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The Joan and Bill Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage

About | Staff | Board

The Joan and Bill Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage (CCIH) is one of Loyola's five interdisciplinary Center of Excellence. The Hank Center cultivates, connects, and integrates Roman Catholic thought and practice by supporting research, creating and leading initiatives, offering conferences, symposia, public dialogs, and other programs that engage the communities at Loyola University Chicago, the Midwest, nationally, and internationally.

At the Center, the rich and variant lines of the Catholic intellectual tradition are explored, communicated, complicated, and renewed. The Center’s support of research and course development projects provides support for Loyola faculty. Its prestigious Michael J. Garanzini, S.J. Fellowships in the Catholic Intellectual Tradition delivers critical support to promising doctoral students in dissertation stage from across the U.S.  All of these endeavors invite and cultivate transformative scholarship and innovative curricular design with a special focus on academic excellence and the demands of social, environmental, and spiritual justice.

The Center animates the living tradition of Catholic higher education in that it informs and builds-up the connection among faith, reason, and justice— a unity of knowledge, according to St. John Henry Newman, that resides at the heart of the academic enterprise. As a scholarly center dedicated to engaging the vibrancy and legacy of Catholic Intellectual Tradition, CCIH is a primary voice in articulating intellectual priorities in academically normative ways—and in integrating these priorities across the disciplines. Its unique scope of events and programs, strong record of conferences, substantive web pages and resources, and active media presence broaden the Center's reach and are factors that distinguish the Hank Center as one of the most comprehensive venues for Catholic thought, dialogue, and research in the world.

The Center was founded in 2006 with the goal of preserving and fostering the Catholic intellectual heritage not only at Loyola University Chicago, but also in the local community, the academy, and the church. On April 24, 2007, Loyola University Chicago renamed this Center of Excellence in honor of two generous friends and benefactors, Joan Los (BS'54) and Bill Hank— a couple who have an abiding love for integrated scholarship in the Jesuit tradition.  Thanks to their generosity and vision, the radiant light of the Catholic Intellectual Heritage will inform the work of Loyola University Chicago for many years to come.

Get to know our Staff:

Michael Patrick Murphy, PhD

Title/s:  Director, Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage and
Senior Lecturer
OFFICE #:  Cuneo Hall 430
Phone: 773.508.3822
Email: mmurphy23@luc.edu
CV Link: Michael P. Murphy CV

Michael Murphy

About

Michael Murphy is Director of Loyola’s Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage. He earned his doctorate in Theology, Literature, and Philosophy from the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, an MA in English from San Francisco State University, and undergraduate degrees in English and Great Books from the University of San Francisco. His research interests are in Theology and Literature, Sacramental Theology, Systematic Theology, and the socio-political cultures of Catholicism-- but he also writes about issues in eco-theology, media ecologies, and social ethics. Dr. Murphy, a Senior Lecturer in the Theology Department, is a National Endowment for the Humanities fellow. His first book, A Theology of Criticism (Oxford), was named a "Distinguished Publication" in 2008 by the American Academy of Religion. His current scholarly project is a monograph, The Humane Realists: Catholic Fiction, Poetry, and Film 1965 - 2025.

Degrees

A doctorate in Theology, Literature, and Philosophy from the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, an MA in English from San Francisco State University, and undergraduate degrees in English and Great Books from the University of San Francisco

Program Areas

Catholic Studies; Catholic Intellectual Tradition; Catholic Social Teaching and Tradition; Jesuit/Ignatian Traditions

Research Interests

Mike’s work explores the idea that the Catholic intellectual tradition is not only an essential resource for content, but is also one with a deeply ingrained interdisciplinary method as well. With this theoretical framework in mind, Mike engages the following fields and subfields as projects in constructive, integral theology: ​

Theological Aesthetics/Hans Urs von Balthasar
The Catholic Literary Tradition
The Literary and Political Cultures of Catholicism
Religion and Mimetic Theory
Digital Cultures/New Media Ecologies
Systematic Theology (Christology, Trinitarian Theology)
Sacramental Theology
Ressourcement Theology
Christian Spirituality

Awards

Finalist, Ignatius of Loyola Award, LUC Faculty Center for Ignatian Pedagogy, 2016

Finalist, Kolvenbach Award, LUC Faculty Center for Ignatian Pedagogy, 2015

Alpha Sigma Nu, Centenary Faculty Inductee, Loyola University Chicago, 2014-2015

Loyola University Chicago USGA Teaching Award: Faculty Member of the Year, 2013-2014

