Coming to the Center Hosts Liz Williams

We are sorry to report that Coming to the Center on Aug 24 must be cancelled. Ms. Williams promises to reschedule in early 2025. Meanwhile, stay tuned for news about the next CTTC program on Sep 28 with longtime Pagan author and editor, Chas Clifton.

Liz Williams is a science fiction and fantasy writer living in Glastonbury, England, where she is co-director of a witchcraft supply business. She has been published by Bantam Spectra (US) and Tor Macmillan (UK), also Night Shade Press and appears regularly in Asimov’s and other magazines. She has been involved with the Milford SF Writers’ Workshop for over 25 years, and also teaches creative writing at a local college for Further Education. Miracles of Our Own Making: A History of Paganism (2020 Reaktionbooks) is based in scholarly literature but written for an audience of anyone. Many will also have read Williams’ occasional columns at The Wild Hunt. Join us as she talks about life in Glastonbury as a Pagan and also the development and direction of UK Paganism over the last 20 years. Free of charge and open to all.

One Person’s Journey – Reflections on the CMC

Editor’s Note: This poignant submission comes from a student we’ll refer to as “Jack.” Jack is the first incarcerated individual to participate in the CMC program. Correctional facilities often lack the chaplaincy resources and the choice of teaching offered by CHS.

While serving a life sentence, Jack found himself in a position where others within his community often sought his spiritual guidance.

Although he initially felt uncomfortable as a leader at the program’s outset, the journey of self-reflection and learning that the CMC provided gradually transformed into a newfound self-confidence and a more profound sense of personal and community (local and in the broader world) responsibility.

Personal Reflection on a 13-Month Journey

This assignment asks some deceptively difficult questions. What was the most important section? It’s difficult to place one over the others generally, as far as learning impact, but the most important section for me was Module 2: Ethics & Personal Responsibility. This is due to the fact that it was during this module that I made some of the greatest strides within myself. I did some very difficult journaling in response to this module’s coursework, much more than I included in the Spiritual Timeline assignment actually. This presented the opportunity to dig deeper than I had before, and come to some greater understanding and terms with my life’s journey thus far. The work of this module, and the next, Module 3: Diversity, Culture & Sexuality, were the most personally important for my self-growth. Though I must re-iterate it’s quite difficult to place one module over the others as the single most important for learning impact.

In considering the questions posed, I find myself both amazed and a bit melancholy. This ending is bittersweet. I’ve immensely enjoyed this journey, which makes its ending a little bitter, and yet it’s sweet in that I’m awed by it. I’m amazed in the sense of someone who, after an arduous climb, reaches a summit and turns to find that a beautiful vista lies behind them. The CMC has been enriching in ways that I wasn’t expecting. It has widened the scope of my work far beyond anything that I intended when it began. I started out with the thought and intent of improving my skills, and maybe adding a few new tools to my belt. However, I’ve definitely been changed by an expansion of vision; my simple work has grown into a vision of ministry and service to not only my little circle but to all of The Mothers’ children. The CMC has caused me to explore myself and consider things in ways that I wasn’t expecting or intending; not confined to teaching a few skills or techniques for being a better Pagan practitioner or the leader of a circle, this course has taught me that we who practice and lead must have a wider gaze and accept serving with a greater responsibility. I’m not the same Pagan that I was at the beginning. I am, to quote a certain 7o’s TV show, “better, stronger, faster”. I’m a better leader and servant, better educated, and better in myself. I’m stronger in my resolve and confidence in doing the work, and stronger for the skills that I’ve gained. I’m faster too, faster in stepping up to accept the responsibility to minister to any who come to me, faster in responding to the needs of my community, and faster in recognizing those needs.


What I’ll do differently is simply this: I’ll go forward with a greater sense of mission and purpose. I’ll walk on as a minister and servant of not just one little circle of Pagans but as one servant of The Mother.


To those who come after me on this path I would say this: if you intended to just pick up a few skills, or become better for just your own little circle, be prepared to have your eyes opened, your mind blown, and your expectations greatly exceeded. “Buckle-up Bunky, you’re in for quite a ride!”

