Our Staff
The Boisi Center is committed to fostering rigorous, civil, and constructive conversations about religion in American public life, in pursuit of the common good of a religiously diverse society.
Mark Massa, S.J.
Director
Mark Massa, S.J., is the director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life at Boston College, where he is also professor of Theology. Massa received his Ph.D. in American religion from Harvard University, and is the author of seven books. His most recent book,The Structure of Theological Revolutions: Catholic Debates About Natural Law,is forthcoming from Oxford University Press. His monograph published in 1999,Catholics and American Culture: Fulton Sheen, Dorothy Day, and the Notre Dame Football Team,received the Alpha Sigma Nu Award for Best Work in Theology for 1999-2000. His ongoing area of research is American Catholic faith and culture of the past century.
As first holder of the Karl Rahner Chair in Theology at Fordham University, Massa also directed the Curran Center for American Catholic Studies. From 2010 to 2016, he served as dean of the School of Theology and Ministry at Boston College. He also served as board chair for the Boston Theological Institute, a consortium of nine divinity schools, seminaries, and a rabbinical college in greater Boston. Massa has appeared on a number of programs in the "American Experience" series on PBS, including "Religion in America," and most recently, "An American Conscience: The Reinhold Niebuhr Story."
Susan Richard
Administrative Assistant
Since the Boisi Center's inception in 1999, Susan Richard has served as the Boisi Center's administrative assistant. With her degree from Johnson and Wales University, she has the educational training to plan and organize the many events the Boisi Center sponsors each semester. In addition to her administrative duties, Susan oversees the management of the Boisi Center website. Prior to coming to Boston College, Susan worked at Boston University for eight years in administrative capacities in the Dean's Office in the College of Arts and Sciences and Graduate School as well as the department administrator in the sociology department.
At the end of summer 2022, Susan completed her Master’s degree program in Leadership and Administration through the Woods College at Boston College. She now looks forward to spending time with her family, traveling, crafting, and catching up on all the books she didn't have time to read while in school.
Madeline Jarrett
Graduate Research Assistant
Madeline Jarrett is the graduate research assistant for the Boisi Center. In addition to her work at the center, she is a PhD student in systematic theology. She graduated from the University of Notre Dame in 2014 with majors in Theology and Psychology. After her undergraduate studies, Maddie participated in a year-long AmeriCorps service program based in Chicago, where she served full-time as the ESL Tutor, art teacher, and creative writing teacher at a Catholic elementary school. After her time in Chicago, Maddie moved to Boston to pursue theological studies at Boston College’s School of Theology and Ministry, where she received her Master of Divinity in 2018. Prior to joining the theology department as a doctoral student, she taught theology and psychology and served as the Theology Department Chair at Mount Alvernia High School in Newton, MA. Maddie is a 2020 recipient of the Archdiocese of Boston’s Excellence in Education Award.
Maddie’s research engages issues of theological anthropology, particularly as they relate to embodied experiences of grace and limitation. She is also interested in temporality, disability theology, and the theology of Karl Rahner. Maddie has been published in The Journal of Disability and Religion, Philosophy & Theology, Political Theology, and Commonweal Magazine.
Apart from her doctoral studies and work at the Boisi Center, Maddie enjoys taking art classes, hosting dinner parties, and frequenting the Isabella Stewart Gardner museum.
Liam is a Senior Majoring in History and Theology with minors in Religion in American Public Life and Jewish Studies. He is looking forward to engaging with guest speakers throughout the year and hopes to further his education in Theology postgrad.
Joey Monti is an undergraduate at Boston College with a major in Psychology and minors in Religion and American Public Life and Philosophy. He is originally from Rocky Hill, CT, but has called the Heights home for the past three years. When he is not at the Boisi Center or studying, Joey enjoys service work, golfing, and trying new restaurants with friends. He plans on attending law school in the fall of 2025, but is looking forward to a wonderful senior year beforehand.
