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The National Association of Baptist Professors of Religion
College Theology Society The Human in a Dehumanizing World: Re-Examining Theological Anthropology and Its Implications Sixty-Seventh Annual Convention in conjunction with The National Association of Baptist Professors of Religion Thursday, June 3 – Saturday, June 5, 2021 **ALL TIMES CENTRAL** Thursday Evening Opening 6:00-6:45pm (CDT) Online Auditorium Welcome, Business Meeting, Award Presentations Mary Doak University of San Diego (CA) President, College Theology Society Thursday Plenary 7:00-8:30pm (CDT) Online Auditorium ID: Convention Co-Chair and Session Moderator Jessica Coblentz, Saint Mary’s College (IN) Love for the Annihilated: A Black Theological Reading of Angela’s Memorial Memorial Andrew L. Prevot Boston College Andrew L. Prevot is an associate professor in the Department of Theology at Boston College. His research interests include: prayer, spirituality, and mystical theology; political, liberation, and black theology; phenomenology and continental philosophy of religion; and Catholic systematic and fundamental theology. He is the author of Thinking Prayer: Theology and Spirituality Amid the Crises of Modernity (Notre Dame Press, 2015), and a number of article and book chapters in the fields of liberation theology, political theology, and philosophical theology. Dr Prevot’s address belongs to a burgeoning field of scholarship that addresses current social issues by drawing on Christian mystical sources. In particular, it argues that Angela of Foligno's struggle with an inner sense of personal nothingness resembles the psychological burdens of many suffering under anti-blackness and other dehumanizing regimes. It further contends that God's loving response to Angela points to the sort of love that is needed to address such injustices. -
Christian Theology Edited by Ian A
Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-41496-9 - The Cambridge Dictionary of Christian Theology Edited by Ian A. McFarland, David A. S. Fergusson, Karen Kilby, Iain R. Torrance Frontmatter More information the cambridge dictionary of Christian Theology With over 550 entries ranging from ‘Abba’ to ‘Zwingli’ composed by leading contemporary theologians from around the world, The Cambridge Dictionary of Christian Theology represents a fresh, ecumenical approach to theological refer- ence. Written with an emphasis on clarity and concision, all entries are designed to help the reader understand and assess the specifically theological significance of the most important concepts. Clearly structured, the volume is organized around a small number of ‘core entries’ which focus on key topics to provide a general overview of major subject areas, while making use of related shorter entries to impart a more detailed knowledge of technical terms. The work as a whole provides an introduction to the defining topics in Christian thought and is an essential reference point for students and scholars. ian a. mcfarland is Associate Professor of Systematic Theology at Emory University. His publications include Difference and Identity: A Theological Anthro- pology (2001) and The Divine Image: Envisioning the Invisible God (2005). davida.s.fergussonis Professor of Divinity and Principal of New College at the University of Edinburgh. His recent publications include Church, State and Civil Society (Cambridge, 2004) and Faith and Its Critics (2009). karen kilby is Head of the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Nottingham and President of the Catholic Theological Associ- ation of Great Britain. She is the author of A Brief Introduction to Karl Rahner (2007) and Karl Rahner: Theology and Philosophy (2004). -
Karl Barth and Hans Urs Von Balthasar: a Critical Engagement
CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by University of Birmingham Research Archive, E-theses Repository KARL BARTH AND HANS URS VON BALTHASAR: A CRITICAL ENGAGEMENT by STEPHEN DAVID WIGLEY A thesis submitted to the University of Birmingham for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of Theology and Religion School of Historical Studies The University of Birmingham January 2006 University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository This unpublished thesis/dissertation is copyright of the author and/or third parties. The intellectual property rights of the author or third parties in respect of this work are as defined by The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 or as modified by any successor legislation. Any use made of information contained in this thesis/dissertation must be in accordance with that legislation and must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holder. Karl Barth and Hans Urs von Balthasar: a critical engagement Abstract This thesis examines the relationship between two major twentieth century theologians, Karl Barth and Hans Urs von Balthasar. It seeks to show how their meeting, resulting in von Balthasar’s seminal study The Theology of Karl Barth, goes on to influence von Balthasar’s theological development throughout his trilogy beginning with The Glory of the Lord, continuing in the Theo-Drama and concluding with the Theo-Logic. In particular it explores the significance of the debate over the ‘analogy of being’ and seeks to show that von Balthasar’s decision to structure his trilogy around the transcendentals of ‘being’, the beautiful, the good and the true, results from his re-affirmation of the role of analogy in light of his debate with Barth. -
