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Christian author Diana Bulter Bass visit to Pullman and Moscow will include talks about Ukraine and her theological journey

Diana Butler Bass will give multiple talks this month in Pullman and Moscow.  (Courtesy)
By Tracy Simmons SpokaneFAVS.com

For the second time in three years, progressive Christian icon and bestselling author Diana Butler Bass is coming to the Palouse, this time to speak at a series of events for the 40th Roger Williams Symposium.

Bass visited Moscow, Idaho, in 2019 to speak at a gratitude conference organized by the Emmanuel Lutheran Church.

“That part of the country I found very compelling,” she said. “It engaged my spirit in a way that I didn’t expect.”

She was originally slated to be at the symposium in 2020, but due to COVID the event was postponed until this year. The event will be Saturday through Monday, both in-person and on Zoom.

The Roger Williams Symposium began in 1978 and over the years has featured notable presenters, including theologians Walter Brueggemann, Marcus Borg, John Dominic Crossan and Matthew Fox and Sister Simone Campbell, who recently retired as the leader of the Network, a progressive lobbying organization focused on social justice issues.

“We have a long tradition of bringing in outstanding speakers,” said event organizer Timothy Paulitz.

The event will start with a keynote talk by Bass at 7 p.m. Saturday at Community Congregational United Church of Christ, 525 N.E. Campus St.

Bass said this talk will center around her latest book, “Freeing Jesus: Rediscovering Jesus as Friend, Teacher, Savior, Lord, Way and Presence.” In the book, she shares much of her own theological journey.

“I think in certain kinds of ways talking about Jesus in public has become exceedingly difficult,” she said.

She said many conservative Christians are leaving the church, but still like Jesus and struggle to articulate that experience. On the other hand, leftist churchgoers tend to be afraid to talk about Jesus for fear of sounding exclusive and cutting off their non-Christian friends and family. Another reason why talking about Jesus is difficult, Bass said, is because the conversation is often led by a louder, white, Evangelical voice, which often includes political views that not all Christians agree with.

“So there’s a real divide around Jesus,” she said. “While one group has commandeered the conversation, many of the rest of us don’t know how to engage in theological conversations in the public square, like hey, what would Jesus say about the war in Ukraine? Or about the food programs? Or about XYZ?”

“Freeing Jesus” came out in hardback a year ago (this month in paperback) and Bass said because of the pandemic she hasn’t given many in-person public lectures on it and is eager to enter into a community conversation about it.

Her next symposium event will be a workshop from 2-4 p.m. Sunday at St. James Episcopal Church, 1410 N.E. Stadium Way in Pullman. The topic is “Religion in the News: Trends Shaping Religion and Culture.”

Then, at noon Monday she’ll speak at the Foley Institute on, “The Shifting Landscape of American Religion and Politics.” It will be in the Foley Speaker’s Room, 308 Bryan Hall on the Washington State University campus and will be streamed on the Foley Institute YouTube channel.

Bass said she expects the latter two events to be more open-ended. She added that she knows people are worried about what’s happening in Ukraine, so she plans to address that.

She said it’s difficult to understand what’s happening between Russia and Ukraine without knowing Eastern European religious history. In recent weeks, she’s written extensively on Russian Orthodoxy and has said “Kyiv is essentially Jerusalem.”

She added that although the Christian church is in decline in the United States, that’s not the case in Eastern Europe.

“I hope that the angle of religion not only helps us to see it a bit better, but might provide different doors of conversation and peacemaking,” Bass said.

The symposium is sponsored by the Common Ministry at WSU and the Thomas S. Foley Institute for Public Service and Public Policy.

All events are free. For more information or to register for the Zoom feed, visit interfaith-house.com/events/symposium.