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Alexis Abernethy, associate provost for faculty inclusion and equity and professor of psychology, responds to Dwight Hopkins’ lecture, focusing on psychological health, speaking truth to power, and her research on music and embodiment.
Dwight N. Hopkins, the Alexander Campbell Professor of Theology at the University of Chicago Divinity School, and scholars from the Fuller community lecture on Martin Luther King Jr. and the social, cultural, and pastoral intersections of the Black experience. Dr. Hopkins was the featured speaker for the Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration, January 21–25, 2019. The celebration included lectures, conversations, worship and more, and was sponsored by the William E. Pannell Center for African American Church Studies. Learn more: fuller.edu/pannell-center/
For more resources for a deeply formed spiritual life, visit Fuller.edu/Studio
By FULLER studio4.6
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Alexis Abernethy, associate provost for faculty inclusion and equity and professor of psychology, responds to Dwight Hopkins’ lecture, focusing on psychological health, speaking truth to power, and her research on music and embodiment.
Dwight N. Hopkins, the Alexander Campbell Professor of Theology at the University of Chicago Divinity School, and scholars from the Fuller community lecture on Martin Luther King Jr. and the social, cultural, and pastoral intersections of the Black experience. Dr. Hopkins was the featured speaker for the Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration, January 21–25, 2019. The celebration included lectures, conversations, worship and more, and was sponsored by the William E. Pannell Center for African American Church Studies. Learn more: fuller.edu/pannell-center/
For more resources for a deeply formed spiritual life, visit Fuller.edu/Studio

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