Brett Grainger, ThD

Associate Professor of Theology and Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Villanova University

  • Villanova PA

Brett Grainger, ThD, researches the changing face of modern spirituality in America and how various religions view the natural world.

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4 min

An Expert Guide to the Papacy and Pope Francis

The death of Pope Francis marks a pivotal moment for the Catholic Church, ending a papacy that redefined the Church's relationship with the modern world. As the College of Cardinals prepares to gather in conclave, Catholics across the globe are closely watching to see whether the next pontiff will build upon Francis' legacy or chart a new course. The following experts are available to provide insight into a range of related topics, including Pope Francis' enduring impact and what lies ahead for the world's 1.4 billion Catholics: Massimo Faggioli, PhD Professor, Theology and Religious Studies Dr. Massimo Faggioli is a world-renowned expert on the history and administrative inner workings of the Catholic Church, with specific expertise in the papacy, Vatican II, the Roman Curia, liturgical reform, new Catholic movements and Catholicism and global politics. As quoted on NPR: "Historically, we see in different conclaves a certain swinging of the pendulum. What the conclave and the next pope cannot do is to ignore and deny the changing features of global Catholicism, which is much less European, much less white, less North American and more Global South..." Kevin Hughes, PhD Chair, Theology and Religious Studies Dr. Kevin Hughes is a leading historical theologian, offering insights into the life, legacy and impact of Pope Francis. He can also speak to the significance of the pope in Catholicism and the influence of his teachings on the global Catholic Church. As quoted on Scripps News: "[Pope Francis' selection] was really the Church extending beyond the limits of its European imagination. His Latin American identity was really crucial to embracing a new moment within the Church and opening the door in so many ways, and I think he bore witness to that throughout his papacy." Jaisy Joseph, PhD Assistant Professor, Systematic and Constructive Theology Dr. Jaisy Joseph is a trained ecclesiologist, able to address a wide range of topics relating to the papacy, conclave process and Catholic Church. Previously, she has commented on the Church's presence in Asia and the Global South, offering expert commentary on its growth, challenges and shifting influence. As quoted by ABC News Digital: "[The election of someone from the Global South would be] a move in that direction of how to be a global church. That move from a Eurocentric church to a truly global church—I think that's what Francis really inaugurated." Patrick Brennan, JD Professor of Law; John F. Scarpa Chair in Catholic Legal Studies Professor Brennan is an expert on the conclave process and the main rules that govern it. He can also speak to topics such as the contemporary and historical importance of secrecy in the conclave, what the cardinals may be looking for in the next pope and the factors that cause similarities and differences from one conclave to the next.  As quoted on Fox 29's Good Day Philadelphia: "The purpose of the general congregation is for the cardinals, who don't know each other in some cases, to get to know each other better as they learn about the current state of the Church and together decide on the needs of the Church and priorities for the new pontificate." Brett Grainger, ThD Associate Professor, Study of Spirituality and American Religious History Dr. Brett Grainger is a go-to source for discussions of the changing face and role of modern spirituality in America. He serves as an expert on contemporary religious trends and can also speak to the broader public reaction to Pope Francis' passing, especially outside of the Catholic faith. As quoted by Courthouse News Service: "People are disaffiliating from a tradition—that doesn't necessarily mean in fact that they don't believe in God anymore...What's more important is 'Is this giving me life? Is this making my life more meaningful? Is this giving me the kind of energy and purpose that I'm looking for?' That's where religion is going." Michael Moreland, JD, PhD Professor of Law and Religion; Director, Eleanor H. McCullen Center for Law, Religion and Public Policy Dr. Michael Moreland is a renowned scholar of constitutional law, religious freedom, public policy and ethics. He can provide expert commentary on items related to the Catholic right and the state of religious politics in the United States. As featured on NBC News Digital: Michael Moreland said the mass appeal of "Conclave" captured how, even in a secular modern age, there is still pervasive intrigue around "the ancient rituals of the Catholic Church." "The significance of the theological and spiritual aspects of Catholicism and this process of electing a pope was kind of reduced into partisan politics," he said. Ilia Delio, OSF, PhD Josephine C. Connelly Endowed Chair in Christian Theology Sr. Ilia Delio addresses topics in her work such as theology and evolution, technology and human becoming and understandings of Catholicity in a world of complexity. She can provide expert insight into Laudato Si', Pope Francis' position on the environment, the relationship between science and religion and integral ecology. As featured in the National Catholic Reporter: "We are clearly an Earth in crisis," with a reversal necessary to secure a sustainable future, said Ilia Delio... Delio posed a series of questions: about the relationship between religion and science; what Laudato Si', and Christianity more broadly, can offer ecological movements; and whether the concept of kinship or creation as family might better reflect humanity's place within nature than "care for creation." To speak with any of these media experts, please contact mediaexperts@villanova.edu.

