Coming to the Center Hosts Arnold Bustillo

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Click to register for this free livestream event

Arnold Bustillo will share with us about his research and dedication to Santa Muerte, the Mexican folk saint whose name in English means Holy Death, as well as his publishing work.

Arnold is also the founder of Santa Muerte Ministries, which allows members to recognize and elevate those who do good work in service to others and in the name of Holy Death.

Apart from his spiritual work, Arnold is a gay military veteran of the Iraq war, having served in silence during the era of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, and today he holds a doctorate in business administration, which he was able to earn thanks to the military GI Bill.

A Threshold of Change

Holli S. Emore, MDiv, Executive Director

Now, more than ever before, Paganism and the many forms of earth-centered spirituality have become the threshold over which increasing numbers step, seeking what is both within and without, both healing and celebration, profane and divine.

Some see the growth of Paganism as hope for the earth, itself.  Many look to the eclectic and diverse nature of Paganism as a positive model for the burgeoning globalization of society.

Whatever we seek as spiritual sojourners, we are all still human — we need solace during life’s painful transitions, community support when we answer the call to effect social change, assistance with crisis, companionship as we pursue the path of transformation.  And we are the most curious of creatures on the planet, ever and always wanting to know more, understand better, see further.

March 2025 marks the 18th anniversary of Cherry Hill Seminary as a public nonprofit educational institution (and nearly twenty years since our founding as a private teaching effort).   It has been my honor to serve as director since January 2008.  Like a garden, we have flourished in the fertile soil found among those who hunger for knowledge. Like most gardens, it is all that we can do to keep up with the rich and abundant harvest, as well as the weeds.

If we thought that recent years have been tough, 2025 seems to be getting tougher. But we have a community and resources here at CHS that you can trust to support each other, to keep improving each year, and to validate your sacred journey. Whatever jobs, freedoms, services or benefits may look shaky this year, your education can never be taken away from you. Learning at CHS is an investment that pays dividends the rest of your life.

Hypatia of Alexandria set an example for us of how to hold education as a linchpin to a healthy society. We honor her each year on International Hypatia Day, March 15, remembering how this remarkable person stood tall in front of all the authorities, insisting that education be tempered with wisdom and compassion.

You are invited to be part of this dynamic learning community, as a student, as a volunteer, as a member of Votaries Alumni Circle, or in a way we’ve not yet thought of.  In your own way, be part of Cherry Hill Seminary as we step across our own threshold of change.

Yours in changing times,
Holli S. Emore, M.Div.
Executive Director

Winter Commencement: Awards and Graduates

Rev. Diane Cacciato, Professor of the Year
Rev. Diane Cacciato, Professor of the Year

Columbia, S.C. — Cherry Hill Seminary held its Winter Commencement on December 22, recognizing the achievement of summer and fall students, and announcing the Wendy Griffin Professor of the Year. A third special award was presented, the Hypatia Award For Excellence in Education. The ceremony began with a keynoted address by Dr. Jeffrey Keefer, Chair, Board of Directors

Following the keynote, Academic Dean Margot Wolfe presented Helene Grogan of Massachusetts and Stacy Patterson of California who each earned the Community Ministry Certificate this year. The CMC represents thirteen months of self-directed study with the guidance of a faculty-mentor. The Seminary acknowledged the many hours of dedication demonstrated by these students.

Four additional students were honored as the first cohort to complete the Writing As A Spiritual Practice certificate: Margaret Meggs, Diana Payton, Troy Robinson, and Diane Sontum. The year-long intensive program culminated in the creation of an anthology of students’ work. Hypatia Dreaming: An Anthology of Poems, Prayers, and Stories by the Students of Cherry Hill Seminary. The book is in the process of publication and should be ready for purchase by early January.

Each year the Votaries Alumni Circle leads the selection of the coveted Wendy Griffin Professor of the Year award.* This year the recipient is Rev. Diane Ciacatto. Diane is the creator of the Writing As A Spiritual Practice certificate. Votary Polly Springhorn said, “Rev. Cacciato’s students experienced firsthand her wealth of personal experience, wide array of informational resources, and her willingness not only to provide personalized feedback, but to edit and finalize multiple submissions for publication – all while scheduling classes to accommodate students living all over the globe. Thanks to her, the cohort of four is armed with a well-rounded approach to the writing process and renewed inspiration to communicate their spiritualities and learn about those of others.”

Jeffrey Keefer, Chair of the Board of Directors, delivered a keynote address to the virtual gathering, including this excerpts:

You know that education is not easy – we are stretched [as students], we are challenged, and we are transformed often in ways great and small. If this were easy, you would have finished this years ago. But whatever forces were at work needed this time and now we need you, to minister, to support, and to encourage a world desperately in need of your gifts. There is not always a perfect time to serve, there’s not always a clear invitation. Sometimes there is not even a clear way forward, but serve we must. Your CHS experience will likely not make you rich, or powerful or even powerful, but you knew that when you started. . . Your CHS experience will help you look into the mirror and respect who is looking back at you, for what you are going to bring to you. You will work with people who need what you offer. And there are few things greater than to serve those who need you.

