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Congress

Programme of the 2009 Annual Meeting of the Canadian Theological Society

Carleton University, Ottawa
May 25th to 27th, 2009

The 2009 CTS annual meeting will be held May 25-27 at Carleton University, Ottawa. For more information and registration, visit the Congress 2009 website.

The theme of the 2009 Congress of Humanities and Social Sciences is

Capital Connections: Nation, Terroir, Territoire

This theme invites an exploration of identity as physical space, of the space of a people, a nation, and their historic ‘terroir.’ It asks the question: Has globalization produced a sea-change in our understanding of the relationship between place and who we are? Theological reflections on this theme may include topics such as: ecclesiology, missiology, and right relations with First Nations, especially in light of the Indian Residential Schools Truth and Reconciliation Commission; the public role of churches in a multi-faith and intercultural society; the affect digital technology on the identity of religious communities and the spaces (physical and virtual) in which they practice. While we invite you to submit proposals on any theological subject, we encourage you to consider topics which relate to this theme.

Programme

Except where indicated, all sessions will be held in the Herzberg Laboratories, rooms 4351 and 5115. The Herzberg Laboratories are designated “HP” on the Carleton University Map

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Herzberg Laboratories, Room 4351
Herzberg Laboratories, Room 5115
8:45 -8:55 Welcome

– Michael Bourgeois (CTS President)

9:00-9:55

John Rawls, Sovereignty, and the Suspension of Anathema

– Kathleen Roberts Skerrett, Grinnell College

9:00-10:30

Panel: Strangers in a Strange Land: Engaging Religious Pluralism in Canadian Contexts

– Robert Mundle, University of St. Michael’s College (Chair)

Presenters

• John Dalla Costa, PhD candidate, Regis College, University of Toronto

• Robert Mundle, PhD candidate, University of St. Michael’s College, University of Toronto; Chaplain, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute

• Rev. Manoj M. Zacharia, PhD candidate, Trinity College, University of Toronto

• Rev. Jerome Damst, PhD candidate, Regis College, University of Toronto

10:05-12:15 Panel: Augustine on Public Theology

Connecting Cities, Engaging Politics: An Examination of Contemporary Augustinian Mappings of the Public

– Stephen W. Martin, The King’s University College

Lord of Two Cities: Christological or Political Realism in Augustine’s City of God?

– Jane Barter Moulaison, University of Winnipeg

Desire, Discipline, and the Political Body

– Nathan Colborne, Nipissing University

10:40-11:35

The Imago Dei and Charles Darwin: Understanding the Human as Co-creator in an Evolving and Globalized World

– Simon Watson, Emmanuel College

11:45-12:35

Re-Imagining Christians and Public Space: Building Intercultural Communities

– Marilyn Legge, Emmanuel College

12:30-1:30

Lunch

1:30-3:00 Panel: Contemporary Engagements on Karl Barth’s Theology

Anticipatio et Recapitulatio: Christology and Time in Karl Barth

– Adrian Langdon, McGill University

Karl Barth and the Emergence of New Religious Movements

– Jeffrey A. McPherson, Taylor University College

1:30-2:25

Memory and Place: Rethinking Theological Contextuality in a Global Era

– Thomas Reynolds, Emmanuel College

2:35-3:30

Spirituality and the Question of Intellectual Ssustainability in the Contemporary University

– Sara Terreault, Concordia University

3:10-4:35 Panel: The Canadian Social Gospel and its Legacy

– Michael Bourgeois, Emmanuel College (Chair)

At the start of a global economic crisis the effects of which parallel the economic and social conditions that helped to provoke the rise of the Social Gospel a century ago, this panel will examine key features of the Canadian Social Gospel and the strengths and weaknesses of its legacy.