Boisi Center Board of Advisors
Nancy T. Ammerman
Nancy T. Ammerman is professor emerita at Boston University School of Theology, where she served as professor of sociology of religion (2003-2019), after having previously taught at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology (1984-95), and at Hartford Seminary’s Hartford Institute for Religion Research (1995-2003). At Boston University, she also served the College of Arts and Sciences as associate dean of the faculty for the social sciences (2015-18), as chair of the department of sociology (2007-13), and director of the graduate division of religious studies (2014-15).
Ammerman’s earliest work explored grassroots Fundamentalists and analyzed the organizational architecture of the 1980s conservative takeover of the Southern Baptist Convention. Her most recent research has focused on everyday lived religion across a wide religious and geographic spectrum, including working with Grace Davie (University of Exeter) to coordinate an international team of scholars to assess “Religions and Social Progress” for the International Panel on Social Progress.
Randall Balmer
Randall Balmer is the John Phillips Professor in Religion, the oldest ֱ chair at Dartmouth College. Before coming to Dartmouth in 2012, he was a professor of American religious history at Columbia University for twenty-seven years. In addition, Balmer has been a visiting professor at Princeton, Yale, Emory, and Northwestern universities and in the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. He was an adjunct professor of church history at Union Theological Seminary and, from 2004 to 2008, a visiting professor at Yale Divinity School.
An award-winning historian, Balmer is the author of more than a dozen books, includingGrant Us Courage: Travels along the Mainline of American ProtestantismandRedeemer: The Life of Jimmy Carter. His second book,Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory: A Journey into the Evangelical Subculture in America, now in its fifth edition, was made into a three-part documentary for PBS. Balmer was nominated for an Emmy for writing and hosting that series. He has published several reviews inWashington Post Book Worldand theNew York Times Book Review, and his commentaries on religion in America have appeared in newspapers across the country, including theLos Angeles Times,Washington Post,Des Moines Register,Minneapolis Star Tribune, and theNew York Times. In 2024, Balmer was the recipient of the Martin E. Marty Award for the Public Understanding of Religion from the American Academy of Religion.
Ben Birnbaum
A Brooklyn, New York, native, Ben Birnbaum holds a B.S. in Talmudic Law from Ner Israel Rabbinical College; a B.A. in psychology from Queens College of the City of New York; and an M.Ed. in counseling from the University of Vermont.
From 1978 to 2018, he was variously employed by Boston College as a writer, editor, executive director of marketing communications, and special assistant to the president. He was the editor ofBoston College Magazinefrom 1985 to 2018, and served for a decade as a member of the advisory board to the Center for the Church in the 21st Century.He is presently a freelance writer and editor. His work has appeared over the years in publications that includePenthouse, Tri-Quarterly Review, Boston Globe, the Atlantic, Harvard Divinity Review, Image, Moment, the Jewish Review of Books, Salon and Tablet Magazine. He is the writer or editor of four books of Boston College history, and is also editor of a collection of essaystitledTake Heart: Catholic Writers on Hope in Our Time(Crossroad, 2007). His writing has been anthologized inBest American Essays,Best Spiritual Writing, andBest Catholic Writing.
A father and grandfather, Birnbaum lives with his wife in Brookline, Massachusetts. A former chair of the board of the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities, he currently serves on the organization’s advisory committee. He was for 10 years an elected member of Brookline Town Meeting as well as an appointed member of the town’s Economic Development Advisory Board. He currently serves as an appointed member of the Town Advisory [Finance] Committee.
