C.G. Jung and the Spiritual Quest of Our Time: An Overview

Monday, July 12
Welcome and Orientation 9:30-10:00am
10:00 am-12:00pm, 1:00-3:00pm

Instructor: Donald R. Ferrell, PhD, MDiv, STM

C.G. Jung, with his sense of two personalities that lived within him, one fully oriented to the inhabited world of his everyday life and the other deeply aware of the great Mystery that lay beyond the ordinary world, committed his life in the search of how these two personalities were related to each other and in what forms they lived within in the world.  As a citizen of the Modern World,  Jung lived his life as a Modern Man, fully engaged with the Present Age, and creatively transcending the reach of the past with its structures of tradition, faith, belief  and the sense of the  Eternal Return of the Same by which pre-modern men and women lived their lives in antiquity.

In the course of becoming a Modern Man, Jung became aware that, in doing so, he had lost something of great value, which he called the loss of his soul.  When the numinosity of this sense of his own estrangement from his depths grasped Jung, he undertook an inner journey to find his soul and thus to be restored to the Mystery of his own inner Depths.  As that journey unfolded,  Jung deconstructed and reconstructed the meaning of religion in human life and, as an empirical psychologist, created a model of the psyche by which a new form of spirituality became possible.

This seminar will explore this story of Jung’s psychospiritual journey and the understanding of the spiritual dimension of life that emerged from it and its relevance for our post-modern age and the meaning of our own spiritual lives.


Learning Objectives

    1. To outline the Jungian model of the psyche.
    2. To explain the psyche’s implications for not only our psychological development but our spiritual development as well.
    3. To discuss Jung’s psychology of religion and his psychology of psychic individuated wholeness and their possible relationship to each other.
    4. To describe the reality of the numinosum in human experience and the symbolic forms in which that numinosity is expressed

Learning Objectives:

On completion of this class, you will be able to:

  1. Challenge the social norms and gender stereotypes that have placed limits on the male gender experience.
  2. Distinguish archetypal patterns that underpin masculine psychological development.
  3. Comprehend the centrality and symbolic importance of aggression in the masculine Individuation process.
  4. Differentiate between the qualities of “authentic” masculinity and hyper masculinity
  5. Identify approaches to attend to the developmental, psychological, and spiritual needs of men in clinical settings

FACULTY

William Baker, PsyD, is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City. He is currently on the faculty at the Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology at Yeshiva University, the William Alanson White Institute, and the Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts and serves as a member of the editorial staff at the Journal of Analytical Psychology.

Harry W. Fogarty, MDiv, PhD, LP, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in NYC.  He is a faculty member of the Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts and a former Lecturer in Psychiatry and Religion at Union Theological Seminary. 

Ilona Melker, LCSW, is a Jungian Psychoanalyst and Certified Sandplay Therapist.  She has taught and lectured at the C.G. Jung Foundation and at national conferences.  She has contributed to professional journals.  She is in private practice in Manhattan and Princeton, New Jersey.

Maria Taveras, LCSW, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City.  She is also an award-winning creator of Dream Art.  She creates art from images in her own dreams and is the recipient of two Gradiva Awards from the National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis for her Dream Art.  Her Dream Art has been exhibited in New York, San Francisco, Berkeley, London, Montreal, and Cape Town.  

David Walczyk, EdD, LP, NCPsyA, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in NYC. He is a graduate of Columbia University and the C.G. Jung Institute of NY. He is an award-winning educator, award-winning designer, a writer, and public speaker. He has lectured both domestically and internationally and is on the faculty of New York University.

Sylvester Wojtkowski, PhD, is a Jungian analyst and clinical psychologist in private practice in New York City.  He received his doctorate from the New School for Social Research.

Refunds

Refunds for continuing education courses, less $15 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. There will be no refunds issued after classes have begun. No exceptions will be made. Programs are subject to change without notice.



Program Information

PROGRAM COSTS

Price per person: $650 to register for all 5 program days.
$150 per single-day program registration.
There are no scholarships available for this program.

YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD:
On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDITCARD.

TUITION


Full Week Registration
$650

Individual Days
$150 per day
Monday
C.G. Jung and the Spiritual Quest
of Our Time: An Overview
Tuesday
The Mother: Archetypal, Spiritual,
Personal Goddess
Wednesday
Mystical Themes in the Francis
of Assisi’s Canticle
of Brother Sun and Sister Moon 
Thursday
C.G. Jung’s Quest
to Know the Unknowable
Friday
C.G. Jung and Religion
after the Death of God

Program is subject to change without notice

Certificate of Completion for NYS licensed social workers, psychoanalysts, and creative arts therapists is included in the tuition.
A non-credit letter of completion can be issued upon request.


Tax Deductions

Seminars of this type usually meet the requirements for IRS tax deduction, but each individual must consult
with a professional tax advisor prior to registration to ascertain eligibility.


Program Registration

Class size is limited. Early registration is strongly recommended. Programs are subject to change without notice.

The full fee must be paid at the time of registration. Please register through the payment buttons on this website.  Mail in registration is available through the Registration Form, which can be downloaded by clicking here.  Register by telephone at 212-697-6430 with Visa or MasterCard.

When you pay you must also email your current email address and telephone number to the Foundation at cgjungny@aol.com.  If you are taking this course for CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists, please specify which license you hold and give your NYS license number.


