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We are...

The Wendland-Cook Program in
Religion and Justice

The Wendland-Cook Program in Religion and Justice is an interdisciplinary program located at Vanderbilt University Divinity School. We focus on issues of justice that arise at the intersection of religion, economics, and ecology. Founded in 2019 by Dr. Joerg Rieger and supported by a generous gift from Barbara Wendland, the mission of the program is to develop resources and opportunities for students, scholars, clergy, and activists to envision and create a more just and sustainable world for all.

 
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Interventions

Interventions is a space for students, scholars, clergy, and activists to write and collaborate on practical and theological approaches to issues of economy, ecology, religion, and justice.

 
 

The Age of the Capitalocene and the Theological Critique of Idolatry

May 2024

On April 10th at Vanderbilt Divinity School the Wendland-Cook Program welcomed Dr. Jung Mo Sung for a lecture titled, “The Age of the Capitalocene and the Theological Critique of Idolatory,” and featured responses by Dr. Joerg Rieger and Dr. Phillis Sheppard. This forum presents an abbreviated version of Dr. Sung’s lectures and the responses by Dr. Rieger and Dr. Sheppard.

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Listening to the Spirit

March 2024

People organize to protect and fight for what they hold sacred. Organizing works by building relational power grounded in values and relationships. Issue wins are vital - building radically democratic power is at the heart of organizing, but the first step to building political and economic power is building radically democratic relationships. Because of the crucial role of sacred value in organizing, some organizing practices are religious practices. These are the central claims of Aaron Stauffer’s new book, Listening to the Spirit: The Radical Social Gospel, Sacred Values, and Broad-based Community Organizing.

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Teach the Children

February 2024

This forum explores the legacy of education institutions that fostered and supported the social gospel movement in the south, primarily focusing on Vanderbilt Divinity School, where Alva Taylor taught, Commonwealth College in Arkansas, where Claude Williams was a key player, and at Highlander Center for Research and Education, where Howard Kester, Alva Taylor, and Claude Williams all were active. Panelists explore the importance of education as a force for economic and political change, and how education institutions are often contested spaces laden with economic and political power. Each panelist will also explore the states of educational institutions today can continue to play a crucial role in economic and political democracy.

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Click on an icon below to view all the articles on that topic and more from our Resource Library.

 
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Outward focus

Solidarity Circles

At a time when protest often seems to be the last recourse for those longing for a better world and a more sustainable faith, the Solidarity Circles of the Wendland-Cook Program in Religion and Justice at Vanderbilt University are designed to expand horizons by constructing and building alternatives. Our approach is holistic from the outset. Putting together faith communities and solidarity economies—we are also talking about developing religious and economic democracies in addition to political democracy—leads to deeper engagements of all of life and feeds back into the deepening of faith.

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Academic Fellows

The Wendland-Cook Program in Religion and Justice is happy to accept applications to our fellows program for next academic year. The Wendland-Cook Program provides fellowships and internships for masters students enrolled at VDS and for doctoral students in the Graduate Department of Religion and other graduate programs at Vanderbilt University. The program focuses on issues of justice in matters of religion, economics, and ecology, intersecting with race and gender. The fellowship program places VDS students in leadership roles in the key initiative of the Wendland-Cook program, the Solidarity Circles.

Fellowship slots  are limited and applicants who have participated in Solidarity Circles previously or are familiar with our webinars such as The (Im)possibility of Solidarity on the Left and popular education materials are encouraged to apply. Applications are competitive and can be found here.

 

Working Groups

International Working Group on Theology in the Capitalocene

The Social Gospel in the South Working Group

If you are interested in the work of these groups, please submit an inquiry here.

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Join the Movement for Justice

Sign up for our regular Interventions newsletter and indicate if you are interested in receiving stand-alone announcements and priority registration access for upcoming events. We also provide relevant updates for Vanderbilt students interested in participating in the program. Check all that apply. No Spam. No Nonsense. Never.

 
 
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Our world and communities face unprecedented challenges, and our struggle for a more just planet and economy cannot be carried on without you.


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