Great Books Symposium
Homer’s Iliad

Achilles storms off in a huff: Agamemnon has deprived him of his war prize. The ensuing tensions and conflicts of Homer's Iliad are wrapped up in the question of how conflict impacts the way we think about what is ultimately valuable. How did the Greeks think about what was valuable and what does the Iliad have [...]

October 14: Julius Caesar

Online Zoom Oregon (PST)

Once Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon and took the city of Rome, he was on top of the world--for a time. But his monarchical approach to leadership made the Senate increasingly uncomfortable and led ultimately to his bloody demise on the Senate floor. In this Great Books Symposium, we will discuss Shakespeare's history play [...]

$10.00

November 4: The Hiding Place (CANCELLED)

Online Zoom OR

CANCELLED Dutch watchmaker Corrie Ten Boom and her family are enjoying a century of business in Haarlem in the 1930s. Yet, every fiber of her faith and character will be tested as the Nazis invade Holland and begin to round up the Jews for deportation. Before long, she finds herself at the center of [...]

$10.00

December 2:
Plato’s Crito

Online Zoom OR

Socrates is in prison waiting for his death sentence to be carried out. His friend, Crito, hatches a plan to help him escape, but Socrates hesitates. The question we will investigate in the Great Book Symposium is this: Why? A webinar for K-12 teachers in the private school, the public school, and the [...]

$10.00

January 6:
Mere Christianity

C. S. Lewis endeavored to explain the essence of Christianity to a general audience through a series of radio broadcasts, an endeavor which resulted in Mere Christianity. Though Lewis discusses questions and issues familiar to most Christians, he appeals frequently to every person’s common experience–rather than theological proofs–to explain the faith. Together, we will [...]

$10.00