CHS Summer Intensive

A master bard leads us into the mists of sacred story . . .

Through a documentary fragment known in English as the Cauldron of Poesy, we glimpse what may have been an ancient Irish way of viewing the inner universe of

the human being in The Three Cauldrons. The Three Cauldrons have been likened to an ancient Celtic chakra system, a way of viewing the spiritual life and as a model for Celtic shamanism. In recent years, research across many fields has begun to reveal to us the significant role of stories to the human brain, its organization and the entire human experience. We will bring together over four sessions at Mystic South these pieces of ancient spiritual practice from the Irish Celtic traditions and modern brain research to explore the power of story in the inner and outer worlds of Earth, Sea and Sky.
Each session will include some of the foundational material about both the ancient cauldron system of the human being and the recent brain research. Each session will be devoted to examining story as it relates to one of the three cauldrons and our spiritual journey in the world.. The final session will reach for some integration of the ancient and modern research with suggestions for spiritual practice. Exploring the power of story: the physical body aspects, the emotional/relational aspects, and the wisdom/spiritual aspects.

We are delighted to be hosted this year by Mystic South, the distinctly Southern and progressive Pagan conference held in Atlanta, GA.

Much-loved CHS professor and national award-winning teacher Bob Patrick is an active member of the Unitarian-Universalist Congregation of Gwinnett where he co-founded both the Oak Grove CUUPS and the Druid Order of Three Realms whose mother Grove, Sylvan Sanctuary, meets at UUCG. His religious and spiritual path is labyrinthine, including ministry in the United Methodist Church, the Roman Catholic Church, Druidry and UUism. He has special interests in language pedagogy, creating and leading ritual, and spiritual direction/friendship, working with labyrinths, gardening and painting, and is a certified and licensed massage therapist. He understands his Earth-centered spiritual path as the way of weaving together all of these aspects of his life. Bob holds a BA in Biblical Literature from Oral Roberts University, a Masters of Divinity from Emory University, and a PhD in Latin and Roman Studies from the University of Florida. His

dissertation focused on the presence of sacred groves in the Metamorphoses of Ovid as nonlinear events, and he has continuing interest in sacred groves in surrounding European and near-eastern cultures, particularly Celtic cultures.

How you can participate (read carefully):

All four sessions will be open to any paid Mystic South attendee. Registered participants will meet privately as announced by the instructor in the CHS hotel suite. You will also be placed in a special online classroom for pre- and post-conference discussions, and an assignment for degree students.

To earn credit as an intensive towards your master’s degree, register and pay here.

To earn credit towards any CHS certificate, register and pay here.

Your CHS registration will also register you for the entire Mystic South conference. However, you must make your own hotel reservation (use the code MYSTIC SOUTH) and you are responsible for your meals.

The Crowne Plaza is a natural wonderland, with walking paths, gardens and woods. There are many nearby restaurants and stores, as well as restaurants and bars inside the hotel.

Wendy Griffin Named Academic Dean Emerita Upon Retirement from Seminary

Columbia, S.C. — Wendy Griffin, Ph.D., has been named Academic Dean Emerita by Cherry Hill Seminary, as she retires from seven years of service as Academic Dean for that institution.

Wendy Griffin, Ph.D.

Griffin was the first permanent academic dean for Cherry Hill Seminary (CHS), taking the position on January 1, 2011. Professor Emerita of Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies at CSU Long Beach, Griffin was one of the first scholars to publish academic research in Goddess Spirituality and Wicca. She is founding Co-chair of the Contemporary Pagan Studies Group for the American Academy of Religion, co-editor of the first academic series in Pagan Studies, and on the editorial board of The Pomeganate: the International Journal of Pagan Studies. Editor of the anthologies Daughters of the Goddess: Studies of Healing, Identity and Empowerment and of Sacred Land & Spiritual Landscapes, she has published numerous articles and chapters here and internationally. In her spare time, she has published two historical novels.

