Preliminary SBL Program: With Whom Am I Presenting?
Bloggers are noting that the preliminary program for the 2009 meeting is up on SBL’s site. Naturally, I first searched for my own name. Indeed, it is there! In fact, I am currently set to begin the session. I’m not sure if that’s a good thing or not. The title of the session is, “Rituals, Texts, Individuals and Associations: Competing Ways to Construct Identities?” One of three sessions with that title. Looks like I am slotted with 25 minutes. You can find my abstract on my blog here.
While I can’t yet see the time or day the session will take place, I am able to see those with whom I will be sharing the stage/podium. There is a bit of international flavoring to the session. First, we have Simon Mimouni presiding over the session, who teaches at Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, a school within the Sorbonne (the University of Paris).
After my slot is Gabriella Gelardini who received her Dr. theol. in New Testament studies from the University of Basel (Switzerland), where she currently teaches. Her paper, “Nomen est Omen: The Practice of Naming in the Gospel of Mark as an Instrument (of Power) in Service of Identity Construction(s),” addresses why some folks get named and others do not in the Gospel of Mark.
We then have five minutes for discussion (total for both initial papers!) and time for a five minute break.
Starting up the second half of the session is Lori Baron, who I believe is a Ph.D. candidate at Duke University. Her paper, “Interpreting the Shema: Liturgy and Identity in the Fourth Gospel,” was also recently presented at the 2009 SECSOR presentation (the Southeastern regional SBL/AAR). You can see one blogger’s description of the “excellent paper.” She presented on a similar theme at the 2008 SBL session in Boston. Here are her opening abstract lines:
This paper explores how the use of the Shema in John’s Gospel is instrumental in developing the identities of two groups of actors: Jews who believe in Jesus and Jews who do not. Equally important, John’s use of the Shema distinguishes those John considers true believers from false believers.
Finally, we have Matthew E. Gordley of Regent University rounding out the session. Gordley serves as the Department Chair of Religious Studies at Regent. He received his Ph.D. in 2006 from Notre Dame in New Testament and Early Christianity. I know what you might be thinking, “Pat Robertson’s Regent University?” Yes. But, I have to say that my opinion has been radically altered, having met a graduate of their seminary–who also happens to be one of the sharpest guys I know and still has his intellectual integrity intact. My friend tells me that Pat Robertson may get the university money, but the professors in religious studies are far from Robertson’s own strange civil religion theology.
Gordley, who wrote his dissertation on the Colosians hymn (available on Google Books), has titled his presentation for this session, “Dynamics of Communal Formation in Horace’s Odes and Early Christian Hymns.” Gordley’s paper addresses the two major hymns of the NT (Phil 2:5-11 and Col 1:15-20) in light of a recent study on “Horace’s encomia of Caesar (especially Odes IV. 14 and 15) [that] suggests that praise of an exalted individual can be part of a complex process of involving author and audience in navigating issues of identity.”
Well, I am quite impressed. I was a bit worried I would end up with boring topics, but I am intrigued by all the papers in the session. I hope we will be able to draw in a little bit of a crowd–here’s hoping we’re not up against any heavy hitters, or some session on “empire” or “sex” or the two combined.
Here is the outline of the session:
Construction of Christian Identities
Date TBD
Time TBD to Time TBD
Room: Room TBD – Hotel TBDTheme: Rituals, Texts, Individuals and Associations: Competing Ways to Construct Identities? (3)
Simon Mimouni, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Presiding (5 min)
Patrick George McCullough, University of California-Los Angeles
The Agents of Jesus Meet “All the Nations”: Adapting Jesus’ Cultic Reform for the Eschaton (25 min)Gabriella Gelardini, University of Basel
Nomen est Omen: The Practice of Naming in the Gospel of Mark as an Instrument (of Power) in Service of Identity Construction(s) (25 min)Discussion (5 min)
Break (5 min)Lori Baron, Duke University
Interpreting the Shema: Liturgy and Identity in the Fourth Gospel (25 min)Matthew E. Gordley, Regent University
Dynamics of Communal Formation in Horace’s Odes and Early Christian Hymns (25 min)Discussion (5 min)
Business Meeting (30 min)
SBL Paper Accepted!
