Ilnitzki honored with Rhind Award

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June 12, 2025 -  

Marissa Ilnitzki, a Disciples House Scholar and June graduate of the MDiv and MSW programs, was honored with the 2025 Joseph Gray Rhind Award at the Divinity School's pinning and hooding ceremony on June 6. Each year a recipient is selected from MDiv graduates for their excellence in training and promise for religious leadership.

The following comments are adapted from the award presentation. Marissa's MDiv cohort knows her as a deep listener, a skilled interlocutor, and a committed friend: as one who pays close attention to others and in whose presence they feel seen, heard, and respected. At Northwestern Hospital, where Marissa trained and continued to work shifts as a hospital chaplain, patients experienced a sense of dignity and understanding among her abundant gifts for spiritual care. Her care for persons and communities is matched and sustained by her lively intellectual curiosity, courage, and love for the arts.

Her skill and insight were powerfully articulated in her MDiv thesis, “A Postcolonial Image: What Hospital Chaplaincy Can Learn from the Art, Theory, and Practice of Improvisation.” In the thesis, Marissa paired her training in improvisation (including at Second City) with research into its use in social work at Hull House, and the felt similarities with moments of jointly crafting theological and care giving responses to illness, grief, and change. She advocates for chaplains and other caregivers to use improv exercises to “ground themselves in humility, remind themselves of the limits of their knowledge, take in new information, and trust that each person has something unique and beautiful to contribute to our mutual understanding.”

Ilnitzki is pictured in the center, with a fellow DDH scholar, Justin Carlson, and resident, Halley Haruta.