Loyola University Chicago Student Diversity and Multicultural Affairs Diversity Award, 2013- 2014

CCIH Fellowship: $6,000 Research Grant for Vatican II at 50

USF Distinguished Adjunct Nominee, 2011 and 2012

2011 American Academy of Religion Distinguished Book: 2008

Selected Publications

“The Tinderization of Theology" in Theological Discourses on Social Media, Christopher B. Barnett, Clark J. Elliston, and Trevor B. Williams, eds. In preparation; forthcoming from Routledge in 2025.

"Panem et Circenses: Michel Houellebecq, Submission, and the Liturgies of Spiritual Exhaustion" in The Call of Literature (Forthcoming from Routledge in 2024)

“Cultivating Catholic Studies and Charism through Co-Curricular Programs: The Annual John Courtney Murray, S.J., Forum @LUC,” in Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture, McKenzie and Sherry, eds., Volume 26, Number 5 (August, 2023).

“A look inside the Vatican meeting that brought Pope Francis and Martin Scorsese together,” America Magazine, 6/8/2023.

“Apocalypse Now? Yes, Please: Notes on Navigating the Digital Revolution,” in Nexus: Conversations on the Catholic Intellectual Tradition, Vukov and Burns, eds. Volume 2 (May, 2023).

“You are What You Eat: St. Ignatius and Doing Advent Right,” in Heroes of the Ignatian Tradition, The Jesuit Conference, 11/30/2022

“Response: Innovate in Tradition,” Dialogue on Mission Drift in Catholic Higher Education in Conversations in Jesuit Higher Education, 2/9/2022

“Childhood and the Terrain of Transformation: A Tale of Two O’ Connors” in Living Life to the Full: Literature and a Catholic Philosophy of Life, David Torevell, ed., Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, 2021.

“Houellebecq's Cautionary Tale About Liturgy Gone Awry,” in Church Life Journal, University of Notre Dame, 6/20/2021


Joe Vukov, PhD

Associate Director, The Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage
Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy

Joe Vukov

Joe Vukov is an Associate Professor in the Philosophy Department at Loyola University Chicago. He is also Associate Director of the Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage at Loyola, and an Affiliate Faculty Member in Catholic Studies and Psychology. Nationally, Vukov also serves as the Vice President of Philosopher’s in Jesuit Education. Vukov received his PhD from Fordham University, and also holds Certificates in Bioethics and Medical Humanities (Montefiore-Einstein), Health Care Ethics (Fordham), an MA in Humanities (University of Chicago), and BAs in Philosophy and English Literature and Writing (Bethel University). Vukov's research explores questions at the intersection of ethics, neuroscience, and philosophy of mind, and at the intersection of science and religion. In 2022, he published Navigating Faith and Science, and in 2023, he published The Perils of Perfection. In 2020, he was named a Sujack Master Teacher and in 2019, was awarded the Provost’s Award for Excellence in Teaching Freshmen.

Research Interests

Neuroethics
Philosophy of Mind
Science and Religion

Selected Publications

The Perils of Perfection: On the Limits and Possibilities of Human Enhancement (2023)

Navigating Faith and Science (2022)


Katie Arnold

Office Manager

OFFICE #Cuneo Hall 434

Phone: 773.508.6088

Email: karnold6@luc.edu

Katie Arnold

Katie Arnold is the Office Manager at the Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage. She has a Bachelors Degree in Public Relations and History from Purdue University and joins the Center from the field of public history. As a museum professional, Katie has experience working in a range of positions including most recently as a Project Manager of Exhibitions at the Field Museum of Natural History. She was also a Producer and Archival Researcher at a historical documentary production company, where she earned a Mid-Atlantic EMMY Award for her work on a documentary about female abolitionists in the mid-19th century.

Katie is currently serving as a leader for the Young Adult Ministry at St. Mary of the Lake and Our Lady of Lourdes. As a lifelong Catholic, she continues to dedicate herself to her own spiritual growth and seeks to create new opportunities for others to learn, experience and grow in the faith.


Naomi Fisher, PhD

Director of Catholic Studies

Naomi Fischer

Naomi Fisher is Assistant Professor of Philosophy. Prior to coming to Loyola in 2018, she taught at Clark University in Massachusetts. She earned her Ph.D in philosophy from the University of Notre Dame in 2016, and prior to that earned her M.S. in physics from UC Davis.

