Past Koch Events

2024 Koch Lecture
Living Prosperity Responsibly:
Catholic Social Thought & our Complicity in Harms to Distant Others
Presented by Dr. Daniel Finn
Monday, September 30, 2024

View Lecture

Daniel K. Finn is Professor Emeritus of Theology and Clemens Professor Emeritus of Economics at St. John’s University and the College of St. Benedict. His books include Christian Economic Ethics (Fortress), Consumer Ethics in a Global Economy (Georgetown), and The Moral Ecology of Markets (Cambridge). He has received lifetime achievement awards from the Catholic Theological Society of America and the Association for Social Economics. He is a former president of those two professional societies and of the Society of Christian Ethics. For 25 years, he has been the Director of the True Wealth of Nations project at the Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies. He has lectured in more than twenty nations in Latin America, Europe, and Asia and has led a successful affordable housing campaign among five cities in central Minnesota.

An older man with short gray hair smiles softly at the camera. He is wearing a light brown jacket over a blue shirt, and the background shows a white fence and greenery.

Daniel K. Finn is Professor Emeritus of Theology and Clemens Professor Emeritus of Economics at St. John’s University and the College of St. Benedict. His books include Christian Economic Ethics (Fortress), Consumer Ethics in a Global Economy (Georgetown), and The Moral Ecology of Markets (Cambridge). He has received lifetime achievement awards from the Catholic Theological Society of America and the Association for Social Economics. He is a former president of those two professional societies and of the Society of Christian Ethics. For 25 years, he has been the Director of the True Wealth of Nations project at the Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies. He has lectured in more than twenty nations in Latin America, Europe, and Asia and has led a successful affordable housing campaign among five cities in central Minnesota.


2023 Koch Lecture
Racial Justice & LGBTQ Inclusion:
The Threat of White Christian Nationalism
Presented by Dr. Bryan Massingale
Tuesday, September 12, 2023

View Lecture

In Catholic discourse, concern for racial justice and LGBTQ inclusion are often treated in isolation. This presentation offers an intersectional approach to racial and sexual justice by exploring the challenge that white Christian nationalism poses to both our democracy and to vulnerable populations. It argues that “seeing and loving the world as God does” requires an uncompromising rejection of the idolatry of Christian nationalism and creating a society where the dignity of all is respected.

A man with short hair, wearing a dark suit, light blue dress shirt, and patterned blue tie, is smiling at the camera against a gray background.

Dr. Massingale is a leading African American scholar on racism and social justice. His lecture will focus on the current manifestation of Christian nationalism and envisioning and building a spirituality of resistance against racism. In his teaching, Dr. Massingale specializes in social ethics and focuses upon the impact of religious faith as both an instrument of social injustice and a catalyst for social transformation.

Dr. Bryan Massingale:

This event was sponsored by the Koch Chair in Catholic Thought and Culture in collaboration with Saint John’s School of Theology and Seminary, the Multicultural Center, Eugene J. McCarthy Center for Public Policy, Department of Political Science, Department of Theology, Department of Gender Studies, and Intercultural LEAD & QPLUS Student Organizations.


2022 Koch Workshop:
Happy Hour and Pedagogical Workshop on the Common Good
Monday, April 25, 2022
4:30-6 p.m., Gorecki 204, College of Saint Benedict
View Workshop

In this workshop, Kristin Heyer will discuss the common good tradition in Catholic social thought with special attention to its ‘growing edges’ and curricular implications. She will suggest several virtues and practices for pursing the common good in a Catholic university curriculum in this particular historical moment and in the face of perceived or real tensions with commitments to difference, diverse perspectives, structural power differentials, and injustices. Finally she will offer some questions for discussion to prompt participants’ reflection on connections to their own work personally (vocationally) and more broadly (collectively as a CSB/SJU community).

A woman with shoulder-length brown hair is smiling and looking towards the camera. She is wearing a grey blazer over a light-colored top, and earrings. The background is blurred, with hints of greenery visible.

Dr. Kristin Heyer is a professor of theological ethics and the director of graduate studies in the theology department at Boston College.


2022 Koch Luncheon:
God’s Involvement in Events that Cause Great Suffering
Wednesday, April 6, 2022
12-1 p.m., Gorecki President’s Room, College of Saint Benedict

Dr. Christopher Southgate joins faculty and staff to discuss with us the perennial question: How do we understand divine presence in the context of extreme suffering? We will read a chapter written by Chris entitled “God’s Involvement in Events that Cause Great Suffering.” If there is interest, we can discuss the wider sub-discipline of the practical theology of trauma. This subject may be especially of interest to us due to our two-year experiences of living in a pandemic.

A smiling man with glasses and a beard stands outside near a stone building. He is wearing a dark blazer over a dark shirt and has a circular pin on his left lapel. Sunlight illuminates the scene, casting shadows on the stone wall behind him.

Originally trained as a biochemist, Christopher Southgate has been teaching the science-religion debate at the University of Exeter, UK, since 1993. He is best known for his study of suffering in evolution, The Groaning of Creation. More recently he has worked on the natural theology of glory and the practical theology of trauma. He is also a much-published poet.


2022 Koch Luncheon:
Advocacy to Advance the Common Good in the Classroom and in Research: Redrawing Line(s) in a Post-Truth Empire where the Bad Guys are Winning
Tuesday, March 1, 2022
12-1 p.m., Gorecki 120, College of Saint Benedict
View Presentation

Globally, authoritarian regimes have increasingly employed religion to reinforce nationalism – in Russia, India, Turkey, Brazil, and the United States, for just a few examples. Locally, scientific expertise (and traditional authority in classrooms and other public venues) is under siege from partisan cadres. How does what some describe as a “post-truth” cultural climate necessitate redrawing lines of advocacy, democratic debate, and the common good? In this workshop, employing cases from both research and teaching, Jon Pahl will invite conversation that includes attention to advocacy along lines of age, race, and gender to explore how some surprising new possibilities emerge when the science-based social construction of society meets the enduring wisdom of indigenous and historic traditions and their practices.

A middle-aged man with short, greying hair smiles at the camera. He is wearing a dark suit, white dress shirt, and a light blue tie. The background is dark and blurred.

Dr. John Pahl is the Peter Paul and Elizabeth Hagan Professor of the History of Christianity at United Lutheran Seminary (ULS) Philadelphia/Gettysburg. He’s the author of seven books, include Fethullah Gulan: A Life of Hizmet (2021) and Empire of Scarifice: The Religious Origins of American Violence (2012). He has taught a Valparaiso, Temple, and Princeton in addition to his tenure at ULS.

Jennifer Beste
Koch Chair in Catholic Thought and Culture
Professor of Theology
320-363-5934

Catherine Rupp
Department Coordinator
SJU Quad 239
320-363-2475