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  • I am a Doctor of Theology (Th.D.) student at Duke Divinity School. My areas of concentration are "The Practice of Leading Christian Communities and Institutions" and "New Testament."

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March 23, 2008

Jürgen Moltmann and Stanley Hauerwas Audio Recordings from Society for Pentecostal Studies and the Wesleyan Theological Society joint meeting

I attended the Society for Pentecostal Studies and the Wesleyan Theological Society 3rd Joint Meeting at Duke Divinity School, March 13-15, 2008.

I recorded three of the sessions with my little recorder.  They are not the best recordings, but if you are highly interested, I assume you will still be grateful.  If you have questions about listening to MP3's, see below.   

The Gospel and Peace -- A Pentecostal-Wesleyan-Quaker-Baptist Conversation.mp3

2 hr. 6 min session, 144 MB size
BILATERAL AND MULTILATERAL DIALOGUES
Thursday, March 13, 2008 SESSION 2
Paul Alexander, Azusa Pacific University, Chair
Theme: "The Gospel and Peace: A Pentecostal-Wesleyan-Quaker-Baptist Conversation"
Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, Panelist
Ann Riggs, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA, Panelist. (Dr. Riggs is now Adjunct Faculty at the Earlham School of Religion.)
Glen Stassen, Fuller Theological Seminary, Panelist
William C. Turner, Duke Divinity School, Panelist

Jürgen Moltmann - Sighs, Signs, and Significance.mp3

55 min lecture, 63 MB size

Thursday, March 13, 2008
OPENING PLENARY SESSION 1
Speaker: Professor Dr. Jürgen Moltmann, Tübingen University
Sighs, Signs, and Significance: A Theological Hermeneutics of Nature

Jürgen Moltmann - Darwin and the Interpretation of Natural Theology.mp3

1 hr 28 min lecture and panel, 100 MB size

Friday, March 14, 2008
PLENARY SESSION 3: PANEL
Professor Dr. Jürgen Moltmann, Tübingen University, Presenter "Darwin, Theology, and Culture"
Ellen Davis, Duke Divinity School, Respondent
Frederick L. Ware, Howard Divinity School, Respondent. (Dr. Ware writes, "I am attaching  my full written response to Professor Moltmann.  My oral presentation does not follow verbatim the written text I prepared for the plenary session.  Professor Moltmann has a copy of my written text." Download Ware_Response_to_Moltmann_Theology_of_Nature_Without_Moral_Realism.pdf)
Barry Callen, Anderson University, Respondent

Note to those interested in Moltmann:

Tony Jones has alerted me to the Jürgen Moltmann Yahoo Group which you would be free to join.

Instructions for playing MP3's:

I have given you MP3's which play on any computer.  You just right click on it and click "Save Link As . . ." or "Save Target As . . ." and you can save it to your desktop (and it will be on your computer and you can listen to it whenever you want).  If you have an MP3 player, you just plug it in to your computer like a memory stick and move the MP3's from your computer to your player. 

More Duke Divinity School Audio Recordings:

There are more Duke Divinity School audio recordings at iTunes U / Duke / Religion / Divinity School. (This link will only work if you have iTunes, a free downloadable program, installed on your computer).   See especially the talks by Wendell Berry, Stanley Hauerwas and Ellen Davis at "Our Daily Bread 2007: 2007 Convocation and Pastor's School" (iTunes link).  See also the talks by Dale C. Allison Jr., from Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, on "The Historical Jesus and the Theological Jesus" (iTunes link).

There are also some MP3's available at the Duke Divinity School Socratic Club blog.  For example, one post  "Socratic Audio Files" has 2008 talks by Allen Verhey on Richard Niebuhr, Amy Laura Hall on the Yale School (George Lindbeck, etc.), Curtis Freeman on Karl Barth, Mary McClintock Fulkerson on Friedrich Schleiermacher, Stanley Hauerwas reading from his memoirs, and Richard Hays on biblical studies at Duke Divinity School.   These talks explore various influences on the strain of theology found at Duke Divinity School. 

