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Over eighty people across the city gathered for workshops this month held by Xavier’s new Institute for Spirituality and Social Justice (ISSJ). Facilitated in both English and Spanish, the workshops focused on Pope’s Francis’ understanding of a universal call to discipleship that is sparked in each person by means of encounter.

The workshops were the first in a series of programs offered by the ISSJ under the leadership of Dr. Gillian Ahlgren, professor of theology and one of the workshops’ two co-facilitators.   “We based the workshop sessions on the pope’s letter The Joy of the Gospel, which is really a beautiful document that speaks to our need to recover the depths of our humanity in light of what the pope calls the ‘globalization of indifference,’” Ahlgren explained.   “In the document Pope Francis calls all of us to an ‘ever watchful scrutiny of the signs of the times’ because he sees that we are stuck in patterns of dehumanization that we have to reverse.”Dan Hartnett, SJ, pastor of Bellarmine Chapel and adjunct professor in the Philosophy Department, also facilitated the workshop, contributing a careful review of the social and economic dimensions of the document, informed by decades of work with the marginalized in Peru.

Participants represented over twenty different churches in the area, Catholic and Protestant,all seated at roundtables. “The workshop’s intent was to gather people for a careful consideration of the message of this document and to spark hopeful and challenging discussion,”Ahlgren said. “People left really energized by Pope Francis’ invitation to a whole new way of living together more thoughtfully, more compassionately, more justly. It’s what he calls ‘la mística de vivirjuntos’—the mystical life that we share together.”

The program will be repeated in the fall, and more ISSJ workshops will be offered on Saturday, August 16. For more information contact the ISSJ at (513) 745-2894 or visit www.xavier.edu/issj

By: Tatum Hunter ~Staff Writer~

Pope Francis’ unique approach to the papacy has many people talking. Next week, students, faculty and administrators at Xavier will gather to offer their opinions on Pope Francis’ leadership style and teachings.

The Brueggeman Center for Dialogue is holding an open discussion of the election and papacy of Pope Francis at Bellarmine Chapel at 7 p.m. on March 18 in Bellarmine Chapel.

The event is co-sponsored by various campus groups, including the Catholic Ministry Team and the Center for Mission and Identity.

The discussion will feature Dr. Gillian Ahlgren, who specializes in church history and mysticism, and Dr. Chris Pramuk, who studies issues of racial justice in society and the Church. Ahlgren and Pramuk will offer their perspectives on the papacy of Pope Francis as they field questions and lead discussion.

The event is geared mainly toward members of the Catholic community but is open to anyone who would like to attend.

“This pope is touching people from all walks of life and faith traditions,” Cynthia Cummins, administrative assistant at the Brueggeman Center, said.

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Hear how Dr. Gillian Ahlgren’s (Professor of Theology at Xavier University) approach to Jesuit education was influenced by the Jesuit martyrs in El Salvador.

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