Her research focuses on Kant and German Idealism and Romanticism, specifically the relationship between nature, freedom, and rationality in Kant’s Critical philosophy and in Friedrich Schelling’s philosophy of nature. She also has interests in the broader history of philosophy, particularly the 19th century, the philosophy of science, and ethics.

Degrees

PhD, University of Notre Dame 
MA, University of Notre Dame
MS, University of California - Davis
BS, Biola University 

Research Interests

Kant and German Idealism 

Selected Publications

"Organisms and the Form of Freedom in Kant’s Third Critique" (forthcoming in European Journal of Philosophy).

"Freedom as Productivity in Schelling’s Philosophy of Nature" in Schelling's Philosophy: Freedom, Nature and Systematicity, ed. G. Anthony Bruno (forthcoming with Oxford University Press).

"The Epistemology of Schelling’s Philosophy of Nature" in History of Philosophy Quarterly 34:3 pp. 271-290 (July 2017).

"Kant On Animal Minds" in Ergo 4:15, pp. 441-462 (2017).

"Natural and Ethical Normativity" in The Southern Journal of Philosophy 54:4, pp. 417-439 (December 2016).


Julian Sieber

Graduate Research Assistant

Julian Sieber

Julian Sieber is a Graduate Student Assistant at the Hank Center. He is pursuing a Ph.D. in New Testament & Early Christianity at Loyola University Chicago. His research interests include the literary and social backgrounds of the Bible at the intersections of gender, indigeneity, and banqueting practices, as well as Catholic biblical reception histories. He holds an M.Div. from Yale Divinity School and a B.A. (Media & Information) from Curtin University, Western Australia.


Vincent DeStazio

Undergraduate Student Worker

Vincent DeStazio

Vincent DeStazio is an undergraduate in his second year at Loyola. He is a member of the Interdisciplinary Honors Program, studying mathematics with a minor in Middle East & Islamic World Studies. Vincent is actively involved in Loyola's Catholic community and Campus Ministry.


Emily Henseler

Undergraduate Student Worker

Emily Henseler

Emily Henseler is an undergraduate in her third year, studying Advertising and Public Relations with minors in Human Resources and Catholic Studies. She is involved in the Catholic Students Club, Campus Ministry, Labre Homeless Ministry, and Greek life on campus.


Matthew Battaglia

Undergraduate Student Worker

Matthew Battaglia

Matthew Battaglia is an undergraduate in his third year at Loyola. He is pursuing a double major in Philosophy and Political Science, and a minor in Catholic Studies. His research interests include Ignatian pedagogy in higher education, and Jesuit history. In addition to his studies, Matthew volunteers at Labre homeless outreach and is a sacristan at Madonna Della Strada Chapel at Loyola's Lakeshore campus. 


ADVISORY BOARD

Elizabeth Coffman, PhD
Professor, Film and Digital Media, School of Communication
Loyola University Chicago

Colby Dickinson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Theology
Loyola University Chicago

The Hon. Thomas M. Donnelly, J.D.
Associate Judge, Circuit Court of Cook County
Part-Time Faculty, School of Law
Loyola University Chicago

John Hardt, PhD
Vice Dean of Professional Formation and Associate Professor of Bioethics, Stritch School of Medicine
Part-Time Faculty, School of Law
Loyola University Chicago

D. Scott Hendrickson, S.J., DPhil
Associate Provost for Global and Community Engagement
Associate Professor, Department of Modern Languages and Literature
Loyola University Chicago

M. Therese Lysaught, Ph.D.
Professor and Director of Graduate Program in Healthcare Mission Leadership
Neiswanger Institute for Bioethics & Healthcare Leadership
Loyola University Chicago

Michelle Nickerson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of History
Loyola University Chicago

Seungho Moon, Ed.D.
Professor of Teaching and Learning, School of Education 
Loyola University Chicago

Lorraine A. Ozar, Ph.D.
Clinical Associate Professor and Andrew M. Greeley Endowed Chair in Catholic Education
Loyola University Chicago

Stephen Schloesser, S.J.
Professor, Department of History and Director of the Jesuit Heritage Research Center
Loyola University Chicago

Michael J. Schuck, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Theology
Founding Director, The Joan and Bill Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage
Loyola Univeristy Chicago

The Joan and Bill Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage

About | Staff | Board

The Joan and Bill Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage (CCIH) is one of Loyola's five interdisciplinary Center of Excellence. The Hank Center cultivates, connects, and integrates Roman Catholic thought and practice by supporting research, creating and leading initiatives, offering conferences, symposia, public dialogs, and other programs that engage the communities at Loyola University Chicago, the Midwest, nationally, and internationally.