The announcement was delivered today by former CHS board chair Jeffrey Albaugh at the 14th annual Conference on Pagan Studies, following Griffin’s conference presentation. Albaugh noted his gratitude for her dedication to strengthening and shaping CHS programs. The full text of the proclamation is given below.

Executive Director Holli Emore said, “It is rare that one is able to enjoy the kind of experience I have had working with Wendy for the past seven years. It has been a deep privilege, and I know that I speak for the entire staff when I say how very much she will be missed.”

Longtime colleague Michael York, who also has taught for CHS for more than ten years, provided this statement:

Throughout my own academic career, Wendy Griffin has constantly impressed as a most esteemed colleague. In addition, I have also come to be extremely privileged to be able to call her a dear friend. But apart from our friendship, she has never failed to inspire one and all with her professional abilities and acute intellectual engagement. With all challenges of education and research, she has become a distinguished model, and what has been particularly appreciated is the warm and human touch she brings to every aspect of her work. Certainly, Cherry Hill Seminary has benefitted immensely from her directorship for which she freely sacrificed much of her retirement time. I believe everyone who has had contact with her has nothing but gratitude for her sensitive concerns as well as her achievement in bequeathing the seminary a durable legacy to carry the institution skillfully into the future.

The Seminary continues its search for a new academic dean.

For more information, contact the office at CHS@cherryhillseminary.org.

PROCLAMATION

In Honor of Wendy Griffin
Presented by The Board of Directors

WHEREAS Dr. Griffin

Recognized the value of a professional educational program to serve the unique needs of students desiring to learn about Pagan and other Earth-Based Spiritualities and to serve those communities;

Offered her profound expertise and experience to shape a graduate program which could be presented successfully for formal accreditation;

Showed vision for the future of Cherry Hill Seminary through a generous endowment gift;

Supported her Cherry Hill Seminary colleagues and students in every way she was asked for these past ninety-five months, earning their deep admiration and full trust;

Demonstrated exceptional commitment to the organization by serving a full seven years as Academic Dean, far beyond her original three-year term;

Remained dedicated to standards of academic integrity even in times of shifting public opinion;

Exemplified resilience, fortitude and faith in the importance of Cherry Hill Seminary to the world; and

In all of her work as Academic Dean, shared wisdom, compassion, and the accumulated expertise of her career in academia, without reservation;

BE IT RESOLVED, that the Board of Directors of Cherry Hill Seminary do proclaim on this 26th day of January, 2018 the appointment of Dr. Griffin as Academic Dean Emerita.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, Cherry Hill Seminary will preserve a copy of this PROCLAMATION for posterity, making it a part of the Seminary permanent record.

Proclamation In Honor of Wendy Griffin

PROCLAMATION

In Honor of Wendy Griffin

Presented by The Board of Directors

WHEREAS Dr. Griffin

Recognized the value of a professional educational program to serve the unique needs of students desiring to learn about Pagan and other Earth-Based Spiritualities and to serve those communities;

Offered her profound expertise and experience to shape a graduate program which could be presented successfully for formal accreditation;

Showed vision for the future of Cherry Hill Seminary through a generous endowment gift;

Supported her Cherry Hill Seminary colleagues and students in every way she was asked for these past ninety-five months, earning their deep admiration and full trust;

Demonstrated exceptional commitment to the organization by serving a full seven years as Academic Dean, far beyond her original three-year term;

Remained dedicated to standards of academic integrity even in times of shifting public opinion;

Exemplified resilience, fortitude and faith in the importance of Cherry Hill Seminary to the world; and

In all of her work as Academic Dean, shared wisdom, compassion, and the accumulated expertise of her career in academia, without reservation;

BE IT RESOLVED, that the Board of Directors of Cherry Hill Seminary do proclaim on this 26th day of January, 2018 the appointment of Dr. Griffin as Academic Dean Emerita.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, Cherry Hill Seminary will preserve a copy of this PROCLAMATION for posterity, making it a part of the Seminary permanent record.