Susannah Heschel
Susannah Heschel is the Eli M. Black Distinguished Professor and chair of the Jewish Studies Program at Dartmouth College. Her scholarship focuses on the Wissenschaft des Judentums, and she has used feminist, postcolonial, and critical race theoretical models in interpreting Jewish-Christian relations. She is the author ofAbraham Geiger and the Jewish Jesus;The Aryan Jesus: Christian Theologians and the Bible in Nazi Germany; andJüdischer Islam: Islam und jüdisch-deutsche Selbstbestimmung. Her forthcoming book, written with Sarah Imhoff, isJewish Studies and the Woman Question. Also forthcoming isNew Paths: Essays in Honor of Professor Elliot Wolfson, co-edited with Glenn Dynner and Shaul Magid.With Umar Ryad she editedThe Muslim Reception of European Orientalism. She has also editedMoral Grandeur and Spiritual Audacity: Essays of Abraham Joshua Heschel, her father. A Guggenheim Fellow, she is also the recipient offive honorary doctorates from institutions in the United States, Canada, Germany, and Switzerland, and she has held research grants from the Carnegie Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the National Humanities Center, and the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin.
Daniel Joslyn-Siemiatkoski
Dr. Daniel Joslyn-Siemiatkoski is the Kraft Family Professor in the Theology Department and director of the Center for Christian-Jewish Learning at Boston College. He is a scholarof Jewish-Christian relations and comparative theology and the author ofThe More Torah, The More Life: A Christian Commentary on Mishnah AvotandChristian Memories of the Maccabean Martyrs.His research interests include Jewish-Christian relations ancient and modern, comparative theology, the intersection of anti-Judaism and racism, and Anglican theologies of religion.
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M. Cathleen Kaveny
Cathleen Kavenyjoined the Boston College faculty in January 2014 as the Darald and Juliet Libby Professor, the first role of its kind at Boston College, which has appointments in the theology department and Law School.
Kaveny has published over a hundred articles and essays in journals and books specializing in law, ethics, and medical ethics. She serves on the masthead ofCommonwealas a regular columnist. Her book,Law’s Virtues: Fostering Autonomy and Solidarity in American Society, was published by Georgetown University Press in 2012. It won a first place award in the category of “Faithful Citizenship” from the Catholic Press Association. Her most recent book is titledProphecy Without Contempt: Religious Discourse in the Public Square(Harvard University Press, 2016).
Kaveny has served on a number of editorial boards includingThe American Journal of Jurisprudence,The Journal of Religious Ethics, theJournal of Law and Religion, andThe Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics. She has been a visiting professor at Princeton University, Yale University and Georgetown University, and a visiting scholar at the University of Chicago’s Martin Marty Center. From 1995 until 2013 she taught law and theology at the University of Notre Dame, where she was a John P. Murphy Foundation Professor of Law.
She is also the president of the Society of Christian Ethics, the major professional society for scholars of Christian ethics and moral theology in North America. It meets annually in conjunction with the Society of Jewish Ethics and the Society for the Study of Muslim Ethics.
Ann McClenahan
Dr. Ann B. McClenahan is the former executive director of the Boston Theological Interreligious Consortium, an association of nine graduate schools of theology in the Boston area and (most recently) in Hartford.
Dr. McClenahan holds an A.B. degree from Brown University in American history and religious studies along with an M. Div. and Th.D. in religion and society from Harvard Divinity School. She returned to the study of religion and theology after a 20-year career in marketing and advertising, working with companies such as PepsiCo, Procter & Gamble, and The Washington Post.
Vincent Rougeau
Vincent D. Rougeau is the 33rd president of the College of the Holy Cross and is a passionate advocate for an inclusive, mission-driven education. Under his leadership, Holy Cross has advanced, its strategic vision for the future, with an early focus oninvesting in student, faculty and staff experience, strengthening shared governance with faculty, administration and the Board of Trustees, and deepening partnerships across the City of Worcester.He previously served as dean of the Boston College Law School and the inaugural director of the Forum on Racial Justice in America. A graduate of Brown University and Harvard Law School, Rougeau has written extensively on law and religions, and is a nationally respected expert in legal education and Catholic social thought. He and his wife, Robin Kornegay-Rougeau, M.D., are proud parents to Christian, Alexander, and Vincent (V.J.) Rougeau.
