
United Lutheran Seminary (ULS) will host A Vision for Liberating Our Democracy: Examining the Religious and Racialized Roots of American Democracy on February 27–28, 2026, at its Philadelphia campus. The interdisciplinary conference will bring together scholars, activists, educators, and faith leaders to examine how religion and race have shaped democratic life in the United States and to explore liberative visions for the future.
The conference builds on a growing body of research that examines the theological, cultural, and political intersections of democracy, citizenship, and power. Participants will investigate how worldviews and faith traditions have informed concepts of governance, belonging, and personhood from the founding era to the present. The conference will highlight not only the Haudenosaunee Influence on American Democracy but also the historic and present contributions to Democratic thought by Black, Indigenous, and Latine communities, contributions which are often forgotten and ignored.
“As America’s oldest Lutheran seminary, founded by an antislavery theologian 200 years ago in Gettysburg on land that was to become part of the Civil War’s greatest battlefield, United Lutheran Seminary has always been part of the nation’s conversation on race and freedom,” said the Rev. Dr. R. Guy Erwin (Osage Nation), ULS president. “The Lutheran heritage of freedom of conscience and its emphasis on serving the common good draw us always from faith toward action. With this conference, our Seminary returns to the center of our current national debates.”
Dean Teresa L. Smallwood said, “The American context is ripe fora time of reflection on the concept of democracy. “We the People” must evaluate our democratic commitments as we witness our nation entering a period of structural erosion. It is felt across all pockets of the nation. Have were .,,defined the governance schemata such that democracy is literally on life support? Do we continue to believe in the checks and balances of government? Is America a bastion for equality or have we reordered our commitments as a nation? These are some of the questions we must wrestle with at this conference.”
“United Lutheran Seminary is committed to fostering public conversations about the moral and historical foundations of democracy,” said the conference organizing committee member Adam DJ Brett. “By examining the ways religion and race intertwine with political life, we can better imagine inclusive and equitable systems of governance.”
The conference will feature exciting plenary addresses by
- Maya D. Wiley, President and CEO of Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
- Rev. Alba Onofrio (Reverend Sex), Executive Director of Soulforce
- Dr. Raymond Winbush, Research Professor and theDirector of the Institute for Urban Research, Morgan State University
- Rev. Dr. Joseph Evans, The J. Alfred Smith, Senior Professor of Theology in the Public Square Director at Berkeley School of Theology
- Brandon Paradise, Associate Professor of Law and Professor Dallas Willard Scholar at Rutgers Law School
- Rev. Dr. Gabby Cudjoe Wilkes, Pastor of The Double Love Experience Church
- Tadodaho Sidney Hill of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy
- Betty Hill (Lyons), (Onondaga Nation, Snipe Clan), Executive Director of the American Indian Law Alliance
- Rev. Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr., President and CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA): The Black Press of America.
- Rev. Naomi Washington-Leapheart, Strategic Partnerships Director, Political Research Associates
- Rev. Dr. Yvette R. Blair-Lavallais, Equity Research Fellow for Feeding America and Professor at Memphis Theological Seminary
- Rev .Dr. Obery M. Hendricks, Jr., Visiting Scholar, Departments of Religion & African and African Diaspora Studies at Columbia University
- Rev. Damien C. Durr, General Secretary of the Proctor Conference
- The Middle Passage, The Mid-Atlantic Slave Trade, Maa’afa
- The Continental Congress and the Balance of Power
- The Haudenosaunee Influence on American Democracy
- W.E.B. Du Bois and the Black Reconstruction of Democracy
- The Doctrine of Discovery and settler colonial foundations
- White Christian nationalism and the myth of civil religion
- Religion, race, and legal personhood
- Religion and resistance in Black, Indigenous, Latine, and immigrant communities
- Race, religion, and the media in shaping democratic narratives
- Womanist, Feminist, and Mujerista Methodologies
- Foreign Policy and Human Crises
The organizing committee invites proposals for papers, panel discussions, roundtables, and creative presentations. Submissions from scholars at all career stages, including graduate students and early-career researchers, are encouraged. We are open to presentations from independent scholars as well.
The program will also include undergraduate poster sessions, graduate student panels, and live podcast recordings designed for classroom and public scholarship use. Following the event, an open-access journal volume will publish selected presentations.
Proposals should include a 300-word abstract and a 100-wordbiography. The submission deadline is January 15, 2025. Proposals may be sent to [email protected].
« #CFP: Navigating Conflict: Humanistic Buddhism and Comparative Theology in a Divided World »
20 November 2025