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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260202T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260202T213000
DTSTAMP:20260514T002552
CREATED:20260128T155635Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260128T160232Z
UID:11045-1770060600-1770067800@www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Thomistic Institute – Giving a Voice to Mary in Syriac Liturgical Tradition – Dr Sebastian Brock
DESCRIPTION:On Monday 2nd February\, the Oxford Thomistic Institute will be hosting Dr Sebastian Brock\, of Wolfson College\, Oxford\, to speak on Giving a Voice to Mary in Syriac Liturgical Tradition. \nThe lecture will begin at 7.30pm in the Aula at Blackfriars\, and will be followed by refreshments. All are welcome. \n \nAbout the speaker\nSebastian Brock is Emeritus Reader in Syriac Studies in Oxford University; having taught previously at the Universities of Birmingham and Cambridge\, he moved to Oxford in 1974\, where he taught Aramaic and Syriac for the following thirty years\, retiring in 2003. \nHe has written extensively on Syriac literature and on the history and theology of the different Syriac Churches. Among his publications are The Syriac Fathers on Prayer and the Spiritual Life\, The Luminous Eye: the Spiritual World Vision of St Ephrem\, Bride of Light: Hymns on Mary from the Syriac Churches\, Fire from Heaven: Studies in Syriac Theology and Liturgy\, St Ephrem: Hymns on Paradise\, The Bible in the Syriac Tradition\, Treasure-House of Mysteries: Explorations of the Sacred Text through Poetry in the Syriac Tradition\, and Isaac of Nineveh (Isaac the Syrian): Headings on Spiritual Knowledge. \nHe has worked closely with the St Ephrem Ecumenical Research Institute (SEERI) in Kottayam (Kerala\, India)\, and served as an academic advisor for PRO ORIENTE’s Syriac Dialogue. He is a Fellow of the British Academy\, and was awarded the Medal of St Ephrem by the late Syrian Orthodox Patriarch\, HH Moran Ignatius Zakka Iwas.
URL:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/event/thomistic-institute-giving-a-voice-to-mary-in-syriac-liturgical-tradition-dr-sebastian-brock/
LOCATION:Blackfriars Hall\, St Giles\, Oxford\, OX1 3LY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Priory,The Aquinas Institute
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/TI-Sebastian-Brock.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="Thomistic Institute (Oxford Chapter)":MAILTO:reginald.herbert@english.op.org
GEO:51.756248;-1.259881
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260204T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260204T183000
DTSTAMP:20260514T002552
CREATED:20260113T142148Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260120T100647Z
UID:10968-1770224400-1770229800@www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Nietzsche or St Thomas
DESCRIPTION:Fr Michael Sherwin OP (Angelicum)\, ‘Nietzsche or St Thomas: Thoughts on Alasdair MacIntyre’\nPart of this term’s lecture series\, Thursdays at 5pm unless otherwise noted\, presenting the breadth of Thomistic thought and its applications. \nupcoming events in this series\nWk 5 Jan Bentz (Blackfriars)\, ‘Aquinas and the Real Distinction: Historical-Philosophical Notes’ \nWk 6 Jack Norman (Blackfriars)\, ‘McCabe’s Social Ontology: Sin\, Sacraments\, and the New Left’ \nWk 8 Fr Richard Conrad OP (Blackfriars)\, ‘“Faith Believes\, nor Questions How”: St Thomas on How (Not) to Understand the Eucharist’
URL:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/event/nietzsche-or-st-thomas/
LOCATION:Blackfriars Hall\, St Giles\, Oxford\, OX1 3LY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:The Aquinas Institute
ORGANIZER;CN="Aquinas Institute":MAILTO:aquinas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk
GEO:51.756248;-1.259881
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260205T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260205T203000
DTSTAMP:20260514T002552
CREATED:20260112T132736Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T133056Z
UID:10954-1770318000-1770323400@www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk
