Category Archives: Church

Family: Graduation, 2 Certificates, and a Funeral

Jessica Dickinson Goodman MSFS Georgetown graduation with family, May 2026
Jessica Dickinson Goodman MSFS Georgetown graduation with family, May 2026

I have not been keeping up on events on KatysBlog so this post will cover some ground. John and Paul and I recently returned from a week in Virginia for Jessica‘s first graduation from Georgetown University, with a Master of Science – Foreign Service (MSFS graduate degree). She finishes her second Master’s in December. Jessica is also newly a Mom our granddaughter Joanne who is thriving with her big brother 3-year-old Alex and Dad, Matthew. We are all very proud of Jessica (and having fun with our beloved grandbabies)!

Jessica John Katy Paul Georgetown MSFS graduation
Jessica, John, Katy, & Paul at Georgetown MSFS graduation

My father, Wade Dickinson, and his brother Wayne were business and innovation partners for fifty years, during which time they were granted more than fifty U.S. patents and taught entrepreneurship for 16 years at U.C. Berkeley Engineering. My father passed in 2011 and my Uncle Wayne passed late last year. Wayne’s memorial service was last weekend in San Rafael, California. It was a touching opportunity to tell stories and reconnect with my brother Mark and cousins Eric and Leslie Dickinson.

Mark, Katy, Leslie, Eric Dickinson, Wayne Dickinson Memorial Service, 23 May 2026
Mark, Katy, Leslie, Eric Dickinson, Wayne Dickinson Memorial Service, 23 May 2026
Wayne Dickinson Memorial Service, 1935-2025
Wayne Dickinson Memorial Service, 1935-2025

I posted recently about finishing the Graduate Theological Union‘s Certificate in Islamic Studies. I also just completed the Clinton Global Initiative’s Empowering Faith Leaders Program, hosted at the GTU. It was an interesting class in how substance addiction works in individual lives and the community. I now have a TechWomen certificate signed by Secretary Hillary Clinton and this new certificate signed by President Bill Clinton. It will be strange not to be taking grad school classes for a while!

Clinton Global Initiative, Faith Leaders certificate, 5 May 2026
Clinton Global Initiative, Faith Leaders certificate, 5 May 2026
Clinton Global Initiative, Faith Leaders cohort, 5 May 2026
Clinton Global Initiative, Faith Leaders cohort, 5 May 2026
Islamic Studies Books, May 2026
Islamic Studies Books, May 2026

Images Copyright 2026 by Katy Dickinson, If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysbloghome page).


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Yehuda Amichai and Suspicion

Yehuda Amichai poetry books

As part of my Islamic Studies certificate, in the Spring 2025 term I took a Graduate Theological Union (GTU) class called, “Literary Analysis of Islamic and Jewish Texts.” I was fascinated by the ancient Islamic literature we studied, particularly Attar‘s biography of the famous Sufi woman Rabi’a (also called Rabia Basri and Rābiʼa al-ʼAdawiyya al-Qaysiyya, 716-801 CE) in his Memorial of the Friends of God; however, I saw such a strong connection between battlefield soldiers like the modern Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai and incarcerated people that I chose that as my topic. Here is my paper.

Battlefield soldiers and incarcerated people are both groups who may find suspicion and watchfulness of their surroundings help them to survive in a fast-changing and dangerous world. In the paper I included three feedback quotes from men in reentry or who are still incarcerated about my Transforming Literature of the Bible class and its use of poetry. I gave a copy of the paper to the Elmwood Jail class this week and am curious to hear what they think. Here are the quotes,

“Poetry has helped me to express myself in a unique way. When I try to do poetry by sitting down and thinking about it, I think it is not as authentic as a spontaneous one. For example if I’m laying in bed and I’m thinking about something I jump out of bed and just start writing. Those are the best poems I have written.”

