Every other year SECSOR meets in Atlanta—I don’t complain. This year’s meeting is approaching. The conference will be held on March 5th-7th at the Atlanta Marriott Century Center, and there are a number of interesting papers in NT, HB, and early Christianity. If you plan to attend the conference, you can register online until March 1st, and registration is only $20 for students. I hope to see you there.
Here’s a link to the entire 2010 program (WordDoc), but I have also listed belong the relevant sessions on NT, HB, early Christianity, and archaeology:
FRIDAY, March 5
6:00-8:00 pm (SESSION I)
SBL: Hebrew Scriptures/Old Testament I
Brian Alderman, Lee University, Presiding
Brandon J. Simonson, Vanderbilt University
• Was Sarai a naditum? Examining the Sexuality of Sarai in an Ancient Near Eastern Milieu
Kristen L. Cox, University of Georgia
• Moses and the Motif of Water: From the Nile to the Jordan River
William L. Lyons, Regent University
• The Forgotten Casualty: Children and War in the Hebrew Bible
Joseph F. Scrivner, Samford University
• Wisdom as Cultural Capital: Socioeconomic Interests in Proverbs 1-9
SBL: New Testament I
Theme: New Testament Themes
Mark Proctor, Lee University, Presiding
Alexander Stewart, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
• Eschatology and Soteriology in 1 Peter
Kevin Larsen, Mid-Atlantic Christian University
• Neglected Considerations in Understanding the Structure of the Book of Revelation
Ricky Shinall, Vanderbilt University
• One Saturday in Capernaum: Mark’s Gentile Appropriation of the Sabbath
John Daniels, Flagler College
• Gossiping Jesus Into Being: The Oral Processing of a Social Personage in the Gospels
AAR: History of Christianity I
Theme: Early Christianity
Michael Simmons, Auburn University, Presiding
Ryan T. Woods, Emory.
• Providence, Punishment, and Perfection: Clement and Basilides on the Suffering of Martyrs
Annie Tinsley, University of Birmingham, U.K.
• Response to Harold O. Maier’s ‘A Sly Civility — Colossians and Empire’
Jonathan Schwiebert, Lenoir-Rhyne University.
• The Meaninglessness of Baptism
Alan Knox, Southeastern Theological Seminary.
• Theological Sources of Ignatius of Antioch
John Stokes, Auburn University Montgomery
• The Cult of Mithras and the Early Christians: Conflict and Competition in the Second and Third Centuries
8:15-9:30 pm
Presidential Addresses:
AAR: Michelle Tooley, Berea College
• Beyond the Peace Dividend in Guatemala: Re-membering Women’s Bodies
SBL: Jodi Magness, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
• Truth and Fiction: The Talpiyot Tomb in Context
SATURDAY, MARCH 6
9:00-10:45 am (SESSION II)
ASOR/SBL: Archaeology and the Ancient World I
Theme: ASOR Presidential Address
Greg Linton, Johnson Bible College, Presiding
James Riley Strange, Samford University
• Economics and the Archaeological Field School: Some Thoughts on the Production and Consumption of Education in the 21st Century
SBL: Hebrew Scriptures/Old Testament II
Robert Wallace, Shorter College, Presiding
Douglas Watson, Emory University
• The Rhetoric of Lament in the Book of Joel
Callie Plunket-Brewton, University of North Alabama
• Aesthetics and Architecture: The Rebuilding of Zion in Isaiah 49-55
Todd Hibbard, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga
• From Name to Book: Another Look at the Composition of the Book of Isaiah
Jerry Gladson, Columbia Theological Seminary
• The Deus Absconditus in Lamentations and in Postmodern Life
SBL: New Testament II
Theme: The Gospels
Kavin Rowe, Duke University Divinity School, Presiding
James W. Barker, Vanderbilt University
• John’s Use and Disuse of Matthew
David Moffitt, Duke University
• Jonah, Jews, Jesus, and Gentiles: Matthew’s Appropriation of the Sign of Jonah Saying in Light of the Gentile Mission
Tim Wardle, Wake Forest University
• Mark, the Jerusalem Temple and Jewish Sectarianism
Jason Robert Combs, UNC Chapel Hill
• Locating Luke 6:5d: Toward a Social Context for the Sabbath Worker
2:30-4:15 pm (SESSION III)
ASOR/SBL: Archaeology and the Ancient World II
Theme: Jesus and the Galilean Economy
Ralph K. Hawkins, Kentucky Christian University, Presiding
Mordechai Aviam, The Institute for Galilean Archaeology — Kinneret College, in Collaboration with the Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies,
University of Miami
• Socio-Economic Conditions in Galilee at the Time of Jesus
SBL: Hebrew Scriptures/Old Testament III
Bryan Bibb, Furman University, Presiding
Theme: Emerging Technologies that Enhance Biblical Scholarship and Teaching
Panelists: TBA
SBL: New Testament III
Theme: Theological Issues in the Interpretation of the New Testament
Richard Vinson, Salem College, Presiding
Jason Staples, UNC Chapel Hill
• Lord, Lord: Jesus’ Use of the Divine Name in the Synoptics
Douglas A. Hume, Pfeiffer University
• The Economics of Friendship: An Interpretation of the Narrative Summaries in Acts 2:41-47 and 4:32-35
Michael Zolondek, Florida International University
• And They Threw Him Out of the Vineyard: An Analysis of the Parable of the Wicked Tenants
