobs.

Thursday 1 September 2011

The New Fall Semester Begins at ICS!

This month marks the beginning of the new fall semester at ICS. There are six courses starting next week:

Biblical Foundations with Dr. Jim Olthuis

Paradoxes of Progress: Habermas's Theory of Communicative Action with Dr. Lambert Zuidervaart

Liberal Theory and Its Critics with Dr. Shannon Hoff

Matter, Body and Gender in the Thought of Hildegard of Bingen, Bernardus Sylvestris, Alan of Lille and Thomas Aquinas with Dr. Bob Sweetman

Person, Family and Society with Dr. Shannon Hoff

Religion, Life & Society: Reformational Philosophy with Dr. Bob Sweetman


One distance course is offered this semester:

Wisdom and Schooling with Dr. Doug Blomberg

For course descriptions and timetables, please visit http://www.icscanada.edu/academics/.

CPRSE Launches the "Ground Motive" Forum

The Centre for Philosophy, Religion and Social Ethics is pleased to announce the launch of a new internet forum under the name Ground Motive. Ground Motive is a forum to host and foster online dialogue on subjects of relevance to the CPRSE's mandate. It is intended for the benefit of the CPRSE and of all whose subject interests or fields of research and study intersect with those of the CPRSE and its participants.

The name Ground Motive is derived from a concept developed by the 20th century Dutch philosopher Herman Dooyeweerd. He theorized that a religious ground motive has "a central communal character and gives expression to a common spirit… It lies at the foundation of a community of thought, insofar as it guarantees ... mutual understanding, even between philosophical trends which vehemently combat each other."

The Ground Motive forum can be accessed directly at http://www.groundmotive.net. We encourage everyone to visit the forum and post comments on our articles. If you have any general feedback about the forum, please contact Lyle Clark at the CPRSE at cprse@icscanada.edu.

CPRSE Launch Celebration on Oct. 24

Please join us on the evening of Monday, October 24, 2011 for the Launch Celebration of the Centre for Philosophy, Religion and Social Ethics. The festivities will be held at the Faculty Club at the University of Toronto, commencing with a reception at 5:30 pm and words of welcome from Dr. Lambert Zuidervaart, Director of the CPRSE and Professor of Philosophy at ICS. This will be followed by a sumptuous banquet, featuring a performance by internationally acclaimed classical violinist Barry Shiffman, formerly a member of the St. Lawrence String Quartet, joined by musicians of the Royal Conservatory's Young Artists Performance Academy. Tickets for this fundraising event are $125 per person; they will be available for purchase by phone or online through our website in early September.

For further information or to inquire about sponsoring a table for the banquet, please contact Lyle Clark, Assistant Director of the CPRSE at 416-979-2331 ext. 247 or by email to lclark@icscanada.edu. More information about this event will be posted at http://www.icscanada.edu/cprse.

Doug Blomberg at New Saint Andrews College in Idaho

Senior Member Doug Blomberg will present a paper at the Association of Reformed Institutions of Higher Education (ARIHE) Symposium, "A Pedagogy for Royalty", to be held on September 15-17 at New Saint Andrews College in Idaho. Doug will also represent ICS at the ARIHE Business Meeting on Saturday afternoon. For more information visit http://arihe.org.

Cal Seerveld at Cornerstone University in Grand Rapids

On the evening of Thursday, September 29, at 8 pm Senior Member Emeritus Cal Seerveld is scheduled to introduce a performance of his translation of Ecclesiastes as a unified chorus of diverse voices, at Cornerstone University, 1001 East Beltline, Grand Rapids, Michigan. This performance will be directed by Randall Burghart, along with Michael Card and others playing musical interludes as commentary. ICS alumnus Professor Matt Bonzo has taken the initiative for this event.

