About HC
“Restoration of the Other Conference” is open to everyone who is interested in attending!
The conference is hosted at Taylor University by the Honors Guild, a special honors program run by directors Scott and Jennifer Moeschberger. Every year a specific theme is explored. This year the theme is: Restoration of the Other: Justice, Mercy, and Faithfulness.
This one day conference will address the idea of restoration from a global and local perspective with keynote speakers, breakout sessions and a panel discussion. Topics explored will be: immigration, Christian-Muslim relations, the struggles in Northern Ireland, forgiveness, India’s Dalit population and perhaps others.
Goals of the Conference:
- To inform the audience about a few areas of restoration from both a global and local perspective
- To equip attendees to better understand the purpose and value of restoration in our lives and community
- To begin the process of recognizing the “others” in our own lives; this processing will then lead to an application of how we are called to interact and treat those around us from a biblical standpoint
- To offer a place to discuss how acts of pain and violence can move toward healing and forgiveness
- Ultimately this conference will explore various issues and areas of restoration from a theological, philosophical and cultural perspective. The hope is that through interacting with this material, the intended audience will have a tangible picture of restoration, how it has and is still affecting communities around the world and what it means for our own lives today.
About HC
“Restoration of the Other Conference” is open to everyone who is interested in attending!
The conference is hosted at Taylor University by the Honors Guild, a special honors program run by directors Scott and Jennifer Moeschberger. Every year a specific theme is explored. This year the theme is: Restoration of the Other: Justice, Mercy, and Faithfulness.
This one day conference will address the idea of restoration from a global and local perspective with keynote speakers, breakout sessions and a panel discussion. Topics explored will be: immigration, Christian-Muslim relations, the struggles in Northern Ireland, forgiveness, India’s Dalit population and perhaps others.
Goals of the Conference:
- To inform the audience about a few areas of restoration from both a global and local perspective
- To equip attendees to better understand the purpose and value of restoration in our lives and community
- To begin the process of recognizing the “others” in our own lives; this processing will then lead to an application of how we are called to interact and treat those around us from a biblical standpoint
- To offer a place to discuss how acts of pain and violence can move toward healing and forgiveness
- Ultimately this conference will explore various issues and areas of restoration from a theological, philosophical and cultural perspective. The hope is that through interacting with this material, the intended audience will have a tangible picture of restoration, how it has and is still affecting communities around the world and what it means for our own lives today.
About HC
“Restoration of the Other Conference” is open to everyone who is interested in attending!
The conference is hosted at Taylor University by the Honors Guild, a special honors program run by directors Scott and Jennifer Moeschberger. Every year a specific theme is explored. This year the theme is: Restoration of the Other: Justice, Mercy, and Faithfulness.
This one day conference will address the idea of restoration from a global and local perspective with keynote speakers, breakout sessions and a panel discussion. Topics explored will be: immigration, Christian-Muslim relations, the struggles in Northern Ireland, forgiveness, India’s Dalit population and perhaps others.
Goals of the Conference:
- To inform the audience about a few areas of restoration from both a global and local perspective
- To equip attendees to better understand the purpose and value of restoration in our lives and community
- To begin the process of recognizing the “others” in our own lives; this processing will then lead to an application of how we are called to interact and treat those around us from a biblical standpoint
- To offer a place to discuss how acts of pain and violence can move toward healing and forgiveness
- Ultimately this conference will explore various issues and areas of restoration from a theological, philosophical and cultural perspective. The hope is that through interacting with this material, the intended audience will have a tangible picture of restoration, how it has and is still affecting communities around the world and what it means for our own lives today.