I am pleased to announce that my paper, “The Agents of Jesus Meet ‘All the Nations’: Adapting Jesus’ Cultic Reform for the Eschaton,” has been accepted for the 2009 Annual Meeting program unit Construction of Christian Identities at the Society of Biblical Literature in New Orleans. Though I have presented at the regional SBL meeting for the west coast, this will be my first presentation at the national conference.
The basic thesis for the paper is that Jewish eschatological texts anticipate a time when the Gentiles/nations will one day worship the one true God, and with Jesus’ inauguration of the eschaton, his followers carry out the Gentile mission in partial fulfillment of that vision. Here is the abstract:
The Gospels portray Jesus of Nazareth as both cultic reformer within the house of Israel (akin to Amos) and an apocalyptic herald announcing the end of the age. As a reformer, Jesus seeks to extend God’s compassion to groups marginalized by contemporary practices within the Judean cult (e.g., women, the sick, the poor). While Jesus’ inclusivity here is radical, his program is limited to the house of Israel (e.g., Matt 15:24). This paper argues that Jesus’ role as an apocalyptic herald inaugurates not only the eschaton, but also the inclusion of the Gentiles (the “nations”). The role of the Gentiles in the coming judgment is a muddled area within Second Temple Jewish texts. Some texts anticipate a war with Gentile oppressors of the Judeans, other texts see God using the Gentiles as bringing God’s justice upon unfaithful Israelites/Judeans, while many texts also suggest that the Gentiles will some day worship the true God and will join the people of God. The latter category provides the foundation for this paper. From the perspective of Jesus’ followers, Judean cultic leaders have rejected Jesus’ message of radical inclusivity. As Jesus’ death and resurrection marks the beginning of the new age, the followers of Jesus act as his agents to reinterpret his cultic reforms for a mission to the Gentiles—thus initiating the Gentile inclusion anticipated in eschatological texts. One can see the shift in the disciples’ role as Jesus’ agents to the house of Israel first (Matt 10) and later to “all the nations” (Matt 25:31-46; 28:16-20). The pragmatic and theological implications of such a shift dominate the conversation of the early Jesus movement. This paper contrasts this phenomenon with the sectarian particularism of the Qumran community, which constitutes a contemporary group also identified by both cultic reform and apocalyptic eschatology.
And here is information for the program unit (see all program units):
Construction of Christian Identities
Edmondo F. Lupieri Mauro Pesce Description: Interdisciplinary study of the making of Christianity as a complex phenomenon (“Early Christianities”), and of conflicting intercultural relations among Mediterranean/Near-Eastern religious groups as contributing to diversified evolution inside early Christianities. Identifying different early Christian groups as matrix of different early Christian writings.
Call for papers: For the Annual Meeting of New Orleans 2009, this Unit plans to invite the speakers for one of its sessions (panel discussion) and to accept papers for the other. The title of the panel discussion is: “From Christianity to Christianities: Ways Back to the Origins.” We would like to explore the possibility to move back from the consolidated situation of Christianity we know better (that of a “Great Church” and of “heresies”) to the complexity of the origins. The title of the open session is: “Rituals, Texts, Individuals and Associations: Competing ways to Construct Identities?” We invite contributions which analyze first century events and/or phenomena pertaining to cultural mechanisms which could have contributed to the construction of a group identity, both among the followers of Jesus and in comparable groups. Please, feel free to send any proposal for papers, the content of which corresponds to the specific subject of the open session and to the lines established in the General Description of the Section.
AAR not so independent after all…
Good news! Just got this email from AAR. Hot off the press:
April 14, 2008
Dear Fellow Members of the American Academy of Religion:
I write today to alert you to an action taken by your Board of Directors at its meeting this past weekend.