SUMMARY:The Instinct to Save: Thomistic Healthcare Decision-Making
DESCRIPTION:A Thomistic case for the rule of rescue as a normative principle in healthcare allocation decision-making\nThe rule of rescue (RR) describes the tendency in healthcare to prioritise treatment for identified patients facing severe immediate need over prevention benefiting unidentified/statistical lives. It is criticised by health economists for preventing cost-effective healthcare allocation. Accordingly\, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)\, one of the chief bodies guiding the commissioning of NHS services\, rules out RR as a principle for healthcare allocation – even though this goes against the deep instincts of most healthcare professionals. Using the philosophical and theological framework of Thomas Aquinas\, this talk makes the case for RR as a normative principle for healthcare allocation decision-making. \nRegistration is required for this online seminar. Everyone is welcome. \nDr Joseph Kwon is a Senior Researcher in Health Economics at Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences\, University of Oxford. He holds a Doctorate in Health Economics and a Master’s degree in Theology. His health economics research spans dementia\, frailty\, end-of-life care\, long covid\, mental health\, preterm birth and childhood health measurement. Since August 2025\, he has been seconded to NICE’s Science Policy & Research team to represent the national Mental Health Mission. He is interested in the theological ethics of healthcare allocation.
URL:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/event/the-instinct-to-save-thomistic-healthcare-decision-making/
CATEGORIES:Las Casas Institute,The Aquinas Institute
ORGANIZER;CN="Las Casas Institute":MAILTO:lascasas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260219T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260219T183000
DTSTAMP:20260514T002552
CREATED:20260113T142325Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260115T090831Z
UID:10971-1771520400-1771525800@www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Aquinas and the Real Distinction
DESCRIPTION:Jan Bentz (Blackfriars)\, ‘Aquinas and the Real Distinction: Historical-Philosophical Notes’\nPart of this term’s lecture series\, Thursdays at 5pm unless otherwise noted\, presenting the breadth of Thomistic thought and its applications. \nupcoming events in this series\nWk 6 Jack Norman (Blackfriars)\, ‘McCabe’s Social Ontology: Sin\, Sacraments\, and the New Left’ \nWk 8 Fr Richard Conrad OP (Blackfriars)\, ‘“Faith Believes\, nor Questions How”: St Thomas on How (Not) to Understand the Eucharist’
URL:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/event/aquinas-and-the-real-distinction/
LOCATION:Blackfriars Hall\, St Giles\, Oxford\, OX1 3LY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:The Aquinas Institute
ORGANIZER;CN="Aquinas Institute":MAILTO:aquinas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk
GEO:51.756248;-1.259881
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260221T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260221T170000
DTSTAMP:20260514T002552
CREATED:20260115T135159Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260212T124142Z
UID:10998-1771682400-1771693200@www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Nature as Neighbour: Past Entanglements and Present Challenges
DESCRIPTION:This seminar brings together emerging scholars of historical ecologies\, placing them in conversation to reflect on the relationship humanity has and had with the natural world. By tracing how human–environment relations have been imagined\, governed\, and lived in the past\, the seminar foregrounds nature not as a distant backdrop but as a proximate and entangled neighbour. Responding to one another and in dialogue with attendees\, this seminar will workshop how historical perspectives can inform present-day responses to the climate and natural world\, offering critical insights into environmental-stewardship\, -responsibility\, -coexistence\, and environmentally-just futures. \nThe seminar will be held at 2pm Saturday the 21st of February\, at Blackfriars Hall. A reception will follow. This event is