06/17/2025
SAVE THE DATE!
The Willson Lectures at Oklahoma City University will be held on Thursday, October 9, 2025 at 1 p.m., 2:30 p.m., and 7 p.m. on campus in the W. Angie Smith Chapel. This year we are pleased to announce that our lecturer is Rev. Dr. Rebecca Copeland from Boston University School of Theology. Dr. Copeland will be talking about her most recent book (Entangled Being) and her current project (Replanting the Uprooted).
Rev. Dr. Becky Copeland serves as Associate Professor of Theology and the Director of the Faith and Ecological Justice Program at Boston University School of Theology, Affiliated Faculty with the Boston University Institute for Global Sustainability, and a provisional deacon with the Virginia Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. Her research and teaching engage theology, ethics, and biblical studies, exploring the ways in which classical Christian texts and doctrine can be reconstructed considering what we learn about the world through environmental studies.
Dr. Copeland has published two books, numerous articles in biblical studies and theology, and received prestigious fellowships and grants to support her work. Her first two books, Created Being: Expanding Creedal Christology (Baylor, 2020) and Entangled Being: Unoriginal Sin and Wicked Problems (Baylor, 2024), use a relational lens to reconsider Christian understandings of the incarnation, sin, and repentance. Her current book project, Replanting the Uprooted: A Social-Ecological Approach to the Agricultural Parables, re-examines parables in the Synoptic Gospels in light of the concrete agricultural practices in the early Roman empire.
Dr. Copeland was named the 2023-2024 Boston University School of Theology Exemplary Teacher of the Year (awarded by the General Board of Higher Education and Ministry, UMC) and received the Boston University School of Theology Teaching Excellence Award (awarded by the Class of 2024). She has served in various community and church roles, including as a deacon for Wesley UMC in Worcester, and a member of the Worcester Congregations for Climate and Environmental Justice, the Methodist Higher Education Environmental and Social Responsibility Initiative, and the United Methodist Creation Care Vocations Group.