Schedule of Events
Religion, Culture, and Society
Monday, April 28, 2025
1:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Kingsmen Room, Student Union
Cal Lutheran students study religion at the intersections of culture, history, politics, ethics, conflict, and peace. The Religion and Theology majors engage students through faculty-mentored research, service and experiential learning, and a flexible curriculum, as students strive to understand the complex role that religion plays in the world today. In this session, students will present their original research across a wide range of topics and methodologies.
Student Abstracts
Christianity & Indigenous Faith: Using Truth as an Antidote to a Religon Poisoned
My goal for this research is to learn how different indigenous faith leaders turned a weaponized religion into one that can now bring hope, joy and healing to a people that have been harmed by it. And one who continues to be harmed so many decades later. With this understanding, I would like to then show how the practices of these faith leaders can be used for other cultural leaders to bring and promote hope and healing to others who have also been harmed by those who would use this religion as a tool of control, and not one of unity.
I combined research of church and indigenous history, Christianity, personal encounters with indigenous faith leaders and my own experience as a faith leader to piece together the intersectionality and the evolution of Christianity within the indigenous communities.
I discovered that many of the Indigenous Faith leaders, used their knowledge of Jesus, Christianity, History, and the stories passed down to expose the truth behind the scriptures without the toxic additions used as a means of control, to promote healing with truth.
Student(s):
Mary Ann Harrison
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Khrystyne Wilson
Artifacts Consumed
Student(s):
Alexia Lye
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Samuel Thomas
Divine Justifications: The Role of Biblical Interpretation in Forming the Debate on Slavery
A religious studies perspective anchored in history offers insight into the entangled relationship between church and state in America. Protestant Christianity has been the dominant religion in the United States since colonial times, and many early Americans formed key aspects of the country’s identity based on Protestantism. As a consequence, when it came to addressing the continuation of slavery in America, arguments on both sides sought justification from the Bible. Both sides believed that arguments based on or proven by the Bible were more effective in strengthening their message because American culture allowed and encouraged religion, specifically Protestantism, to intersect in social and political areas of life. My research will shed light on how religious discourse and interpretations of the Bible impacted the debate over slavery in antebellum America. My goal is to identify and compare pro- and anti-slavery biblical interpretation styles by referring to primary and secondary sources. Applying David Bebbington’s four elements of evangelical Christianity, I discovered how pro- and anti-slavery Christians placed more emphasis on certain elements over others in guiding their interpretation of the Bible and thus their biblical defense or critique of slavery. The contributions of Black liberation theology to an experienced-based interpretation of scripture reveal how sermons, songs, and readings of texts reflected the social situations of African Americans.
Student(s):
Daniela Munoz-Martinez
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Jennifer Hahn
One God, Three Faiths, Shared Patterns: How Abrahamic Religions Have Been Used to Justify Abuse Against Women
Student(s):
Sophie Peterson
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Khrystyne Wilson
One Nation Under God: Christian Nationalism and Abortion in the United States
Student(s):
Jacqueline Shaw
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Khrystyne Wilson