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  • Call for Papers: Canadian Theological Society 2015 Annual Meeting

    June 1-3, 2015

    University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario

    The theme for the Canadian Theological Society for 2015 is “Capital Theology: Religion and Politics in the 21st Century”.  This theme invites reflection on the relationship between theology and politics.  The potential for such reflections is manifold and may involve theological engagement with political structures or specific policies, the public and political role of theological discourse as such, the relationship between theology and praxis, the role of the Church in public discourses, or the relationship of theology in Canada to politically dominant and marginalized groups alike.

    This connects with the broader theme for Congress in 2015, which is “Capital Ideas.”  Ideas have the ability to empower and captivate.  Ideas foster dialogue and debate and help shape our realities.  They are essential in education, research, and public knowledge.

    The Canadian Theological Society invites proposals pertaining to either of these themes.  We also invite proposals on any topic in theology.  CTS would like to encourage everyone to submit a proposal, although scholars whose papers are selected are expected to be members of CTS at the time of the conference (with the exception of invited panelists). We invite submissions in two formats:

    1. 20/20 Presentations

    We will again follow the 20/20 format used in previous years, inviting presentations of 20 minutes with 20 minutes of discussion to follow.  Typically the presentation will be an account of a larger research project.  Since members work in a variety of fields and specializations, attention should be given to presenting advanced work in an accessible way.

    Submission

    Submit a proposal that includes:

    • Title of presentation;
    • Proposal of a maximum 300-400 words (with word count), which includes an abstract, the problem your scholarship engages, and the contribution you plan to make;
    • Requests for audio-visual equipment (A/V equipment will be available only if it is requested in the proposal);
    • On a separate page, please include:
      • Presenter’s name, institution or professional affiliation, and contact information.

    2. Panels

    We invite panels on issues that are relevant to members, especially as related to the theme of the annual meeting.  Panel proposals should be developed to foster dialogue among the panelists and with those attending in the audience.  Thus, we discourage panels that consist only of reading several papers.

    Submission

    Submit a proposal that includes:

    • Title of panel;
    • Length of panel (40 or 80 minutes);
    • Proposal of a maximum 300-400 words (with word count), which includes an abstract, the problem your scholarship engages, the contribution you plan to make, and how you plan to foster dialogue among panelists and audience (e.g., use and allotment of time);
    • Requests for audio-visual equipment (A/V equipment will be available only if it is requested in the proposal);
    • On a separate page, please include:
      • Convener’s name, institution, and contact information.  The convener will be the link between the panel and the CTS;
      • Names, institutions and contact information of all members of the panel;
      • Either the name and contact information of the moderator, or a request that CTS provide a moderator.

     

    All proposals should be submitted in a Word or .pdf file by email attachment by January 30, 2015 to:

    Timothy Harvie, CTS Program Chair.

    We will confirm receipt of all proposals submitted by email.

    Selection Criteria

    In selecting proposals for 20/20 presentations or for panels, the committee will consider:

    • The clarity and significance of the proposal;
    • The quality of the contribution to scholarship;
    • The relationship of the presentation to the thematic focus of the annual meeting;
    • The contribution of the presentation to a diversity of perspectives and approaches;
    • The potential for inspiring discussion and engagement among the members.

    Our goal as a Society is to foster collegial discussion of members’ work and of the work of other Canadian theologians.  All presenters and attendees are encouraged to participate in as much of the program as possible.  We welcome all members, students, and other interested persons to join us this year at the annual meeting in Ottawa, Ontario.

     

     

     

  • Getting to Know Your Exec – Presidential Edition!

    Allen Jorgenson

    Hi all, and welcome to CTS.  I am in my last week as president of CTS, and so just finishing up the second of a three

    year term.  Last year I served as president-elect and next year will be past-president.  My experience on the executive has been immeasurably rich, and my fellow executive members have been so very generous with their time, energy, and insight.  Be sure you are being well served by your executive, and know that CTS is an incredibly rich resource in Canada and beyond.

