ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ provost's book wins Aldersgate Prize
In July, Noah Toly began his tenure as ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ provost. Two months later, his book (Oxford University Press) received the .
āThe Aldersgate Prize is one that Iāve followed with interest every year since its inception, not because I thought any of my books would ever be nominated, but because of the ideals it seeks to honor,ā said Toly.
Broadening understanding
Since 2013, the John Wesley Honors College at Indiana Wesleyan University has annually awarded the Aldersgate Prize. The prize celebrates the outstanding achievement of an author whose scholarship challenges reductionistic trends in academia by yielding a broadly integrative analysis of lifeās complexities and by shedding fresh light on ultimate questions that can enrich Christian conceptions of human flourishing.
āI can hardly imagine a more apt description of my aims in Christian scholarship,ā said Toly. āThe books honored by the prize over its first eight years have been excellent contributions written by distinguished scholars and published by outstanding presses. Iāve learned a lot from them, but I never expected one of my books to be among them, so Iām deeply honored by the selection committeeās choice.ā
And the committee had a fair amount of work to choose from having reviewed more than 70 nominations before .
Embracing challenges, discovering paths forward
āSo much of modern environmental thought and global environmental governance is preoccupied with the need to give up, undermine, destroy, or forego one or more goods in order to possess or secure one or more other goods. Want clean water, clean air, and a biodiverse, climate stable future? I do. But hereās the key: Along the way, weāll have to give up some other non-trivial goods in order to get there,ā said Toly as he reflected on his latest book.
āOur usual responses to this reality are terribly dysfunctional. We might deny that these tradeoffs exist. We might be paralyzed by them, unwilling to choose a course of action that involves giving up one good or another. We might throw up our hands and say, āIf Iām giving up or destroying something good one way or another, then nothing mattersā or āIf all of my options involve giving up something good, then how can I even know right from wrong.ā But the Christian tradition gives us better options than those.ā
So Toly wrestles with all of these realities in his book, drawing on theological ethics to both name this challenge and also develop a Christian response to it.
Drawing on experience
Toly, who now serves as provost for ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„, is also a scholar of urban studies, politics, and international relations. He is a non-resident senior fellow for Global Cities at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and has taught on cities and urbanism in the Free University of Berlinās Center for Global Politics. He has served as senior fellow at the University of Chicagoās Martin Marty Center for the Public Understanding of Religion and as associate fellow at the University of Virginiaās Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. Toly also serves on the Advisory Council of Together Chicago, as well as the steering committee of the Duke Divinity School Traditioned Innovation Initiative.
Toly will accept the Aldersgate Prize on October 20, 2021, when heās on the campus of Indiana Wesleyan University to deliver an address about his book as part of the Presidentās Author Series.