Thorstein Veblen and the Social Gospel Critique of Capitalism

– Rob Fennell, Atlantic School of Theology

The Canadian Social Gospel: Historical Review and Present Prospects

– Bob McKeon, St. Joseph’s College, University of Alberta

Re-imagining Social Christianity

– Wendy Fletcher, Vancouver School of Theology

3:40-4:35

Church, Pleroma and Parousia: The Spatial Eschatology of Thomas F. Torrance

– Stanley MacLean, Concordia University

4:35-7:30

Free Time & Supper

7:30- The Peter Craigie Lecture: “Resurrecting Late Judaism: Archaeology, Analysis, and Apologetic”

– Amy-Jill Levine, E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Professor of New Testament Studies at Vanderbilt University Divinity School

in Southam Hall, Theatre B.
Reception to follow

(Joint session sponsored by the Canadian Society for Biblical Studies, and the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences)

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Herzberg Laboratories, Room 4351
Herzberg Laboratories, Room 5115
9:15-10:10

American Empire? How Hardt and Negri Challenge Conventional Political and Theological Assumptions of Space

– Jeff Nowers, Emmanuel College

9:15-10:10

Micro-missional Ecclesial Identity

– Frank Emanuel, Saint Paul University

10:20-11:15

Student Essay Contest Winner:

From Integrative Multiculturalism to Interculturalism: The United Church of Canada’s Vision for Becoming an Intercultural Church

– Hyuk Cho, Emmanuel College (Th.D. student)

in Herzberg Laboratories, room 4351

11:25-12:30

The Inaugural Jay Newman Lecture in the Philosophy of Religion:

Philosophy of Religion: A State of the Subject Report

– John Schellenberg, Professor of Philosophy at Mount Saint Vincent University and Adjunct Professor at Dalhousie University

in Herzberg Laboratories, room 4351

A new lectureship made possible by the estate of the late Jay Newman, a long time member and former president of the Canadian Theological Society. He was a prominent Canadian scholar with a keen interest in the philosophy of religion. He authored eleven books, seven relating to religion or the religious life. He was a member of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Guelph from 1971 until his death on June 17, 2007. Professor Newman left a bequest to CTS for the purpose of endowing an annual lecture in the Philosophy of Religion. It is his generosity that enables us to launch this annual lecture this year.

12:30-1:30

Lunch

1:30-3:00

Book Panel

Feminist Theology with a Canadian Accent: Canadian Perspectives on Contextual Feminist Theology (Ottawa: Novalis, 2008)

– Ellen Leonard, St. Michael’s College (Chair)

– Mary Ann Beavis, St. Thomas More College

– Denise Nadeau, Interfaith Summer Institute for Justice, Peace and Social Movements; Vancouver School of Theology

– Heather Eaton, St. Paul University

– Lee Cormie, St. Michael’s College

1:30-2:25

Whatever Happened to the New Earth? The Ambiguous Destiny of Creation in Christian Eschatology

– J. Richard Middleton, Roberts Wesleyan College

3:10-3:55 CTS Presidential Address: “And So it Goes with God? Story and History in Christian Theology”

– Michael Bourgeois, Emmanuel College

in Herzberg Laboratories, room 4351

4:05-5:05 CTS Annual General Meeting

in Herzberg Laboratories, room 4351

5:10-6:20 President’s Reception
6:30- CTS Annual Dinner

Siam Kitchen,
1050 Bank Street, ph. 613-730-3954

For directions, see GoogleMaps

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Herzberg Laboratories, Room 4351
Herzberg Laboratories, Room 5115
9:00-9:30

Work in Progress

Taking the Trickster Seriously: Theological Engagement with Aboriginal Trickster Stories

– Chris Wells, University of Winnipeg

9:00-9:55

Faith and Reason and the Catholic Catechism

– Ryan Topping, University of Oxford

9:40-10:45

Seeking the Common Good Through the Good we have in Common

– Marie Campbell, Concordia University

10:05-11:00

One’s Right Relationship with God: The Theological Dimensions of Sallie McFague’s Call for Ecological Praxis

– Jessica Fraser, Saint Paul’s University

10:55-11:50

Gardasil, Girls, and God: When Church, Sexuality and Pharmaceuticals Converge

– Doris M. Kieser, University of Alberta

12:00- Closing

– Alyda Faber, Atlantic School of Theology

in Herzberg Laboratories, room 4351

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Posted: April 1, 2009