Society of Biblical Literature
Since 1880

Romans through History and Cultures

SBL Meeting 22-25 November, 2003 Atlanta


Please click on the titles to download a copy in Word format. Get the spionic font here

Session One: Medieval Readings of Romans

Presider: Laurence L. Welborn, United Theological Seminary

Presenters:
John Doutre
Romans as read in the Cloister and in the School: The Expositions of William of Saint Thierry and Peter Abelard on Romans

Brenda Schildgen, University of Claifornia, Davis
Abelard's Commentary on Romans, Heloise's Letter 5 to Abelard, and the Authority of Augustine

Peter Hawkins, Boston University
Dante and the Epistle to the Romans

Respondents:
William Franke, Vanderbilt University
William S. Campbell, University of Wales
Charles H. Cosgrove, Northern Baptist Theological Seminary

 

 

 

 

Session Two: Reading Romans as Scripture in Ancient and Modern Contexts

Presider: Timothy B. Cargal, Northwood Presbyterian Church

Presenter:
Jim Harrison, Wesley Institute, Sydney, Australia
Paul's Dishonored Benefactor: Responses from Augustan Rome

Respondent:
Lukas Bormann, Technische Universitaet Braunschweig


Panel Discussion of "Scriptural Criticism"

Panelists:
Stefan Alkier, Goethe Universitaet, Frankfurt
Cynthia Kittredge, Episcopal Theological Seminary of the Southwest
Sarah Lancaster, The Methodist Theological School in Ohio
John Riches, University of Glasgow
Christopher Rowland, Oxford University

Respondents:
Cristina Granholm, Karlstad University
Daniel Patte, Vanderbilt University
 

The papers in this session will not be read but discussed. They are available in advance of the meeting in the SBL 2003 Seminar Papers. You can request copies via e-mail attachments through Daniel Patte (Daniel.M.Patte@Vanderbilt.Edu), or through the U.S. Postal Service--for the cost of duplicating and mailing (Daniel Patte, Vanderbilt University, Department of Religious Studies, Box 1704, Station B, Nashville, TN 37235).


Click on the titles of the papers above to download a Word document copy.  Get the spionic font here
The Greek font, spionic, is from the SBL site (www.sbl-site.org)