In light of the scheduling and logistical problems connected with the proposed Independent Annual Meetings, and given the views our members expressed in our recent member survey, the Board, in its April 12, 2008 meeting, approved a recommendation that the AAR begin scheduling concurrent, yet independent Annual Meetings with the Society of Biblical Literature as soon as is feasible. Assuming that the SBL is agreeable to meeting concurrently, it is our intention that such meetings would feature:
- A return to the traditional meeting time, on the weekend before the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday;
- An AAR Program (and Program Book) that is entirely separate from the SBL’s;
- If desirable, a single, jointly sponsored Book Exhibit and a single, jointly sponsored employment interview center;
- The invitation to and inclusion of other scholarly groups that may wish to meet concurrently with the AAR;
- An arrangement whereby AAR members could participate freely in sessions and programs of the SBL (and other scholarly organizations with which the AAR has entered into concurrent meeting arrangements), and vice versa, with no additional registration fees; and
- Consultation with the Finance Committee, prior to entering into jointly sponsored ventures with the SBL, to ensure that the AAR’s financial interests are protected.
The Board concluded that such a plan:
- Supports the views of the majority of our members;
- Represents a genuine compromise among the views of our members on this contentious subject;
- Fosters many of the goals sought in Independent Annual Meetings;
- Allows departments, schools, universities, and other societies to use concurrent meetings for breakfasts, receptions, and other special events aimed at both AAR and SBL members; and
- Promotes the continuing health of our organization.
The text of this announcement is available on the AAR website.
I will share additional developments about concurrent meetings with you as they are available. Until then, thank you for your participation in the work of our Academy.
Sincerely yours
Jack Fitzmier
Executive Director
Sounds like a good compromise to me. It’s probably good for the organizations to keep their separate identity, but this solves so many practical problems that we were facing. I hope that SBL finds the proposal agreeable.
Reception for Bibliobloggers (or whatever you call us) in Boston?
Jim West, the man of the perpetually transforming blog presentation, informs the public that we may indeed have a chance to be an official reception at SBL. Such an event would be great, considering the unwieldy nature of our massive biblioblogger lunch in San Diego. I think it would make for a better event, too, because it would be a set time and place advertised in print for all SBL members to see.
Is it too early to be excited about Boston? I did grow up in Massachusetts after all. It’s my home! By the way, this Friday is the last day to register for the meeting at the “early bird” rate. March 1st is the due date for paper proposals.
Hagner's Response to Nanos' Critique
I have just noticed that the SBL session reviewing “Jewish Christianity” (S19-116) is available for free audio download (HT: JC Baker). I will be reflecting on the exchange between Hagner and Nanos a little later (as has Matt Barnes on his blog), but I thought that I would share Hagner’s response to Nanos’ critique here for anyone who might be interested. You should note that this is a transcription of what was spoken, so pretend you’re hearing it:
I thank the chair for the privilege of having a few minutes to respond even though I’m not on the program. My good friend, Mark–my former good friend, Mark [laughter], is as usual always interesting, always stimulating, but, at least for me, not always persuasive. He accuses me of prejudging the issues and I have to say that I think Mark has at least as much of an a priori as I have. And I think he has more of an a priori than I have, if that’s okay. Mark tends to dismiss my view as the “traditional view.” I’d like to say that because an interpretation is “traditional” does not mean it is necessarily true, but it also does not mean it is necessarily false. I think it’s interesting to ponder the fact that so many have understood Paul in the traditional way. It doesn’t mean it’s right; it’s just an interesting observation.