Padraic Fitzgerald

Padraic Fitzgerald is an adjunct instructor at the College of Charleston in their Religious Studies department. He recently graduated from the University of Denver and Iliff School of Theology Joint Doctoral Program in Religious Studies (’23). His dissertation, titled Til Valhall!: The Formation of Nordic Neopagan Identity, Religiosity, and Community at a Norwegian Heavy Metal Festival, explores the Midgardsblot heavy metal festival as a temporary sacred space where people self-identifying as belonging to or adjacent to Nordic Neopaganism engage with manifold forms of Nordic folk symbolism to refine religious identities and achieve religious experiences. His research interests include material religion with an emphasis on the natural environment and religious musicology, the “greening” of religion, Northern European folk traditions, Neopagan movements, and the relationship between religion and popular culture.

2023 Professor of the Year

Robert Patrick, PhD, MDiv,

Columbia, S.C. — During a special virtual ceremony on Saturday, February 25 the Votaries Alumni Circle of Cherry Hill Seminary announced the winner of this year’s Wendy Griffin Professor of the Year Award. The recipient is Robert Patrick, PhD, MDiv, Dept. of Ministry, Advocacy & Leadership.

Patrick (pictured at left) holds a BA in Biblical Literature from Oral Roberts University, a Masters of Divinity from Emory University, and a PhD in Latin and Roman Studies from the University of Florida. His dissertation focused on the presence of sacred groves in the Metamorphoses of Ovid as nonlinear events, and he has continuing interest in sacred groves in surrounding European and near-eastern cultures, particularly Celtic cultures.

An active member of the Unitarian-Universalist Congregation of Gwinnett (Georgia), he co-founded both the Oak Grove CUUPS (Covenant of Unitarian Universalist Pagans) and the Druid Order of Three Realms whose mother grove, Sylvan Sanctuary, meets at UUCG. His religious and spiritual path is labyrinthine including ministry in the United Methodist Church, the Roman Catholic Church, Druidry and Unitarian Universalism. He has special interests in language pedagogy, creating and leading ritual, and spiritual direction/friendship, working with labyrinths, gardening and painting, and is a certified and licensed massage therapist. He understands his Earth-centered spiritual path as the way of weaving together all of these aspects of his life.

Special Recognition

Erica Baron, M.Div., Dept. of Ministry, Advocacy & Leadership

Also honored with special recognition was Erica Baron, MDiv, for her outstanding service to students in the past year. Nominations are submitted by students who have taken a course in the past year with their nominee; nominees are reviewed and voted on by the Votaries.

“As a member of the Board of Directors for Cherry Hill Seminary, I am proud that Votaries Alumni/ae honor the late and beloved Academic Dean, Wendy Griffin, with the annual Professor of the Year Award named for her,” said Margaret Meggs of the Seminary Board of Directors. “Any Cherry Hill Seminary professor honored with this award may be assured of their value to the students, faculty, staff, and Board of Cherry Hill Seminary.”

In his acceptance remarks, Patrick commented on the unique relationship between students and successful faculty members. “I’ve learned over the years that my students are my best evaluators. They can tell me what I get right, and they can tell me where things don’t work for them. I always learn at least as much as they do. At Cherry Hill Seminary, this has been my constant experience, that each class is a gathering of co-learners.”

Rev. Erica Baron thanked the group by saying, “I love the students at Cherry Hill Seminary so much. You are all so creative and smart and engaged and I have really enjoyed all the time I get to interact with you and read your work.”

Recording of the entire ceremony, including keynote remarks by Seminary graduate, Rev. Karen LeBlanc, MDiv, minister of New Bedford (Massachusetts) Unitarian Church

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.

Honoring Academic Dean Emerita Wendy Griffin

As Cherry Hill Seminary’s first permanent Academic Dean, Wendy Griffin, Ph.D., and Academic Dean Emerita, brought to our 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.