At the Center, the rich and variant lines of the Catholic intellectual tradition are explored, communicated, complicated, and renewed. The Center’s support of research and course development projects provides support for Loyola faculty. Its prestigious Michael J. Garanzini, S.J. Fellowships in the Catholic Intellectual Tradition delivers critical support to promising doctoral students in dissertation stage from across the U.S.  All of these endeavors invite and cultivate transformative scholarship and innovative curricular design with a special focus on academic excellence and the demands of social, environmental, and spiritual justice.

The Center animates the living tradition of Catholic higher education in that it informs and builds-up the connection among faith, reason, and justice— a unity of knowledge, according to St. John Henry Newman, that resides at the heart of the academic enterprise. As a scholarly center dedicated to engaging the vibrancy and legacy of Catholic Intellectual Tradition, CCIH is a primary voice in articulating intellectual priorities in academically normative ways—and in integrating these priorities across the disciplines. Its unique scope of events and programs, strong record of conferences, substantive web pages and resources, and active media presence broaden the Center's reach and are factors that distinguish the Hank Center as one of the most comprehensive venues for Catholic thought, dialogue, and research in the world.

The Center was founded in 2006 with the goal of preserving and fostering the Catholic intellectual heritage not only at Loyola University Chicago, but also in the local community, the academy, and the church. On April 24, 2007, Loyola University Chicago renamed this Center of Excellence in honor of two generous friends and benefactors, Joan Los (BS'54) and Bill Hank— a couple who have an abiding love for integrated scholarship in the Jesuit tradition.  Thanks to their generosity and vision, the radiant light of the Catholic Intellectual Heritage will inform the work of Loyola University Chicago for many years to come.

Get to know our Staff:

Michael Patrick Murphy, PhD

Title/s:  Director, Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage and
Senior Lecturer
OFFICE #:  Cuneo Hall 430
Phone: 773.508.3822
Email: mmurphy23@luc.edu
CV Link: Michael P. Murphy CV

Michael Murphy

About

Michael Murphy is Director of Loyola’s Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage. He earned his doctorate in Theology, Literature, and Philosophy from the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, an MA in English from San Francisco State University, and undergraduate degrees in English and Great Books from the University of San Francisco. His research interests are in Theology and Literature, Sacramental Theology, Systematic Theology, and the socio-political cultures of Catholicism-- but he also writes about issues in eco-theology, media ecologies, and social ethics. Dr. Murphy, a Senior Lecturer in the Theology Department, is a National Endowment for the Humanities fellow. His first book, A Theology of Criticism (Oxford), was named a "Distinguished Publication" in 2008 by the American Academy of Religion. His current scholarly project is a monograph, The Humane Realists: Catholic Fiction, Poetry, and Film 1965 - 2025.

Degrees

A doctorate in Theology, Literature, and Philosophy from the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, an MA in English from San Francisco State University, and undergraduate degrees in English and Great Books from the University of San Francisco

Program Areas

Catholic Studies; Catholic Intellectual Tradition; Catholic Social Teaching and Tradition; Jesuit/Ignatian Traditions

Research Interests

Mike’s work explores the idea that the Catholic intellectual tradition is not only an essential resource for content, but is also one with a deeply ingrained interdisciplinary method as well. With this theoretical framework in mind, Mike engages the following fields and subfields as projects in constructive, integral theology: ​

Theological Aesthetics/Hans Urs von Balthasar
The Catholic Literary Tradition
The Literary and Political Cultures of Catholicism
Religion and Mimetic Theory
Digital Cultures/New Media Ecologies
Systematic Theology (Christology, Trinitarian Theology)
Sacramental Theology
Ressourcement Theology
Christian Spirituality

Awards

Finalist, Ignatius of Loyola Award, LUC Faculty Center for Ignatian Pedagogy, 2016

Finalist, Kolvenbach Award, LUC Faculty Center for Ignatian Pedagogy, 2015

Alpha Sigma Nu, Centenary Faculty Inductee, Loyola University Chicago, 2014-2015

Loyola University Chicago USGA Teaching Award: Faculty Member of the Year, 2013-2014

