
July Summer Series: Fissures of Hope
July Summer Series at The Riverside Church
Fissures of Hope
Sundays | July 13, 20, 27 | 9:30 AM
In Room 20T & Online via Livestream
Join us for a powerful three-part summer series exploring how hope persists and emerges in the cracks of despair, injustice, and political uncertainty. Fissures of Hope brings together theological reflection and literary insight to help us imagine new possibilities in troubled times.
Session 1 – July 13
Valley of the Dry Bones: The Possibility of Hope in Impossible Times
With Dr. Andrea C. White & Ayana Mathis
Session 2 – July 20
Hope Against Hope: Resurrection Hope and Divine Promise
With Dr. Andrea C. White
Session 3 – July 27
The World’s Fast Burn: Hope in the Face of Political Upheaval
With Ayana Mathis
About the Presenters
Dr. Andrea C. White is Associate Professor of Theology and Culture at Union Theological Seminary, an ordained American Baptist minister, and the Theologian-in-Residence at The Riverside Church. Her teaching and research fashion a nexus between womanist theology, Black critical theory, and phenomenology. A sought-after preacher, scholar, and speaker, Dr. White has lectured across the U.S. and internationally on issues of race, gender, and faith. She has published extensively, including contributions to AAR’s Reflections, Theology Today, and edited volumes on womanist and global theologies. Dr. White has taught and preached many times at Riverside, and she and her husband, The Rev. Richard Landers, are members at Riverside, as are their children, Mara and Chloe Landers, who have shared their gifts as violinists and liturgists in worship.
Ayana Mathis is the author of The Twelve Tribes of Hattie and most recently, The Unsettled (available in our Riverside Bookstore), which was the inaugural winner of McSweeney’s Gabe Hudson Prize and a finalist for the Hurston/Wright Foundation’s Legacy Award. The book was named a New York Times and Washington Post Notable Book of 2023 and included in year-end best lists from The New Yorker, Publisher’s Weekly, Oprah Daily, and Kirkus Reviews. Mathis received her MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and went on to become the first African-American woman to serve as an Assistant Professor in that program. She currently teaches in the MFA Program at Hunter College. Deeply invested in the intersections of theology and literature, Mathis is a candidate for the Master of Arts in Religion with a concentration in Theology at Union Theological Seminary. Her current work reflects a growing focus on theology of the literary imagination, exploring how spiritual narratives are shaped—and reshaped—through storytelling and lived experience.