Photo of Ms Seforosa Carroll Ms Seforosa Carroll

AssDipAcct (NthSyd TAFE), BTh, MTh, MTh (Hons) (SCD)

Seforosa Carroll is the first year mentor at the United Theological College in North Parramatta, a partner in the School of Theology of Charles Sturt University. She lectures in the areas of contextual and cross-cultural theology subjects. Sef is currently completing her PhD at Charles Sturt University on 'Making room for the religious other: Reading interfaith dialogue and encounters in Australia from a feminist diasporic perspective'. Her research interests fall into two areas of theology: cross cultural theologies and interfaith dialogue/religious pluralism. Sef is a Minister of the Word in the Uniting Church of Australia.

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Teaching

  • Public and Contextual theologies

  • Doing theology and ministry in the diaspora

  • Christian theology and religious pluralism

  • Interfaith dialogue

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Recent Publications

  • “Reimagining home: a diasporic perspective on encounters with the religious other in Australia” in Asian and Oceanic Christianities in Conversation: Exploring Theological Identities at Home and in Diaspora.  Heup Young Kim, Fumitaka Matsuoka & Anri Morimoto, et al (eds.), Netherlands: Rodopi B.V., 2011, 169-184.
  • “Homemaking in the diaspora: a theological framework for homing a niu local”. Pacific Journal of Theology 2:44 (2010), 16-29.
  • “Welcome anOther: transforming community through crossing borders.” Grevillea 16 (Nov. 2010).
  • “Stranded” in Pacific Journal of Theology 2:43 (2010), 16-43.
  • “Being a stranger at home and away” in Talanoa Ripples: across borders, cultures, disciplines. Jione Havea (ed.). Auckland: Masilamea Press, 2010, 42-48.
  • 7 day Commentaries in With Love to the World, 12:12 (2010).
  • “Hospitaleity: a helava way” in Dreadlocks Vakavuku: Special proceedings of the Pacific Epistemologies Conference, 2006. Mohit Prasad, (ed.). Pacific Writing Forum, University of the South Pacific, 2007, 41-47.
  • “Weaving new spaces: Christological perspectives from Oceania (Pacific) and the Oceanic diaspora”, Studies in World Christianity 10.1, (2004), 72-92.

 

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