Alan Knox, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
• A Theology of Mutuality
4:30-6:00 pm (SESSION IV)
ASOR/SBL: Archaeology and the Ancient World III
Theme: Jesus and the Galilean Economy
Ralph K. Hawkins, Kentucky Christian University, Presiding
Panelists: Tom McCollough, Centre College
David Fiensy, Kentucky Christian University
Doug Oakman, Pacific Lutheran University
Mordechai Aviam, The Institute for Galilean Archaeology — Kinneret College, in Collaboration with the Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies, University of Miami
SBL: Hebrew Scriptures/Old Testament IV
Nancy L. deClaissé-Walford, McAfee School of Theology, Mercer University, Presiding
Steve Cook, Independent Scholar
• The Biblical Hermeneutics of Margaret Walker: The Case of “Girl Held Without Bail” and Jephthah’s Daughter
B.J. Parker, McAfee School of Theology, Mercer University
• The Sublime, Terrible and Ezekiel 16
Jackie Wyse, Emory University
• A Book of Daniel(s): Characterization in Bakhtinian Perspective
Joshua Vis, Duke University
• The Sacrificial System of Leviticus in the Book of Hebrews
AAR: History of Judaism II
Theme: Second Temple Judaism
Gilya Schmidt, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Presiding
Edmund Gallagher, Heritage Christian University
• The Greek Bible among Ancient Jews
Bennie Reynolds, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
• Lost is Assyria: Locating ’svr on the Maps and the Lexicons of Jewish Writers from the Hellenistic Period
David Stark, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
• mvrh tzdqh as a Hermeneutical Functionary in the Qumran Sectarian Manuscripts
Kenneth Henson, University of Central Florida
• Prophetic “Light” Versus Qumranic “Darkness”: Isaiah’s Audacity of Hope
SUNDAY, MARCH 7
8:30-10:15 am (SESSION V)
ASOR/SBL: Archaeology and the Ancient World IV
Theme: Archaeological Investigations and Reports
Terry W. Eddinger, Carolina Evangelical Divinity School, Presiding
Dan Warner, The Virtual Bible Project
• A Re-Assessment of Canaanite Cultic Structures Based Upon a Functional/Utilitarian Approach
Sharon Lea Mattila, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
• Was There an Economic Crisis under Antipas? Revisiting the Questions of Royal Estates and Taxation in Herodian Galilee
Jeff Hudon, Andrews University
• Judahite Expansion into Philistia during the Early Eighth Century BCE: What is the Historical and Archaeological Evidence?
John Wineland, Kentucky Christian University
• A Report on the 2009 Season at Khirbet Mudaybi
AAR: History of Judaism III and Hebrew Scripture/Old Testament V (joint session)
Theme: The Handwriting on the Wall and Other Tales of Old
David Garber, McAfee School of Theology, Mercer University, Presiding
Cameron B. R. Howard, Emory University
• A Basic Conceptual Metaphor in the Serek ha-Yahad
Michael Fuller, Lee University
• Divine Intervention and Israel’s (”History’ of) Passivity in Josephus and Other Early Jewish Documents
Marian Broida, Emory University
• Textualizing Divination: The Writing on the Wall
SBL: New Testament IV
Theme: Reception History of the New Testament
Doug Hume, Pfeiffer University, Presiding
Diane Lipsett, Wake Forest University
• Stones, Scandal, and Seeing God: John Donne in the Reception History of Matthew
Wayne Coppins, University of Georgia
• Paul’s Juxtaposition of Freedom and Positive Servitude in 1 Cor 9:19 and its Reception by Martin Luther and Gerhard Ebeling
Ben White, UNC Chapel Hill
• How to Read a Book: Irenaeus and the Pastoral Epistles Reconsidered
Jeremy Barrier, Heritage Christian University
• The Earliest Christian Novels: An Analysis of the Manuscript and Literary Evidence for Christian Novel Writing in the Pre-Constantinian Era
10:30 am-12:15 pm (SESSION VI)
ASOR/SBL: Archaeology and the Ancient World V
Theme: Archaeological Method and Theory
Sharon Lea Mattila, University of North Carolina at Pembroke, Presiding
Ted Carruth, David Lipscomb University
• A Sculpture Fragment from Iron II Moabite Khirbet Mudaybi’: A Case Study of Inter-Disciplinary Inquiry for Interpretive Purposes
Robert Darby, University of Missouri-Columbia and Erin Darby, Duke University
• “Re”-Covering the Past: How Do We Protect and Study Jordan’s Threatened Ancient Sites? Approaches at “Ayn Gharandal”
Frederick L. Downing, Valdosta State University
• When the Center Cannot Hold: A Paradigm for Reading Near Eastern Archaeology
SBL: New Testament V
Theme: Paul
Diane Lipsett, Wake Forest University, Presiding
Mark Proctor, Lee University
• If Christ Has Not Been Raised — The Inefficacy of a Qualified Gospel in 1 Cor 15:17
Thomas Whitley, Gardner-Webb University
• From Qumran to Philo: Precedence for Paul’s Use of “Israel”
Annie Tinsley, University of Birmingham (UK)
• “Colossians and Empire”: A Response to Harold O. Maier
Presian Burroughs, Duke University
• Why Await the Apocalypse of the Sons of God? Reflections on Creation’s Liberation in Romans 8:18—22
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