Scottish Journal Of
scottish journal of Volume 72 Number 3 2019 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 170.106.33.22, on 29 Sep 2021 at 08:53:54, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0036930619000565 Editor Ian A. McFarland Emory University, Atlanta, GA Email: [email protected] Editorial Assistant E. S. Kempson University of Cambridge, UK Consulting Editors James Edwards Francesca Murphy Whitworth University, Spokane, Washington, USA University of Notre Dame, USA David Fergusson Aristotle Papanikolaou University of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK Fordham University, USA David Ford Amy Plantinga Pauw University of Cambridge, UK Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, Stanley Hauerwas Louisville, Kentucky, USA Duke Divinity School, USA Willie Jennings Kang Phee Seng Yale Divinity School, USA China Graduate School of Theology, Hong Kong Paul Joyce Katherine Sonderegger King’s College, London, UK Virginia Theological Seminary, USA Karen Kilby Kathryn Tanner Durham University, UK Yale Divinity School, Yale, USA Lois Malcolm Leanne Van Dyk Luther Seminary, St Paul, USA Columbia Theological Seminary, USA Joseph Mangina Wycliffe College, Toronto, Canada Dawn DeVries Bruce L. McCormack Union Theological Seminary, Richmond, Princeton Theological Seminary, New Jersey, USA Virginia, USA Paul Molnar Michael Weinrich St John’s University, Queens, New York, USA University of Bochum, Germany Subscriptions Scottish Journal of Theology (ISSN 0036-9306; electronic ISSN -
Karl Rahner Theology and Philosophy
Karl Rahner Theology and philosophy Karl Rahner is one of the great theologians of the twentieth century. This bold and original book explores the relationship between his theology and his philosophy, and argues for the possibility of a nonfoundationalist reading of Rahner. Karen Kilby calls into question both the admiration of Rahner’s disciples for the overarching unity of his thought, and the too- easy dismissals of critics who object to his ‘flawed philosophical starting point’ or to his supposedly modern and liberal appeal to experience. Through a lucid and critical exposition of key texts including Spirit in the World and Hearer of the Word, and of themes such as the Vorgriff auf esse, the supernatural existential, and the anonymous Christian, Karen Kilby reaffirms Rahner’s significance for modern theology and offers a clear expo- sition of his thought. Karen Kilby is Lecturer in Systematic Theology at Nottingham University. She is author of Karl Rahner (Fount Christian Thinkers, 1997), a brief intro- duction to the thought of Rahner. Karl Rahner Theology and philosophy Karen Kilby First published 2004 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group This edition published in the Taylor and Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” © 2004 Karen Kilby All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. -
Durham Research Online
Durham Research Online Deposited in DRO: 15 March 2019 Version of attached le: Accepted Version Peer-review status of attached le: Peer-reviewed Citation for published item: Murray, Paul D. (2018) 'Living Catholicity dierently : on growing into the plenitudinous plurality of Catholic Communion in God.', in Envisioning futures for the Catholic Church. Washington, D.C.: Council for Research in Values and Philosophy, pp. 109-158. Cultural heritage and contemporary change series., Christian philosophical studies 23 (VIII). Further information on publisher's website: http://www.crvp.org/publications/Series-VIII/23-Futures.pdf Publisher's copyright statement: Additional information: Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in DRO • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full DRO policy for further details. Durham University Library, Stockton Road, Durham DH1 3LY, United Kingdom Tel : +44 (0)191 334 3042 | Fax : +44 (0)191 334 2971 https://dro.dur.ac.uk Living Catholicity differently: On growing into the plenitudinous Plurality of Catholic Communion in God1 PAUL D. MURRAY Introduction The forerunner to the current volume, A Catholic Minority Church in a World of Seekers (2015), analysed the contemporary situation of the Catholic Church in North America and Europe as one minority choice amidst a welter of options. -
Ross Paul Cameron Curriculum Vitae