“I read lots of poetry in the class. Every poetry that I read had positive stories that taught me to be a better person even when I was in jail. It taught me to be strong in my faith and that everything is possible when you have faith to follow. No matter what we go through, everything is going to be OK.”

“The Brilliant poetry that is introduced to us in relation to the topics of study, are everything from heart felt amazement, shockingly heroic, Educationally sound, & a way to give multiple perspectives & ways of understanding. Artist & Poets…Bring understanding and awe, I’ve called home at times in excitement.”

Image (c) Copyright 2025 by Katy Dickinson. If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysblog home page).

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Fannie Lou Hamer as a Martyr

As part of my Islamic Studies certificate, in the Spring 2025 term I took a Graduate Theological Union (GTU) class called, “Martyrdom and Afterlife in the Qur’ān,” for which I gave a Presentation about notable American civil rights leader Fannie Lou Hamer. Our inspiring GTU professor was Dr. Mahjabeen Dhala. Part of my presentation explored what it meant for Hamer to be a martyr since martyrdom was a focus of our class discussions. I was happy to see a print of Fannie Lou Hamer decorating the offices of the Sentencing Project when I went to visit last week in Washington DC. Here is my Presentation.

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Heaven in the Qur’ān and Christian Testament

Elijah Taken Up in a Chariot of Fire, by Giuseppe Angeli, c. 1740.*

As part of my Islamic Studies certificate, I took a Graduate Theological Union (GTU) class in the Spring 2025 term called, “Martyrdom and Afterlife in the Qur’ān,” for which my final paper was, “Heaven in the Qur’ān and Christian Testament.” Our inspiring professor was Dr. Mahjabeen Dhala who presented us with a challenging reading list and led our class of Muslims, Christians, and Baháʼís in a series of discussions about death, the afterlife, martyrdom, and the end of days. I have studied with Dr. Dhala before and this class confirmed that she is one of the best teachers at the GTU.

I took the opportunity of the twenty-eight page final paper to explore a subject that I have been thinking about. Here is my introductory paragraph,

“In both Christianity and Islam, heaven exists and has always existed but there are different beliefs on how the living can engage with it. This paper provides an overview of some of these Abrahamic religions’s relationships with heaven, highlighting two key dissimilarities. The scope is intentionally constrained in addressing this vast and complex topic. I am not attempting to be comprehensive or to present all variants of belief. I will not discuss the specifics of physical resurrection, interim or last judgements, the Christian Jesus versus the Muslim Jesus (ʿĪsā ibn Maryam), or a variety of other tempting and fascinating topics. My comparisons will include the physicality of heaven, how some artists have envisioned how heaven looks, engaging with heaven during life, orthodox beliefs about heaven, when heaven opens, and mystical or heavenly cities. Writing this paper has become a journey of discovery as much as a research project. I keep finding new materials and points of view on eschatology and the end times. The Oxford Handbook of Systematic Theology offers this traditional definition, “eschatology comprised the ‘four last things’ that Christian faith expects to be the destiny of humans at the end of time: resurrection, last judgement, heaven, and hell.” Comparative eschatology is a big subject but considering the more limited question of what Islam and Christianity have to say about heaven seems possible in the space of a relatively short paper.”

You can read the whole paper here.

*This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author’s life plus 100 years or fewer.

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Transforming Literature of the Bible in Jail

Katy Dickinson, Georgetown Library, June 2025

3 June 2025 Update – ProQuest just made my doctoral dissertation available! ProQuest # 31845163, full search: “Dickinson, Katy. Berkeley School of Theology ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2025. 31845163” – Available online (and soon in paper!) through the GTU Library.

Part of earning a Berkeley School of Theology (BST) doctorate is writing a dissertation or thesis. Mine is titled Transforming Literature of the Bible in Jail. It is 143 pages long, based on a 300 page project (a rewrite of the “Transforming Literature of the Bible,” TLB, class materials I have used as a jail Chaplain since 2018). TLB was originally developed in 1980-2008 by the Rev. Canon William Barnwell. Over twenty pages of my dissertation is the References & Bibliography section, that may be the most helpful part for future scholars.

