Students posing for photo near Trinity College building

2025 Summer Courses

 

🌞Thinking of taking a course in the summer session?

Trinity has some great options to consider!

MDiv online students may use these courses to achieve in-person learning and connect more directly to the Trinity College and TST community.

If you live outside of Toronto and want to enrol in the summer intensive courses, we offer accommodations—up to five rooms are available on campus. The cost will be $55 per night, plus HST. For details, please contact the Faculty Administrator Sydney Yeung at sydney.yeung@utoronto.ca


Mystical Traditions and the Sacred Journey of Transformation – Narrative, Ritual, and Entheogens

TRP3261H
Instructor:
Geoffrey Ready

Format: In-person
Schedule: May 3, 10, 17, 24 & June 7, 21, 2025
Time: 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Location: Trinity College
 
αν πεθάνεις πριν πεθάνεις, δεν θα πεθάνεις όταν πεθάνεις
If you die before you die, you won’t die when you die.
(Inscription over a door at Saint Paul’s monastery on Mount Athos, Greece)
 

This course presents the mystical traditions of Christianity with reference to other faith practices as the experience of a sacred journey of transformation according to the narrative pattern of life, death, and resurrection (or, in Richard Rohr’s contemporary expression, “order, disorder, and reorder”). As we examine the rich history of Christian mystical experience and parallels within other ancient spiritual traditions, we will recognise the special role of entheogens, sacred fungus and plant medicines, alongside other practices, in facilitating or deepening transcendent experience. We will examine the potential role of entheogens in mystical encounters today, mindful of both ethical considerations and diverse perspectives on their usage. Interdisciplinary reflection will draw upon research in human consciousness, psychology, anthropology, comparative mysticism, medicine, and spiritual care, and invited guest speakers from different contexts, including indigenous spiritual leaders and clinical researchers studying the benefits of psychedelic therapy (including for addiction, trauma, and end-of-life care), will assist students as future faith leaders and spiritual care providers to develop a holistic and coherent response to the current psychedelic revival. We will emphasise harm reduction and overall well-being and uphold sacred narrative, ritual, and spiritual disciplines as essential elements of the ‘set and setting’ for the healthy and transformative use of entheogens. Structured around the key concepts, practices, and texts of the mystical tradition, as well as the lives and teachings of influential mystics within Christianity and beyond, the course provides the opportunity to explore the ongoing invitation of the sacred journey of transformation – both with and without entheogenic aids – for us to embrace change, navigate challenges, accept inner healing, experience personal and spiritual growth, and establish a more profound and interdependent connection with the divine, with others, and all creation.

Please note that this course neither condones nor encourages illicit or unsafe behaviour.


Spirituality: The Love of Learning and the Desire for God

Course code pending! For registration, please contact the Faculty Administrator Sydney Yeung at sydney.yeung@utoronto.ca
Instructor: Sister Connie Gefvert
Format: In-person
Schedule: May 12-16, 2025
Time: 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Location: St. John’s Convent, 233 Cummer Avenue, North York, ON M2M 2E8 (free parking or near Finch subway station)
The love of learning and the desire for God have been at the heart of English worship since Augustine brought the Rule of St. Benedict to Canterbury, England, in 597 CE. Benedict lived in a time much like our own, when the Roman Empire was disintegrating when the most vulnerable in society were the target of the rich and powerful, and when learning and culture were threatened along with political and social stability. How can the Rule of Benedict be a guidebook for parish and community life in a time when so many of our churches are in serious decline, where parishes are being closed or combined? How can Benedictine/Anglican spirituality help strengthen parish life as centres of prayer, learning, community and service? How can parish churches welcome seekers who have a deep and mostly unarticulated desire for God but are not able to connect their longing with what they normally see in a parish church? The course will seek answers to these questions through a study of Leclercq’s book Because the Rule of Benedict has so deeply shaped Anglican culture.

Biblical Studies: The Gospel of Mark

TRB3653H
Instructor:
  Ann Jervis
Format: In-person
Schedule: May 26-30, 2025
Time: 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Location: Trinity College

 

An opportunity to read the entire Gospel of Mark communally. The course will provide space for historical, literary and theological questions. 

Church Management: Nuts and Bolts of Modern Congregational Administration

TRP2721H
Instructor:  Walter Deller
Format: In-person and online
Schedule: June 5-6,19-20
Time: 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Location: Trinity College

 

This course will explore the essential role of clergy in offering oversight and service to key aspects of the unfolding of congregational life. What is the relationship between this practical work of the laity, theology, and congregational health? How can clergy offer intelligent oversight and service to lay leadership without interfering and micromanaging? In dialogue and discussion with expert practitioners, we will focus on the basic skills and awareness necessary for effective leadership in the areas of congregational administration, including finances and budgeting, property and buildings, stewardship, volunteer management and personnel supervision and feedback, and organizing the weekly Sunday liturgy. Though the course will draw on Anglican polity and examples, the issues addressed by the course are faced in various forms by congregational leaders across denominations.