Ross Paul Cameron Curriculum Vitae Areas of Specialisation Metaphysics (esp. time, modality, ontology, truth, composition, persistence, metametaphysics, indeterminacy, vagueness, metaphysics of aesthetics) Areas of Competence Formal and Philosophical Logic Aesthetics Philosophy of Religion Epistemology Education Ph.D. Jan 2006, Arché, University of St Andrews. Thesis title: The Source of Modal Truth. Supervised by Prof. Crispin Wright MPhil, University of Glasgow, 2002 (Distinction) MA, University of Glasgow, 2001 (First class honours) Employment August 2014 - present: Associate Professor in Philosophy (with tenure), University of Virginia August 2009 - August 2014: Associate Professor in Philosophy, University of Leeds September 2006 - August 2009: Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Leeds August 2005 - September 2006: Research Fellow in Metaphysics, University of Leeds Honorary Positions Since December 2009: Associate Fellow, Northern Institute of Philosophy March 2006 – Feb 2011: Associate Fellow, Arché, University of St Andrews and Honorary Research Fellow, University of St Andrews Publications Books The Moving Spotlight: An Essay on Time and Ontology, Oxford University Press, forthcoming (estimated publication, Aug 2015) The Routledge Companion to Metaphysics, edited with Robin Le Poidevin, Peter Simons and Andrew McGonigal, Routledge, 2009 Papers 'Improve your thought experiments overnight with Speculative Fiction!', forthcoming in Midwest Studies in Philosophy, Vol. 39, special issue on Science Fiction and Philosophy ‘Truthmakers’, forthcoming in The Oxford Handbook of Truth, edited by Michael Glanzberg, Oxford University Press 'Parts Generate The Whole, But They Are Not Identical To It', in Composition as Identity, edited by Donald Baxter and Aaron Cotnoir, Oxford University Press, p90-107, (2014) 'On the lack of direction in Rayo's The Construction of Logical Space', Inquiry Vol. -
As a Mother Tenderly
AS A MOTHER TENDERLY Exploring parish ministry through the metaphor and analogy of mothering REVEREND EMMA PERCY MA Cantab BA Dunelm Thesis submitted to the University of Nottingham for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy July 2012 As a mother tenderly: using mothering as a metaphor and analogy for parish ministry. The thesis sets out to use maternal imagery as a way of articulating the practice of parish ministry in the Church of England. The aim is to find a language which can affirm and encourage many aspects of good practice that are in danger of being over looked because they are neither well articulated nor valued. The ministry of a parish priest is a relational activity: characterised by care. It is because the priest has a responsibility to care for those entrusted to her that she engages in priestly activity. In doing so she is sharing in the collective ministry of the church in which she has a pivotal and public role. The church is to be a community in which people grow up in Christ and come to maturity of faith. In order to explore the relational activity of a parish priest the imagery of mothering is used. The changing place of women in society has made it more difficult to use gendered images and thus it is necessary to discuss whether mothering is an essentially female activity. After acknowledging the complexity of the gendered language and the reality that most women arrive at mothering through a specifically female bodily experience, the thesis goes on to state that the practice of mothering is not instinctual but learnt. -
Some Aspects of the Theological Legacy of Karl Rahner
Declan Marmion Some Aspects of the Theological Legacy of Karl Rahner Introduction The German termvielseitig – versatile or many-sided – certainly applies to Karl Rahner. The word might be literally translated as ‘many-paged’, and this epithet too applies to Rahner, as many theology students can attest. His literary output was prodigious – even by 1974 it had reached almost 3,000 publications, including translations. A distinguished Irish theologian once said of him that in all his voluminous works, Rahner has really only one thing to say – but it is maddeningly difficult to name what that one thing is! Were I to venture a guess, I would point to Rahner’s repeated attempts to focus on the core of the Christian faith, a method that does not lead to a reduction of the essentials but, in the words of Herbert Vorgrimler, to ‘a concentration of the plurality into a few very basic thoughts,’ key terms (Schlüsselbegriffe), or better, key experiences (Schlüsselerlebnisse), of which the most fundamental is the experience of the self-communication of God.1 However, in this essay I will not focus on the experience of God in Rahner, though hopefully it will be apparent how Rahner’s ‘mystagogical’ style finds 1 ‘Seine [Rahner’s] Methode … ist die der Konzentration der Vielfalt auf ganz wenige Grundgedanken, wie er sagt, auf Schlüsselbegriffe oder noch besser auf Schlüsselerlebnisse. Der Grundgedanke dieser Theologie oderdas Schlüsselerlebnis ist, nachlesbar bei Rahner selber, die Erfahrung Gottes.’ Herbert Vorgrimler, ‘Gotteserfahrung im Alltag: Der Beitrag Karl Rahners zu Spiritualität und Mystik,’ in Albert Raffelt, ed., Karl Rahner in Erinnerung, Freiburger Akademieschriften, Band 8. -
Karl Barth and Hans Urs Von Balthasar