In the past, I have greatly appreciated it when people have recorded lectures and then posted them on the web.  I am keenly aware that it is not always possible to fly across the country to go to that conference you wanted to attend.  I posted recordings from the SBL and AAR meetings in November and the feedback from both presenters and listeners was 100% positive.

Links:

Collin Hansen's "Theology in the News" web only Christianity Today article links to this post.  He writes,

The period following Lent is the season for conferences. The Wesleyan Theological Society joined with the Society for Pentecostal Studies at Duke University in March for a conference called "Sighs, Signs, and Significance: Pentecostal and Wesleyan Explorations of Science and Creation." More than 600 scholars attended. Jürgen Moltmann delivered the keynote address, which explored the harmony between revealed Scripture and the natural world. Andy Rowell has posted audio.

November 21, 2007

Tony Jones, N.T. Wright, Richard Bauckham, Scot McKnight, James K. A. Smith, Robert Bella and John Milbank - Audio from SBL and AAR

In the past, I have been enormously helped by people who recorded audio of various lectures and conferences and then kindly posted it on the web.  I have recorded a few of the sessions from the Society of Biblical Literature (SBL) and the American Academy of Religion (AAR) annual meetings November 17-20, 2007 in San Diego.  See my previous post about attending the meetings.  There are literally thousands of lectures at the meetings but I thought I would give you a sample of the ones I attended.  At each time slot, there are about 30-40 choices to choose from.  Sometimes I bounce from one to another.  Other times I find someone to talk to and skip the sessions.  So some of the talks are not complete.  But I still thought I would post what my little MP3 player recorded and see if anyone was interested.

For the next couple of years, SBL and AAR will not meet together.  Some AAR people led this divorce but people in my circles are hopeful that after a couple of years people will reconsider.   Typically theologians, historians, practical theology, and people who study other religions than Christianity attend AAR.  Biblical studies people attend SBL.  But in the past these have occurred together so that many of us have enjoyed sessions from both. April 28, 2008 Update: the AAR has decide to begin meeting with SBL again when they are able to work out the logistics in a few years again.

Other places to find great audio: 

If you like audio, see my now outdated Best Audio for Church Leaders (Aug 2006) but still useful list of MP3's on the internet and my instructions about listening to podcasts in my also outdated post Best Podcasts for Church Leaders (Oct 2006)

Also Evangelical Theological Society (ETS) has this on their site:

As in previous years, ACTS, inc. will be recording all sessions at the conference. Online orders for these recordings may be placed on their web site at the following address: http://actsonline.biz/ets_21_ctg.htm.  The entire conference costs $149.00.

I do not think AAR and SBL record their sessions at all. 

If you dislike my low quality recordings, check out christianaudio.com which has quite a good selection of Christian books on audio.  For example, you can download the unabridged 6 hour audiobook of Eugene Peterson's Eat This Book for $20.98.  (This is the book Duke Divinity School first year students were required to read this year).  That would be a very rich six hour car drive.  They also offer a free download each month.  This month (November) it is The Religious Affections (Unabridged) by Jonathan Edwards.  In December it is Dark Night of the Soul (Unabridged) by St. John of the Cross. 


Instructions for playing MP3's:

I have given you MP3's which play on any computer.  You just right click on it and click "Save Link As . . ." or "Save Target As . . ." and you can save it to your desktop (and it will be on your computer and you can listen to it whenever you want).  If you have an MP3 player, you just plug in to your computer like a memory stick and move the MP3's from your computer to your player. 

I have pasted below the SBL or AAR description of the session (S is for SBL and A is for AAR) and then put a note in italics with my comment about the recording.  I'm sorry to say that I have not listened to these recordings nor edited them.  If you are interested, I thought you would appreciate them anyway. 

Let me know in the comments if you appreciated them or if they were too poor quality to be helpful.  I haven't done this before so I just thought I would give it a shot.   I have emailed the speakers to let them know I have posted these and I will take down the talks if any of them wish.  But I do think this is good publicity for AAR, SBL and each of the speakers.
      

Without further ado, here are the MP3's I recorded from 9 presentations I heard at SBL/AAR this past weekend. 

