Fifth Annual Catholic Lecture Series

March 14, 2013

St. John's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences held its Fifth Annual Catholic Series on March 4, 2013. Kristin Heyer, Ph.D., Bernard J. Hanley Professor of Religious Studies Santa Clara University, was the guest lecturer.

In her lecture "Civic Kinship:  A Christian Ethic of Migration," Dr. Kristin E. Hyer suggested that the ways Americans typically think about the issue of immigration should be revised in light of Gospel values and Catholic Social Thought.  Instead of seeing immigrants as threats to American security, culture, or prosperity, Heyer proposed that Americans should see the issue through scriptual lenses.  She noted that the ancient prophets of Israel and the Gospels stress the moral importance of offering hospitality to the stranger and alien. 

Earlier in the day, Dr. Heyer met with undergraudates students from the university's new Catholic Scholars Program where they talked about "Why Catholics Should Care About Immigration Reform."  Dr. Heyer also took part in a colloquium where she discussed her research on social sin and immigration with faculty from the Department of Theology & Religious Studies and the university's interdisciplinary Master of Arts in Global Development and Social Justice.