| School Counseling Professor Gives Keynote Address at Oxford Conference DURING A 2002 SABBATICAL, Christopher Sink, 
                    professor of school counseling and psychology
                    at ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ, was “introduced” 
                    to 20th-century philosopher John Macmurray. Fast-forward to 
                    October 2005. That’s when Sink flew 4,800 miles from 
                    Seattle to address the annual conference of the John Macmurray 
                    Fellowship at Oxford University. While in England on sabbatical, Sink first learned of Macmurray 
                    from Michael Fielding,
                    professor of education at the University of Sussex. Soon after, 
                    Sink began to research the philosopher’s writings, and 
                    he realized that Macmurray’s philosophy had a lot to 
                    contribute to his own area of expertise: counseling
                    and building community in schools.
                    “I’d had theoretical underpinnings to my work, 
                    but with Macmurray I also gained philosophical
                    underpinnings consistent with my Christian faith,” says 
                    Sink. “Macmurray filled in the gaps for me.” A Scotsman born in 1891, Macmurray was a Christian and a 
                    philosopher who emphasized the union of philosophical theory 
                    with real-world action. His best-known works were Interpreting 
                    the Universe (1933) and Religion, Art and Science 
                    (1961). Mostly forgotten by the time he died in 1976, interest 
                    in his work was reawakened, in part, after it became known 
                    that his writing had influenced a young Tony Blair, now British 
                    prime minister. In 1993, the John Macmurray Fellowship began, bringing together 
                    theologians, philosophers,
                    educators, and others. This year, when organizers learned 
                    of Sink’s take on Macmurray’s
                    work, they invited him to give one of two keynote addresses 
                    at the annual conference. Sink says he is not an expert on Macmurray,
                    but he saw that the philosopher’s work addresses what 
                    educators say is often missing from schools: a sense of community. 
                    He also recognized that Macmurray’s ideas were built 
                    on a foundation of the teachings of Jesus.
                    So when asked to participate in the conference,
                    Sink agreed, and on October 29, he delivered the lecture, 
                    “Macmurray’s Spirituality
                    and School Counseling.” Afterward, conference participants engaged in a lively debate. 
                    “This provided me an opportunity
                    to talk about faith in an open forum,”
                    he says. “Facing Oxford dons and other notable Macmurray 
                    scholars was academically and personally
                    challenging, but the opportunity allowed me to further refine 
                    my thinking in this area.” Back to the topBack to Home
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