    I am Assistant Dean and Associate Professor of Systematic Theology at Waterloo Lutheran Seminary in Wilfrid Laurier University (http://www.wlu.ca/seminary).  My current areas of research include Martin Luther’s theology of creation and exploration of the theological insights afforded by the First Nations of North America.  I am also doing research in the area of Schleiermacher’s sermons.

    I pass my spare time in the summer sailing, in the winter curling, and also dabble in painting and poetry from time to time.  I blog at http://stillvoicing.wordpress.com.  I am looking forward to our time together at Brock University in St Catharines, Ontario next week.  The line-up of papers this year suggests that it will again be an insightful, provocative and satisfying conference.  I hope to see you there.

  • Congress Schedule has been Revised!

    Make sure you check out the revised schedule for Congress. Lots of great papers and presentations this year!

     

  • Abstract for Upcoming Jay Newman Lecture

    “A Matter of Bones, Feathers, and Wishful Thinking”:  Science and the Marginalization of Religion

     Dr. Janet Wesselius

    This title comes from the Terry Lecture series delivered by the American novelist Marilynne Robinson in 2010 when she offered this description of how religion is caricatured by some eminent scholars in the alleged conflict between science and religion. The widespread and popular view of science is that it renders traditions and practices such as religion obsolete. In this lecture, I explore the public discourse used by science popularizers in their polemic against religion, specifically how the epistemic and cognitive authority of science—with rhetorical invocations of “objectivity” and “facts”—is used to foreclose any alternative narrative. My concern is how this discourse enables dehumanizing effects while precluding liberatory possibilities for human flourishing. It is here that I think philosophy of religion can make a significant contribution:  to provide an alternative narrative to science’s fiction about human beings as nothing more than “meaty machines” engaged in a competition to ensure the survival of their genes.  Of course, there are others who are marginalized by this popularization of science but who do not regularly interact with philosophy of religion.  By drawing on conversations in aboriginal and environmental thought—who are “naively” concerned with bones and feathers—and in literary and feminist thought—who are all too familiar with being dismissed as engaged in wishful thinking—I propose potential alliances in an effort to generate alternative narratives.

  • Getting to Know Your Exec

    Rob Fennell

    I have been Vice-President of CTS this past year, and for 2014-15, I will be President.  In past years, I served as Secretary, and was active as a student member.  CTS is a vibrant and interesting Canadian venue for a rich exchange of research and wisdom in the theological disciplines.  I hope that you will continue to support and take an interest in CTS – together we are better.

    Since 2006, I have taught Historical and Systematic Theology at Atlantic School of Theology in Halifax.  Prior to that, I served with local congregations in various places for 10 years.  I am ordained in the United Church of Canada.  My research interests are principally concerned with interpretation, and especially theological interpretation of Scripture.  Adjunct to this I have lively interests in Christology, Trinity, ecclesiology, post-Christendom Christian witness, and thinkers such as D. Bonhoeffer, J. Moltmann, and C.S. Lewis.

    Another project in which I am actively involved is Touchstone, a Canadian theological journal, for which I serve as chair of the editorial board.  Finally, I am directing a new venture called Camino Nova Scotia.  You can read about it here: http://www.astheology.ns.ca/upcomingevents/CaminoNS.html

    I look forward to seeing you at our annual conference, and to keeping in touch by email and Facebook.

  • Student Travel Grant Announcement

    Canadian Theological Society
    Student Travel Grant
    Congress 2014
    Brock University

    In previous years, CTS received funding for an annual grant of $3075 from SSHRC to help subsidize costs associated with travel, accommodation and food for CTS members participating in the CTS annual conference.  Students have always been listed as a priority for receiving this funding support.  Two years ago, SSHRC announced that this funding program had been terminated.  This year the CTS Executive has approved a special new travel grant pool of $1500 from CTS funds.  This grant will be only for CTS Student Members who present papers at the 2014 CTS Annual Conference at Brock.  It will be a travel subsidy, subsidizing only travel costs.  Unlike previous years, accommodation and food costs will not be subsidized this year.

