Spiritual Formation Leadership (TEL)
Learning Objectives
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Articulate a personal understanding of the embedded theologies that have informed their personal spiritual growth and vocational journey.
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Analyze various perspectives on the process of personal and communal spiritual growth.
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Apply concepts of Christian Spirituality to their personal growth, their vocation, and the spiritual growth of others.
Course Components
Spiritual Formation (TEL)
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Syllabus + Meeting Link
10 MinutesLesson Locked -
Becoming The Beloved
5 MinutesAssignmentLesson Locked -
The Sacredness of Being Seen
10 MinutesAssignmentLesson Locked -
Healing a Wounded Village
10 MinutesAssignmentLesson Locked -
Rest Is Resistance
10 MinutesAssignmentLesson Locked -
Closing | Final Assessment
10 MinutesAssignmentLesson Locked
Features and Benefits
This area is dedicated to highlight the features and benefits of the course, providing potential students with compelling reasons to enroll.
How This Equips Faith Leaders
This section is dedicated to explaining how the course equips faith leaders with necessary tools and insights.

Spiritual Formation Leadership (TEL)
Taught by Dr. Ish Ruiz
This course invites you to explore your own embedded spirituality while learning to translate academic spiritual and theological insights into accessible, public-facing spiritual philosophies. Through this process, you will cultivate the skills needed to serve as spiritual leaders for individuals and communities, while deepening your own spiritual growth and development.

Meet Your Instructor,
Dr. Ish Ruiz
Dr. Ish Ruiz is an assistant professor of Latinx and Queer Decolonial Theology at Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, CA, and holds a PhD in Theology and Ethics from the Graduate Theological Union. A native from Puerto Rico and a queer Catholic theologian, his research interests explore the intersection between queer theology, Latinx theology, ecclesiology, sexual ethics, liberation, human rights, and Catholic education. He is the author of LGBTQ+ Educators in Catholic Schools: Synodality, Inclusivity, and Justice (Rowman and Littlefield), the editor of Cornerstones: Sacred Stories of LGBTQ+ Employees in Catholic Institutions, and the author of numerous academic articles.
Prior to his appointment at the Pacific School of Religion, Dr. Ruiz served at Candler School of Theology at Emory University and at the University of Dayton. He also worked at the secondary school level for 11 years, chaired the Marianist LGBTQ+ Initiative team, offered several workshops to Catholic schools on Catholic LGBTQ+ inclusion, served as a union activist to protect the rights of LGBTQ+ Church employees, presented in several pastoral conferences throughout the US, and has actively ministered to queer Catholics for over a decade. Through his teaching, research, and service, Dr. Ruiz hopes to see a world where Catholicism (and Christianity, more broadly) embrace the diversity of gifts people of all racial backgrounds and sexual identities bring to society and the Church.