Sam Sawyer, S.J.
Sam Sawyer, S.J., is an executive editor and the director of digital strategy at America Media. He previously served as an associate pastor at Holy Trinity Church in Washington, DC, after being ordained a priest in 2014. During his theology studies, he helped to foundand served as one of its first editors. During his Jesuit formation, Fr. Sawyer studied philosophy at Loyola University Chicago and theology at Boston College; he also taught philosophy for two years at Loyola University Maryland. Before entering the Society of Jesus, he worked as a software engineer after graduating from Boston College and spending a year as a volunteer middle school teacher. He also assists on Sundays at the Church of St. FrancisXavierin Manhattan.
Mark Silk
Mark Silk is the former director of the Leonard Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life and professor of religion in public life at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut. Silk served as editor of the Boston Review as well as a reporter, editorial writer, and columnist for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. For 15 years he edited Religion in the News, a magazine published by the Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life that examined how the news media handle religious subject matter. Silk's publications include: Spiritual Politics: Religion and America Since World War II (New York: Simon and Schuster), Unsecular Media: Making News of Religion in America (Urbana: University of Illinois Press), and (with Andrew Walsh) One Nation Divisible: How Regional Religious Differences Shape American Politics (Lanham, MD, Rowman and Littlefield). Silk writes a weekly column for the Religion News Service. He received his A.B from Harvard College and earned his Ph.D. in medieval history from Harvard University.
Nancy S. Taylor
Nancy S. Taylor is the senior minister emeritus of Old South Church in Boston. Beforeretiring in 2022, she served churches for more than 40 years (in Maine, Connecticut, Idaho and Massachusetts). An ordainedminister in the United Church of Christ, she has been a civil and human rights activist. She is a co-founder of the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial and the Wassmuth Centerfor Human Rights Education. While in Idaho, she helped defeat two anti-gay ballot initiativesand to secure a minimum wage for Idaho farmworkers. In Massachusetts she was instrumental drafting the statute that makes clergy mandated reporters of suspected child abuse.She holds degrees from Yale Divinity School and Chicago Theological Seminary and is the recipientof three honorary degrees and multipleawards. She serves as an independent trustee of Impax Funds, on the Dean’s Advisory Council at Yale Divinity School, and as trustee emeritus of Franklin Cummings Tech.
Boisi Center Alumni
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2015-2018)
Consultant at Deloitte, and MBA Candidate at UCLA
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2006-2007)
Associate Professor of Theology at Spring Hill College
Max Blaisdell (Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2015-2016)
Julia Bloechl (Undergraduate Research Fellow, 2017-18, 2019-2020)
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, Fall 2008)
Vice President at Jefferies, New York
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, Spring 2014)
Associate at Goldman Sachs, New York
Patricia M.Y. Chang (Assistant Director, 2000-2005)
Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at Stanford University
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2004)
Organization Development & Internal Executive Coach at Google Inc., California
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2007-2008)
Special Assistant to the Vice President of Mission and Ministry & Adjunct Lecturer in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies, Georgetown University
(Web Specialist, 2010-2011)
Sr. Product Manager at Etsy
Jay Deely (Graduate Research Assistant, 2000-2001)
Thomas DeNardo (Graduate Research Assistant, 2000-2006)
Securities Lending at State Street Corporation
Ryan Duffy (Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2016-17)
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2013)
Vice Principal at Catholic Memorial School
Mary Elliot (Graduate Research Assistant, 2018-2019)
Assistant Director, Lonergan Center, Boston College
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2015-2016)
Stealth Startup, New York
Matthew Farnum(Undergraduate Research Assistant, Summer 2014)
Legal Administrative Assistant at Clark+Elbing LLP
(Interim Assistant Director, 2005-2006)
Associate Vice President for Strategic Planning and Special Initiatives and Dean of the Honors College, Boise State University