AM17-28
________________________________________
Emergent Church Forum
11/17/2007
9:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Room: 29 C – CC
The panelists are Tony Jones, Diana Butler Bass and Scot McKnight and the moderator, from Azusa Pacific University, is Keith Matthews. 

I missed the first ten minutes of this one.  Tony was speaking when I arrived.

Emergent Church Forum.mp3 (131 MB; 2 hrs. 19 min.)

Update: December 18: The first hour of this lecture is also available now on the Emergent Village podcast website but honestly you didn't miss too much in the 10 minutes I missed but Tony's recording is a better recording.  I would expect that they would put up part 2 (the second hour) at the end of December.


AM17-53
________________________________________
Mission and Biblical Interpretation: toward a Missional Hermeneutic
11/17/2007
1:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Room: 28 C – CC
What would it mean to read the Bible with an explicit methodological starting point in an ecclesial location understood as fundamentally missional? Join us for our sixth annual session focused on such questions, as Princeton Theological Seminary professors Darrell Guder and J. Ross Wagner present their work on missional hermeneutics in the seminary classroom. We anticipate a thought-provoking and productive discussion.

I only taped Ross's brief comments about Philippians.  The first two minutes are the end of Darrell Guder speaking.

Mission and Biblical Interpretation - toward a Missional Hermeneutic.mp3  (12 MB; 13 min.)

S17-79
________________________________________
Synoptic Gospels
11/17/2007
1:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Room: San Diego C - MM
Theme: Panel Review of Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the Eyewitnesses: The Gospels as Eyewitness Testimony (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2006)
Jeffrey Peterson, Austin Graduate School of Theology, Texas, Presiding
John Kloppenborg, University of Toronto, Panelist (20 min)
Adela Yarbro Collins, Yale University, Panelist (20 min)
James Crossley, University of Sheffield, Panelist (20 min)
Richard Bauckham, University of St. Andrews-Scotland, Respondent (25 min)
Discussion (65 min)

I only recorded Bauckham's response.  The room was packed.

Jesus and the Eyewitnesses - The Gospels as Eyewitness Testimony.mp3 (23 MB; 24 min.)

A18-122
Scriptural Reasoning Group   
Sunday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
Steven D. Kepnes, Colgate University, Presiding
Theme: Pragmatism and Biblical Hermeneutics: A Discussion of the Work of Peter Ochs
Panelists:
David Lamberth, Harvard University
Leora Batnitzky, Princeton University
James K. A. Smith, Calvin College
Nicholas Adams, University of Edinburgh
Responding:
Peter Ochs, University of Virginia

Abstract
Scriptural Reasoning Group
Theme: Pragmatism and Biblical Hermeneutics: A Discussion of the Work of Peter Ochs
The session will discuss the theoretical contribution of the work of Peter Ochs in terms of its contribution to the field of American pragmatism and to theoretical advances in biblical hermeneutics as well as in contemporary analyses of religious community and inter-religious dialogue. In particular the session will discuss the impact of Professor Ochs' work on the recently developed set of practices referred to as scriptural reasoning. Panelists will speak from the perspective of their various disciplines including, philosophy of religion, Christian theology and contemporary Jewish philosophy.

I recorded until from the beginning of the session until Smith was finished (the first three speakers).  Ochs was not present because he had to do a eulogy at a funeral.

Pragmatism and Biblical Hermeneutics - A Discussion of the Work of Peter Ochs.mp3 (72 MB; 1 hr. 16 min.)

A18-106
Sunday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
William Schweiker, University of Chicago, Presiding
Theme: Living in a Secular Age: Charles Taylor and the Philosophy of Religion
F. B. A. Asiedu, Middlebury College
The Post-Secular Condition: The Usefulness of Belief in the Philosophy of Charles Taylor
Jennifer A. Herdt, University of Notre Dame
Secularization, Recomposition, and Bad Faith in Contemporary Christian Ethics
Joseph Prabhu, California State University, Los Angeles, University of Chicago
Re-examining the Secularization Hypothesis
Robert N. Bellah, University of California, Berkeley
Taylor on Religion and Modernity
Responding:
Charles Taylor, Northwestern University

I only taped Taylor's response and I was sitting in an area of the room where the sound was terrible.  The room was absolutely packed.