    CTS travel grant forms will be available at the CTS Conference at Brock.  After the CTS Conference, CTS student presenters applying for this travel grant should submit their completed travel grant forms and their travel receipts to the CTS Treasurer.  Travel grant cheques will then be sent out over the summer.

    For more information, contact Bob McKeon, CTS Treasurer.

  • 2014 Congress Schedule (REVISED)

    Download CTS Revised Program 2014

    Monday, May 26 (Welcome and Panel Sessions in Cairns, Room 310) 

    9-9:10AM – Welcome Session, Allen Jorgenson, CTS President

    9:10-9:50AM

    • Cairns, Room 310 – “Preaching as Medium and Maker of Meaning,” D. Laurence DeWolfe (Atlantic School of Theology)
    • Cairns, Room 313 – “Taking Up the Past: Queer Temporality and Transformative Social Praxis,” Robert Timmons (Emmanuel College, TST)

     

    9:50-10:10AM – Break

    10:10-11:40AM

    • Cairns, Room 310 – “Friendship as a Philosophical Foundation of Theological Biography,” Preston Parsons (University of Cambridge)
    • Cairns, Room 313 – “From the Dust of the Ground: Towards and Ecological Anthropology,” Adrian Langdon (Nipissing University and Laurentian University)

    11:40-12:20PM

    • Cairns, Room 310 – “The Politics of Decline and Retrieval: Bernard Lonergan’s Foundations for Democratic Citizenship,” Nick Olkovich (University of St. Michael’s College, TST)
    • Cairns, Room 313 – “The Blame Game: Emotion, Reason, and the Will in Rival Thomistic Accounts of Moral Error,” Michael Buttrey (Regis College, TST)

     

    12:20-1:30PM – Lunch

    1:30-2:30PM – Jay Newman Lecture: Dr. Janet Wesselius (Augustana Campus, University of Alberta)

    2:30-2:50PM – Break

    2:50-3:30PM

    • Cairns, Room 310 – “Feeling Beyond the Rational: Empathy and Ethics in Coetzee and the Christian Tradition,” Matt Eaton (University of Saint Michael’s College, TST)
    • Cairns, Room 313 – “Jesus’ Resurrection as a Saturated Phenomenon,” Donald Schweitzer (St. Andrew’s College)

     

    3:30-5:00PM – CTS AGM

    5:00-7:00PM – Supper Break

    7:00-8:30PM – Panel: Ecotheological Epistemologies, Borders and Praxis

     

    Tuesday, May 27 (Student Luncheon and Panel Sessions in Glenridge Building, Room A-201)

     9:00-9:40AM

    • Glenridge Building, Room A-201 – “Literature as Theology: Recovering the Christian Religious Ideal with the Help of Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables,” Jean-Pierre Fortin (University of Saint Michael’s College, TST)
    • International Centre, Room 112 – “Martyrdom and Dialogue: Ecumenism in Martyrdom of the Catholic Jesuit Alfred Delp and the Evangelical Helmuth James Graf von Moltke,” Peter Nguyen (Regis College, TST)

     

    9:40-10:20AM

    • Glenridge Building, Room A-201 – “A Theological Analysis of Peter Weir’s The Truman Show,” Jeffrey A. Allen (Lonergan Research Institute, Toronto)
    • International Centre, Room 112 –  “How Many is Too Many? A Theological Propaedeutic for Polyamory,” Jesse Smith (Saint Paul University)

    10:20-10:40AM – Break

    10:40-11:50AM – Panel – Truth and Reconciliation:  Theological Challenges and Opportunities

    12:00-12:50PM – Student Luncheon: Discussions in the Field

    12:50-1:30PM

    • Glenridge Building, Room A-201 – “Books, Metadata and the Theological Library: Rethinking Borders, Boundaries and Emergence,” Gordon Rixon (Regis College, TST)
    • International Centre, Room 112 – “A Sensuous Pursuit of Justice/Love: An Examination of the Erotically Pleasurable and Morally Formative Practice of Yoga,” Samantha Cavanaugh, (Emmanuel College, TST)

     

    1:30-2:30PM – CTS Presidential Address: Allen Jorgenson (Waterloo Lutheran Seminary) “Imago Dei and Imago Mundi: Imagining a Modest Humanity”