Next, I’d like to say that the challenge for both of us is to make some coherent sense not just of a few texts, but of all of the texts… together. And I think that leads us to the necessity of affirming tensions, nuances, subtleties, things that you tend to refer to as “contradictions,” I’m afraid. It’s also not a matter of either/or; it’s a matter of both/and. It’s not whether Paul is a Jew or a Christian. He is both: a Jew and a Christian. But these subtleties, I think, sometimes seem to escape Mark. Somehow Mark has missed my affirmation that Paul is a Jew… that Paul is a Jewish believer in Jesus, that Paul has not changed his religion, that Paul upholds the righteousness of the law, but with a new dynamic, in a new way. I emphatically deny something that he has in his written statement, namely (this is a quote from him), he says that I think Paul “is engaged in a new religion that stands against his former religion” [pg 15]. No, no, no! I do not think that. Not at all. It’s the absolute opposite of what I think, in fact. Paul is affirming the true Judaism in his own mind.
Mark wants to push me into a simple “discontinuity” between Paul and Judaism in contrast to his simple “continuity.” But again, the issue is not that easy. We have to deal with both/and, both continuity and discontinuity in this matter. Mark’s view is just a little too simplistic for me. Galatians 1:13, Paul speaks of his Ἰουδαϊσμός as something of the past and I don’t think I can read it in the way Mark does, just moving from one form of Judaism to another. The Ἰουδαϊσμός is behind him, I think. And his Philippians 3:4 and following, Paul counts his Jewish pedigree, including his blamelessness as a Pharisee as worthless. What matters is Χριστὸς.
And it’s ludicrous, by the way, I think, Mark, to say that he would have to include his apostleship in that list [see pg 8]. That’s not giving him a fair chance to say what he means to say, what he wants to say. Because Paul doesn’t use the word “Christian” does not mean that he can’t be described or shouldn’t be described as a Christian. I fail to see how Mark can deny my two nonnegotiables. Are these two statements really questionable on a reading of the authentic Pauline letters? First, that Christians are no longer under the law. Second, that righteousness remains for Paul an indispensable priority. Can we really challenge either of those statements on the basis of the Pauline letters? I don’t think so. Mark’s Paul, for me, is not the Paul of the letters. I would ask him to make better sense of the texts than I have. And I think so far, he hasn’t. Thank you.
SBL Reflections: Anabaptists and "Nonviolent Atonement"
Greater bibliobloggers have already done their reflections on experiences from the big SBL/AAR meeting in San Diego last month, but I just had to focus on my end-of-the-quarter responsibilities for awhile. Now that the Fall quarter is officially over, my main concern is making sure my doctoral applications are all taken care of and taking some time to reflect. My time at SBL this year was tilted more towards my concerns with the former: I was trying to meet with people (profs and grad students) and get some good advice on PhD stuff. But I also came across some engaging ideas, unrelated to my drive towards doctoral work.
On Friday night (November 16th), I went to what some have called the “Mennonite schmooze fest,” also known as the “Mennonite Scholars and Friends Reception.” It is the answer to the question: “What happens when you fill a room with tons of Anabaptists?” It was my first time doing the SBL/AAR menno-schmoozing, but I heard it may have been the most crowded it has ever been. For the “introduction” tradition, we all stand in a humongous circle and say our name and institution. It seems like the group may have outgrown the tradition, but I’m just a noob.
The next morning continued the menno-fun with the traditional “Mennonite Scholars and Friends Forum.” Last year, it was on Jewish-Anabaptist relations, particularly a discussion on John Howard Yoder, and it hosted Daniel Boyarin for some interesting discussion. This year, the topic was “Reflections on J. Denny Weaver’s Non-Violent Atonement.” Weaver was, of course, there to respond to the reflections. Doing the reflecting, we had Sharon Baker (a prof at my alma mater!), Mark Thiessen Nation (a Fuller PhD grad), and Thomas Yoder Neufeld (who I met the night before at the schmooze fest).
If this had been a presidential candidate debate and we were declaring “winners,” I would have to say that it was hands down Tom Yoder Neufeld. Of course, I’m showing my bias because Tom was the only Bible scholar among them and I’m a Bible guy. But I’m getting ahead of myself. Let me set the scene a little bit.