Living in a Secular Age - Charles Taylor and the Philosophy of Religion.mp3 (44 MB; 47 min.)

A18-200      
Sunday - 1:00 pm-2:30 pm
Sponsored by the Public Understanding of Religion Committee
Lawrence Mamiya, Vassar College, Presiding
Theme: The Marty Forum: Robert N. Bellah
Panelists:
Robert N. Bellah, University of California
Randall Balmer, Columbia University

Abstract
Special Topics Forum
Theme: The Marty Forum: Robert N. Bellah
Sponsored by the Public Understanding of Religion Committee
The recipient of the 2007 Martin Marty Award for contributions to the public understanding of religion is Robert N. Bellah, Elliott Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Berkeley. Dr. Bellah has authored or co-authored numerous influential books and articles in the sociology of religion, including Beyond Belief, The Broken Covenant, The New Religious Consciousness, Varieties of Civil Religion and Uncivil Religion, Habits of the Heart and The Good Society. The Marty Forum provides an informal setting in which Dr. Bellah will talk about his work with Professor of American Religion Randall Balmer and will engage in discussion with the audience.

I taped all of it except the last ten minutes when my battery ran out.  This should be a very good recording.

Interview with Robert N. Bellah.mp3 (70 MB; 1 hr. 15 min.)

A18-251
Sunday - 3:00 pm-4:30 pm
Paul Oslington, Princeton University, Presiding
Theme: Theological Readings of Economics
Panelists:
Alasdair John Milbank, University of Nottingham
Albino Barrera, Providence College
Kathryn Blanchard, Alma College
Rebecca Todd Peters, Elon University

Abstract
Wildcard Session
Theme: Theological Readings of Economics
This session is about religious voices in political economy. Deeper theological engagement with economic theory is needed because (a) much contemporary religious discussion of economics is ill-informed and superficial (b) economics dominates contemporary culture. In the session panel members will consider a number of recent theological readings of economics, followed by discussion. The emphasis will be economic theory rather than particular economic issues because religious engagement with particular issues depends on our view of the relationship between theology and the economic tools we use to consider the various issues. At the end of the session we will discuss the proposal for a new AAR group on religion and economics and its relationship to the Religion and Social Sciences Section.

I taped Milbank and Barrera.  Barrera told me he listened to my recording and could make it out.   

Theological Readings of Economics.mp3 (36 MB; 39 min.)

S18-117
________________________________________
God in Public?
11/18/2007
4:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Room: Salon C - MM
N. T. Wright, Durham Cathedral
God in Public? The Bible and Politics in Tomorrow’s World (45 min)

I taped all of this.  The room was packed.

God in Public - The Bible and Politics in Tomorrow’s World.mp3 (44 MB; 58 min.)

S19-50
________________________________________
Pauline Epistles
11/19/2007
1:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Room: 20 A - CC
Theme: Paul and Empire
Papers by John M.G. Barclay, Durham University, and Tom Wright, Bishop of Durham, with a response by Robert Jewett, University of Heidelberg
Alexandra Brown, Washington and Lee University, Presiding
John M.G. Barclay, Durham University
Why the Roman Empire was Insignificant to Paul (40 min)
N. Thomas Wright, Church of England
Paul's Counter-Imperial Theology (40 min)
Robert Jewett, University of Heidelberg, Respondent

I taped this in two parts as there was a five minute break after Barclay and Wright presented.  The first part has Barclay and Wright.  In the second part, Jewett responds and Barclay and Wright respond.  They then took some questions but I skipped out at that point.  Many New Testament scholars were there.  There is lots of talk on the blogosphere about this one.  If you google, Wright Barclay Paul Empire, you'll get lots of hits.

Paul and Empire - Part 1 of 2.mp3 (84 MB; 1 hr. 30 min.)

Paul and Empire - Part 2 of 2.mp3 (30 MB; 33 min.)