Loyola University Chicago Student Diversity and Multicultural Affairs Diversity Award, 2013- 2014

CCIH Fellowship: $6,000 Research Grant for Vatican II at 50

USF Distinguished Adjunct Nominee, 2011 and 2012

2011 American Academy of Religion Distinguished Book: 2008

Selected Publications

“The Tinderization of Theology" in Theological Discourses on Social Media, Christopher B. Barnett, Clark J. Elliston, and Trevor B. Williams, eds. In preparation; forthcoming from Routledge in 2025.

"Panem et Circenses: Michel Houellebecq, Submission, and the Liturgies of Spiritual Exhaustion" in The Call of Literature (Forthcoming from Routledge in 2024)

“Cultivating Catholic Studies and Charism through Co-Curricular Programs: The Annual John Courtney Murray, S.J., Forum @LUC,” in Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture, McKenzie and Sherry, eds., Volume 26, Number 5 (August, 2023).

“A look inside the Vatican meeting that brought Pope Francis and Martin Scorsese together,” America Magazine, 6/8/2023.

“Apocalypse Now? Yes, Please: Notes on Navigating the Digital Revolution,” in Nexus: Conversations on the Catholic Intellectual Tradition, Vukov and Burns, eds. Volume 2 (May, 2023).

“You are What You Eat: St. Ignatius and Doing Advent Right,” in Heroes of the Ignatian Tradition, The Jesuit Conference, 11/30/2022

“Response: Innovate in Tradition,” Dialogue on Mission Drift in Catholic Higher Education in Conversations in Jesuit Higher Education, 2/9/2022

“Childhood and the Terrain of Transformation: A Tale of Two O’ Connors” in Living Life to the Full: Literature and a Catholic Philosophy of Life, David Torevell, ed., Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, 2021.

“Houellebecq's Cautionary Tale About Liturgy Gone Awry,” in Church Life Journal, University of Notre Dame, 6/20/2021


Joe Vukov, PhD

Associate Director, The Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage
Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy

Joe Vukov

Joe Vukov is an Associate Professor in the Philosophy Department at Loyola University Chicago. He is also Associate Director of the Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage at Loyola, and an Affiliate Faculty Member in Catholic Studies and Psychology. Nationally, Vukov also serves as the Vice President of Philosopher’s in Jesuit Education. Vukov received his PhD from Fordham University, and also holds Certificates in Bioethics and Medical Humanities (Montefiore-Einstein), Health Care Ethics (Fordham), an MA in Humanities (University of Chicago), and BAs in Philosophy and English Literature and Writing (Bethel University). Vukov's research explores questions at the intersection of ethics, neuroscience, and philosophy of mind, and at the intersection of science and religion. In 2022, he published Navigating Faith and Science, and in 2023, he published The Perils of Perfection. In 2020, he was named a Sujack Master Teacher and in 2019, was awarded the Provost’s Award for Excellence in Teaching Freshmen.

Research Interests

Neuroethics
Philosophy of Mind
Science and Religion

Selected Publications

The Perils of Perfection: On the Limits and Possibilities of Human Enhancement (2023)

Navigating Faith and Science (2022)


Katie Arnold

Office Manager

OFFICE #Cuneo Hall 434

Phone: 773.508.6088

Email: karnold6@luc.edu

Katie Arnold

Katie Arnold is the Office Manager at the Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage. She has a Bachelors Degree in Public Relations and History from Purdue University and joins the Center from the field of public history. As a museum professional, Katie has experience working in a range of positions including most recently as a Project Manager of Exhibitions at the Field Museum of Natural History. She was also a Producer and Archival Researcher at a historical documentary production company, where she earned a Mid-Atlantic EMMY Award for her work on a documentary about female abolitionists in the mid-19th century.

Katie is currently serving as a leader for the Young Adult Ministry at St. Mary of the Lake and Our Lady of Lourdes. As a lifelong Catholic, she continues to dedicate herself to her own spiritual growth and seeks to create new opportunities for others to learn, experience and grow in the faith.


Naomi Fisher, PhD

Director of Catholic Studies

Naomi Fischer

Naomi Fisher is Assistant Professor of Philosophy. Prior to coming to Loyola in 2018, she taught at Clark University in Massachusetts. She earned her Ph.D in philosophy from the University of Notre Dame in 2016, and prior to that earned her M.S. in physics from UC Davis.

