Residence
Office
PO Box 4405
Ithaca, NY 14852-4405
ATTENDEES ACROSS ALL EVENTS
791
Lecture Attendees in 2022-2023
7524
Meals Served in 2023-2024
355
Course Enrollments Since 2014
2237
Total Person-Hours of Public Reading Scripture
What We Do
Events
Every semester, we bring highly sought after speakers who are at the top of their fields to Cornell to speak about their work and the role that their faith plays in it. Click to find out what lectures and other events are coming up.
learn moreResidences
Chesterton House's living-learning community is made up of three beautiful residences and offers male and female students the opportunity to live in intentional Christian community at Cornell. Click to learn more or apply.
learn moreCourses
Too many students in college fail to integrate their intellectual growth with their religious faith. Explore your questions about the Christian tradition in Chesterton House’s Logos Seminar, designed to help students develop their minds for God in a sustainable way.
learn moreOur Past
Upon graduating from Cornell in 1989, Karl, along with graduate student Ray Zimmerman and a few others, began a small ‘intentional Christian community’ at 201 Stewart Ave. The community was characterized by daily prayer, community meals, and ‘living simply.’ This was not the first such community at Cornell…
learn more about our storyOur Future
We recently purchased the house next door to the men’s facility to be the new women’s residence and built a beautiful patio between the houses to create a unified living-learning campus. We look forward to completing renovations over the next year. Interested in what we’ve done and what we hope to do? Check out our Building for the Future Campaign.
learn more about our plans for the futureStaff
Vivek Mathew
Executive Director
Read bioVivek Mathew
Executive Director
Marissa Koeller
Operations Director
Read bioMarissa Koeller
Operations Director
Originally from Los Angeles, Marissa earned a BFA in Musical Theatre from the American Musical and Dramatic Academy before moving to New York City to work as a professional actor. In the height of the COVID-19 shutdowns, she expanded her knowledge in digital marketing through Columbia University’s Business School of Executive Education. She combined this with her experience in web/graphic design to start her own business in digital marketing.
Marissa is passionate about creating spaces and communities where young Christians can embody their faith knowing they are not alone in this world. At Chesterton House, she manages the operations of our residential, events, and regular programming to facilitate these spaces of encounter, while also having a hand in the marketing and communications to share these opportunities with the campus. She is simultaneously pursuing a Master’s of Divinity at Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary.
Ryan O'Dowd
Academic Director & Senior Chaplain
Read bioRyan O'Dowd
Academic Director & Senior Chaplain
Ryan O’Dowd began his support of Chesterton House in 2010 and now serves as Chesterton House Academic Director and assisting priest at Bread of Life Anglican Church in Ithaca, NY. He is a graduate of the U.S. Air Force Academy (1994), Reformed Theological Seminary, and the University of Liverpool (PhD). Over the last 30 years, Ryan has balanced work as a pastor, an Active Duty and Reserve officer in the U.S. Air Force, and a scholar in a wide variety of academic settings. His doctoral research explored the relationship between biblical wisdom and law, and, over the last 15 years, he has examined these subjects alongside the study of moral theology and religious and secular ethics. He has also developed and taught several courses on work and vocation (calling). Ryan and his wife Amy have three grown children and live with their youngest daughter in Ithaca, NY. In his free time, Ryan loves to bake, read, cycle, run, and swim.
Select publications:
Books:
- The Preacher’s Hebrew Commentary on Deuteronomy (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson) forthcoming
- Proverbs, ESV Bible Expository Commentary (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2022)
- Proverbs, Story of God Biblical Commentary (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2017)
- Old Testament Wisdom Literature: A Theological Introduction, with Craig Bartholomew (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Academic Press, 2011)
- The Wisdom of Torah: Epistemology in Deuteronomy and the Wisdom Literature, FRLANT (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2009)
Articles and chapters:
- “Pain and Danger: Unpleasant Sayings and the Structure of Proverbs,”Catholic Biblical Quarterly, 80 (2018) 619–35
- “Aesthetic Shaping of Agur’s Oracle in Proverbs 30:1–9,”Inner Biblical Allusion in the Poetry of Psalms and Wisdom, eds. Mark Boda, Kevin Chau, Beth Tanner, Society of Biblical Literature (Atlanta: Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2018) 103–119
- “A Prophet in the Sage’s House? Origins of the Feminine Metaphors in Proverbs,”Riddles and Revelations: Explorations into the Relationship between Wisdom and Prophecy in the Hebrew Bible, eds. Mark Boda, Russell Meek, William R. Osborne (LHBOTS; London: Bloomsbury/T&T Clark: 2018) 165–79
- “Wisdom and Poetry,” The Old Testament: A Christian Companion, ed. Hywel Clifford (Norwich: SCM Press, 2016) 101–129
- “Epistemology in Ecclesiastes: Remembering What It Means to Be Human,” The Words of the Wise are Like Goads: Engaging Qohelet in the 21st Century, eds. Mark Boda, Tremper Longman III, and Cristian Rata (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2013) 197–219
Lisa Cooper
Adjunct Chaplain
Read bioLisa Cooper
Adjunct Chaplain
Lisa Cooper serves as a part-time Adjunct Chaplain at Chesterton House, providing spiritual support for women in the community. She works as a senior copywriter at RevelationMedia, a media company focused on creating and distributing quality Christian content to the world for free. She also freelances for a variety of publications including data-reporting for Barna and writing academic articles for The Christian Research Journal. She has a passion for poetry; her poems have been published in a variety of literary magazines and online venues including The Book of Penteract, an anthology of formal and constrained poetry.
