Thursday, August 13, 2009

One More Annand Mentor ...


Harlon L. Dalton has been a professor at Yale Law School since 1981. Faced with a legal system that reflects the aspirations of the mythical “reasonable man,” his scholarly ambition has been to reconstruct law so that it takes account of our many nonrational qualities, including our capacity to love without condition, hate without reason, desire to our detriment, and connect spiritually. To that end, he was a pioneer in imagining and establishing law and sexuality as an academic discipline. He was also a pioneer in the field of AIDS law. And he played a significant role in launching and nurturing critical race theory as a distinctive enterprise. In recent years he has taught “Law and Theology,” “The Formation of Lawyers,” and “Law and Human Flourishing.”

In the mid-1990's, he began to respond to a quiet but insistent call to ordained ministry. On January 4, 2003, he was ordained a priest by the Episcopal Bishop of Connecticut. Since his initial ordination in June 2002 (as a transitional deacon), he has served as the Associate Rector of the Episcopal Church of St. Paul & St. James in New Haven. He currently serves on several Diocesan bodies, including the Standing Committee, and is a member of the Commission on Ministry committee that oversees the initial stages of the ordination process.

Since July 2006, he has been a member of the YDS and Berkeley faculties as a Professor (Adjunct) of Law and Religion. He was a founding member of the Initiative on Religion and Politics, and at present is conducting a survey of New Haven’s houses of worship that explores how they see and understand themselves as religious institutions (i.e. what do they do? why? how?).

During the Fall Semester of 2008, he led an Annand formation group for the first time. It proved to be a an enjoyable and enriching experience that allowed him to integrate his interest in formation with his interest in contemplative spiritual practices. He is living proof that we people of faith are works in progress. We are constantly in the process of being formed and reformed; done; undone, and made new. Thanks be to God!

No comments:

Post a Comment