New Issue of "Perspective"

The upcoming issue of Perspective will include a feature article by Henk Hart, special articles by Allyson Carr and Doug Blomberg, and an interview with Lambert Zuidervaart on the role of research in the post 9/11 world. The well-received "In-House Review" continues and will include reviews of Lambert's new book and a significant post 9/11 Bollywood movie, among others.

Watch for the new issue of Perspective coming later this month.

President’s Prayer Letter: September 2011

My way into the Reformational tradition that continues to be ICS's intellectual and spiritual lifeblood runs through Dirk H. Th. Vollenhoven. I appreciate the enormous efforts, the perspicacity and Christian integrity of Dooyeweerd's philosophical efforts but find myself more attracted by formulations of Vollenhoven, for better or worse. That is not to say that I really get Vollenhoven all the way down, so to speak. There are people who do, or at least get a whole lot closer to that depth knowing. H. Evan Runner was one, John Kok of Dordt College and Tony Tol of the VU University Amsterdam are others, Cal Seerveld and Jim Olthuis of ICS are still others. What I can say for myself is that there are things that Vollenhoven has written and defended that make a whole lot of sense to me. I find them crucial rather than peripheral and so I do my best to use what I have learned and to give it the importance I think it has.

One of the things Vollenhoven has given me words to speak about is the intuition that process is one of the deep and determining features of creaturely existence. Change (and constancy too of course) is woven into the warp and woof of the creation itself; it expresses something of our creaturely response to the call or invitation to be of our Creator. Of course, if we exist in process, so to speak, corporately as well as individually, why then we cannot avoid the limitations imposed on us by where we are located within the processes we recognize as determinative in our living and being. We must acknowledge such limits for how else to embrace the opportunities such locations open up. The point is that all these processes and all the narratives we construct to tell of them bespeak not only the interweaving of constancy and change or of limit and opportunity, they also comprehend the spiritual ambivalence or struggle we Christians habitually think about in terms of biblical stories surrounding "the Fall". All our thinking and telling participate in that struggle ambiguously, not purely on the side of the angels nor of the opposing powers. And that means that at some point our thinking and telling will find itself divided against itself. We will find it hard to think much less say what we know, in a mysterious way, must be said. Vollenhoven acknowledged all of this. But he also insisted that that fact should not paralyse us. We should speak faithfully from within the limits and opportunities of our situation, expecting that we will be able to discern in the responses our speaking engenders signs of our vulnerability, occasions for that most Christian of all responses, metanoia. Conversion will mark our resistance to the sides of us and our tellings that serve Despite in our world. I find this vision of Christian scholarship quite invigorating. It constitutes a discipline of faithfulness in an ambivalent world, a world in which purity, or at least purity as we most often think of it, is beyond our means. Such a discipline can read the efforts of others with real generosity without sacrificing the imperative to be faithful, because it acknowledges its own weaknesses with humility. This is not, I admit, Vollenhoven's own way of speaking. Still, I think all of this describes the ethos of Vollenhoven's own practice of Christian philosophy quite well. It is an ethos I would cultivate myself, in my own scholarship and teaching and that I would work to promote in the ICS as a whole. My prayer for this month is a very simple one: So may it be, now at the beginning of a new academic year, and going forward, even to the end of the age. I invite you to join me in that prayer.

For the President

Bob Sweetman


Thursday, September 1: We pray for guidance and energy for all those participating in the preparations for Registration and Orientation Week and the annual ICS community fall retreat next week.

Friday, September 2: We pray for safe travel for all new and returning Junior Members who are coming to study at ICS this fall.

Monday, September 5: We offer prayers of thanks for the addition of six new Junior Members to the ICS community this fall. Please continue to remember them in your prayers as they make the final preparations and transitions this summer in order to begin their program studies here next week. As new and returning students arrive, we ask God to help with energy and flexibility for their back-to-school transition.

Tuesday, September 6: Today is New Junior Member Orientation Day! We take this as an opportunity to thank God especially for our incoming class of Junior Members and to ask God's blessing on their time at ICS.