November 15, 2007

Attending ETS / SBL / AAR Meetings

Today I leave for Evangelical Theological Society / Society of Biblical Literature / American Academy of Religion meetings in San Diego.  Feel free to email me if you want to get together.  Email Me

There are thousands of possible sessions to attend  (See the ETS program book, SBL program book, and AAR program book).  I pared it down to a couple of sessions per time slot.  You can see what sessions I will probably attend below. 

Download ETS/SBL/AAR Word Document.doc

Download ETS/SBL/AAR PDF Document.pdf


See also my post: How to Survive and Thrive at ETS and SBL from September 2006.

Here are a few sessions that are non-negotiable for me this year.

AM17-28
Emergent Church Forum
11/17/2007
9:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Room: 29 C – CC
The panelists are Tony Jones, Diana Butler Bass and Scot McKnight and the moderator, from Azusa Pacific University, is Keith Matthews.

AM18-1
Institute for Biblical Research Worship Service
11/18/2007
7:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Room: Salon C – MM
NT Wright is preaching. 

AM18-135
Duke University Graduate Reception
11/18/2007
9:00 PM to 11:00 PM
Room: 29 B - CC

AM19-5
Friends of Regent College
11/19/2007
7:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Room: Annie AB - GH

November 11, 2006

ETS Paper: "Emerging churches in dialogue with Dietrich Bonhoeffer: A fresh practical theology of discipleship for the church"

Update December 23, 2006.

I have updated the paper here.

I just thought I would let you know that I am presenting a paper this Wednesday at the Evangelical Theological Society in Washington, DC.

The title is: "Emerging churches in dialogue with Dietrich Bonhoeffer: A fresh practical theology of discipleship for the church."   

Here is a summary of what to expect.

According to UNC sociologist Christian Smith, evangelical teens tend to view Christianity as “feeling good, happy, secure, and at peace” (Soul Searching, 164).  And yet Jesus said "If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also" (Mt 5:39 TNIV).  We've got an educational problem here.  How do we bridge the gap?  We need to take a multi-disciplinary approach to tackle this issue.  I use the practical theology reflection paradigm described by Princeton Theological Seminary's Richard Osmer.

If we are going to reach young adults, it will be instructive to investigate what emerging churches are doing.  I suggest that these emerging churches should properly be seen as laboratories where innovative Christian practices are being explored.  I then present some insights by Dietrich Bonhoeffer on discipleship and innovative Christian practices.  I then look at the meaning of "turning the other cheek" according to New Testament scholars.  Finally, I suggest how a few emerging church practices could be utilized to teach young adults about turning the other cheek.

Here are the details of when and where I'm presenting.

Wednesday, November 15 // Afternoon

Lincoln East
3:20-4:00 PM
Andrew D. Rowell (Taylor University)
Emerging Churches in Dialogue with Dietrich Bonhoeffer: A Fresh Practical Theology of Discipleship for the Church
(replaces paper by John S. Hammett, which is moved to November 15 in C-356 at 11:00 am)

I am on the "program changes" page which you can find on the conference page here.

I had written earlier about the ETS conference here.

December 1, 2006 Update

Due to your kind requests, I have put the paper I presented below.  I have been reading a lot more Bonhoeffer and have decided to completely restructure my dialogue between Bonhoeffer and Emerging Churches in another paper.  But, if you are interested, here was my first stab at the whole concept. 

Here is my paper:

Download bonhoeffer_and_emerging_church_paper.pdf

Here is the 2 page outline I handed out:

Download bonhoeffer_and_emerging_church_outline.pdf

Thanks Steve Knight for the link at Emergent Village

Audio Report on Paper

On my trip to Princeton Theological Seminary and Evangelical Theological Society, I ended up doing some late night driving.  I had no one to talk to so I did a bit of audio recording.  I talked about my ETS paper mostly and a bit about visiting PTS.  I have posted those recordings below.  I don't know how to make them one big recording.  Sorry. 

Numbers 1-9 take place on a drive from Washington DC to Princeton, NJ from midnight to 3:00 am.  At around 3 min 30 sec of number 9, I almost hit a deer. But the show goes on.  :-)

Numbers 10-11 are after PTS and ETS on my way home. 