She is a graduate of Geneva College (B.A. English) and The American Lutheran Theological Seminary (M.A. Religion). Her published works range from practical to academic, from creative to data-driven, and from children’s content to current events—all kinds of topics and all kinds of tones—all to know Jesus better and to make Him known. She has volunteered and otherwise worked in ministry settings for over ten years including children’s ministry, college ministry, and women’s ministry. Her church home is Trinity Lutheran Church in Ithaca.
Lisa grew up in Connecticut, and still considers herself a New Englander, even though she has since lived in five other states. She now lives in Groton, NY with her husband Jordan and her two sons. She particularly enjoys baking, Russian literature, keeping houseplants alive, playing guitar, singing, and crocheting.
Hannah Eagleson
Director of Grad & Faculty Development
Read bioHannah Eagleson
Director of Grad & Faculty Development
Stevie Lazenby
Senior Office Manager
Read bioStevie Lazenby
Senior Office Manager
Stevie Lazenby graduated from The Ohio State University with a degree in Social Work and worked with special needs populations until departing the workforce to start a family. In addition to raising a family, she has filled her time participating in various volunteer activities. She also enjoys baking, paper crafting, hiking, running, biking, and gardening.
Mary Milbrath
Financial Accountant
Read bioMary Milbrath
Financial Accountant
Mary Milbrath graduated from Minnesota State University-Moorhead with a bachelor’s degree in Accounting. She passed the CPA exam upon graduation and worked in banking and public accounting before serving as the Director of Finance and Operations of the Fargodome. Mary has spent the last 18 years raising and homeschooling her four children, continuing her work in accounting, and volunteering.
Katlyn Wilhoit
Executive Manager
Read bioKatlyn Wilhoit
Executive Manager
Katlyn Wilhoit graduated from Liberty University with a degree in Special Education and Elementary Education. Both during and after graduating, Katlyn worked alongside numerous nonprofit organizations, including campus ministries and churches, in several different administrative and leadership roles. She is currently a stay at home, homeschool, mother of three children.
Whitney Antley
Residential and Academic Administrator
Read bioWhitney Antley
Residential and Academic Administrator
Whitney Antley is a midwestern girl, a huge Ohio State buckeye fan who has lived in that great state most of her life. She graduated from Lee University in Tennessee with a degree in Elementary Education and a minor in Religion. She went on to teach in various school settings: public, private, online and now currently, homeschool. Whitney has served beside her husband in church ministry for the last 11 years and has always enjoyed being involved in the local church. In her free time, Whitney likes to knock off bucket lists goals; the most recent was running a half-marathon and marathon. She is currently enjoying life as a stay at home mom/homeschool teacher to her 3 daughters. One of Whitney’s biggest desires and goals in life is to be an encouragement to others, to walk with people in their struggles and to point them to Christ, always.
Aidan Charron
Fellow
Read bioAidan Charron
Fellow
Aidan graduated from Hope College in Holland, MI with a BA in Christian History and Theology as well as Philosophy. During his time at Hope he has enjoyed participating in the Nykerk Cup Competition as a Play Moraler and an Even Year Play Morale Coach where he helped to create funny (sometimes not) skits and build the set for the play. Additionally, he was a subject editor and then Editor-in-Chief for the Bell Tower, Hope’s Journal for Christian Undergraduate Research. In his freetime, Aidan enjoys being involved in local churches by helping play music or building relationships with people and families at the church. Aidan also likes to watch good films or shows, read, or listen to music in his free time.
Gabrielle Dowers
Fellow
Read bioGabrielle Dowers
Fellow
Gabrielle Dowers received her BA in Political Science from Wheaton College. While at Wheaton, she had several leadership positions in the school’s program called Passage that aims to welcome in new freshmen and transfers. Over the summer, she worked with an organization called Prosperous Youth Foundation in Chiang Mai Thailand, where she taught English to children in youth homes. In her free time, Gabby enjoys singing, spontaneous adventures and finding new coffee shops. After her time at Chesterton House she hopes to get her MA in International Development in the UK.
Maria Lee
Fellow
Read bioMaria Lee
Fellow
Maria Lee graduated from Cornell University with a B.S. in Communication and a minor in American Indian and Indigenous Studies. During her time at Cornell, her studies centered around environmental, science, and health communication and education. She is passionate about community service and promoting literacy in underrepresented youth and community service. Maria has been involved with ministry throughout her time at Cornell and is very eager to be a part of the Chesterton House team.
