lectures

Living the Faith in the World of Today

The 2023 Pluscarden Pentecost Lectures to be given by Fr Richard Price

…This series of talks addresses a broad range of problems – from that of living in an increasingly godless society to that posed by doubts as to how read Scripture.

It speaks of the need to cultivate one’s own spiritual perception of the world, and uses an autobiography by a nineteenth-century Italian to illustrate how to maintain Christian patience and charity in a context where we have to depend on our inner resources rather on a supportive environment, for that is the situation of a Christian today.

Pentecost Lectures 2015

“CLOTHED IN MERCY”: MONASTIC PERSPECTIVES ON HUMAN MATURING
The 2015 Pluscarden Pentecost Lectures
to be presented by Fr Erik Varden O.C.S.O.

26th – 28th May 2015 at Pluscarden Abbey, near Elgin

Each year the Abbot and Community of Pluscarden Abbey sponsor a series of four lectures by an invited Theologian on an aspect of Catholic Theology. Previous Lecturers have included Fr Vincent Twomey S.V.D., Professor Lewis Ayres, Professor John Haldane, Fr Aidan Nichols OP, Fr Thomas Weinandy OFM Cap, Fr Anthony Meredith SJ, Fr Paul McPartlan and Fr Tom Herbst OFM. The Lectures are held on the Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday after Pentecost in St Scholastica’s Retreat House at the Abbey. They are open to all who wish to attend and are free. Limited accommodation is available at the Abbey and those who wish to stay should book as soon as possible. There are also many places to stay in the Elgin area: contact the local tourist office: 01343 542666.


Lecture Schedule

1. Tuesday 26 May at 3.00 pm
2. Wednesday 27 May at 10.30 am
3. Wednesday 27 May at 3.00 pm
4. Thursday 28 May at 10.30 am

 
The Lecturer

Erik Varden OCSOFr Erik Varden O.C.S.O. is currently superior of Mount St Bernard Abbey. He was born in Norway and gained his Master’s and a theological doctorate at Cambridge University. Also a musician, he studied Gregorian Chant under Dr Mary Berry and later co-founded the Chant Forum. Following monastic profession he went to Rome to study for a second doctorate in Syriac studies. He will deliver four lectures which examine the following:

 

 

 

 

The Theme


Where do we come from? Where are we going? The Western world no longer has a shared narrative to account for the origin and finality of life. As a result, our world is awash with conflictual accounts of the nature and development of human flourishing. These lectures will argue that today’s Church must respond to this quandary. They will suggest that, in so doing, we can be helped by insights from Christian Antiquity. Drawing on sources from the fourth and fifth centuries, predominantly from the Christian Orient, they will propose elements for a Christian anthropology. It will emerge that many contemporary challenges bear an uncanny resemblance to issues faced with ingenuity and depth in the time of the Christian Midrashic tradition and of the first generations of monks. The perspective of the lectures will be “monastic” in a twofold sense. Many of the texts used will come from the monastic patrimony. More essentially, we will attempt a monastic reading of these texts, that is, areading which, while remaining responsibly attentive to questions of context and semiotics, strives always to go further, to reach the living core of the sources considered, in search of wisdom to live by now.

Fr Erik will be drawing on the following quotation from St Athanasius:

“You know what happens when a portrait that has been painted on a panel becomes obliterated through external stains. The artist does not throw away the panel, but the subject of the portrait has to come and sit for it again, and then the likeness is redrawn on the same material. In this way also, the all-holy Son of the Father, being an Image of the Father, came near to our place, that he might renew the human being made in accord with himself. Therefore also he said to the Jews: ‘Unless one is born anew.’ He did not mean birth from one’s mother, as they suspected, but the re-birth and re-creation of the soul, showing forth that which is according to the image.”

Athanasius the Great, On the Incarnation of the Word


For further information or to book accommodation, please contact us.