    2:30-2:50PM – Break

    2:50-3:30PM

    • Glenridge Building, Room A-201 – “Kant’s Unmerciful God and the Law of Unhappiness,” Cameron M. Thomson (University of Edinburgh)
    • International Centre, Room 112 – “Labouring in a Foreign Land: An Ecofeminist Approach Toward the New Cosmology,” Abigail L. Lofte (University of St. Michael’s College, TST)

     

    3:30-4:10PM

    • Glenridge Building, Room A-201 – “Being at Borders with Paul Tillich,” Marc Dumas (Université de Sherbrooke)
    4:10-4:40PM – End Paper Presentations
    5:00-7:00PM – Universities President’s Reception (Congress) (check Congress schedule for location)

     6:00-8:00PM – CTS Dinner

     

  • Getting to Know Your Exec

    Matthew Eaton

    Greetings! I am currently in the midst of my first year as the student representative for the Canadian Theological Society. I am entering the dissertation phase of my program at the University of St. Michael’s College, where my research focuses on other-than-human subjectivity, eco-Christology, and the philosophies of Emmanuel Levinas, Jacques Derrida, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty … though my cat, Fargo, is perhaps more influential on my work than anything else. In addition to work with CTS and my own research, I am active in the organization of conferences and seminars at the Toronto School of Theology, and serve as the co-Associate Director of the Dominican Institute of Toronto. Apart from theological work, I am likely to be found amidst Toronto’s many music venues or tending my rooftop garden and defending it against near constant feline assault!

    My time with CTS has been short thus far but I am enjoying the organization of a co-sponsored session between the Canadian Society for the Study of Religion and CTS on ecotheology and non-human subjects. I am looking forward to greater involvement with our annual conference as the years go by beyond my own participation though the presentation of research. If you are a student and have questions of concerns about CTS, please do not hesitate to get in touch with me!

  • Jay Newman Lecture – Janet Wesselius, PhD

    The Executive of the CTS is pleased to announce that Dr. Janet Wesselius has accepted our invitation to present the Jay Newman Memorial Lecture in the Philosophy of Religion at the 2014 CTS at Brock University (Monday, May 26, 1:30pm). We would like to thank Drs. William Sweet, Yiftach Fehige, and Jean-Pierre Fortin for their work organizing the lecture.

    Janet Wesselius, PhD

    Dr. Janet Wesselius is Associate Dean of Teaching and Associate Professor of Philosophy at the Augustana Campus of the University of Alberta. She obtained her Ph.D. in Philosophy from the Vrije Universiteit (Free University) in Amsterdam, with her dissertation, “Objective Ambivalence: Feminist Negotiations in Epistemology.” Her area of specialization is feminist epistemology and philosophy of science; she has published extensively on feminist themes. She has also received numerous teaching awards, most recently the Augustana Faculty Teaching Award.

     

     

  • Student Networking Lunch at Congress

    Dear Canadian Theological Society members and student members,

    The Executive of the CTS invites you to attend our annual Student Networking Lunch on Tuesday May 27th.   This event falls in the middle of our sessions during Congress at Brock University. The lunch will take place from 12:00 – 1:30 p.m., near our meeting rooms (location TBD).

    STUDENTS EAT FOR FREE!  This arises from our long-standing commitment to students and your participation in the CTS.

    OTHER CTS MEMBERS are invited to pay for their own lunch and/or to consider sponsoring a student.  The suggested contribution is $15 (retired or underemployed) or $20 (salaried) per person, or more if you wish.

    The Student Lunch is an important annual opportunity for building our society, networking, and encouraging the next generation of Canadian theological scholars.

    ***Established scholars are warmly invited to join the table and to share mentoring conversations with newer student-scholars.

    Advance registration is required; please pay on site.

    Please send your name and email address by May 10th to:
    Prof. Rob Fennell
    CTS Vice-President

    Please be sure to indicate if you are a student, and if you have any food restrictions.

    REGISTRATION DEADLINE IS MAY 10TH.