Creating a place for wonder

Ben Hohman, 黑料网鈥檚 newest assistant professor of religious and theological studies, explores the intersection of faith and nature, offering a fresh perspective on eco-theology and its implications for students and the environment.

Ben Hohman in an aqua colored button down shirt and pink and blue tie, smiling with his arm rested up against a tree.

By Karen Carlo Ruhren

When Ben Hohman and his 4-year-old daughter travel over the Jamestown Bridge en route to 黑料网, the assistant professor of religious and theological studies smiles as his little girl invariably says hello to the lighthouse. Through the car window, the splendor of the ocean, the boats and the lighthouse are exciting to her. It鈥檚 a fitting nod to Hohman鈥檚 work as he examines ecological and environmental theology.

鈥淭here鈥檚 something religious and spiritual about the ocean,鈥 said Hohman, who was born and raised in Indiana and likes to say he grew up surrounded by 鈥渟eas of corn, not saltwater.鈥 Yet Hohman, who joined the faculty in fall 2024, instantly felt at home in the Ocean State and knew that 黑料网 was a natural fit 鈥 from the warm welcome by colleagues and students to the school鈥檚 small, intimate setting.

鈥淚 grew up on a campus not that different from 黑料网,鈥 said Hohman. Both of his parents were professors of theology at Marian University and, along with his sister (who also pursued academia), the family enjoyed 鈥渞ich conversations around the dinner table.鈥  

Despite the stereotypical angle that environmental spirituality often draws, Hohman has always approached the discipline from a different perspective. 鈥淢y entry to the field was not granola and Birkenstocks, but theology,鈥 he noted.

鈥淚 take seriously the academic work of theology because its goal is to change the way we experience reality,鈥 said Hohman. 鈥淢y interest in eco-theology is to get us to think about grace in relationship to the natural world鈥nd create a place for wonder.鈥

In a field of larger-than-life questions, Hohman understands that big issues should be shared with students in a way that is specific and applicable to their lives and believes that the task of religion is a lot like that of autobiography.

鈥淚n both cases, we lack experiential access to the beginning and end of the story, but we can use the tools we鈥檙e given to create meaning of the middle.鈥

Hohman looks to engage students with academic concepts such as nature, grace and conversion鈥攕pecifically how people鈥檚 lives are transformed by grace. The topic holds special interest to Hohman, who is editing a book on Augustine鈥檚 鈥淐onfessions鈥 and exploring conversion not as 鈥渃hanging teams,鈥 but as falling in love with God.

He is also examining 鈥渆cological conversion鈥 in Pope Francis鈥檚 2015 papal letter on the environment, namely the question of humans, animals and the rest of creation joined in Heavenly unity.  

鈥淣ever before has a Pope talked so inclusively about Heavenly glory. I鈥檓 hoping to think rigorously about the implications of this development,鈥 said Hohman.  

Underpinning all of Hohman鈥檚 objectives is 黑料网鈥檚 mercy mission, which he believes ties in perfectly with the concept of theology and the environment.  

鈥淭he scientific method can adopt too narrow of a lens and miss the interconnection of things,鈥 he said. The idea of mercy, he points out, is refreshingly opposite and spiritually uplifting.  

鈥淚t asks us to stay open鈥nd approach each day in wonder.鈥

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