📖 Overview
Kelly Monroe Kullberg is an author and speaker who focuses on Christianity in academic and cultural contexts. She served as a chaplain at Harvard University, where she worked with graduate students and faculty members.
Kullberg founded The Veritas Forum, a campus outreach organization that hosts discussions about faith and intellectual life at universities. The organization sponsors events that bring together academics, students, and public intellectuals to explore questions about truth, meaning, and purpose.
Her writing examines the intersection of Christian faith and higher education. She has contributed to discussions about religious belief in secular academic environments and the challenges facing Christian students and faculty at major universities.
Kullberg has spoken at conferences and events focused on Christian apologetics and campus ministry. Her work addresses how people maintain and express religious faith within institutions that may be skeptical of or hostile to religious perspectives.
👀 Reviews
Readers praise "Finding God at Harvard" for its collection of personal testimonies from Harvard faculty, students, and alumni about their faith journeys. Many reviewers appreciate the intellectual approach to Christianity and find the academic credentials of the contributors compelling. Readers note that the book provides insight into how educated professionals reconcile faith with rigorous academic inquiry.
Some readers value the book's demonstration that intelligent people can hold religious beliefs without abandoning critical thinking. The personal stories resonate with readers who have faced similar challenges in academic or professional environments where faith is questioned or dismissed.
Critics point out that the book primarily represents one perspective and lacks diversity in religious viewpoints. Some readers find the testimonies repetitive or feel the book oversimplifies the relationship between faith and reason. A few reviewers suggest the collection would benefit from including more challenging questions about religious belief rather than focusing on affirmation.