Vigen Guroian

Vigen Guroian is Professor of Theology and Ethics at Loyola College in Baltimore, Maryland. In the fall of 2008 he will join the faculty of the University of Virginia as Professor of Religious Studies (Eastern Christianity). He was named a Senior Fellow of The Trinity Forum in 2006.

image

He has been an academic consultant for several of the Trinity Forum seminar curricula.

Since 1986 Dr. Guroian has been a member of the faculty of the Ecumenical Institute of Theology at St. Mary’s Seminary and University. For the academic year 1995–1996 he was named the Distinguished Lecturer in Moral and Religious Education at the Institute. For more than a dozen years he has taught courses and workshops on religion and morality in children’s literature both at the Ecumenical Institute of Theology and at Loyola College.

Dr. Guroian attended the University of Virginia and received his Ph.D. in Theology from Drew University in 1978. He was an Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Virginia from 1978–81 and held a post there as well in the Center for Russian and East European Studies. He has also been a visiting lecturer at St. Nersess Armenian Seminary in New Rochelle, New York, where he was the Seminary’s Director of Academic Affairs from 1990–92. He was appointed recently as a member of the Academic Council of Examiners of the Faculty of Theology at Yerevan State University in Armenia.

Dr. Guroian is the author of several books as well as an edition of Russell Kirk's ghost stories, Ancestral Shadows: An Anthology of Ghostly Tales (Eerdmans, 2005):

He has also published nearly one hundred and fifty articles in books and journals on a range of subjects including liturgy and ethics, marriage and family, children’s literature, ecology, genocide, and medical ethics.

Dr. Guroian is also a Senior Fellow of the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal, a Richard M. Weaver Fellow, and a Salvatori Fellow of the Heritage Foundation. He sits on numerous editorial boards including The Journal of Religious Ethics, Pro Ecclesia: A Journal of Catholic and Evangelical Theology, and Christian Bio-Ethics. He is on the Board of Directors of the Society of Christian Ethics and on the Executive Committee of Christians Associated for Relations with Eastern Europe. He has been active in both the National Council of Churches and in the World Council of Churches. He served in recent years as a member of the Ethics and Ecclesiology Consultation of the WCC and is currently a member of the Board of Trustees and Chairman of the Editorial Board of the Universal Literary Project at Columbia Teacher’s College, Columbia University.

He and his wife, June, live in central Virginia. They have two adult children, a son, Rafi, and a daughter, Victoria.

We who lived in the concentration camps can remember the men who walked through the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken from a man but one thing: The last of his freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.

Victor E. Frankl

Featured Trinity Forum Resource

cover imageA Spiritual Pilgrimage by Malcolm Muggeridge, Foreword by Alonzo L. McDonald.

A life in perspective, offering questions to consider and a path worth exploring.