The Elliott Allen Institute for Theology and Ecology

Named after Fr. Elliott Bernard Allen (1921-1981), who was the founding Dean of Faculty of Theology at the University of St. Michaelā€™s College, the Elliott Allen Institute for Theology and Ecology was created in 1991 in response to the growing environmental crisis.

The instituteā€™s first Director, Fr. Stephen Dunn, C.P., through the inspiration of the work of cultural historian Fr. Thomas Berry (1914-2009), developed a certificate program that permitted students at the Toronto School of Theology to acquire a specialization in theology and ecology while they concurrently completed a graduate degree in theology.

Since 1991, students have also been able to complete master and doctoral level theses in eco-theology (including eco-spirituality, eco-feminism, and eco-ethics) as well as interdisciplinary theses involving eco-theologyā€”a pioneering accomplishment of the Elliott Allen Institute.

In addition to courses that enable students to explore the relationships between theology and ecology on a deeper level, the Institute has hosted public lectures, bringing experts in a variety of fields into dialogue with theologians so that issues pertaining to the ecological challenges might be creatively explored.

Lectures have been delivered by: Thomas Berry, Brian Swimme, Mary Evelyn Tucker, John Grim, Rosemary Radford Reuther, Heather Eaton, Anne Marie Dalton, Christopher Key Chapple, Chung Hyun Kyung, Theodore Roszak, Stephen Bede Scharper, Edmund Oā€™Sullivan, John Haught, Dieter Hessel, Dorothy Golden Rosenberg, and Celia Deane-Drummond, among others.

After Fr. Dunnā€™s retirement in 2001, Dr. Dennis Oā€™Hara took over as the Instituteā€™s Director. Dr. Hilda Koster is the third Director to lead the Institute. She took up her duties in July 2021.

Since its inception, the Elliott Allen Institute has enjoyed a close relationship with the Passionists of Canada, especially at the former the Holy Cross Centre for Ecology and Spirituality that they owned for many years at Port Burwell, (Ontario) as well as the Sisters of the Congregation of St. Joseph, especially at their Villa St. Joseph Ecology and Spirituality Centre in Cobourg, Ontario.

Through these partnerships, the work of the Institute has been enlarged and enhanced. The student members of the Institute have expanded their classroom education to the more natural settings of these retreat centers. Today, this collaboration continues atĀ St. Gabrielā€™s Passionist ParishĀ in Toronto through the monthly Eco-Sabbath gatherings and the annual Advent-Solstice Evening of Reflection as well as an annual course in eco-praxis hosted atĀ Villa St. Joseph Ecology and Spirituality CentreĀ in Cobourg.

In 2012Ā a brief video about the mission and history of Elliott AllenĀ was made, which includes unique archival material of a lecture by Fr. Thomas Berry.

The task of ecological theology is to articulate an earth-honoring faith that draws together scientific knowledge with the wisdom of religious cosmologies. Because ecological destruction affects poor and marginalized communities differently, the Elliott Allen Institute foregrounds an integrated approach to ecological theology that addresses the structural, intersecting injustices in our society and promotes integral human development and environmental justice.

In collaboration with the other member schools of the Toronto School of Theology (TST) as well as the School of the Environment and the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto, the Elliott Allen Institute offers a Certificate program for Master and PhD students seeking to specialize in Theology and Ecology.

The Institute also offers a Diploma in Theology and Ecology as a continuing education program. The Institute regularly organizes webinars, conferences and lectures aimed at both academic and non-academic audiences.

Hilda P. Koster

Director, EAITE