Her research focuses on Kant and German Idealism and Romanticism, specifically the relationship between nature, freedom, and rationality in Kant’s Critical philosophy and in Friedrich Schelling’s philosophy of nature. She also has interests in the broader history of philosophy, particularly the 19th century, the philosophy of science, and ethics.

Degrees

PhD, University of Notre Dame 
MA, University of Notre Dame
MS, University of California - Davis
BS, Biola University 

Research Interests

Kant and German Idealism 

Selected Publications

"Organisms and the Form of Freedom in Kant’s Third Critique" (forthcoming in European Journal of Philosophy).

"Freedom as Productivity in Schelling’s Philosophy of Nature" in Schelling's Philosophy: Freedom, Nature and Systematicity, ed. G. Anthony Bruno (forthcoming with Oxford University Press).

"The Epistemology of Schelling’s Philosophy of Nature" in History of Philosophy Quarterly 34:3 pp. 271-290 (July 2017).

"Kant On Animal Minds" in Ergo 4:15, pp. 441-462 (2017).

"Natural and Ethical Normativity" in The Southern Journal of Philosophy 54:4, pp. 417-439 (December 2016).


Julian Sieber

Graduate Research Assistant

Julian Sieber

Julian Sieber is a Graduate Student Assistant at the Hank Center. He is pursuing a Ph.D. in New Testament & Early Christianity at Loyola University Chicago. His research interests include the literary and social backgrounds of the Bible at the intersections of gender, indigeneity, and banqueting practices, as well as Catholic biblical reception histories. He holds an M.Div. from Yale Divinity School and a B.A. (Media & Information) from Curtin University, Western Australia.


Vincent DeStazio

Undergraduate Student Worker

Vincent DeStazio

Vincent DeStazio is an undergraduate in his second year at Loyola. He is a member of the Interdisciplinary Honors Program, studying mathematics with a minor in Middle East & Islamic World Studies. Vincent is actively involved in Loyola's Catholic community and Campus Ministry.


Emily Henseler

Undergraduate Student Worker

Emily Henseler

Emily Henseler is an undergraduate in her third year, studying Advertising and Public Relations with minors in Human Resources and Catholic Studies. She is involved in the Catholic Students Club, Campus Ministry, Labre Homeless Ministry, and Greek life on campus.


Matthew Battaglia

Undergraduate Student Worker

Matthew Battaglia

Matthew Battaglia is an undergraduate in his third year at Loyola. He is pursuing a double major in Philosophy and Political Science, and a minor in Catholic Studies. His research interests include Ignatian pedagogy in higher education, and Jesuit history. In addition to his studies, Matthew volunteers at Labre homeless outreach and is a sacristan at Madonna Della Strada Chapel at Loyola's Lakeshore campus. 


ADVISORY BOARD

Elizabeth Coffman, PhD
Professor, Film and Digital Media, School of Communication
Loyola University Chicago

Colby Dickinson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Theology
Loyola University Chicago

The Hon. Thomas M. Donnelly, J.D.
Associate Judge, Circuit Court of Cook County
Part-Time Faculty, School of Law
Loyola University Chicago

John Hardt, PhD
Vice Dean of Professional Formation and Associate Professor of Bioethics, Stritch School of Medicine
Part-Time Faculty, School of Law
Loyola University Chicago

D. Scott Hendrickson, S.J., DPhil
Associate Provost for Global and Community Engagement
Associate Professor, Department of Modern Languages and Literature
Loyola University Chicago

M. Therese Lysaught, Ph.D.
Professor and Director of Graduate Program in Healthcare Mission Leadership
Neiswanger Institute for Bioethics & Healthcare Leadership
Loyola University Chicago

Michelle Nickerson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of History
Loyola University Chicago

Seungho Moon, Ed.D.
Professor of Teaching and Learning, School of Education 
Loyola University Chicago

Lorraine A. Ozar, Ph.D.
Clinical Associate Professor and Andrew M. Greeley Endowed Chair in Catholic Education
Loyola University Chicago

Stephen Schloesser, S.J.
Professor, Department of History and Director of the Jesuit Heritage Research Center
Loyola University Chicago

Michael J. Schuck, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Theology
Founding Director, The Joan and Bill Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage
Loyola Univeristy Chicago