open to everyone\, registration is required to attend. \nThis seminar is co-convened by Nidanu O’Shea and John Angus Macaulay. \nspeakers\nAndrew McNey – A Green Desert? Interrogating Reciprocity in the Late Antique Negev \nIn the late fourth century a complex irrigation regime swept across the Negev desert in response to opportunities afforded by high value plants. This talk seeks to interrogate the possibility of a reciprocal relationship between the farmers of the late antique Negev and their environment. Agronomical research suggests that growing plants in a desert may have a beneficial impact on soil health and biodiversity. However\, ecologists posit that the exponential extraction of natural resources created fragility in a system that was coaxed into rigidity. This talk will probe these two cases through the lens of landscape archaeology. \nAndrew is currently studying for the DPhil in History at Reuben College\, Oxford. His research seeks to explore transdisciplinary approaches to narratives of resilience in rural communities of the eastern Mediterranean during Late Antiquity. He has worked as an excavator at the sites of Tel Azekah and Yavneh and as a Supervisor at Ancient Corinth. As a research assistant at the University of Cambridge he documented archaeobotanical material from the site of Yotvata. He was recently appointed Stipendiary Lecturer in History at Trinity College. \nPablo Scheffer – The Sagas of Icelanders and Climatic Change \nThe forty-or-so texts known as the Sagas of Icelanders were written in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries\, and describe the lives of Iceland’s first settlers a few hundred years earlier. In the intervening period\, the island’s environment changed dramatically. Forests were felled; native species were extirpated; landscapes were transformed by erosion. The climate\, meanwhile\, became both colder and more unpredictable. In my paper I’ll begin to consider if and how the sagas remember these changes\, ultimately to ask a larger question: what did medieval Icelanders make of the fact that the world around them was becoming a more hostile place? \nPablo Scheffer is a second year DPhil student in Old Norse. His research – which is co-funded by the AHRC\, the Clarendon Fund and Magdalen College – sits at the intersection of literary studies and environmental history\, exploring how the Sagas of Icelanders grapple with the harshness and unpredictability of the Icelandic environment. Before starting his DPhil\, he spent three years at the Times Literary Supplement\, where he remains the consultant editor for medieval history and literature. \nRichards Chang Yui Cheong – When the Waters Turn Buddhist: Ecological Histories of Conversion in Kinnaur \nSituated along the Old Hindustan–Tibet trade routes in the Western Himalayas\, Kinnaur has long been a zone where Buddhist\, Hindu\, and pre-Buddhist traditions meet. This paper examines Buddhist conversion in Kinnaur through its ecological dimensions\, focusing on water management and the ritual “taming” of klu\, serpent spirits associated with wild waters. Drawing on Tibetan historiographical texts and contemporary ethnography\, it argues that conversion in the Western Himalayas was enacted not only through doctrinal changes or royal patronages\, but also through practical engagements with landscape and environment. By situating Kinnaur as a key contact zone during the 10th–11th centuries\, the study reframes religious conversion as an ongoing ecological process that continues to shape Buddhist practice and community life today. \nRichards Chang Yui Cheong is a DPhil candidate in Tibetan & Himalayan Studies at St Antony’s College\, the University of Oxford. He employs historical and anthropological approaches to examine processes of place-making and identity formation in the Western Himalayas. His doctoral research focuses on the religious history of Kinnaur (Tib. Khu nu)\, analysing it as a contact zone between the Tibetosphere and Indosphere during the early phyi dar period. He completed his MPhil in Tibetan and Himalayan Studies at Wolfson College\, Oxford\, where his thesis examined the place-creation history of Mtsho Padma (Rewalsar).