Cherry Hill Seminary Calls For Academic Freedom, Respect and Civility

For Immediate Release: November 16, 2015

COLUMBIA, S.C. – Responding to the “Red Scare” of the last century, educational philosopher Robert Hutchins (then president of the University of Chicago) noted that without a vibrant commitment to free and open inquiry, a university ceases to be a university. (1)  Cherry Hill Seminary is also committed to free and open inquiry in all matters, particularly in light of the wide diversity found among contemporary Pagan teachings and practice.  Hence, we support all members of our seminary community – faculty and students – in their search for meaning, giving them the broadest latitude possible to share their thoughts, write, listen, learn and challenge each other. These ideas will, and have at times, presented natural conflicts.  But it is not the proper role of either a university or seminary to censor ideas that some may find unwelcome, disagreeable, or even deeply offensive. (2)

Recently, one of our faculty members signed a petition that some people found hurtful and offensive.  Cherry Hill Seminary has been pressured to terminate this faculty member.  The fact that we have been pressured suggests to us that the Pagan community may be confused about the role of higher education.  We all want diversity of sex and race, for example, although we would seem to be less comfortable with diversity of ideas. But we do not serve our students well by suggesting that the way to respond to those with whom we disagree is to silence them.

Such situations come up from time to time at universities around the country when, for example, a controversial speaker is scheduled to speak on campus, or a faculty member publishes a paper which some find offensive.  Institutions of higher learning take the position that it is vital to our survival and health that these conflicts not be used to curtail a completely free and open discussion of ideas.  Indeed, the very nature of the educational experience is to be exposed to new ideas, to be personally challenged, and to learn to defend one’s own ideas in a civil and meaningful way. This means it is not for the Seminary to make a judgment about and suppress one person’s ideas, but it is up to individuals themselves to engage in respectful and responsible debate.

Some may not understand our mission as a seminary: we are not a religious tradition, do not have elders or priests, and do not provide ordination. Our sole mission is education; in that process we help people learn to listen to one another, to reach across boundaries, to foster tolerance for difficult ideas. We caution all who have expressed concern to keep in mind the limited and often unreliable nature of hearsay and social media as their only source of information. We call for our Seminary family to embrace this controversy as an opportunity to support each other with respect in our search for personal authenticity, upholding the interfaith principle that each may only speak her or his own truth, her own belief and story. As both an institution of higher education and a seminary, Cherry Hill Seminary will continue to hold a safe space for dialog on the issues which might otherwise divide us.

Jeffrey Albaugh, President
Holli Emore, Executive Director

  1. “Faced with charges in 1935 by drugstore magnate Charles Walgreen that his niece had been indoctrinated with communist ideas at the University, Hutchins stood behind his faculty and their right to teach and believe as they wished, insisting that communism could not withstand the scrutiny of public analysis and debate. He later became friends with Walgreen and convinced him to fund a series of lectures on democracy. When the University faced charges of aiding and abetting communism again in 1949, Hutchins steadfastly refused to capitulate to red-baiters who attacked faculty members.“ https://president.uchicago.edu/directory/robert-maynard-hutchins
  2. Upholding academic freedom is one of the criteria for accreditation. Here is an informative statement by the American Association of University Professors.

Suggested readings:

Bass, Scott A.  and Mary L. Clark.  The Gravest Threat to Colleges Comes From Within,” September 28, 2015. http://chronicle.com/article/The-Gravest-Threat-to-Colleges/233449

Huckabee, Charles.  “Former Chief Quits U. of British Columbia’s Board After Academic-Freedom Review,” October 15, 2015. http://chronicle.com/blogs/ticker/former-chief-quits-u-of-british-columbias-board-after-academic-freedom-review/105860

Kahn-Harris, Keith.  “Being Civil Doesn’t Have to Mean Remaining Silent,”  October 08, 2015.  http://chronicle.com/article/Being-Civil-Doesn-t-Have-to/233697

Leshin, Zachary, “Dershowitz: ‘The Fog of Fascism Is Descending Quickly Over Many American Universities,’ ” November 13, 2015. http://www.cnsnews.com/blog/zachary-leshin/dershowitz-fog-fascism-descending-quickly-over-many-american-universities