Honestly, I wish that this could have been recorded and shown to any and all who have interests in the atonement. Denny’s book has become well-known in that field, but I think many people assume it is the Anabaptist theory of the atonement. If they had come to this little Mennonite debate, they would have seen that there is no unified Anabaptist voice on Atonement and indeed, many Anabaptist folk feel quite uncomfortable with Denny’s views. I hadn’t been all that interested in the atonement before I took the class, “Cross in the New Testament” with Marianne Meye Thompson, because it is just so darn complicated and mysterious. But now that I have a basic understanding of the various views and their implications, I’m more interested in engaging the topic.
At the session, we first had a basic summary of Denny’s book. Going against the grain of some significant Anabaptist theology, Weaver wants to avoid attributing violence to God. If we have a “violent” image of the atonement, in which a wrathful God demands a violent sacrifice of Jesus in order to pay some kind of self-demanded debt, then we may be encouraged to be violent ourselves. Drawing upon the critiques of contexual theologies (such as feminist, womanist, and black theologies) against traditional views of the atonement, Weaver attacks the foundation of the historical “satisfaction” theories (with their roots in Anselm): “Satisfaction atonement depends on the assumption that doing justice means to punish, that a wrong deed is balanced by violence” (225). Weaver instead opts for a modified form of Christus Victor, which is the view that attributes to Christ’s death a cosmic victory over the evil powers of Satan. For Weaver, though, those cosmic forces are representative of historical, human realities. For instance, when describing the cosmic symbolism of the book of Revelation, he notes, “it is clear that the symbolism of conflict and victory of the reign of God over the rule of Satan is a way of ascribing cosmic significance to the church’s confrontation of the Roman empire” (27). In Weaver’s understanding, if we have a violent image of God, that justifies the violent actions of humanity (going against a good lot of Anabaptist theology and especially Old Testament scholarship, which imagines God as the “divine warrior” who fights the battles for humanity).
Then we got into the responses. Sharon Baker, up first, was by far the most positive response. She affirmed Weaver’s reinterpretation of the atonement and reinforced it by arguing that the Christian church has continually changed their views depending on their own particular social and historical situations: indeed, “the tradition,” she said, “is to reinterpret the tradition.” She also affirmed that, while it is difficult to establish causes and effects between social violence and atonement theory, if atonement theories lend legitimacy to violence, we must rethink them. She offered one comment that took me aback for a moment: Baker stated that “narrative Christus Victor [theory] offers a more consistent picture of God.” My question: is the biblical image of God consistent? More on that later.
Mark Thiessen Nation was up next and his response to Weaver was quite negative, but his was a more personal reaction. I know I’m not going to do him justice because I didn’t quite follow his argument. He was interested in the affects of martyrdom generally and even mentioned that he grew up in a racist environment and that part of how he got out of his racist views from childhood was the witness of Martin Luther King, Jr. He suggested that it was the powerful death of MLK that shook him out of racism. In a sense, Thiessen Nation stated more than once, “Martin Luther King died for my sins.” It was an interesting connection, but for me it raised more questions than answers: if we add such significance to the deaths of all minoritized “martyrs,” does that mean their deaths are good and that their killers did the right thing? Of course not.
As I mentioned, Tom Yoder Neufeld (who is, by the way, the son-in-law of John Howard Yoder) was my personal favorite. He did offer some agreement with Weaver: he concurs that the atonement is connected with transformed/transforming living and that the resurrection is not just a generic hope, but a defining act in the cosmos. But Yoder Neufeld dug deeply into problematic biblical texts to suggest that our understanding of the atonement should be more nuanced. Weaver’s criterion for his atonement theory, and Tiessen Nation mentioned this as well, is nonviolence. In other words, it begins with the idea that the atonement must be nonviolent and is thus self-fulfilling. Furthermore, Yoder Neufeld questioned Weaver’s usage of the term “violence.” What do we mean by “violence” related to the death of Jesus? Is God “responsible” for such violence? And if so, is God appropriately labeled “violent”? Yoder Neufeld also emphasized that we must have a fuller picture of the biblical God, who is at times a wrathful judge, to be both feared and trusted.
