The light of the cross shines on a beautiful evening at Lake Junaluska

Festival of Wisdom and Grace set for Aug. 19-22

March 26, 2024

Registration is now open for the Festival of Wisdom and Grace, a conference for finding purpose and renewal in the second half of life. The festival will be Aug. 19-22 at Lake Junaluska Conference and Retreat Center.

This annual event features worship, workshops, learning, entertainment and fellowship to help participants explore how to flourish as they age, navigate transitions, live into their talents and passions, cultivate their relationship with Christ and engage topics that matter with courage and conviction.

This year’s theme is “Growing Our Roots: Our Wesleyan Roots.” The keynote speaker will be Dr. Ashley Boggan D. and the conference preacher will be retired Bishop Lawson Bryan. Workshop topics include labyrinth, respite ministry, grief, social holiness, Bishop Lambuth, writing and gardening and are subject to change.

“I look forward to reminding those in attendance of our Wesleyan roots and illustrating how to be ‘Methodist’ means that we intentionally push the boundaries of this world in order to let the love of God be felt by all persons,” Boggan D. said.

Boggan D. is the general secretary of the General Commission on Archives and History, located on the campus of Drew University in the United Methodist Archives & History Center in Madison, New Jersey. A general agency of the United Methodist Church, the General Commission on Archives and History was established in 1968 to focus on promoting and preserving UMC history.

As general secretary, Boggan D. ensures that the United Methodist Church understands its past in order to envision a more equitable future for all Methodists.

Boggan D. earned her Ph.D. from Drew Theological School’s Graduate Division of Religion, specializing in both Methodist/Wesleyan Studies and Women’s/Gender Studies. She earned a Master of Arts degree from the University of Chicago’s Divinity School, specializing in American Religious History.

She was the director of United Methodist Studies and assistant professor Christian History at Hood Theological Seminary in Salisbury, an AME Zion Seminary, from 2017-2019 and was the director of Women’s and Gender Studies and assistant professor of Religion at High Point University in High Point, from 2019-2020.
Boggan D. is a lay member of the Arkansas Annual Conference and the daughter of two ordained United Methodist ministers. Her great-great-great grandfathers were Methodist circuit-riders in the early 19th century. She is the author of “Nevertheless: American Methodists and Women’s Rights;” “Entangled: A History of American Methodism, Politics and Sexuality;” and added to the revised “American Methodism: A Compact History.”

The conference preacher, Bryan, served churches throughout Alabama and one in Florida from 1975-2007. In 2016, he was elected bishop and assigned to the South Georgia Conference of The United Methodist Church Episcopal area. Since 2021 he has served as the bishop-in-residence at FUMC in Montgomery, Alabama and the Respite For All Foundation.

Bryan also has served as a member of and in leadership positions on numerous boards and associations, including the Alabama-West Florida Conference Board of Ministry, the Southeastern Jurisdiction Larger Church Consultation, the Huntingdon College Board of Trustees, Committee of 100, Candler School of Theology, Emory University; and General Commission on Religion and Race of The United Methodist Church. He currently is a board member of Respite For All Foundation.

A cum laude graduate of Tulane University, Bryan received Master of Divinity and Doctor of Ministry degrees from Emory University. He is the author of “How Science can Strengthen our Faith” and “Pursuing Science, Finding Faith.”

“The importance of the Festival of Wisdom and Grace for finding purpose and renewal in the second half of life is highlighted for me in an insight provided by Howard Thurman, who said, ‘Do not ask what the world needs; ask what makes you come alive and go do that; because what the world needs is people who have come alive.’ The Festival provides a stimulating context for exploring what it means to come alive in the second half of life,” Bryan said.

His sermons will focus on the conference theme of Wesleyan Roots. His workshops will focus on the Respite Ministry for those living with dementia and their families, which he helped start at FUMC Montgomery when he served as the church’s senior minister. “That ministry has grown into a nationally recognized model for moving a local church to the leading edge of addressing this major social need,” he said.

Elizabeth “Beth” Miller, a co-chair of the festival, said the gathering is important for those looking to “renew, reflect and reconnect.”

The Rev. Gregory Waldrop, also a festival co-chair, said the festival supports the notion that ‘older’ people appreciate opportunities to gather with others of a similar generation to discuss how to use their years of wisdom and experience to maintain a sense of relevance and purpose at any age. “If you are eager to age and sage well in the last half of life, the Festival of Wisdom and Grace at Lake Junaluska is the place you want to be,” he said.
Participants also will have time to explore Lake Junaluska and enjoy its gardens, places of meditation, lakeside trail and more.

The conference kicks off with a John Wesley monologue by Ashley Calhoun. The opening session will be at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 19, at the Harrell Center Auditorium and is free and open to the public.

The festival also features opportunities to gather in prayer at the Cross, take lakeside devotional walks, participate in learning circles and enjoy a lake cruise aboard the Cherokee IV pontoon boat.

A conference for finding purpose and renewal in the second half of life, the Festival of Wisdom and Grace features worship, workshop, recreation, entertainment and learning.