Increasing numbers of young people fail
to find meaning in education, work, and community settings
that once provided a sense of purpose and inspiration. In
response, the Stanford Center on Adolescence aims to promote
the competence, character, and well-being of all young people
in today’s world. The Center provides guidance for
parenting, for improved educational practice, and for youth
development.
Teach for America
www.teachforamerica.org
A national corps of outstanding college graduates of all
academic backgrounds who commit two years to teach in urban
and rural public schools, and become lifelong leaders in
the effort to ensure that all American children have an
equal chance in life. Approximately 9,000 individuals have
joined since its inception in 1990, directly impacting the
lives of more than 1.25 million students.
YMCA Civic Engagement Initiative
www.ymcacivicengagement.org
The vehicle through which the YMCA promotes the development
of civic engagement attitudes, skills, and behaviors in
young people. The Initiative is designed to reach young
people directly and connect them to specific opportunities,
while improving the ability of the YMCA and the “civic
engagement community” (political parties, nonprofit
organizations, the media, schools and colleges) to engage
young people.
B.
Retirement Resources
Civic Ventures
www.civicventures.org
Works to expand the contribution of older Americans to society
and to transform the aging of America into a source of social
renewal by developing avenues for meaningful service. It
is the home of Experience Corps®, which operates in
13 cities to mobilize the time, talent, and experience of
adults 55 or older. President Marc Freedman is the author
of Prime Time: How the Baby Boomers Will Revolutionize
Retirement and Transform America published by PublicAffairs.
The book includes stories and portraits of people serving
as role models for continued contribution in later life.
Halftime
www.halftime.org
Organization that inspires business and professional leaders
to embrace God’s calling and move from success to
significance. Accomplishes its mission through events, networking,
and transitional strategies: “Halftime is a time out—a
time to think seriously about one’s purpose in life
and draft a game plan for the second half. . . . Most call
this a ‘midlife crisis.’ We call it halftime.”
Senior Corps
www.seniorcorps.org
Taps the experience, skills, and talents of older citizens
to meet community challenges. Through its programs—Foster
Grandparents, Senior Companions, and RSVP (Retired and Senior
Volunteer Program)—more than half a million Americans
age 55 and over assist local nonprofits, public agencies,
and faith-based organizations. Senior Corps, part of the
USA
Freedom Corps, is administered by the Corporation
for National and Community Service, the federal agency
that also oversees AmeriCorps
and Learn
and Serve America.
III. Scientific
Perspectives
A. Cosmology
Havel, Ivan. “Is
There a Purpose in Nature?” (workshop paper)
www.cts.cuni.cz/conf98/Procee-x.htm
Thirteen scholars debated at the workshop with the goal
of arriving at a reasonable description of evolution that
is neither strictly mechanistic nor purely teleological.
The discussions were restricted to science and philosophy,
not intended to touch upon religious beliefs in a transcendent
supernatural entity.
Ultimate Reality Bibliography
www.canyoninstitute.org/resources/URBibliography/urbindex.htm
Objective is to compile a comprehensive, balanced, and up-to-date
bibliography to facilitate and support research on the subject
of Ultimate Reality by scholars from diverse backgrounds.
Bibliography contains over 2,000 entries, more than 450
of them annotated.
B. Biology
Center on Theology and the Natural
Sciences
www.ctns.org
International non-profit organization dedicated to research,
teaching, and public service. It focuses on the relation
between the natural sciences (physics, cosmology, evolutionary
and molecular biology, and technology and the environment)
and Christian theology and ethics. Offers courses at the
doctoral and seminary levels to bring future clergy and
faculty to a greater awareness of this important interdisciplinary
work.
IV. Religion
and Spirituality
Coalition on the Environment
and Jewish Life
www.coejl.org/learn/je_textcosm.shtml
Founded in 1993 to promote environmental education, scholarship,
advocacy, and action in the American Jewish community. Is
sponsored by a broad coalition of national Jewish organizations
and has organized regional affiliates in communities across
North America. COEJL is the Jewish member of the National
Religious Partnership for the Environment.
Guideposts Magazine
www.guideposts.com
Founded in 1945 by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale and his wife,
Ruth Stafford Peale. Mission is to help people achieve their
maximum personal and spiritual potential. Guideposts, which
is committed to communicating positive principles for daily
life, publishes magazines and books and provides outreach
ministry services that demonstrate the benefits of combining
faith and positive thinking.
