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The Precarious Power of a Strongly Worded Letter: Political Correspondence, Lutheran Theology, and Civic Participation

Dr. Anthony Bateza, a guest at our 2023 Synod Assembly, presents this talk on Wednesday, 3/22/2023, 10am AZ (PST), 11am MST at Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary. If you are planning to attend online, please register at this link.

In the face of social challenges and mounting injustices, we are sometimes encouraged to write a letter. Whether this is an opinion piece for a local newspaper or a policy recommendation for our local representative, the assumption is that putting words on a page will contribute to making the world a better place.

In this talk Dr. Bateza will examine some of the presumptions behind this advice and our practices, connecting contemporary challenges we face with Martin Luther's own use of political correspondence.

Questions about our competence and commitments, the reasons behind our writing and our standing to offer our options, will be central as we evaluate our motives and those of others. Ultimately, Dr. Bateza will argue that a Lutheran approach to complexities of good works and the sacraments provide valuable lessons and cautionary warnings as we take our stands and post our ideas for the world.

Registration

If you are planning to attend in-person, please register at this link.

Schedule

9:30 AM - Gathering and light refreshments
10:00 AM - Lecture begins

About Dr. Bateza

Anthony Bateza is a specialist in Martin Luther, moral theology and Christian ethics. Luther’s political theology is his primary area of resarch, focusing on the reformer's understanding of human agency and his relationship with the virtue tradition and Augustinian thought. He is also personally and professionally invested in questions of race, identity, and social justice. He has written on Black liberation theology and connections between Lutheran teaching and confronting racism in the United States.

Dr. Bateza teaches a variety of courses in the religion department that connect theological and historical questions with contemporary challenges. He has taught in the Enduring Conversations program and currently serves as the program director of the Race and Ethnic Studies program (RACE) and chair of the Race, Ethnic, Gender and Sexuality Studies department (REGSS).

Dr. Bateza has earned degrees from Iowa State University (B.S, 2002), the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago (M.Div., 2006), and Princeton Theological Seminary (Ph.D., 2017). He is an ordained pastor in the Lutheran Church (ELCA) and frequently speaks in congregational settings and at church events.

Dr. Bateza lives in Northfield with his wife, Cynthia, their two children, Austen and Magdalene, and their loveable dog Charlie. In his free time he enjoys cycling, board games, comic books and cooking.

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