Cancellation of Registration

There will be a cancellation fee of $15 per person per day registered on all cancellations received on or before July 8, 2021.  No refunds after July 8, 2021. No exceptions will be made.  Only cancellations made in writing via email or letter will be deemed valid.


Disclaimer of Responsibility

By registering for this program, the seminar member specifically waives any and all claims of action against the C.G. Jung Foundation and its staff for damages, loss, injury, accident, or death due to negligence on the part of any organization or employee providing services included in this Summer Study Program.


For more information, call or write:

Office of the Executive Director
The C.G. Jung Foundation of New York
28 East 39th Street
New York, New York 10016
Telephone: (212) 697-6430, Fax: (212) 953-3989
Email: cgjungny@aol.com
Web address: www.cgjungny.org
Like us @facebook.com/cgjungny
Follow us @twitter.com/cgjungny


Registration

The full fee must be paid at the time of registration. Please register through the payment buttons on this website. Mail in registration and telephone registration are not available at this time.


 

Monday, July 12
Welcome and Orientation 9:30-10:00am
10:00 am-12:00pm, 1:00-3:00pm

Instructor: Donald R. Ferrell, PhD, MDiv, STM

C.G. Jung, with his sense of two personalities that lived within him, one fully oriented to the inhabited world of his everyday life and the other deeply aware of the great Mystery that lay beyond the ordinary world, committed his life in the search of how these two personalities were related to each other and in what forms they lived within in the world.  As a citizen of the Modern World,  Jung lived his life as a Modern Man, fully engaged with the Present Age, and creatively transcending the reach of the past with its structures of tradition, faith, belief  and the sense of the  Eternal Return of the Same by which pre-modern men and women lived their lives in antiquity.

In the course of becoming a Modern Man, Jung became aware that, in doing so, he had lost something of great value, which he called the loss of his soul.  When the numinosity of this sense of his own estrangement from his depths grasped Jung, he undertook an inner journey to find his soul and thus to be restored to the Mystery of his own inner Depths.  As that journey unfolded,  Jung deconstructed and reconstructed the meaning of religion in human life and, as an empirical psychologist, created a model of the psyche by which a new form of spirituality became possible.

This seminar will explore this story of Jung’s psychospiritual journey and the understanding of the spiritual dimension of life that emerged from it and its relevance for our post-modern age and the meaning of our own spiritual lives.


Learning Objectives

    1. To outline the Jungian model of the psyche.
    2. To explain the psyche’s implications for not only our psychological development but our spiritual development as well.
    3. To discuss Jung’s psychology of religion and his psychology of psychic individuated wholeness and their possible relationship to each other.
    4. To describe the reality of the numinosum in human experience and the symbolic forms in which that numinosity is expressed

Learning Objectives:

On completion of this class, you will be able to:

  1. Challenge the social norms and gender stereotypes that have placed limits on the male gender experience.
  2. Distinguish archetypal patterns that underpin masculine psychological development.
  3. Comprehend the centrality and symbolic importance of aggression in the masculine Individuation process.
  4. Differentiate between the qualities of “authentic” masculinity and hyper masculinity
  5. Identify approaches to attend to the developmental, psychological, and spiritual needs of men in clinical settings

FACULTY

William Baker, PsyD, is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City. He is currently on the faculty at the Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology at Yeshiva University, the William Alanson White Institute, and the Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts and serves as a member of the editorial staff at the Journal of Analytical Psychology.

Harry W. Fogarty, MDiv, PhD, LP, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in NYC.  He is a faculty member of the Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts and a former Lecturer in Psychiatry and Religion at Union Theological Seminary. 

Ilona Melker, LCSW, is a Jungian Psychoanalyst and Certified Sandplay Therapist.  She has taught and lectured at the C.G. Jung Foundation and at national conferences.  She has contributed to professional journals.  She is in private practice in Manhattan and Princeton, New Jersey.

Maria Taveras, LCSW, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City.  She is also an award-winning creator of Dream Art.  She creates art from images in her own dreams and is the recipient of two Gradiva Awards from the National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis for her Dream Art.  Her Dream Art has been exhibited in New York, San Francisco, Berkeley, London, Montreal, and Cape Town.  

David Walczyk, EdD, LP, NCPsyA, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in NYC. He is a graduate of Columbia University and the C.G. Jung Institute of NY. He is an award-winning educator, award-winning designer, a writer, and public speaker. He has lectured both domestically and internationally and is on the faculty of New York University.

Sylvester Wojtkowski, PhD, is a Jungian analyst and clinical psychologist in private practice in New York City.  He received his doctorate from the New School for Social Research.

General Information

Location

These are all online courses, given through the program Zoom. Please download the Zoom program in advance of the first class session at Zoom.us


Registration

The full fee must be paid at the time of registration. Please register through the payment buttons on this website. Mail in registration and telephone registration are not available at this time.


Important Notes

When you pay you must also email your current email address and telephone number to the Foundation at cgjungny@aol.com. The Foundation will send you an email message and you must reply to confirm receipt. If you are taking this course for 7.5 CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists, please specify which license you hold and give your NYS license number.

Class size is limited. Early registration is strongly recommended. Refunds for continuing education courses, less $15 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. There will be no refunds issued after classes have begun. No exceptions will be made. Programs are subject to change without notice.

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Summer 2021