Following recognition of all the graduates and the Professor of the Year, longtime board member Ron Schaefer presented Dr. Keefer with the Hypatia Award for Excellence in Education. “This award goes to someone who as our namesake Hypatia has the intellect and the temperament and the motivation and the focus to bring all of us of disparate background, on the board, staff, faculty, to serve together in a unified cohesive manner to press forward with the goals of Cherry Hill Seminary – this usually requires someone to go beyond their normal daily duties and their standard mundane work.” Schaefer continued, “It’s reaching out to someone in need, it’s helping someone who needs a hand, it’s mentoring a new professor or staff, it’s resolving conflicts, doing that with skillful aplomb in the way and nature that  we all understand Hypatia would have done.”

Executive Director Holli Emore added, “Jeffrey’s vision, expertise and curiosity have only been matched by his kindness and generosity of spirit. Always willing to listen, to advise, to suggest a fresh approach, he has been an example to me of true leadership. He is someone who leads by example, never seeking the spotlight. First arriving to our Seminary doors during our most difficult time, he has led us through more than ten years of expansion, innovation, and growing stronger.

*About the Wendy Griffin Professor of the Year Award

Sponsored by the CHS Votaries Alumni Circle, this prestigious award is presented annually to one deserving faculty member who has demonstrated teaching excellence in the classroom and a commitment to spiritual growth for students. Nominations are accepted throughout the calendar year until Thanksgiving weekend, and the award is announced and presented at a special online event early in the new year following.

As Cherry Hill Seminary’s first permanent Academic Dean, Wendy Griffin (1941-2021) brought to Cherry Hill Seminary a dedication to academic integrity and a devotion to Pagan and Nature Spirituality. She was an academic pioneer in the study of Goddess Spirituality and Wicca, and served in the American Academy of Religion and on the editorial board of The Pomegranate: the International Journal of Pagan Studies. By the time she retired in 2018, Griffin had inspired students and colleagues alike with her intellect, skills and engagement.

Cherry Hill Seminary is the leading provider of education and practical training in leadership, ministry, and personal growth in Pagan and Nature-based spiritualities, empowering spiritual leadership, scholarship, and ethics, providing transformative education and empowering students to advance academically and lead spiritually.

CHS Condemns Racist Bombing Attempt in Tennessee (November 5, 2024)

Columbia, S.C. — A man was arrested by federal agents and charged with attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction to destroy an energy facility serving the Nashville, Tennessee area. As he began the attack, accompanied by undercover agents, he started with a ritual invoking the Norse god Odin. He was quickly arrested and charged by the FBI.

Attorney General Merrick Garland issued this statement: “As charged, Skyler Philippi believed he was moments away from launching an attack on a Nashville energy facility to further his violent white supremacist ideology – but the FBI had already compromised his plot. This case serves as yet another warning to those seeking to sow violence and chaos in the name of hatred by attacking our country’s critical infrastructure.”

The Pagan world has struggled for some years now to distance itself from what is often called “volkish ideology.” Cherry Hill Seminary held a joint symposium with the University of South Carolina in 2019 called “Paganism and Its Discontents; Enduring Problems of Racialized Identity”, subsequently publishing the papers in a book with that title.

In his keynote for that conference, CHS professor Dr. Michael Strmiska said:

“We who embrace the spiritual value of Paganism must protect it from the disease of racism . . . there are Pagans who have been taking up this battle with courage and determination. Anti-right-wing, anti-racist Norse Pagans have created several networks to advance their cause. These include Heathens Against Hate, Heathens United Against Racism, and the Alliance for Inclusive Heathenry, all of which stand in adamant opposition to racism and white nationalist versions of Norse Paganism.”

Executive Director Holli Emore emphasized the Seminary’s commitment to inclusive Pagan practices. “In the same way that the Ku Klux Klan does not represent Christianity, neither do extremists who pursue violence and hate in the name of a Pagan tradition represent the great majority of today’s Heathens who are committed to values of democracy, inclusivity and peaceful co-existence.”

Emore has served for nearly ten years as a volunteer on the Community Engagement Council of the FBI Columbia Field Office where she has regularly advocated for attention to religion-based hate crimes.

Update November 27, 2024: Not long after the incident mentioned above, many black students at colleges around the U.S., including in South Carolina, received threatening racist text messages. The sender(s) sent them only to blacks, indicating that they knew the skin color of the person they messaged. The kind of chilling fear such an act produces is the very definition of terrorism. In our director’s last call with the FBI, those on the call were informed of the agency’s efforts to date. All are urged to report any suspicious or harassing incidents to your local authorities. CHS also reminds our students that we have chaplains on call here at the Seminary. Contact the office if you need spiritual support following such an incident.