URL:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/event/nature-as-neighbour-past-entanglements-and-present-challenges/
LOCATION:Blackfriars Hall\, St Giles\, Oxford\, OX1 3LY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Las Casas Institute
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Giotto_-_Legend_of_St_Francis_-_-15-_-_Sermon_to_the_Birds.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Las Casas Institute":MAILTO:lascasas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk
GEO:51.756248;-1.259881
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260223T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260223T213000
DTSTAMP:20260514T002552
CREATED:20260128T155823Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260128T160222Z
UID:11047-1771875000-1771882200@www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Thomistic Institute – Pope or Antipope?: Schism and the Medieval Papacy – Prof Rebecca Rist
DESCRIPTION:On Monday 23rd February\, the Oxford Thomistic Institute will be hosting Prof Rebecca Rist\, of the University of Reading\, to speak on Pope or Antipope?: Schism and the Medieval Papacy. \nThe lecture will begin at 7.30pm in the Aula at Blackfriars\, and will be followed by refreshments. All are welcome. \nAbout the speaker\nProfessor Rebecca Rist is a professor of medieval history at the University of Reading. Her research and teaching interests focus on the papacy\, the crusades\, Jewish-Christian relations\, and heresy and dissent. More widely she is interested in the medieval Church\, religious belief and political ideas in the High and Late Middle Ages (11th-15th centuries). She is also increasingly expanding her interest in religious and political history into the Early Modern period (16th century). \nProf Rist’s first monograph The Papacy and Crusading in Europe\, 1198-1245 (Continuum\, 2009) examined the papacy’s authorisation of crusades against heretics and political enemies in Europe during the first half of the 13th century. Her co-edited book The Cathars and the Albigensian Crusade: A Sourcebook\, ed. C. Leglu\, R. Rist and C. Taylor (Routledge\, 2014) brought together a rich and diverse range of medieval sources to examine key aspects of the growth of heresy and dissent in southern France in the 12th and 13th centuries. Her book Popes and Jews\, 1095-1291 (Oxford University Press\, 2016) examined the papacy’s relationship to Jewish communities in western Europe in the High Middle Ages. Recent articles by Prof Rist in journals and edited collections have explored aspects of papal policy regarding crusading and the papacy’s treatment of heretics and Jews in the High Middle Ages. \nProf Rist is currently working on a monograph on the medieval papacy and heresy for Oxford University Press\, and a book for Routledge on the theme of medieval and early modern Catholic piety and devotional lay sensibilities. She also enjoys media and outreach work and often provides expert commentary for radio\, TV and the press on religious history\, particularly the history of the Catholic Church. She is the current Director of the Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Reading.
URL:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/event/thomistic-institute-pope-or-antipope-schism-and-the-medieval-papacy-prof-rebecca-rist/
LOCATION:Blackfriars Hall\, St Giles\, Oxford\, OX1 3LY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Priory,The Aquinas Institute
ORGANIZER;CN="Thomistic Institute (Oxford Chapter)":MAILTO:reginald.herbert@english.op.org
GEO:51.756248;-1.259881
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Blackfriars Hall St Giles Oxford OX1 3LY United Kingdom;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=St Giles:geo:-1.259881,51.756248
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260226T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260226T183000
DTSTAMP:20260514T002552
CREATED:20260113T142511Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260115T120743Z
UID:10973-1772125200-1772130600@www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Sin\, Sacraments\, and the New Left
DESCRIPTION:Jack Norman (Blackfriars)\, ‘McCabe’s Social Ontology: Sin\, Sacraments\, and the New Left’\nHerbert McCabe OP’s thought was shaped by and phrased in Marxist social theory\, and he shows undeniable sympathy to Marxism. This has been picked up by several recent writings on McCabe. However\, read in context\, I will show that McCabe gave a critical account of Marxism that is embedded in his theology of sin and of grace\, and an ecclesiology that challenges the possibility of a non-Christian community flourishing. In an Augustinian manner\, McCabe thought that without the Church\, and the sacraments\, and certainly without grace\, communities inevitably turn against themselves. As such\, a secular Marxism cannot achieve its own aims. They might be able to diagnose problems but cannot bring about a harmonious society. Thus\, while Marxism influenced McCabe’s thought from his social theory even into his sacramental theology\,  his Marxism is always secondary to his theological convictions.  