Yesterday we published a recap of the St Andrews Atonement Symposium 2018 written by Justin Duff, one of the three outstanding organizers of the event. Today and the rest of this week theLAB will publish an extended photo essay of the Symposium, as a means to enable our readers to participate (virtually) in what has become one of the highlights of the conference season every other year.
Day One featured plenary addresses by Christian Eberhart (University of Houston) and Deborah Rooke (University of Oxford), with the first of three parallel sessions set in between and a delightful wine reception to conclude the day. Enjoy the photos, and stay tuned for Day Two and Day Three the rest of this week.
There’s more to see in Day Two and Day Three of the St Andrews Atonement Symposium, only here on theLAB.
Dr. Tavis Bohlinger is Editor-in-Chief of the Logos Academic Blog and Creative Director at Reformation Heritage Books. He holds a PhD from Durham University and writes across multiple genres, including academia, poetry, and screenwriting. He lives in Grand Rapids with his wife and three children.
Date: c.1880
Medium: oil on canvas
Measurements: 148 x 197 cm
Accession number: HC427
Acquisition method: donated by Mrs. Falconer, 1947
Note: Poissy is a “commune” (or municipality) in north-central France, a suburb of Paris. It is the site of the month long Colloquy of Poissy (9 SEP – 9 OCT 1561) between Roman Catholics and Huguenot Protestants which failed to achieve its object of reconciliation. Theodore Beza from Geneva, and Peter Virmigli from Zurich appeared at this Colloquy. Beza delivered an address during the first session expounding the tenets of the Reformed Church.
[…] Symposium on Atonement. Today we cover the third and final day of the event (see also the recap, Day One and Day Two), which featured three plenary addresses back-to-back with no intervening parallel […]
[…] symposiums, and whatever-you-want-to-call-them’s as possible, as the blog will attest here, here and here. In fact, I have yet-to-publish reports on two Durham conferences, the […]
[…] this symposium in-person on the Academic Blog, along with stunning photographs of the event: Day 1, Day 2, and Day 3. Image below is from the opening […]
The following information is for those who share my fascination with the painting displayed over the fireplace. It is “Poissy, French River Scene,” by Alphonse Moutte (1840–1913); on Art UK at https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/poissy-french-river-scene-125599/search/venue:university-of-st-andrews-5140/page/11/view_as/grid [accessed 15 JUN 2018].
Date: c.1880
Medium: oil on canvas
Measurements: 148 x 197 cm
Accession number: HC427
Acquisition method: donated by Mrs. Falconer, 1947
Note: Poissy is a “commune” (or municipality) in north-central France, a suburb of Paris. It is the site of the month long Colloquy of Poissy (9 SEP – 9 OCT 1561) between Roman Catholics and Huguenot Protestants which failed to achieve its object of reconciliation. Theodore Beza from Geneva, and Peter Virmigli from Zurich appeared at this Colloquy. Beza delivered an address during the first session expounding the tenets of the Reformed Church.
[…] Symposium on Atonement. Today we cover the third and final day of the event (see also the recap, Day One and Day Two), which featured three plenary addresses back-to-back with no intervening parallel […]
[…] symposiums, and whatever-you-want-to-call-them’s as possible, as the blog will attest here, here and here. In fact, I have yet-to-publish reports on two Durham conferences, the […]
[…] this symposium in-person on the Academic Blog, along with stunning photographs of the event: Day 1, Day 2, and Day 3. Image below is from the opening […]