Over the past week, theLAB has been granting unprecedented access to one of the best academic symposiums for biblical studies and theology in the UK, the St Andrews 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 session.
The plenaries included Carol Newsom (Emory University), Catrin Williams (University of Wales), and N. T. Wright (University of St Andrews). We hope you enjoy this opportunity to experience the symposium through pictures, and we hope to publish some of the papers here on theLAB in due course.
(And please let us know in the comments below if you would like to see more coverage of other events like this in the future, whether they be in Scotland, Germany, Finland, or the USA.)
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.
Was there a change of venue for the three plenary addresses (Plenaries 6-8) on the final day of the symposium (6 JUN 2018)? The schedule listed these to be presented in the Buchanan Lecture Theatre, but the photos appear to be in the Lower College Hall.
Hi John, good observation. There was an updated schedule released prior to the event in which all of the plenary addresses were shown to be scheduled in Lower College Hall.
Dear all, please keep these emails coming, as you say from which ever part of the globe. In future some sort of Global Classroom (live or recorded) would be fantastic for those of us unable to attend in person.
This is a great service – keep it up. I had hoped to attend this Symposium but it did not work out. Thanks for the updates. I look forward to a few of the papers if possible.
Many thanks for these blogs, I would love to see more coverage like this in the future.
I would like to receive copies or recordings of the papers presented and and discussions. Videos or recordings would be most welcome. I would pay a reasonable fee for this.
Hi Cam, your request has been mirrored many times now since this posting by other readers of the blog, and for good reason. What I am suggesting people do is send an email to the presenters of any of the papers you wish, and kindly ask for a copy of the presentation copy to read. You can easily find their information on Google et al. Fuller versions of many of the papers will be published in a forthcoming volume by Eerdmans, but that may at least a year or two from now. You might also send an email to the organizers of the conference, whose names are included in the first “Recap” post, and request that they ask the presenters as a group whether papers might be offered for people to read at this stage. Best of luck!
Was there a change of venue for the three plenary addresses (Plenaries 6-8) on the final day of the symposium (6 JUN 2018)? The schedule listed these to be presented in the Buchanan Lecture Theatre, but the photos appear to be in the Lower College Hall.
Hi John, good observation. There was an updated schedule released prior to the event in which all of the plenary addresses were shown to be scheduled in Lower College Hall.
Dear all, please keep these emails coming, as you say from which ever part of the globe. In future some sort of Global Classroom (live or recorded) would be fantastic for those of us unable to attend in person.
This is a great service – keep it up. I had hoped to attend this Symposium but it did not work out. Thanks for the updates. I look forward to a few of the papers if possible.
Many thanks for these blogs, I would love to see more coverage like this in the future.
I would like to receive copies or recordings of the papers presented and and discussions. Videos or recordings would be most welcome. I would pay a reasonable fee for this.
Hi Cam, your request has been mirrored many times now since this posting by other readers of the blog, and for good reason. What I am suggesting people do is send an email to the presenters of any of the papers you wish, and kindly ask for a copy of the presentation copy to read. You can easily find their information on Google et al. Fuller versions of many of the papers will be published in a forthcoming volume by Eerdmans, but that may at least a year or two from now. You might also send an email to the organizers of the conference, whose names are included in the first “Recap” post, and request that they ask the presenters as a group whether papers might be offered for people to read at this stage. Best of luck!