Wednesday, November 18, 2020

AAR/SBL 2020 Conference: Christ Among the Disciplines


Christ Among the Disciplines

As many of you will have heard by now, AAR/SBL will no longer be convening in Boston this upcoming November. This is sad news for many, as the gathering is a time to reconnect with a number of friends and former colleagues, not to mention help up-and-coming scholars network with the leading experts in their field. Nevertheless, this was a wise decision made in consultation with the advice of leading medical specialists, and it is necessary to help stop the spread of COVID-19.

That being said, a group of graduate students (identified below) are hosting an online, interdisciplinary conference on the subject of Christology during this window of time (November 18th–25th). The idea for an event like this was discussed some time ago during an interdisciplinary reading group on Christology, but it remained only an exciting idea until AAR/SBL moved their event online, signaling that online discourse will likely be the modus operandi for academic gatherings for the foreseeable future. After that decision was announced on July 13th, 2020, it was determined that this idea could come to fruition in the form of an online conference, which has since grown far beyond our wildest imaginations. Since that date, plans for the conference have been underway.

With regard to the event itself, we are planning (16) book panels on recent publications in Christology from biblical scholars, theologians, and philosophers. Each book panel will be composed of an interdisciplinary selection of around 4 world-leading scholars, most of which will be followed by a response from the author. The event will also include break-away sessions where graduate students and early-career academics will be able to present their own research on topics related to Christology (which will take place on December 11th–13th). 

This conference will also be unique in that the papers for the various book panels will be distributed to conference attendees in advance of the live event. The link to these essays may be found in the confirmation email sent out to registrants for the conference. Upon reading the papers, conference attendees will be given the opportunity to pre-submit questions for the panelists using a secure link. Additionally, rather than per usual (listening to 4–5 papers straight through), conference participants will instead get to experience a discussion amongst panelists who will first summarize, rather than read, their respective essays. This will not only help avoid the fatigue that arises from online video conferencing, but it will also make for a much more interesting event!

Unlike the hefty fee to participate in the online version of AAR/SBL, however, we are tentatively planning on a modest entrance fee at a fraction of the cost for participants. Bearing that in mind, if you are interested in attending and participating in the “Christ Among the Disciplines” conference, make sure to register today!

Note: All net proceeds will be directed toward transitioning this conference into an annual venture!

It is, however, with great regret that we were unable to secure a more representative and equitable selection of speakers for this year’s conference. With only about three months to plan this event, the majority of all of the invitations that we sent out were politely turned down due to a lack of time to prepare a response. Additional administrative responsibilities (disproportionately affecting scholars of color) — including especially those who needed to prepare for both in-person and online teaching — were a major barrier for most of the scholars that we initially sent invitations to. This failure will not happen again.

Use of the Conference Funds

With regard to the future, our hope is to plan a similar conference of this nature on an annual basis, the next of which is tentatively slated to occur in the summer of 2022. If there is enough interest, we also hope to incorporate an annual lecture series with an invited lecturer. The idea, in other words, is to cultivate something of an online version of AAR/SBL (without membership fees!) that is far more affordable and (hopefully) quite interesting as well. The conference will not, however, be “competing” with AAR/SBL, as the events will not overlap with one another.

Decisions about the appropriation of conference funds — for the hiring of web developers, event planners, and expenses for future events — will be made in consultation with the steering committee. In order to be as above-board as possible, the conference organizers will be establishing an independent bank account for conference funds to be overseen by the steering committee. However, due to the onset of the pandemic, EventBrite (our ticket provider) is not allocating funds from the event until (5) days after the event’s completion, meaning that no funds from conference registration will be allocated until early December 2020. As a result of this, along with the fact that the organizers received no grants or external funding to plan and execute this event, all up-front costs for the website, the hosting platform, and advertising have come out of the pockets of the organizers themselves.

Should anyone desire to listen in on the video conference with the steering committee to discuss the allocation of conference funds, the event will be open to the public, and all are welcome. Any further inquiries about the allocation of funds can be sent via email here.

AAR/SBL 2020 Conference Schedule

Speakershttps://www.christamongthedisciplines.com/

Can’t make it to every session? No worries! Anyone who purchases a ticket will receive access to recordings of the event for later viewing.

