mormon theology seminar
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"Community makes scripture sacred"—Kim Berkey on the 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar
The 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped up in New York City (see here). We asked seminar participants to reflect on their experiences, offering a glimpse at what the Seminar's all about. This post features Kim Berkey, who currently studies philosophy of religion at Harvard Divinity School. Posts from other seminar participants will follow. BHodges Kim Berkey
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"Searching together"—Jenny Webb on the 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar
The 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped up in New York City (see here). We asked seminar participants to reflect on their experiences, offering a glimpse at what the Seminar's all about. This post features Jenny Webb, who holds a degree in comparative literature and works as an editor. Posts from other seminar participants will follow. BHodges Jenny Webb
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"The Book of Mormon stands up to close scrutiny"—Jana Riess on the 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar
The 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped up in New York City (see here). We asked seminar participants to reflect on their experiences, offering a glimpse at what the Seminar's all about. (See here for other posts in the series.) This post features Jana Riess, who holds a PhD in American religious history from Columbia University. A fuller version of this article appeared at Religion News Service on June 15, 2015. This excerpt is used with permission. BHodges Jana Riess
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"Consecration yields an abundance"—Joseph Spencer on the 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar
The 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped up in New York City (see here). We asked seminar participants to reflect on their experiences, offering a glimpse at what the Seminar's all about. This post features Seminar co-director Joseph Spencer, who recently completed his PhD in philosophy at the University of New Mexico. Posts from other seminar participants will follow. BHodges Joseph Spencer
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Adam Miller on the 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar: "Turning the mind toward the heart"
The 2015 Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped up in New York City (see here). We asked seminar participants to reflect on their experiences, offering a glimpse at what the Seminar's all about. This post features Seminar co-director Adam Miller, professor of philosophy at Collin College and author of Letters to a Young Mormon. Posts from Seminar co-director Joseph Spencer and other seminar participants will follow. BHodges Adam Miller
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George Handley: "Interpretation is not a solo act"
This year's Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped things up in London (see here, here). I asked seminar participants to reflect on their experiences in order to give us a sense of what they got out of the gathering. This post features George Handley, professor of humanities and comparative literature at Brigham Young University. BHodges One of the root meanings of the word "religion" is to re-read. To be religious by implication, then, means that we are committed to rereading and rethinking and that the generation of truth is a kind of recycling and repurposing. Revelation often comes to us as our minds reconsider what we thought we understood and suddenly seen from a different perspective or in a new light the familiar and ordinary stands out in new and distinct form. Perhaps nothing embodies this process better than a marriage. The same person, the same history, day in and day out, and yet the ongoing challenge to remain in love, as if you must work at seeing your spouse for the first time. This is a task of the mind and of the imagination as much as anything else.
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Ben Peters on "considering unanswered questions about scripture without anxiety"
This year's Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped things up in London (see here, here). I asked seminar participants to reflect on their experiences in order to give us a sense of what they got out of the gathering. This post features Ben Peters, assistant professor of Communication at the University of Tulsa and a current Faculty Associate at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University. He's a media historian and theorist of information technology. BHodges My experience at the Mormon Theology Seminar this summer was no less than a personal highlight for me as a practicing and sometimes thinking Mormon. I am grateful for the combined brilliance and collaborative reading of my fellow participants as well as the generous support of the Willes Center for Book of Mormon Studies. I want to comment on two features of the experience that my co-seminarians haven't touched on yet.
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Julie M. Smith on "experimenting with new readings"
The first annual Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped things up in London (see here). In this post, participant Julie M. Smith reflects on her experiences at the seminar. She earned a graduate degree in biblical studies from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, CA. She lives near Austin, Texas, where she homeschools her children and is writing a commentary on the Gospel of Mark. Reflections on the seminar from other participants can be found here. BHodges Most of us feel that we never have the time that we wish we had to do what we want to do. I am acutely aware of time pressures as I try to balance my commitment to my research projects against family life and other obligations. This is why the Mormon Theology Summer Seminar (sponsored by the Laura F. Willes Center for the Study of the Book of Mormon, the Richard L. Evans Chair of Religious Understanding, the Mormon Theology Seminar, and the Neal A. Maxwell Institute) was such a remarkable event.
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Michael Ulrich asks "can a mathematician do Mormon theology?"
The first annual Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped things up in London (see here for more). I didn't get to go to London to participate, so I asked seminar participants to reflect on their experiences in order to give me a sense of what they got out of the gathering. This post features Michael Ulrich, a PhD student in mathematics at Universit� de Franche-Comt� (France). His research interests include free probabilities. In his free time he studies the scriptures and LDS church history. BHodges I participated at the beginning of June in the Summer Seminar on Mormon Theology. But how can theology be important or useful in a Mormon context? And why would I do 'Mormon theology,' considering that I am a Mathematician and have no training whatsoever in theology, ancient scriptures, philosophy, etc.?
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Miranda Wilcox on "the possibilities of reading collaboratively"
The first annual Mormon Theology Seminar recently wrapped things up in London (see here for more, or read the seminar co-director Joe Spencer's reflections here). I asked seminar participants to reflect on their experiences in order to give me a sense of what they got out of the gathering. This post features Miranda Wilcox, an associate professor of English at Brigham Young University where she teaches medieval literature and researches the religious culture of Anglo-Saxon England. She recently co-edited Standing Apart: Mormon Historical Consciousness and the Concept of Apostasy (Oxford University Press, 2014). BHodges Miranda Wilcox
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