You would have to be nuts to listen to any of these.  But it is fun for me to experiment with the technology. 

Grace and peace, friends,

andy   

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_01.mp3 11 min. 10 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_02.mp3 17 min 16 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_03.mp3 3 min 3 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_04.mp3 5 min 5 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_05.mp3 5 min 5 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_06.mp3 5 min 5 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_07.mp3 2 min 2 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_08.mp3 3 min 3 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_09.mp3 5 min 5 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_10.mp3 5 min 5 MB

Download Andy_Rowell_PTS_ETS_11.mp3 5 min 5 MB

September 18, 2006

Conferences This Fall: ETS, SBL, NAPCE, Catalyst, Drive, and YS

There are a number of conferences this fall that you might be interested in hearing about. 

Below I discuss the:

  1. Evangelical Theological Society Annual Meeting
  2. Institute for Biblical Research Annual Meeting
  3. Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting
    • How to Survive and Thrive at ETS and SBL
  4. The North American Professors of Christian Education Annual Conference
  5. Catalyst Conference
  6. The Drive Conference at North Point Community Church
  7. The Youth Specialities 2006 National Youth Worker's Convention

The Evangelical Theological Society (ETS) Annual Meeting is November 15-17, 2006 in Washington, DC.  They have just posted their full program today at the link above.   I attended this meeting last year and enjoyed a number of excellent presentations (in the areas of New Testament, Old Testament, philosophy, church history, practical theology) from a conservative evangelical perspective.  The condition for membership into the ETS is subscribing to the following statement:

"The Bible alone, and the Bible in its entirety, is the Word of God written and is therefore inerrant in the autographs. God is a Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, each an uncreated person, one in essence, equal in power and glory."

  • Some well-known people I would enjoy listening to at ETS include: Ron Sider, Scott Hafemann, Robert Yarbrough, William Lane Craig, Jean Bethke Elshtain, J. Budziszewski, Gordon T. Smith, Craig Blomberg, William J. Webb, Tremper Longman, Greg Boyd, Jim Wallis, Shane Claiborne, Kenneth Barker, Larry Hurtado, Scot McKnight, Clark Pinnock, and I. Howard Marshall.  This gives you a flavor of some of the quality of people involved. 
  • From Taylor University's Biblical Studies, Christian Educational Ministries and Philosophy department, we have eight (Win Corduan, Michael Harbin, Bill Heth, Sheri Klouda, Bob Lay, Ed Meadors, Jim Spiegel and me) presenting!
  • See Justin Taylor's quick preview of ETS here.   

In between ETS and SBL, is the Institute for Biblical Research Annual Meeting (Nov 17 evening and Nov 18 morning).  You can find it in the SBL Program Book under Additional Meetings.  "The Institute for Biblical Research, Incorporated (IBRI) is an organization of evangelical Christian scholars with specialties in Old and New Testament and in ancillary disciplines. Its vision is to foster excellence in the pursuit of Biblical Studies within a faith environment."  Craig Blomberg and Craig Evans, among others, are presenting this year.  Its out of date website was pulled down two weeks ago but you can still see it via google cached. 

The Society of Biblical Literature (SBL) Annual Meeting is November 18-21 in Washington DC.  "The Annual Meeting is the largest gathering of biblical scholars in the world. At this combined meeting with the American Academy of Religion, scholars benefit from sessions on religion, philosophy, ethics, and diverse religious traditions."  I also attended this event last fall. 

  • Some well-known names (at least to me) at SBL include: Larry Hurtado, Judith Gundry-Volf, Robert Walter Moberly (friend Joel Lohr doing dissertation under him), Michael Bird, Phyllis Trible, Thomas Long, Christopher Stanley (Regent College grad), Joel Green, Marcus Bockmuehl, Peter Machinist, James Dunn, Walter Brueggemann, Bart Ehrman, Douglas Campbell, Sheri Klouda (Taylor University colleague), Mark Goodacre, Rikk Watts (Regent College prof), Edith Humphrey, Donald Hagner, Philip Jenkins, John M. G. Barclay, Richard A. Horsley, Craig A. Evans, Richard Bauckham, Ben Witherington, Joel Willitts, Michael Theophilos (Regent College grad with me), Ellen Charry, Jacob Neusner, Luke Timothy Johnson, John G. Stackhouse, Jr. (Regent College prof), William Willimon, N. Thomas Wright, Richard B. Hays, Clark Pinnock, Francis Watson, Beverly Gaventa, John Sanders, Scott Hafemann, Robert Derrenbacker (Regent college prof), Susan Eastman, Robert Wall, Marianne Thompson, and Miroslav Volf.  (I have put hyperlinks to those I know have blogs).