Yoder Neufeld’s ultimate critique of Weaver is that he has a “truncated reading of the Scriptures, driven by an ideological hermeneutic.” Instead, we should open our views to see multiple possible atonement theories alive within the biblical text. Biblical atonement theories are less mathematical equations and more poetic ways of trying to understand the death of Jesus. Thus, we can include both substitution and Christus Victor in our understanding. (As an aside, this is partially how I understand Joel Green’s “kaleidescopic” view.)
Weaver responded by suggesting that Yoder Neufeld is “comfortable” with the image of a violent God. Yoder Neufeld responded to that accusation by saying that he was simply trying to accurately reflect the biblical texts, which is a far cry from saying that he is “comfortable” with those texts. In response to other comments of Yoder Neufeld’s, Sharon Baker offered that all of our readings of Scripture are driven by an “ideological hermeneutic.” Tom did not disagree.
So, here’s my two cents. True, we are all driven in our interpretive methods by some particular point of view or ideology. On the other hand, it strikes me as more honest to go with a reading that is less “comfortable” to one’s ideology. Clearly, Tom is dedicated to nonviolence and finds the biblical texts attributing some sort of “violent” tendencies to God quite troubling. We need not be trapped by our ideologies. Instead, we should at least attempt to weigh all the evidence and be willing to concede ideological defeat to that evidence. This brings me back to Sharon Baker’s suggestion that “narrative Christus Victor [theory] offers a more consistent picture of God.” I know there are plenty of Evangelicals and fundamentalists out there who will give me flack for this, but the biblical picture of God is not consistent. As the biblical text (and the picture of God found therein) reflects the social situation of various authors in various times and places, even different languages, we should not expect to find one image of God but a variety of human attempts to reflect their experiences of God. I appreciate Yoder Neufeld’s use of “poetic” language. Theology, biblical theology included, is more art than science. For me, that means I will probably never come to a hard and fast singular conclusion about something I cannot ultimately know for sure (i.e., why Jesus died). Instead, I will live with multiple possibilities held in tension, just as the earliest followers of Jesus apparently did as well.
SBL reflections on hold
I have many reflections that I’d like to share about last weekend’s conference. I met many people that I only knew by blog, and a few I only knew by their books. I walked so much that my legs about fell off. I went to some interesting sessions on things like Denny Weaver’s nonviolent atonement, the AAR-SBL split, Revelation and violence, the minoritized in academic biblical studies, and “Jewish Christianity.”
Alas, it is the end of my quarter with many of my own assignments and some grading begging my attention and I have some doctoral application things to do, so good things come to those who wait. My reflections will be on their way in a little while.
I would like to note, however, how Kevin Scull and Brandon Wason were all over the place at the conference! I just couldn’t shake their presence wherever I went. But now, when I try going to their blog, nothing’s there!
Biblioblogger lunch
No, that’s not where one eats bibliobloggers for lunch, but rather the time during which one meets other bibliobloggers for conversation and food. It’s going to be at 11:30am on Sunday at the entrance to the book exhibit, so that all the people going to the book exhibit can say, “Who are all these crazies blocking the entrance to the book exhibit?”
Chris Brady is scoping out lunch options and Kevin Wilson encourages us all to get the word out. Hence, this post. This is not a closed session, by the way. All are welcome. It is unfortunate, though, that April DeConick can’t make it. I’ll have to find her elsewhere!
It’ll only be a little over an hour, so that people can head over to various presentations of interest that start around 1pm.
I would also like to mention just how grateful I only have a two-hour train ride to get to San Diego, unlike the massive journeys faced by Chris Tilling and James Crossley.
Monumental moments: some reflections
Since we moved to Pasadena, my wife and I have been living with an elderly couple (they just turned 96 and 99 recently) in an apartment within their home. The health of the 99-year-old wife has been on the decline for some time, especially in the last week or so. Just yesterday, she passed away. If you count the year that they dated before getting married, they’d been together for 70 years. 70 years!
