Kavanagh Lecture with Teresa Berger

Event time: 
Tuesday, October 7, 2025 - 2:45pm to 3:45pm
Location: 
Miller Hall (PROS406) See map
406 Prospect Street
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

This year’s annual Kavanagh Lecture, “All Creation Sings Your Praises: Tracing a Liturgical Motif, in the Face of Ecological Devastation,” will be given by Teresa Berger, Professor Emerita of Liturgical Studies and the Thomas E. Golden Jr. Professor Emerita of Catholic Theology at the Yale Institute of Sacred Music and Yale Divinity School.

The event is sponsored by the Kavanagh Lecture series and Liturgy Symposium series. The Kavanagh Lecture, presented by the Yale Institute of Sacred Music, is named for the late Professor Emeritus of Liturgics Aidan J. Kavanagh O.S.B., and given in conjunction with Convocation Week at Yale Divinity School.

This presentation focuses on an underappreciated liturgical motif, namely that all creation sings. Often thought of as poetic exaggeration or as merely metaphoric, the motif is an ancient one. From the claim that morning stars broke into song at the dawn of time (Job 38:7) to today’s creation-attuned new hymns, the conviction that all creation sings has endured in the Christian tradition. The poetic nature of hymnody, in which this conviction is most prominently embedded, shielded this particular motif from more anthropocentric tendencies that begin to manifest in liturgical texts with the onset of modernity. Today, in an intriguing twist, the ancient motif also aligns with newly emerging scientific insights. Whether it is the recognition that other-than-human creatures communicate through sound (e.g., “whale song”) or NASA’s project to “sonify” the universe (for human ears, that is), lines of inquiry have opened that enable a re-reading of this ancient motif, in the face of unprecedented ecological devastation.

Free and open to the public.

This event will be livestreamed.

Open to: 
General Public