Pentecost Lectures 2014

“IMMORTALITY IN QUESTION”

The 2014 Pluscarden Pentecost Lectures – given by Professor Carol Zaleski,
Professor of World Religions at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, USA

10th – 12th June 2014 at Pluscarden Abbey

    1. Tuesday 10 June at 2.45 pm
    The problem with immortality – we don’t know how to think about it

    2. Wednesday 11 June at 10.15 am
    The problem with heaven – imagination can’t grasp it

    3. Wednesday 11 June at 2.45 pm
    The problem with hell – love can’t bear it

    4. Thursday 12 June at 10.15 am
    The problem with purgatory – Christians can’t agree on it


Each year the Abbot and Community of Pluscarden Abbey sponsor a series of four lectures by an invited Theologian on an aspect of Catholic Theology. Previous Lecturers have included Fr Vincent Twomey S.V.D., Professor Lewis Ayres, Professor John Haldane, Fr Aidan Nichols OP, Fr Thomas Weinandy OFM Cap, Fr Anthony Meredith SJ, Fr Paul McPartlan and Fr Tom Herbst OFM. The Lectures are held on the Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday after Pentecost in St Scholastica’s Retreat House at the Abbey. They are open to all who wish to attend and are free. Limited accommodation is available at the Abbey and those who wish to stay should book as soon as possible. There are also many places to stay in the Elgin area: contact the local tourist office: 01343 542666.

The Lecturer

Carol Zaleski is the Professor of World Religions at Smith College, where she also chairs the Department of Religion. She earned her B.A. from Wesleyan University and her M.A. and Ph.D. in the study of religion from Harvard University. She has been teaching philosophy of religion, world religions, and Catholic thought at Smith College since 1989. Zaleski is the author of Otherworld Journeys: Accounts of Near-Death Experience in Medieval and Modern Times and The Life of the World to Come (both Oxford University Press); she is also a columnist and editor-at-large for The Christian Century. She has co-authored, with her husband Philip Zaleski, Prayer: A History (Houghton Mifflin), The Book of Heaven (Oxford), The Book of Hell (forthcoming, Oxford), and a group biography of the Inklings—C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, Charles Williams and their circle (forthcoming, Farrar, Straus & Giroux). Together, Carol and Philip Zaleski are long-time friends of Pluscarden Abbey and oblates of the twin Benedictine communities at Petersham; and they are closely associated with the British Catholic journal Second Spring and its founding editors Stratford and Léonie Caldecott.

The Lectures: “Immortality in Question”

Introduction

With few exceptions, icons of our Lord’s Descent into Hell have a curious detail in common: they show Christ seizing Adam by the wrist rather than by the hand, as he pulls our first parents out of the cave, or the jaws, or the prison, of death. It’s a small detail but, as these four lectures will suggest, it captures in miniature precisely what is distinctive about the Christian understanding of immortality.

My premise is that this distinctive understanding of immortality is not widely understood -- and in some quarters is actually under siege. In these lectures, I will be considering problems that are typically raised by Christians as well as non-believers, occasionally looking over the fence at other religions whose traditions may enrich our understanding, and reflecting upon solutions that become available when we seek to think with the mind of the Church.

Lecture 1. The problem with immortality – we don’t know how to think about it

The expression ‘immortality of the soul’ went out of fashion in the mid-twentieth-century, but it is making a comeback, thanks in no small part to Joseph Ratzinger’s magisterial 1977 book Eschatology: Death and Eternal Life. Christian theological anthropology affirms the creatureliness as well as the dignity of the human person and places the hope for immortality wholly in the hands of our loving Redeemer.

 

Lecture 2. The problem with heaven – imagination can’t grasp it

If heaven seems boring, as the cliché has it, it is due to an atrophy of our reason, imagination, and love; restless until our hearts rest in God, we cannot help but form an inadequate picture of divine peace. Some seek a cure for heaven-fatigue in poetry, but the best cure is a poetic life, living by a Rule not of our own making, by the Church’s rather than the world’s clock, in the bright shadow of eternity.

Lecture 3. The problem with hell – love can’t bear it

Most serious Christians have sought to affirm at once God's universal salvific will and our creaturely freedom to accept or reject His love. Thus Hans urs von Balthasar could ‘dare to hope that all men will be saved’ while C. S. Lewis, no less hopeful, maintained that hell is ‘locked from the inside.’ This lecture will consider the present state of the question as Christians grapple with the problem of hell.

 


Lecture 4. The problem with purgatory – Christians can’t agree on it

Purgatory is a belief founded on the practice of care for the dead, present in germ throughout world religions, fully articulated (and discriminated from ‘hell lite’) by the Catholic tradition, rejected by the Reformers, but resurfacing wherever suppressed (consider Hamlet and The Four Quartets). Christians of many confessions are coming to see the wisdom of C.S. Lewis’s observation that ‘our souls need purgatory’; and this development brings with it new opportunities for ecumenical understanding.

 

For further information or to book accommodation, contact the Abbey.