How to Survive and Thrive at ETS and SBL:

ETS is followed by SBL so that you can attend both if you are interested.   

(1) The paper writers present their own papers.  They basically read the academic paper aloud.  You hear regular laments in the hallway about bad pedagogy.  "We present with PowerPoint and illustrations in our classrooms back home but read papers when we are together.  Oh academia . . ." But it is still pretty fun if you are interested in seeing the scholars or are interested in the topic.  Need I mention that caffeine helps? 

(2) If two papers are scheduled at 8:30 am, you have to choose one to attend.  But if the paper is over at 9:10, you can run to another one.  In other words, you don't have to attend all three papers of one session.  There is lots of movement in between papers.  So make your schedule ahead of time and run around and go to the papers you want to. 

(3) If nothing looks good, go to the book room.  Every publisher in the world has all of their books at 50% off.  Very cool.   

(4) Don't bother going to see a moderator because they really don't do a thing except make sure that the person doesn't go over time.  If it says that the moderator is participating in a discussion, then it could be interesting. 

(5) Schedule lunch and dinner with your friends or acquaintances. You'll be running around all day but you don't want to get stuck eating alone (unless you found a good book in the book room).  And it easy to lose your friends in the chaos around mealtimes.  So schedule your meals and meeting places ahead of time. 

(6) The General sessions are also optional.  I would recommend the one at ETS with the dinner though.  I sat next to Gordon Wenham last year.  Again, I recommend booking people ahead of time to sit with.   

(7) The theme really means nothing except for influencing the general sessions.   

(8) Book a place to stay now as things get filled up and you'll get stuck with the real expensive hotels. 

The North American Professors of Christian Education (NAPCE) Annual Conference is October 19-21, 2006 in Denver, CO.  The keynote speaker is Richard Osmer, professor of Christian Education at Princeton Theological Seminary and author of the new book The Teaching Ministry of Congregations. 

The Catalyst Conference is October 5-6 in Atlanta, GA. "Catalyst was conceived as a Next Generation Leaders Conference in 1999 by a small group of influential young leaders.  Catalyst was created to meet the felt need existing within the church for a leadership event that was focused on a new generation of church leaders.  Catalyst was able to meet the demand for fresh leadership insights for young leaders by creating a conference experience specifically focused on leaders under the age of 40 . . . and this October, over 10,000 young leaders will gather again to experience Catayst up close."   Speakers this year include Andy Stanley,  Donald Miller, John Maxwell, Gary Haugen, Louie Giglio, John Stott, Marcus Buckingham, and George Barna.  Some of their "Catalyst Lab" speakers include some of my favorite people: Eugene Peterson, Mark Buchanan, Andy Crouch, Lauren Winner, and Shane Claiborne.  Catalyst has a blog here

The Drive Conference at North Point Community Church is November 6-8, 2006 in Alpharetta, GA.  North Point, pastored by Andy Stanley, is the "third most influential church in the nation" according to TheChurchReport.com here. "DRIVE '06 is an opportunity for our staff to download what we've learned over the past ten years about creating and maintaining irresistible ministry environments."  Here are my posts that have touched on Andy Stanley.    

The Youth Specialities 2006 National Youth Worker's Convention is:

  • Austin: Oct 5-9
  • Anaheim: Nov 2-6
  • Cincinnati: Nov 16-20
  • Charlotte: Nov 30-Dec 4

Speakers and musicians vary by location but some locations will include some of my favorites: David Crowder Band, Mike Pilavachi, Shane and Shane, Donald Miller, Kenda Creasy Dean, and Shane Claiborne.