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2012-2013; Web Specialist, 2011-2012)
Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Virginia
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2016-2017)
Assistant director, Career Exploration, St. Lawrence University
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2014-2015)
Ph.D. student in Judaic Studies at Yale University
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2009-2010)
Assistant Director, Leadership Giving at Boston College
Zoe Greenwood (Undergraduate Research Fellow, 2019-2020)
Suzanne Hevelone (Graduate Research Assistant, 2007-2009, and Program Coordinator, 2015-2017)
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2000-2002)
Professor of Theology at Boston College
Jack Lee Hill (Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2013-14)
Yael Levin Hungerford (Graduate Research Assistant, 2014-2015)
Program Director, Jewish Culture & Survival, The Snider Foundation
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2011-2012)
Graduate student in Public Health at Columbia University
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2019-2023) Assistant Professor of Theology, Mount Mary University
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2011-2013)
Local Market Specialist at Porch in Seattle, Washington
Karina Kavanagh (Undergraduate Research Fellow, 2021-2022)
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2014-2015)
Associate at Blue Star Strategies, Washington, DC
Kim Kosman (Graduate Research Assistant, 1999-2000)
Susan Kourtis (Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2017-2018)
Administrative Associate, Division of Critical Care Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2009)
Land Project Manager at Partners In Building
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2000-2002)
Associate Professor of Philosophy at Quinnipiac University
Kyle Logan (Graduate Research Assistant, 2015-2016)
Freelance Writer, Pop Culture
(Web Specialist, 2007-2008)
General Manager, Zara
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2010-2011)
Legal Fellow at Human Rights FirstLaw Practice, New York, New York
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2010-2011)
Case Manager and Behavioral Health Associate with Catholic Community Services in Juneau, Alaska
Nathan McGuire (Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2015-2016)
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2008-2009)
Vice President of Marketing at BlueConic, Boston
Jorge Mejía (Undergraduate Research Fellow, 2017-2019)
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, Fall 2013)
Retail Representative at Hana Tropicals
Therese Murphy (Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2013-2014)
Director of Communications for The Irish American Partnership
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2001-2002)
Special Assistant for Communications and Research in the Office of the President at Princeton University.
Jack Nuelle (Graduate Research Assistant, 2017-2018 &Interim Assistant to the Director, 2018-2019)
Program Manager for the Faculty Center for Ignatian Pedagogy, Loyola University Chicago
(Undergraduate Research Fellow, 2018-2020)
Executive Search and Assessment Professional, Russell Reynolds Associates, Dallas, Texas
Emily O'Neil (Undergraduate Research Fellow, 2021-2022)
Erik Owens(Assistant/Associate Director, 2006-2018)
Associate Professor of the Practice of Theology and Director of the International Studies Program at Boston College
Amelia Parker (Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2016-2017)
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2009-2010)
Judicial Law Clerk, United States District Court for The Southern District of Florida, Miami
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2012-2014)
Associate at GR Japan K.K.
Mark Potter (Graduate Research Assistant, 2003)
Chair and teacher in the Religion Department at Newton Country Day School
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2012-2013)
Senior Consultant at Deloitte, Boston, Massachusetts
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2009-2010)
International economic development specialist, London, United Kingdom
Brenna R. Strauss (Graduate Research Assistant, 2010-2012)
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2006-2007)
Professor of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of San Diego
(Undergraduate Research Assistant, Summer 2012)
Consultant for Deloitte
(Graduate Research Assistant, 2007-2008)
Director of Guidehouse, Boston
Sylvia Waghorne (Undergraduate Research Assistant, 2017)
Brian Ward (Undergraduate Research Fellow, 2018-2019)
Alan Wolfe (Director, 1999 - 2016)
ProfessorDaniel Joslyn-Siemiatkoski
Theology Department
Professor Elizabeth Prodromou
International Studies Program