Listen to the Divinity School's Miroslav Volf in conversation with Kelly Corrigan and Rainn Wilson at the Aspen Ideas Festival. #lifeworthliving
#MiroslavVolf #LiveWorthLiving #YDS #YaleDivinitySchool #AspenIdeasFestival #AIF
Listen to the Divinity School's Miroslav Volf in conversation with Kelly Corrigan and Rainn Wilson at the Aspen Ideas Festival. #lifeworthliving
#MiroslavVolf #LiveWorthLiving #YDS #YaleDivinitySchool #AspenIdeasFestival #AIF
From WGNTV in Chicago: Miroslav Volf is a Yale professor and author of new book based on his popular class.
‘Life Worth Living’ provides readers with jumping-off points, road maps, and habits of reflection for figuring out where their lives hold meaning and where things need to change.
https://wgntv.com/morning-news/life-worth-living-a-guide-to-what-matters-most/
YDS Professor Miroslav Volf on the Today Show this morning talking about what makes life worth living — the subject of the brand-new book he's co-authored with Yale Center for Faith and Culture colleagues Matthew Croasmun '06 M.A.R. and Ryan McAnnally-Linz '10 M.A.R.
#Yale #YaleDivinitySchool #YDS #MiroslavVolf #volf #LifeWorthLiving
Ukrainian Pastor Speaks Out: Resist Evil, Be Present, and Remember How Little You Control
"We just have to be a people of dignity and with a dignity we should face the trial that have happened in our lifetime. We just have to be these kind of people that will not turn [into] something else rather than human, but rather will become a better human."
https://faith.yale.edu/media/ukrainian-pastor-speaks-out?mc_cid=3e709fd958&mc_eid=dd5ae42817
#yds #YaleDivinitySchool #CFC #MiroslavVolf #Ukraine #FyodorRaychynets
Ukrainian pastor and theologian Fyodor Raychynets returns to the podcast to update Miroslav Volf on life during wartime, in a war zone—which includes not only the pain of war, but the loss of losing his wife prior to the war, and his adult son just months ago. His faith persists in the face of all the cold reminders of how little control any of us exert on world events such as this. He now turns to the minor prophets—Nahum and Habakkuk in particular—to hope for justice, to complain and express his anger toward God, even with God. And he continues to minister to soldiers and civilians, holding the questions with presence and patience, while preaching a message of hope in the good and resistance to evil.