This\, in turn\, will raise broader theological questions of the kinds of societal progress that can be achieved in light of an account of nature and grace. \nDr Jack Norman is a Research Fellow at Blackfriars Hall. Before that\, he was a Research Fellow at Australian Catholic University. He completed his AHRC funded PhD at the University of Bristol in 2019. His research focuses on systematic theology\, especially a group of theologians sometimes called the ‘Grammatical Thomists’\, including thinkers such as Herbert McCabe OP and David Burrell CSC. He is currently writing articles on Thomism and realism\, and Marxism and Christianity. \nPart of this term’s lecture series\, Thursdays at 5pm unless otherwise noted\, presenting the breadth of Thomistic thought and its applications. Open to all\, no registration required. \nupcoming events in this series\nWk 8 Fr Richard Conrad OP (Blackfriars)\, ‘“Faith Believes\, nor Questions How”: St Thomas on How (Not) to Understand the Eucharist’
URL:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/event/sin-sacraments-and-the-new-left/
LOCATION:Blackfriars Hall\, St Giles\, Oxford\, OX1 3LY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:The Aquinas Institute
ORGANIZER;CN="Aquinas Institute":MAILTO:aquinas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk
GEO:51.756248;-1.259881
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Blackfriars Hall St Giles Oxford OX1 3LY United Kingdom;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=St Giles:geo:-1.259881,51.756248
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260227T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260227T173000
DTSTAMP:20260514T002552
CREATED:20260116T101604Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260219T110712Z
UID:11006-1772208000-1772213400@www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Per Artem ad Deum. Music as spiritual theology. How is music part of theology?
DESCRIPTION:Michelle Castelletti FRSA\, New College\, Oxford\, Director of the Oxford Festival of the Arts. \nGubaidulina – Pärt – Penderecki – Hildegard von Bingen – Gorecki – MacMillan – Bach.  What do these composers have in common?  Is it that they are responding to a need for the soul to be elevated through the sensorial experience\, hoping to create an abstract sense of encounter with God? \n“The new music that we—as composers—are always seeking […] arises from deep within our creative imaginations and […] from deep within our souls. It is music that emerges when the silent composer descends into a deeper silence\, an objective other place or state to which he or she adheres and of which he or she has become an extension. Silence listening to silence.” – James MacMillan. \nAre we\, as creatives within the search for a spiritual theology\, constantly trying to find the apex of Goodness – Truth – Beauty?  This evening\, we shall attempt to look at some of these composers’ works through a spiritual lens. \n  \nDr Michelle Castelletti identifies as an interdisciplinarian\, who thrives on the wonderful encounter between academia and creativity.  As a curator\, artist\, and an historian\, she is always seeking interconnectedness. She is winner of several international awards\, including the Times Higher Education Award for Excellence and Innovation in the Arts and the OPUS KLASSIK Award.  Michelle’s work is performed across the world\, by many orchestras and ensembles (e.g. BBC Symphony Orchestra and the Helsinki Philharmonic)\, receiving the highest accolades including No 1 Orchestral Choice of the Month [BBC Music Magazine\, The Proms Edition].  She is published by Universal Edition Vienna and recorded by BIS Records\, ALTUS Records and ARS Produktion. \nHer latest talks on music were on Bach’s ‘Ich steh mit einem Fuß im Grabe’ at New College Oxford\, ‘Music as Political Commentary’ at Jesus College Cambridge\, and ‘Vibrancy of monastic life and sacred polyphony: Was sacred music collateral damage of the Reformation/s; or was it what made it the glorious tradition we know and love today?’ together with Professor Elizabeth Gemmill\, for the Oxford Festival of the Arts\, of which she is the director.  Michelle is currently researching the medieval concept of ‘wonder’ (admiratio) in ecclesiastical architecture\, with a focus on the creation and use of ‘light’ in late medieval devotional practice.  She is proud to be part of the Blackfriars community.
URL:https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/event/per-artem-ad-deum-music-as-spiritual-theology-how-is-music-part-of-theology/
LOCATION:Blackfriars Hall\, St Giles\, Oxford\, OX1 3LY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Centre for Theology and the Arts
GEO:51.756248;-1.259881
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