Wednesday, September 7: Today is Registration Day for all new and returning Junior Members. We thank God for all of our Junior Members and ask God to bless them as they begin another year of studies at ICS.

Thursday, September 8: Today marks the beginning of ICS's Community Fall Retreat at Manresa Spiritual Retreat Centre. The fall retreat has traditionally served as a wonderful kick-off to another year of our life together at ICS and we pray that this year will be no exception.

Friday, September 9: We pray for ICS's Leadership Team as they also enter a new academic year. We pray for wisdom and blessings on their work.

Monday, September 12: The first week of classes begins today! Two new courses start today: "Biblical Foundations" with Senior Member Emeritus Jim Olthuis, and "Paradoxes of Progress: Habermas's Theory of Communicative Action" with Senior Member Lambert Zuidervaart. We ask for God's blessing on all the course participants.

Tuesday, September 13: Two new courses begin today: "Liberal Theory and Its Critics" with Senior Member Shannon Hoff, and "Matter, Body and Gender in the Thought of Hildegarde of Bingen, Bernardus Sylvestris, Alan of Lille and Thomas Aquinas" with Senior Member Bob Sweetman. We offer prayers for God's blessing on all the course participants.

Wednesday, September 14: Today is the first class of "Creation in the Biblical Story" offered by Adjunct Professor Sylvia Keesmaat at Trinity College. Please pray for wisdom and insight as students explore the importance of creation and the call of humanity as stewards of the earth.

Thursday, September 15: Today is the first day of two new courses: "Person, Family and Society" with Dr. Shannon Hoff, and "Reconsidering Kant's Aesthetics" with Senior Member Rebekah Smick. We pray for God's blessing on all the course participants.

Friday, September 16: Today is the first day of Senior Member Bob Sweetman's course "Religion, Life & Society: Reformational Philosophy". We ask for God's blessing on all the course participants.
This weekend Senior Member Doug Blomberg will be presenting a paper and representing ICS at the ARIHE Symposium in Idaho. We pray for safe travel and fruitful sessions.

Monday, September 19: Planning continues for the reception and fundraising banquet celebrating the official launch of ICS's Centre for Philosophy, Religion & Social Ethics which will be held on October 24. We pray for continued energy and enthusiasm for all those who are involved in this event.

Tuesday, September 20: We offer prayers of gratitude and give thanks to you, the many supporters who have presented ICS with gifts of prayer, money, and expressions of appreciation, especially during the quieter summer months. We value our relationship with you, as we are constantly blessed with your interest and support.

Wednesday, September 21: Today is the first Academic Council meeting of the 2011-2012 academic year. Also, the Executive Committee meets today. We pray for God's wisdom to guide the discussions and decisions at these meetings.

Thursday, September 22: We ask God's help and guidance for all those who are doing advancement work for ICS. Please pray that support for the vision and mission of ICS continues to grow.

Friday, September 23: Today the new Junior Members will be making a road trip to Hamilton to visit the ICS library collection. We pray for safe travel and an informative experience for all the participants.

Monday, September 26: We pray for energy and enthusiasm for those who are involved in planning the Social Justice and Human Rights Conference scheduled for next spring.

Tuesday, September 27: Junior Member Allyson Carr's sister Kristin was in a car accident and has sustained head injuries that continue to impact the rest of her health. We give prayers of thanks that Allyson Carr's sister Kristin is improving after her accident, and pray for her to be able to continue moving toward a full recovery.

Wednesday, September 28: Today is the first Faculty meeting of the 2011-2012 academic year. We pray for God's wisdom to guide this meeting.

Thursday, September 29: This evening Cal Seerveld will be participating in a performance of his translation of Ecclesiastes. Please pray that it be an edifying evening of discovery and reflection.

Friday, September 30: We offer prayers of praise for the talents of ICS alumna Janet Read whose solo exhibition of her new paintings opened yesterday at Christensen Fine Art in Peterborough.