Ellen Tabitha Charry (born 1947) is an American theologian and author who is the Margaret W. Harmon Professor of Systematic Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary.
Charry's research has focused on how religious commitments and theological convictions contribute to human flourishing, and interfaith understanding between Judaism and Christianity.[6] She has written on Christian doctrine, moral formation, and the intersections between theology and psychology.[7] She says that Christians have been averse to happiness, and argues that thinking about happiness is both consistent with Scripture and represented in ancient Christian thought.[8] Her book God and the Art of Happiness coins the term "asherism" to refer to a happiness that is found in "the pursuit of an excellent way of life in community."[9][10]
Combining her own personal experience with Judaism and Christianity with her philosophical thinking, she has written about the need for both Jews and Christians to overcome their differences and "help each other straighten out their own tradition."[11]
Charry was married to Dana Charry, a psychiatrist, who died of lung cancer in 2003.[12] Her chapter on lament in the book Lament: Reclaiming Practices in Pulpit, Pew, and Public Square shares letters they wrote to family and friends during his illness.[12][2] She has two daughters and two granddaughters.[2] Charry comes from a Jewish background[13] and became an EpiscopalianChristian while studying religion.[14] Her PhD supervisor, Paul van Buren, was her baptismal sponsor.[4]
Charry, Ellen T. (2005). "Sacramental Ecclesiology". In Mark Husbands; Daniel J. Treier (eds.). The Community of the Word:Toward an Evangelical Ecclesiology. InterVarsity Press. pp. 213–214.