The various book panels will be hosted on the following days and times:

Wednesday, November 18th:

  • Matthew Novenson, The Grammar of Messianism

    • 8:00 – 10:30 AM — (California)

    • 11:00 AM – 1:30 PM — (New York)

    • 4:00 – 6:30 PM — (London)

  • J. R. Daniel Kirk, A Man Attested by God

    • 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM — (California)

    • 2:00 – 4:00 PM — (New York)

    • 7:00 – 9:00 PM — (London)

Thursday, November 19th:

  • Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the God of Israel

    • 7:00 – 9:30 AM — (California)

    • 10:00 AM – 12:30 PM — (New York)

    • 3:00 – 5:30 PM — (London)

  • Chris Tilling, Paul’s Divine Christology

    • 12:00 – 2:30 PM — (California)

    • 3:00 – 5:30 PM — (New York)

    • 8:00 – 10:30 PM — (London)

Friday, November 20th:

  • Fleming Rutledge, The Crucifixion

    • 7:00 – 9:30 AM — (California)

    • 10:00 AM – 12:30 PM — (New York)

    • 3:00 – 5:30 PM — (London)

  • Natalie Carnes, Image and Presence

    • 10:00 AM – 12:30 PM — (California)

    • 1:00 – 3:30 PM — (New York)

    • 6:00 – 8:30 PM — (London)

Saturday, November 21st:

  • Timothy Pawl, In Defense of Conciliar Christology

    • 5:00 – 7:30 AM — (California)

    • 8:00 – 10:30 AM — (New York)

    • 1:00 – 3:30 PM — (London)

  • Rowan Williams, Christ the Heart of Creation

    • 8:00 – 10:30 AM — (California)

    • 11:00 AM – 1:30 PM — (New York)

    • 4:00 – 6:30 PM — (London)

  • Thomas Joseph White, The Incarnate Lord

    • 11:00 AM – 1:30 PM — (California)

    • 2:00 – 4:30 PM — (New York)

    • 7:00 – 9:30 PM — (London)

Sunday, November 22nd:

  • Ian McFarland, The Word Made Flesh

    • 8:00 – 10:30 AM — (California)

    • 11:00 AM – 1:30 PM — (New York)

    • 4:00 – 6:30 PM — (London)

  • Kathryn Tanner, Christ the Key

    • 11:00 AM – 1:30 PM — (California)

    • 2:00 – 4:30 PM — (New York)

    • 7:00 – 9:30 PM — (London)

    • 8:00 – 10:30 AM — (New Zealand, Monday, November 23rd)

Monday, November 23rd:

  • Richard Cross, Communicatio Idiomatum

    • 8:30 – 10:30 AM — (California)

    • 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM — (New York)

    • 4:30 – 6:30 PM — (London)

    • 4:30 – 6:30 AM — (Fiji, Tuesday, November 24th)

  • Darren Sumner, Karl Barth and the Incarnation

    • 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM — (California)

    • 2:00 – 4:00 PM — (New York)

    • 7:00 – 9:00 PM — (London)

Tuesday, November 24th:

  • Dong-Kun Kim, The Future of Christology

    • 8:00 – 9:45 AM — (California)

    • 11:00 AM – 12:45 PM — (New York)

    • 4:00 – 5:45 PM — (London)

  • Joerg Rieger, Jesus vs. Caesar

    • 10:00 AM – 12:30 PM — (California)

    • 1:00 – 3:30 PM — (New York)

    • 6:00 – 8:30 PM — (London)

    • 6:00 – 8:30 AM — (Fiji, Wednesday, November 25th)

Wednesday, November 25th:

  • Tripp Fuller, Divine Self-Investment

    • 5:30 – 8:00 AM — (California)

    • 8:30 – 11:00 AM — (New York)

    • 1:30 – 4:00 PM — (London)

  • William Willimon, “Concluding Remarks”

    • 8:15 – 9:00 AM — (California)

    • 11:15 AM – 12:00 PM — (New York)

    • 4:15 – 5:00 PM — (London)



* * * * * * * * *


Break-away session topics

            • Jesus Who?
            • The Grammar of Christology
            • The Jesus of History and the Task of Christology
            • The Subject of Election
            • Dialectical vs. Analytic Christology
            • Conciliar Orthodoxy?
            • The genus tapeinoticon

1. Jesus Who?

  • One of the biggest difficulties facing those who would like to enter into the realm of christological discourse centers on the question of what precisely we mean when we employ the word “Jesus.” Are we intending to refer to the psychosomatic entity who lived some two thousand years ago in and around Palestine? Or perhaps we have in view the various literary portraits of the central figure of the New Testament corpus? Or maybe we are calling to mind the metaphysical framework of the Chalcedonian Definition, not least of which includes the transcendental category of hypostasis that is not to be reduced to, or equated with, the assumed human nature? Whatever the case may be, lack of clarity about what precisely we want to denote and connote when invoking the word “Jesus” has and continues to create confusion amongst those in the inherently interdisciplinary sphere commonly referred to as Christology. Bearing that in mind, those who would like to respond to this prompt will be tasked with the responsibility of creating and explaining a detailed taxonomy about the various ways in which the word “Jesus” might reasonably be employed. Three possibilities present themselves:

    • (1) Jesus and History

      • Respondents to this prompt will be tasked with creating and explaining a detailed taxonomy that might distinguish between, amongst other things:

      • (1) the actual Jesus of history;
        (2) the perceptions of Jesus as he was encountered in history;
        (3) the memories about Jesus amongst those who encountered him (or learned of him);
        (4) the risen/ascended/exalted Jesus, the one who served as the basis of early Christian faith;
        (5) Jesus as he was “re-remembered” (for lack of a better word) in the light of one’s belief in his resurrection/ascension/exaltation;
        (6) the Jesus of history as documented (however accurately) in the extant textual evidence; and,
        (7) the historical Jesus as reconstructed by historians.