Brett Grainger, ThDMassimo Faggioli, PhDMichael  Moreland, JD, PhDIlia Delio, OSF, PhD

Areas of Expertise

Evangelicalism
Religion and Nature
Modern Spirituality
American Religious History
History of Christianity

Biography

Dr. Brett Grainger is a go-to source for discussions of the changing face and role of modern spirituality in America. He is an expert on contemporary religious trends, including the state of mainline religions, alternative religions, the religious right and politics, religious fundamentalism, religious violence and "culture wars." In addition, Dr. Grainger can speak to the relationship between religion and nature—namely, how various religions view the natural world as a place to commune with God.

Education

Harvard University

ThD

Harvard University

MTS

University of Toronto

MA

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Select Accomplishments

Honorable Mention, National Magazine Awards (Canada)

2010

Honorable Mention, National Magazine Awards (Canada)

2009

Gold Medal, National Magazine Awards (Canada)

2005

Affiliations

  • Associate Editor, American Catholic Studies, Villanova University
  • Manuscript Review Editor, Church History

Select Media Appearances

Poll Points to Plateau in Number of Americans Leaving Christianity

Courthouse News Service  

2025-02-26

Brett Grainger, an assistant professor of theology and religious studies at Villanova University in Pennsylvania, pushed back on the notion that Americans are losing faith. "People are disaffiliating from a tradition... [That] doesn't necessarily mean in fact that they don't believe in God anymore, they don't hold other religious beliefs or they don't continue to engage in certain kinds of religious practices," Grainger said.

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Church in the Wild: Evangelicals in Antebellum America

New Books Network  

2019-06-17

We often credit the Transcendentalists with introducing a revolutionary new appreciation for nature into American spirituality when they claimed that God could be found in the forests, mountains and fields. In "Church in the Wild: Evangelicals in Antebellum America," Brett Grainger reconsiders the history of the years leading up to the Civil War... Grainger is an assistant professor of religious studies at Villanova University.

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Local Religious Leaders Discuss Impact of Billy Graham

6 ABC  

2018-02-21

Billy Graham used television and stadium-based revivals to call people to the Christian Church... "The closest equivalent we have in America society to Billy Graham... you would have to look at someone like Oprah Winfrey," said Brett Grainger of Villanova University... "I think it is that combination [of] personal charisma and ability to connect with people one on one," he said.

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Research Grants

Young Scholars in American Religion Program

Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture, Indiana University

2016–2017

Summer Research Grant

Theology Institute, Villanova University

2014

W.M. Keck Foundation Fellowship

The Huntington Library

2012–2013

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Select Academic Articles

Church in the Wild: Evangelicals in Antebellum America

Harvard University Press

Brett Grainger

We have long credited Emerson and his fellow Transcendentalists with revolutionizing religious life in America and introducing a new appreciation of nature. Breaking with Protestant orthodoxy, these New Englanders claimed that God could be found not in church but in forest, fields and streams. Their spiritual nonconformity had thrilling implications but never traveled far beyond their circle. In this essential reconsideration of American faith in the years leading up to the Civil War, Brett Malcolm Grainger argues that it was not the Transcendentalists but the evangelical revivalists who transformed the everyday religious life of Americans and spiritualized the natural environment.

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Nature and Religion in America

The Oxford Encyclopedia of Religion in America

Brett Grainger, John Corrigan (Ed.)

One of the most complex words in the English language, "nature" (sometimes personified as "Nature" or "Mother Nature") has been central to developments in American religions. Despite their different origins, the three cosmologies present on the North American continent during the early modern "age of contact"—Native American, African American and Euro-American—shared a number of similarities, including the belief in an enchanted or animate cosmos, the ambivalence of sacred presences manifested in nature and the use of myth and ritual to manage these ambivalent presences in ways that secured material and spiritual benefits for individuals or communities. Through encounters on colonial borderlands and through developments in society and culture (in science, economics, politics, etc.), these cosmologies have been adapted, developed and combined in creative ways to produce new forms of religious life. These developments have been characterized by a series of recurrent tensions... These generative tensions continue to reverberate into the modern day, in part as an outworking of the environmental crisis of the 1960s, which saw a purported "greening" of established religions as well as the rise of new forms of nature spirituality.

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Review of Russell Richey, Methodism in the American Forest

The Journal of Religion

"The scholar of landscape studies J.B. Jackson once suggested that in America no space is considered sacred, only its use. Jackson was not speaking of indigenous Native American communities or enslaved African populations nor, for that matter, of the Catholic colonials who planted shrines wherever they conquered. Jackson was repeating a truism about Protestants, a people known for having relocated the sacred from fixed sites and material objects (relics, hosts, holy wells) to the gathering body of the faithful."

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