Programs for the Theological
Exploration of Vocation
www.ptev.org/default.aspx
Established by the Lilly Endowment Inc., which believes
vital religious communities are essential for society. The
Endowment offers grants to colleges to develop programs
based on the concept of vocation as the center of institutional
planning, educational programming, and extracurricular activity.
The Purpose-Driven Life
www.purposedrivenlife.com
Rick Warren’s best-selling books The Purpose Driven
Church and The Purpose Driven Life have shown
there is a great hunger to learn about purpose. As he writes,
“IT’S NOT ABOUT YOU. The purpose of your life
is greater than your own personal fulfillment, your career,
or even your happiness.” The Purpose Driven Life
features 40 short, life-changing chapters that reveal God’s
purpose for you. See also The Purpose-Driven Church:
www.purposedriven.com/home.aspx
What Color Is Your Parachute?
www.jobhuntersbible.com/index.html
Richard Bolles, author of the best-seller What Color
Is Your Parachute?, has advised job-seekers for decades
that the key is to figure out your purpose in life. He writes,
“We get to choose between: our life as a story with
ultimate purpose running beneath all that
happens to us, like some great underground river; or our
life as a string of meaningless events, without rhyme or
reason.”
PRINT RESOURCES
I. Retirement
Resources
Power and Purpose in Retirement:
New Opportunities for Meaning and Significance
a book by Harold G. Koenig, M.D. published by Templeton
Foundation Press
www.templetonpress.org/book.asp?book_id=51
Eighty million baby boomers are nearing retirement and each
of them needs a goal to utilize their experience, wisdom,
and strengths and give purpose to their lives. Dr. Harold
G. Koenig, an expert in geriatrics, mental health, and religion,
explains that the notion of retirement was a marketing tool
developed after WWII and is based largely on myths. “Finding
purpose is more urgent than ever during the retirement years,
when the search for purpose becomes one of the deepest of
human longings,” says Koenig.
II.
Scientific Perspectives
A. Cosmology
Barrow, John D., Joseph Silk. The
Left Hand of Creation: The Origin and Evolution of the Expanding
Universe. New York: Basic Books, 1983.
Barrow, John D. The Origin of the
Universe. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1994.
Ellis, G. F. R. “The Theology
of the Anthropic Principle.” in Quantum Cosmology
and the Laws of Nature. Robert John Russell, Nancey
Murphy and C.J. Isham, editors. Vatican City State and
Berkeley, California: Vatican City Publishers and The Center
for Theology and the Natural Sciences, 1993.
Ellis, George F. R., G. B. Bundrit.
“Life in the Infinite Universe.” Quarterly
Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society 20 (1979)
37–41.
Discussion of a peculiar implication of an infinite universe:
Anything that has a finite probability of happening should
be happening elsewhere in the Universe at this moment.
Polkinghorne, J. “The Laws of
Nature and the Laws of Physics.” in Quantum Cosmology
and the Laws of Nature. Robert John Russell, Nancey
Murphy and C. J. Isham, editors. Vatican City State and
Berkeley, California: Vatican City Publishers and The Center
for Theology and the Natural Sciences, 1993.
Rees, M. “Black Holes, Galactic
Evolution and Cosmic Coincidences.” Interdisciplinary
Science Reviews 14, 2 (1989) 148–161.
B. Biology
Damasio, Antonio R. Descartes’
Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain. New York:
Avon Books, 1995.
An excellent critique of Descartes’ dualism in light
of contemporary cognitive and brain science, and a strong
case for emotion as being fundamental to mind along with
reason.
D’Aquili, Eugene, Andrew B. Newberg. Why God Won’t
Go Away: Brain Science and the Biology of Belief. New
York: Random House, 2001.
Uses high tech neuro-imaging research to document what happens
in the brain when we experience God. A tantalizing hypothesis
of how deep within our evolutionary roots are the perceptual
foundations that give rise to our experience of the transcendent.
Davies, Paul. “Teleology Without Teleology: Purpose
Through Emergent Complexity.” In Evolutionary
and Molecular Biology. Robert John Russell; William
R. Stoeger, S.J.; and Francisco J. Ayala, editors. Vatican
City State and Berkeley, California: Vatican City Publishers
and The Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences, 1998.
Russell, Robert J., Nancey Murphy,
Theo C. Meyering. eds. Neuroscience and the Person:
Scientific Perspectives on Divine Action. Vatican City
State: Vatican Observatory Publications, 1999.
A collection of twenty-one essays exploring creative interaction
among the cognitive neurosciences, philosophy, and theology.
Major themes include an exploration of the possibility of
God’s interaction with the world, and the relationship
between brain and personhood.