      • Particular attention should be given to which of the above might or might not be in view when we say things such as “Jesus foresaw (or did not foresee) his impending passion,” or “Jesus grew in knowledge and understanding,” or “Jesus knew (or did not know) that he was the messiah,” or “Jesus knew (or did not know) that he was God the second person of the Trinity,” or “Jesus encountered Saul on the Damascus road.”

    • (2) Jesus and Metaphysics

      • Respondents to this prompt will be tasked with creating and explaining a detailed taxonomy that might distinguish between, amongst other things, whether “Jesus” might refer to: (1) the human nature alone (whether conceived in concrete or abstract terms); (2) the hypostasis / “person” alone (whether conceived as a “divine person” or a “divine-human person”); (3) the hypostasis / “person” and the human nature (whether conceived as a “divine person and a concrete/abstract human nature” or a “divine-human person and a concrete/abstract human nature”); or (4) the hypostasis / person and the human nature and the divine nature.

      • Particular attention should be given to which of the above might or might not be in view when we say thing such as “Jesus is the subject of election” (à la Barth), or “Jesus created the world,” or “Jesus was born of Mary,” or “Jesus suffered and died and rose on the third day.”

    • (3) Jesus, History, and Metaphysics

      • Respondents to this prompt will be tasked with creating and explaining a detailed taxonomy that coherently organizes and addresses both of the above two prompts. Particular attention should be given to answering the following: what might we mean when we say that “the infant Jesus did (or did not) know that he was God the second person of the Trinity,” or that “Jesus experienced temptation,” or that “Jesus was (or was not) able to sin,” or that “Jesus did (or did not) raise himself from the dead”?

2. The Grammar of Christology

  • Much of the debates surrounding contemporary christological discourse center on a number of technical distinctions made between (e.g.) the Logos asarkos and Logos ensarkos, the Logos incarnandus and the Logos incarnatus, the humanitas Christi and the extra Calvinisticum, etc. Indeed, at issue in these debates concerns nothing less than the identity of the eternal Word of God, the agent of creation, the nature of the incarnation, one’s understanding of the sacraments, and much besides. Respondents to this prompt will be tasked with the responsibility of carefully defining (perhaps amongst others) the following terms and assessing their suitability (or lack thereof) for christological reflection:

    • (a) The eternal Logos

    • (b) The Logos asarkos

    • (c) The Logos incarnandus

    • (d) The Logos ensarkos / Logos incarnatus

    • (e) The humanitas Christi

    • (f) The extra Calvinisticum

    • (g) The resurrected Jesus

    • (h) The ubiquitous Jesus

    • (i) The glorified Jesus

    • (j) The totus Christus

  • Particular attention should be given to questions like the following: Can we narrate the “life of the Logos,” moving forward, as it were, from the eternal Logos, to the Logos incarnandus, to the Logos ensarkos, to the resurrected Jesus, to the ubiquitous Jesus, to the glorified Jesus? Or is the attempt to narrate the “life of the second person of the Trinity” in these terms inherently problematic? What use, if any, may be found in appeals to the so-called extra Calvinisticum? Of which of the above may it rightly be said to have been the subject of election, the Creator of the world, born of Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, died, rose again, and will come again in glory? Which of the above must not be in view?

3. The Jesus of History and the Task of Christology

  • Cast against the backdrop of the ever-widening “ugly, broad ditch” between the disciplines of history, exegesis, and theology, the question of the significance of the Jesus of history for the task of theology is as relevant today as it has ever been. Respondents to this prompt will be tasked with addressing the following:

    • (1) What is the relationship between the lived history of the man Jesus of Nazareth and divine revelation?

    • (2) What is the relationship between the historical study of the man Jesus of Nazareth and the task of Christology?

    • (3) What is the relationship between the historical-critical study of the Gospel portraits of Jesus and the task of Christology?

  • Particular attention should be given not only to the intellectual context in which the gulf between biblical studies and theology originated, but also to the concerns for clarity identified in prompts (1) and (2) above. Indeed, respondents should consider it prerequisite to attend to prompt #1 (“Jesus Who?”) in particular when approaching this subject. Cf. Sarah Coakley, Christ without Absolutes, and N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God, if additional dialogue partners are needed.