This week I’ve been poring over websites about doctoral admission procedures and communicating with the people who are writing me letters of recommendation. Each program that I am applying to is wonderful and, I feel, is a good fit for my interests and personality. In order to apply to each school, particularly write the admissions essay, I have to really believe that I will be going there. Not just believe that I could get accepted, but I have to imagine myself setting foot on that campus as my home for the next five or six years. It’s quite an emotional roller coaster if you think about it. In a sense, I am psychologically packing up and moving to about eight different states in the country. This time next year, my wife and I will be in one of those eight states (assuming at least one school will have me).
Additionally, I am entrenched in the study of the Gospel of John. I am reading Meeks, Borgen, Brown, Lincoln, Beasley-Murray, Thompson, and of course many others. I am reading Philo and Josephus and 2 Baruch. I am thinking about “I am” and Logos and wisdom and manna. I was a little standoffish about the Gospel of John before, with my Anabaptist tendencies for the Matthew and Luke. But diving in like this, taking two courses from a world class Johannine scholar, has reoriented my thinking about the Gospel. I’m probably not going to write a dissertation on John or anything, but my mind has been expanded. I could probably even say that I’ve learned more this quarter than any other quarter of seminary.
I am going to SBL/AAR this weekend. Actually, since I am the new On-campus Student Representative for SBL at Fuller, I should probably be involved in something with the Student Advisory Group, but I haven’t heard anything yet. I am saddened that, just as I am getting started as a scholar, this will be the last meeting with both organizations together for awhile. I am a member of both SBL and AAR because I have interdisciplinary interests. But since, I guess I’d “land” more in the Bible area, I’m going to have to choose SBL for conferences. Sorry AAR. Why you gotta do this anyway? Also, at the meeting, I’m going to try to meet up with professors at the schools I’m applying to. I may be meeting people with whom I will have a very close relationship with for the next 5-6 years. Perhaps even for decades to come.
For next quarter, I’ve been green-lighted to take Don Hagner’s doctoral seminar on the History of New Testament Scholarship. Apparently, I’m the first masters-level student to take the course in 10 years or so. They don’t even have call letters for it in the system, so there are two or three departments at Fuller working to set up those call letters for next quarter. I am honored and astounded that so much effort is taking place so that little old me can take a seminar.
I am grading Hebrew exegesis and the academic fates of about thirty students rest in my hands. Okay, that’s overly dramatic, but it’s part of what I’m thinking about lately.
My Dad, my brother (not by blood–long story) and his Honduran wife are coming out to have Thanksgiving with my wife and me. They are driving from Austin to LA to get here. It will be the first time the five of us have been together, not including their schedule-hectic wedding in Honduras. It is going to be so wonderful I cannot even begin to express it.
We got a new cat about a month ago. Sometimes she stands up on her hind legs and it makes me happy.
After finals week, I’m going in for jury duty. Which will it be: prayer to not get chosen or dedicated attention to some specific case of civic justice?
Those are some thoughts on life right now.
My New Post with SBL at Fuller
I have officially become the new Society of Biblical Literature (SBL) On-Campus Student Representative (OSR) at Fuller Seminary. What is that, you may ask? The OSR is a student member of SBL who represents SBL to the students of that institution. Some of the things that the OSR does is to recruit student members and disseminate information about the goings-on of SBL to those student members. For more info, check out the webpage for SBL’s Student Advisory Group (SAG), under which all the OSRs serve. You can also catch a job description and see other discussions and announcements on the SAG discussion board.
I was happy to discover that my friend and fellow Pasadena Mennonite Church member, Matt Hamsher, just began serving as the Student Liaison for the American Academy or Religion (AAR) at Fuller this year.
This is a particularly interesting year to serve in such a role since Fuller will be hosting the regional meeting for WECSOR (the regional organization for SBL and AAR — we’ve got too many acronyms going on here). So, in the coming months, I will be looking for ideas on how best to be an OSR at Fuller during such a time and would appreciate any feedback that you might have for me.





