Bethlehem College and Seminary Presents
Fall Lecture Series 2024
Please join us for these important messages. All lectures are free and open to the public, with dessert reception to follow.
Please join us for these important messages. All lectures are free and open to the public, with dessert reception to follow.
Thursday, October 17 | 7–8:30pm
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Minneapolis
The Medieval period has often been portrayed as a time of intellectual decline, ecclesiastical tyranny, and cultural degeneracy. The Dark Ages seem even darker when compared to the intellectual freedom experienced by academics in the contemporary Western world. Yet, we begin to wonder just how free these contemporary institutions actually are. In this lecture, we will consider the nature and purpose of the University, especially the liberal arts or humanities. We will wonder about how “liberal” they actually are, and we will make some suggestions about what is necessary for education to be truly liberating.
Tuesday, November 12 | 7–8:30pm
The North Church
Mounds View
Protestant poet-courtier Edmund Spenser and Puritan preacher John Bunyan both grapple with the pernicious and persistent temptation to despair in their famous works The Faerie Queen (1590) and Pilgrim’s Progress (1678). Spenser and Bunyan offer sophisticated assessments of ways through it and, by God’s grace, out of it. This lecture considers what Spenser and Bunyan’s theological-literary imaginations have to offer us today in our own struggle towards hope in God.
Thursday, December 12 | 7–8:30pm
Cities Church
St. Paul
You won’t find a single Christmas tree mentioned anywhere in the New Testament accounts of the first Advent (Matt. 1:18–2:18; Luke 1:26–2:21). But decorating trees, even among Christians, is a mainstay of Christmas holiday tradition. What does it have to do with Advent? Come hear Dr. James McGlothlin share the surprising pagan origins of this tradition and what it might teach Christians about redeeming culture.