4. The Subject of Election

  • Much ink has been spilled over Bruce McCormack’s controversial proposal that Barth’s revised doctrine of election in Church Dogmatics II/2 constituted a shift in Barth’s understanding of the Trinity. While many are willing to concede that Barth’s account offers a compelling alternative to the decretum absolutum (“absolute decree”) of the Calvinistic doctrine of double predestination, not everyone is comfortable with how McCormack interprets Barth’s notion that Jesus is not only the object of election — the one in whom God’s salvific judgment is enacted — but also its eternal subject. Whatever the case may be, respondents to this prompt will be tasked with bringing McCormack’s proposal into critical dialogue with the Christological vision outlined in Ian McFarland’s latest book, The Word Made Flesh. In what ways might the two share more common ground than McFarland lets on? In what ways (if at all) are their respective convictions actually at odds with one another?

  • Particular attention should be given not only to McFarland’s explicit references to McCormack on pp. 30n14 and 87n42, but also to the concerns for clarity identified in prompts (1) and (2) above. Indeed, respondents should consider it prerequisite to attend to prompt #2 (“The Grammar of Christology”) in particular when approaching this subject. Cf. Michael T. Dempsey (ed.), Trinity and Election in Contemporary Theology if additional dialogue partners are needed.

5. Dialectical vs. Analytic Christology

  • In recent years, two distinct schools of thought have been acquiring greater prominence: (1) “dialectical” theology; and (2) “analytic” theology. Respondents to this prompt will be tasked with assessing the viability (or otherwise) of these two schools of thought insofar as they impinge upon the task of Christology.

  • Particular attention should be given to the presuppositions, tools, methods, and goals of the respective schools of thought, along with an assessment of their relative significance (or otherwise) for theological reflection.

6. Conciliar Orthodoxy?

  • The question as to the nature of “conciliar orthodoxy” has proved relevant as of late, and attempts to answer this question have varied to a great extent largely dependent upon whether or not one has a preference for historical theology on the one hand, or systematic theology on the other. Respondents to this prompt will be tasked with addressing some (or all) of the following:

    • (1) Is there such a thing as “conciliar orthodoxy”?

      • On this point see, inter alia, Timothy Pawl, In Defense of Conciliar Orthodoxy (2016), and Virginia Burrus, “History, Theology, Orthodoxy, Polydoxy,” in Modern Theology (2014).

    • (2) In what ways might certain aspects of “conciliar orthodoxy” (if there be such a thing) stand at odds with (or in harmony with) various christological impulses in the New Testament?

      • On this point, consider addressing, amongst others, claims from Leo’s Tome, Maximus the Confessor on dyothelitism, and the conciliar commitment to Mary’s perpetual virginity.

    • (3) If “conciliar orthodoxy” is, as Richard Bauckham argues, a conceptual translation of the early high Christology of the New Testament into the idiom of Greek metaphysics, then what hope might there be for the Christian kerygma to be translated into different conceptual categories? Is this something that the Church ought to pursue, or is a retrenchment to patristic sources the best way forward for contemporary theology?

7. The genus tapeinoticon

  • Questions remain as to the compatibility of Martin Luther’s Christology and that of the Chalcedonian Definition. Is Luther best understood as the precursor to the modern endorsement of divine passibility, or simply an extension of his late medieval context? Whatever the case may be, multiple scholars on Luther’s theology have noted his unique understanding of the communicatio idiomatum (“communication of the attributes”), moving beyond a mere communication of divine and human attributes to his person, but instead to a sharing (in some sense) of certain attributes among the two natures. This becomes prominent, of course, in the Eucharistic debates wherein the genus maiestaticum (“genus of majesty”) is employed by some Lutherans to secure the ubiquity of Jesus’ humanity on the basis of a communication of attributes from the divine to the human nature. Respondents to this prompt, however, will focus their attention instead on the logical possibility of (what is now known as) the genus tapeinoticon (“genus of humility”) as it might or might not appear in Luther’s later Christology. It is our hope to have essays representing both sides of the debate — both with regard to Luther could rightly be said to have adopted the genus tapeinoticon and with regard to the viability of the genus tapeinoticon.

  • Particular attention should be given not only to David Congdon’s essay, “Nova Lingua Dei: The Problem of Chalcedonian Metaphysics and the Promise of the Genus Tapeinoticon in Luther’s Later Theology” and Richard Cross’ book, Communicatio Idiomatum, but also to the concerns for clarity identified in prompts (1) and (2) above. Indeed, respondents should consider it prerequisite to attend to prompt #2 (“The Grammar of Christology”) in particular when approaching this subject.


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