The Laing Lectures

Serious thought and original ideas—for the church, for society, for us all. Join us March 23–24, 2026, for an exploration of faith, ethics, and the technological trajectories shaping our world.

 

Faith-Based Ethics for a World of Powerful AI

On March 23 and 24, join us in the Regent College Chapel or online for the 2026 Laing Lectures.

Dr. Meghan Sullivan, Wilsey Family College Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame, will speak on the subject of artificial intelligence and ethics.

Schedule

Lecture 1: The DELTA Framework—Where Is the Christian Voice in AI Ethics?
Monday, March 23 • 7:30–9 pm • Regent College Chapel or rgnt.net/live

Lecture 2: The Dignity of Work and the Dignity of Learning
Tuesday, March 24 • 7:30–9 pm • Regent College Chapel or rgnt.net/live

Lunchtime Q&A (Onsite Only)
Wednesday, March 25 • 12:15–1 pm • Room 100

Learn more about this year's lectures

Speaker

Dr. Meghan Sullivan is the Wilsey Family College Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. She serves as Director of the University-wide Ethics Initiative and is the founding director of Notre Dame’s Institute for Ethics and the Common Good, which is home to the Notre Dame–IBM Technology Ethics Lab, among other initiatives.

Learn more about Meghan Sullivan

Schedule

Lecture 1: The DELTA Framework—Where Is the Christian Voice in AI Ethics?
Monday, March 23 • 7:30–9 pm • Regent College Chapel or rgnt.net/live

Lecture 2: The Dignity of Work and the Dignity of Learning
Tuesday, March 24 • 7:30–9 pm • Regent College Chapel or rgnt.net/live

Lunchtime Q&A (Onsite Only)
Wednesday, March 25 • 12:15–1 pm • Room 100


About the Laing Lectures

The Laing Lectures began at Regent College in 1999 in cooperation with Roger and Carol Laing and in honour of their father, William John Laing. The purpose of the lectures is to encourage persons recognized for scholarship, wisdom, and creativity to undertake serious thought and original writing on an issue of significance for the Christian church and to promote the sharing of such thoughts through a series of public lectures.

The material presented by Laing Lecturers is intended to move beyond an analysis of historic and current concerns to provide proposals for alternative action for the Christian church. In doing so, lecturers are invited to explore in an interdisciplinary way the relationship between Christianity and culture, and to suggest ways in which that relationship might lead to greater flourishing of the church, the larger human household, and the whole community of creation.

The following speakers have delivered Laing Lectures: Neil Postman (2000), Charles Taylor (2001), Peter Berger (2002), Margaret Visser (2004), Miroslav Volf (2006), Nicholas Wolterstorff (2007), Walter Brueggemann (2008), Susan Wise Bauer (2010), Albert Borgmann (2011), Rex Murphy (2012), Ellen T. Charry (Spring 2014), Ross Douthat (Fall 2014), Iain McGilchrist (2016), Marilynne Robinson (2017), Stanley Hauerwas (2018), Malcolm Guite (2019), John Milbank (2022), Curt Thompson (2023), George Yancey (2024), and Janet Martin Soskice (2025).

Pastor William J. Laing

Black and white photo of William John Laing as a young man

William John Laing (1916–1992) was the much-loved pastor of Bethel Baptist Church in Calgary. A graduate of William Aberhart’s Prophetic Bible Institute, “Bill” Laing assumed the pastorate of the Bible Institute Baptist Church in 1939 when he was only twenty-three. He served that church for more than four decades. Through his dynamic personality and strength of character, he brought stability to the congregation. Under his leadership, the church was restructured and changed its name to Bethel Baptist Church in 1949. He retired in 1981 and remained as Minister Emeritus for the following ten years.

Evangelism and missions were prominent aspects of Laing’s ministry. Over the years fifty percent of his church’s budget was devoted to supporting missionaries, many of whom he had taught at Berean Bible College. Those missionaries went to Canada’s north, Europe, Africa, India, Southeast Asia, and Central and South America. He was an active supporter of the Youth for Christ movement and Billy Graham’s ministry from their inception. As one whose life had been greatly influenced by radio evangelism, he became a frequent speaker on Canada’s national Back to the Bible Hour broadcast. During the last decade of his life, he was Pastor-at-Large for Global Outreach Mission, which took his ministry to North America, Europe, and India, where he spoke to conferences of pastors and missionaries.


Recent Laing Lectures

2025 • God & Creation: An Urgent Teaching for Today

Janet Martin Soskice

Dr. Janet Martin Soskice, the William K. Warren Distinguished Research Professor of Catholic Theology at Duke Divinity School, studied at Regent College in 1973–74. She went on to earn an MA in Biblical Studies at the University of Sheffield and a doctorate in philosophy of religion at Oxford University. She spent the majority of her career teaching philosophical theology at Cambridge University. Her works include Metaphor and Religious Language (Oxford, 1985), The Kindness of God (Oxford, 2008), and Naming God: Addressing the Divine in Philosophy, Theology and Scripture (Cambridge, 2023). Her 2025 Laing Lectures address the ramifications of confessing the One God as Creator.

Learn more and watch the lectures

2024 • Christian Racial Reconciliation

George Yancey

Dr. George Yancey is a Professor of Sociology at Baylor University and the Baylor Institute for Studies of Religion. He has published several research articles on the topics of institutional racial diversity, racial identity, atheists, cultural progressives, academic bias, and anti-Christian hostility. In this three-lecture series, Dr. Yancey discusses institutional racism past and present, why the solutions being offered are not enough, and the theology and sociology of conversation. 

Learn more and watch the lectures

2023 • Practicing for Heaven: Neuroscience and the Beauty, Trauma & Renewal of All Things

Curt Thompson MD

Curt Thompson connects our intrinsic desire to be known with the need to tell truer stories about ourselves—showing us how to form deep relationships, discover meaning, and live integrated and creative lives. With a keen instinct for making complex topics relatable, Dr. Thompson integrates the science of interpersonal neurobiology with Christian anthropology to help us re-establish and deepen our relationships—leading to healthier, more meaningful lives. 

Learn more and watch the lectures