KARL BARTH AND HANS URS VON BALTHASAR: A CRITICAL ENGAGEMENT by STEPHEN DAVID WIGLEY A thesis submitted to the University of Birmingham for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of Theology and Religion School of Historical Studies The University of Birmingham January 2006 University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository This unpublished thesis/dissertation is copyright of the author and/or third parties. The intellectual property rights of the author or third parties in respect of this work are as defined by The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 or as modified by any successor legislation. Any use made of information contained in this thesis/dissertation must be in accordance with that legislation and must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holder. Karl Barth and Hans Urs von Balthasar: a critical engagement Abstract This thesis examines the relationship between two major twentieth century theologians, Karl Barth and Hans Urs von Balthasar. It seeks to show how their meeting, resulting in von Balthasar’s seminal study The Theology of Karl Barth, goes on to influence von Balthasar’s theological development throughout his trilogy beginning with The Glory of the Lord, continuing in the Theo-Drama and concluding with the Theo-Logic. In particular it explores the significance of the debate over the ‘analogy of being’ and seeks to show that von Balthasar’s decision to structure his trilogy around the transcendentals of ‘being’, the beautiful, the good and the true, results from his re-affirmation of the role of analogy in light of his debate with Barth. -
OPEN LETTER to the University of Liverpool Concerning Threatened Redundancies of Academic Staff
You can't edit this document directly. To sign please use the form linked below the letter. OPEN LETTER to the University of Liverpool concerning threatened redundancies of academic staff In January the University of Liverpool announced 47 redundancies of academic staff. These staff were identified by grant income and citation metrics and sent letters notifying them they had been targeted for redundancies without the opportunity to review the criteria or the specific information held about them. The University has not made allowance for individual circumstances such as workload or sickness which might have affected these metrics, nor has it given any indication of any meaningful plans to make allowance for such factors. The University used a narrow time window over which to calculate these fluctuating metrics, and a proprietary citation metric tool from Elsevier to arrive at field-weighted citation metrics which are, as a consequence, opaque and difficult to review for appropriateness. We write as members of the wider academic community - researchers who collaborate with the University of Liverpool on grants and papers, who read and cite work from Liverpool, examine PhD students, review courses, attend conferences with colleagues from the University of Liverpool. We are dismayed by the University of Liverpool’s actions, which can only have a chilling effect on UK research. Our belief is not just that the redundancies are financially unnecessary and apparently illegal, nor just that they are fundamentally callous and unfair to deploy against staff who have received consistently positive annual appraisals and have been working harder than ever during a global pandemic. -
METAPHYSICIANS of MODERNITY: COLIN GUNTON and GEORGE P. GRANT CONFRONT the ZEITGEIST by Arthur Gregory Daggett Th.B., Kingswoo
METAPHYSICIANS OF MODERNITY: COLIN GUNTON AND GEORGE P. GRANT CONFRONT THE ZEITGEIST By Arthur Gregory Daggett Th.B., Kingswood University, 2010 Submitted to the Faculty of Theology at Acadia University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts (Theology) Acadia University Spring Convocation 2013 © 2013 Arthur Gregory Daggett This thesis by ARTHUR GREGORY DAGGETT was defended successfully in an oral examination on 3 April 2013. The examining committee for the thesis was: Dr. Jody Linkletter, Chair Dr. James Perkin, External Examiner Dr. Carol Anne Janzen, Internal Examiner Dr. William Brackney, Supervisor Dr. Craig Evans, MA Director This thesis is accepted in its present form by Acadia Divinity College, the Faculty of Theology of Acadia University, as satisfying the thesis requirements for the degree of Master of Arts (Theology). ii I, ARTHUR GREGORY DAGGETT, hereby grant permission to the University Librarian at Acadia University to provide copies of my thesis, upon request, on a non- profit basis. Arthur Gregory Daggett Author Dr. William Brackney Supervisor 3 April 2013 Date iii Acknowledgements While I take credit as the author, I do not consider this project a solitary endeavor. Friends, family members, and colleagues who contributed in some way are too numerous to mention, but I would like to acknowledge several people for their help in making this thesis a reality. Dr. Kennth Gavel’s mentorship during my first few years as a student of theology helped lay the foundation for this work, for which I am forever grateful. Blaine Hanna has been a great friend and conversation partner, tolerating my late-night rants through many years of study together.