Once a dissertation is written, it must be reviewed and defended, prepared and approved for publication, and submitted to ProQuest, the company that makes dissertations available to libraries worldwide. This complex writing, approval, and quality management process takes time. At the moment, my dissertation has been approved by BST and submitted to ProQuest. In a month or so, it will be available for public reading, both on the web and in a printed and bound book shelved in the Graduate Theological Union Library.

Here is my dissertation abstract,

Abstract

The Transforming Literature of the Bible scripture study and theological​ reflection program (TLB) provides faith-based study materials tailored to county jail​ inmate interests and challenges in a welcoming setting with the intention of reducing​ some of their disadvantages and supporting them in their goal to stay out of jail in the​ future. This project revised the 2018 TLB with a focus on supporting three groups of​ particularly disadvantaged inmates. The groups are those who are primarily-Spanish​ language speakers (mostly Latinx inmates who make up the majority in Santa Clara​ County, California), those who have reading difficulties, and those with mental health​ challenges. The high-level results of this project are, the TLB page count was cut in half,​ an image was added to each session (or chapter) with a process for theological reflection​ using that image as a focus, and a Spanish language translation of the TLB was​ developed and presented weekly. Mental health topics are presented in several TLB​ sessions in a way intended to encourage discussion​ without embarrassment. In response​ to a series of surveys of inmates and seminar observers in 2023–2024, 99% rated TLB as​ Excellent and overall satisfaction and 98% of inmates said that they would recommend​ the class. 92% of inmates said that it was important that TLB be presented in both​ English and Spanish and 98% said that the machine translations of TLB were of high​ quality and readability. This dissertation​ presents information on the TLB project and its​ methodology, background on incarceration, and an analysis of the theological and​ biblical context for the TLB and this project, with detailed research results.

BST and ProQuest send me emails giving publication status updates (basically saying, “please be patient – there is a process”).

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It’s Doctor

I was graduated with my Doctor of Ministry degree from the Graduate Theological Union‘s Berkeley School of Theology on 17 May 2025 – Hooray! I was surprised and honored at the graduation to be awarded BST’s Keith A. Russell Award for Prophetic Leadership in Community Ministry. My husband John, brothers Mark and Peter my Sister-in-Law Julie, daughter Jessica, Son-in-Law Matthew, grandson Alex, Son Paul, and friends Laura and Barbara were able to join the celebrations. It was a delight to have a cheering team. We graduates enjoyed taking pictures with our advisors and each other (especially the BST Student Council for which I have been the Vice Moderator for the last two years). I am continuing to take classes with GTU’s Center for Islamic Studies.

Images (c) Copyright 2025 by Katy Dickinson. If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysblog home page).

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Hope in Spiritual Care

I am honored to be one of the panelists for tomorrow’s “Hope in Spiritual Care” virtual event hosted by the Berkeley School of Theology. You can still register if you are interested!

To prepare for the panel, I asked my fellow chaplains in the Correctional Institutions Chaplaincy staff meeting today how they gave hope in a complex world to the county jail inmates while offering pastoral care, during worship, or scripture study. Here is some of what the chaplains said:

  • Encourage writing and reflection
  • Give feedback to let them know they are heard
  • Listen to their requests and offer choices when possible (what music to play during worship? what color paper?)
  • Encourage immediately if possible to identify growth and progress
  • Support them in speaking about gratitude and what is good in the present moment
  • Encourage trust in the divine message today to build future hope
  • When opportune, give messages of God’s love: each of us is noticed and important to God
  • Encourage art and creative expression
  • Help inmates to manage realistic expectations of the justice process
  • Even when things go badly, say God is with them and the chaplains will be there to listen
  • Be in the role of offering service rather than advice on how to fix things

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