Adjunct Faculty
Elaine Phillips
Professor and Harold John Ockenga Chair of Biblical Studies
Read bioElaine Phillips
Professor and Harold John Ockenga Chair of Biblical Studies
After receiving her undergraduate degree in social psychology from Cornell University and the Master of Divinity degree from Biblical Theological Seminary, Elaine Phillips, along with her husband, Perry, studied and taught for three years in Israel. Upon their return, they taught at a small Christian junior college outside of Philadelphia from 1979-1992 and Elaine earned her Ph.D. in rabbinic literature from The Dropsie College for Hebrew and Cognate Learning in Philadelphia. She has taught biblical studies at Gordon College since 1993 where she serves as the Harold John Ockenga Chair of Biblical Studies. She and Perry have continued to take Gordon students back to Jerusalem University College, where they serve as adjunct faculty for the three-week summer study program in historical geography. In addition to field study in Israel, her areas of interest and scholarly writing include the books of Exodus and Esther, biblical wisdom literature, and rabbinic texts. Her book-length commentary on Esther is included in The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, edited by Tremper Longman III and David Garland. In 2014, her devotional, With God, Nothing is Impossible, was published by Deep River Books. Her latest book, An Introduction to Reading Biblical Wisdom Texts was published by Hendrickson Publishing in August 2017. She has received both the Junior and Senior Distinguished Faculty Awards and at the commencement ceremonies in May 2014 was granted the inaugural Distinguished Professor award. She also enjoys music, hiking and all things related to summers in northwestern Ontario.
Students
In addition to residential facilities, courses, and lectures, Chesterton House offers pre-orientation programs for incoming students. Find links to resources for students below.
About Cornell
Cornell University is one of the most prestigious institutions of higher education in the world. Founded in 1865, Cornell is a member of the Ivy League, and the land grant institution for New York State. It consists of thirteen colleges, including both privately endowed and state-assisted colleges. Professional schools include management, law, medicine, and veterinary medicine.
About GK Chesterton
Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874-1936) was one of the most brilliant and prolific writers of all time. This British journalist’s 100 books, 200 short stories, and over 4000 newspaper essays include history, philosophy, theology, economics, social commentary, and literary criticism. His best known works include Orthodoxy, The Man Who Was Thursday, and the beloved Father Brown detective stories.
Partnerships
Chesterton House is a registered affiliate of Cornell United Religious Work and a registered student organization of Cornell University.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874-1936) was one of the most brilliant and prolific writers of all time. This British journalist’s 100 books, 200 short stories, and over 4000 newspaper essays include history, philosophy, theology, economics, social commentary, and literary criticism. His best known works include Orthodoxy, The Man Who Was Thursday, and the beloved Father Brown detective stories. Chesterton’s balance of wit and wisdom with humor and humility makes his style as unforgettable as his person. According to one description, Chesterton “weighed about 300 pounds, usually had a cigar in his mouth, and walked around wearing a cape and a crumpled hat, tiny glasses pinched to the end of his nose, swordstick in hand, laughter blowing through his moustache.”* For his ability to make others both think and laugh at the same time, he was greatly admired even among debating opponents such as George Bernard Shaw, who called him a “colossal genius.” One of the most quoted writers in the English language, Chesterton was a defender of the poor, of the amateur, of common sense, and of Christian faith. First a Unitarian, later an Anglican, and finally a Catholic, Chesterton wrote with broad appeal. His works inspired Mohandas Gandhi to challenge British colonial rule in India, and C.S. Lewis to become a Christian. Chesterton attended art school but never went to college. *Dale Ahlquist, American Chesterton Society
Rationale
Chesterton House celebrates life, learning, and the study of all things in grateful response to the God of all creation—Father, Son, and Spirit. Made in God’s image, we are called to love our God and serve our neighbor. We are also called to conserve and cultivate the world he has made. Whether we study art, engineering, law, literature, philosophy, or physics, we understand that our calling as students and scholars includes discovering what God is disclosing. We seek to be good stewards of our aptitudes and affections for the flourishing of creation and all who live in it; ideally, our work and worship are one.
Tragically, we have not always been good stewards of this calling. By means of ingratitude, exploitation, and fixing our faith on all the wrong objects, we suffer estrangement where God intended harmony. We witness evidence of this in the fragmentation of self and community, and the abuse and idolization of creation. Christians have often failed to sustain serious reflection on the spheres of life that bear the wounds of this estrangement—including family, church, business, government, and education—resulting in a compartmentalization of faith rather than a holistic integration of faith and learning.
We long for a better world. We also dare to hope for a better world—a world of whole persons, of peace and justice, and of harmony in all creation. Our hope is sustained by God who, according to his ancient promises, is at work in the world renewing and reconciling all things to himself through Jesus Christ. We seek to join him in this work. Historically, Christ’s love for the world has inspired his followers to contribute to the founding of hospitals and universities, the articulation of human rights, and the development of modern science. In keeping with such service for the common good, Chesterton House aims to draw upon the Christian tradition and its resources to enrich academic inquiry and professional practice.