About
Ignatian Imagination in the World:
The Future of Education, Faith, and Justice
BELLARMINE FORUM • 2011 – 2012
The Questions:
One hundred years since our founding and more than 30 years into the
merger of Loyola University and Marymount College, the questions
remain.. What kind of university will Loyola Marymount University be?
What will be the emphasis and the direction of the institution?
The Theme:
The theme of the Bellarmine Forum of 2011-2012 is derived from the
keynote address of Adolfo Nicolás, S.J., Superior General of the Society
of Jesus, to the international conference on "Networking Jesuit Higher
Education: Shaping the Future for a Humane, Just, Sustainable Globe"?
in Mexico City. In his speech, the Superior General issued a charge to
Ignatian Higher education.
In this globalized world, with all its lights and shadows, would - or
how would - running all these universities still be the best way we can
respond to the mission of the Church and the needs of the world? Or
perhaps, the question should be: What kind of universities, with what
emphases and what directions, would we run, if we were re-founding the
Society of Jesus in today's world? . . . . I think every generation has
to re-create the faith, they have to re-create the journey, they have to
re-create the institutions. This is not only a good desire. If we lose
the ability to re-create, we have lost the spirit.
Adolfo Nicolás, S.J.
Superior General
Society of Jesus
In the coming one hundred years and more, these questions will summon
our best efforts or haunt our yearning. The Dean and Faculty of the
Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts invite all members of the Loyola
Marymount community to attend the events of the Bellarmine Forum in
order to consider these questions, recreate the journey, and carry the
spirit of the three founding orders forward.
The Plan:
The first step is to rediscover the values, charisms, and continuing works of the three founding orders.
Throughout the year, alumni, students, staff, faculty, religious,
colleagues, benefactors, regents, trustees and members of the far flung
community of Loyola Marymount will be invited to consider the question
of Superior General Nicolás. In addition, the Sisters of St. Joseph of
Orange and the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary will challenge the
community to consider compassionate responses to critical need and
explore work toward a globalization of solidarity and hope.
Looking forward, the Bellarmine Forum will host a series of round table
events where those who have rediscovered the legacy of the three orders
and considered the questions, can share their answers and hopes for the
future.
Organizers Prof. K.J. Peters, Prof. Steven Mailloux, and Maureen
Fitzsimmons invite you to visit this site regularly for updates on
activities planned for the Forum.
With support from:
