2019 Karl Barth Conference: The Finality of the Gospel: Karl Barth and the task of Eschatology - Princeton Theological Seminary
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2019 Karl Barth Conference:

The Finality of the Gospel: Karl Barth and the task of Eschatology

June 16—19, 2019

About

The 2019 Annual Karl Barth Conference will be hosted by the Center for Barth Studies from June 16-19, 2019 on the campus of Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, New Jersey. Fifty years from Barth’s own death and on the centenary of the publication of the Römerbrief, the conference takes as its theme, “The Finality of the Gospel: Karl Barth and the Tasks of Eschatology”. Our central purpose is to consider how fresh encounters with various aspects of Karl Barth’s dogmatic theology and biblical exegesis might stimulate, inform, shape, and challenge contemporary reflection on the range of eschatological themes in Christian theology. Plenary papers from leading theologians and biblical scholars from North America and Europe will be supplemented by the contributions of other scholars to be offered in two concurrent sessions during the conference.

Registration

Regular Rate: $285 (Includes breakfast and lunch on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, and all refreshments).

Students: $90 (Includes all refreshments. Fee does not include meals).

PTS Students, Faculty, Staff, and Administration: Free (Registration still required)

Opening Sunday evening banquet meal – separate charge: $30


Plenary Speakers

Concurrent Speakers

Conference Schedule

  • Sunday, June 16th, 2019

  • 4:00 – 5:30 PM

    Registration

    Erdman Center

  • 6:00 – 7:30 PM

    Opening Banquet

    Mackay Dining Hall

  • 7:30 – 9:00 PM

    Lecture 1

    Mackay Auditorium

    Christoph Schwöbel : The Beginning of the End or the End of the Beginning? Barth’s Eschatology as a Guide to the Perplexed

  • Monday, June 17th, 2019

  • 7:00 – 9:00 AM

    Registration

    Mackay Auditorium Foyer

  • 8:00 – 9:00 AM

    Breakfast

    Mackay Dining Hall

  • 9:00 – 10:00 AM

    Lecture 2

    Mackay Auditorium

    Grant Macaskill : The Idolatrous Self and the Eikon: The Possibility of Worship

  • 10:15 – 10:45 AM

    Break with coffee

    Mackay Auditorium Foyer

  • 10:45 – 11:45 AM

    Lecture 3

    Mackay Auditorium

    Kenneth Oakes : Eschatology in the Time of Expectation

  • 12:00 – 1:00 PM

    Lunch

    Mackay Dining Hall

  • 1:15 – 2:15 PM

    Lecture 4

    Mackay Auditorium

    Douglas Campbell : Paul’s Account of the Future: A Case Study in Pauline Dogmatics

  • 2:30 – 3:00 PM

    Break with coffee and refreshments

    Mackay Auditorium Foyer

  • 3:00 – 4:00 PM

    Lecture 5

    Mackay Auditorium

    Christiane Tietz : ‘Standing on the Boundary Where the Now and the Yet Then Touch Each Other’: Barth on Theodicy and Eschatology

  • 4:15 – 5:00 PM

    Concurrent Papers

    Session I

    Peter Anders – Theron Room (Library): “The Cruciform Promise of the Gospel: Theologia Crucis and the Resurrection of the Dead in Karl Barth’s Earlier Theology”

    Steven Harris – Library Room 1010: “First Corinthians 15 in the Century before Barth: Eschatology without Content?”

    Timo Helenius – Clarke Lounge (Erdman Center): “What I Am Not”: Barth’s Negative Phenomenology of Eternity

    Declan Kelly – Art Studio (Erdman Center): “Love in a Time of Apocalypse: Karl Barth’s Interpretation of 1 Corinthians 13”

    Jeff McSwain – Adams House (Living Room): “Species of Origen? Barth’s Refusal of a “self-enclosed middle” between Creation and the Eschaton”

    Nicola Whyte – Cooper Room (Erdman Center)

  • 5:00 – 7:30 PM

    Open Dinner in Princeton

  • 7:30 – 8:30 PM

    Lecture 6

    Mackay Auditorium

    John Barclay : The Day is at Hand: Barth’s Interpretation of Pauline Eschatology

  • Tuesday, June 18th, 2019

  • 8:00 – 9:00 AM

    Breakfast

    Mackay Dining Hall

  • 9:00 – 10:00 AM

    Lecture 7

    Mackay Auditorium

    Beverly Gaventa : The Finality of the Gospel: Barth’s Romerbrief on Romans 9-11

  • 10:15 – 10:45 AM

    Break with coffee

    Mackay Auditorium Foyer

  • 10:45 – 11:45 AM

    Lecture 8

    Mackay Auditorium

    Christophe Chalamet : The Redemption of This World: On the Direction of Eschatology

  • 12:00 – 1:00 PM

    Lunch

    Mackay Dining Hall

  • 1:15 – 2:15 PM

    Lecture 9

    Mackay Auditorium

    Karen Kilby : Death: A Hesitation

  • 2:30 – 3:00 PM

    Break with coffee and refreshments

    Mackay Auditorium Foyer

  • 3:00 – 4:00 PM

    Lecture 10

    Mackay Auditorium

    Nancy Duff : The Ethics of Resisting and Accepting Death in Karl Barth’s Theology

  • 4:15 – 5:00 PM

    Concurrent Papers

    Session II

    Matthew Frost – Art Studio (Erdman Center): “Escaping the Outcomes of History: Barth’s Redesign of Eschatology from Protology, Forward”

    Mitchell Mallary – Theron Room (Library): “The Secularity of Revelation and the Task of History: Karl Barth Against the Theological Interpretation of Scripture”

    R. David Nelson – Library Room 1010: “Humanity at the Crossroads of Old and New: Anthropology and Eschatology in Barth’s Exegesis of Romans 5”

    Kara Slade – Cooper Room (Erdman Center): “Time and the Political Theology of Progress”

    Adam Tietje – Adams House (Living Room): “‘Be What You Are’: Barth’s Eschatological Account of Conscience.”

    Chelsea Williams – Clarke Lounge (Erdman Center): “The World Is Wide Enough: The Kingdom of God and Barth’s Critique of Pietism Today”

  • 5:00 – 7:00 PM

    Open Dinner in Princeton

  • Wednesday, June 19th, 2019

  • 8:00 – 9:00 AM

    Breakfast

    Mackay Dining Hall

  • 9:00 – 10:00 AM

    Lecture 11

    Mackay Auditorium

    Susan Eastman : The Custody of Hope: Christian Existence in The Resurrection of the Dead

  • 10:00 – 11:00 AM

    Break with coffee

    Check out from the Erdman Center by 11 AM

  • 11:00 – 12:00 PM

    Lecture 12

    Mackay Auditorium

    Philip G. Ziegler : The First and Final ‘No’: The Finality of the Gospel and the Old Enemy

  • 12:00 – 1:00 PM

    Lunch

    Mackay Dining Hall

Lodging

Lodging at Princeton Seminary’s Erdman Center is sold out.
The following lodging options are still available:
Dorm rooms are available for reservation at Princeton Seminary’s Alexander Hall. These dormatory style rooms include an XL twin bed, linens, a nightstand, dresser, desk with chair, and a bookshelf. All rooms have Wi-Fi. Recently renovated bathrooms on each floor are shared by all rooms on a hallway. Dorm rooms are $50 per night per room. Call the front desk of the Erdman Center to reserve a dorm room: (609) 497-7990
Hotel rooms have also been reserved in a room block at the nearby DoubleTree by Hilton Princeton. Please use the following information when booking a room:
Address: 4355 US Route 1 at Ridge Road Princeton, NJ 08540
Phone Number: (609) 452-2400
Fax Number: (609) 452-2494
Booking Link: https://secure3.hilton.com/en_US/dt/reservation/book.htm?execution=e2s1
Hotel: DoubleTree by Hilton Princeton
Group Name: Barth Conference 2019
Arrival Date: 16-Jun-2019
Departure Date: 19-Jun-2019
PLEASE NOTE: You must reserve your room at the DoubleTree by 5/24/2019. Any rooms not booked by this date will be released into inventory for general sale, and if available, they will be sold at the market rate.

Maps & Directions

By Air

From Newark Liberty International Airport

The Olympic Airporter shuttle service takes you to the Nassau Inn in Princeton; call for schedule and reservations: 800.822.9797 (within the United States) or 732.938.6666 (outside the United States), or visit www.olympicairporter.com

The AirTrain takes you from all airport terminals to the Newark Liberty International Airport Train Station. Take New Jersey Transit southbound (Northeast Corridor Line) trains to Princeton Junction. From Princeton Junction take the train to Princeton Station.

From Philadelphia International Airport

Take the R1 High Speed Rail Line (entrance on pedestrian bridges and commercial roadway), limousine service (The Olympic Airporter; call for reservations: 800.822.9797 within the United States or 732.938.6666 outside the United States, or visit www.olympicairporter.com), or local taxi service to 30th Street Station in Philadelphia, where you can purchase a SEPTA/New Jersey Transit ticket to take a SEPTA train to Trenton and a New Jersey Transit train to Princeton Junction. From Princeton Junction take the train to Princeton Station.

By Bus

From Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York City (41st Street and 8th Avenue)
Purchase a Suburban Transit bus ticket to Princeton at windows 16 through 19 on the first floor. Board the bus on the third floor (fourth level) at gates 420 through 422. The bus leaves every half hour between 6:00 a.m. and 11:00 p.m. on weekdays and between 9:00 a.m. and 11:00 p.m. on weekends, and every half hour on the hour until 1:00 a.m. The trip is one and one-half hours. Ask the driver to let you off at the end of Nassau Street where it meets Mercer Street and Route 206 in Princeton, and walk to the Seminary.

By Train

From New York City (and north) and Philadelphia (and south)
New Jersey Transit services Princeton from the north (New York City, Newark), with connecting service from the south (Trenton, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington DC). Amtrak trains stop in Trenton, and some at Princeton Junction.

By Car

From the North/New York City
Take the New Jersey Turnpike South to Exit 9 (New Brunswick). After the tollbooths, bear right onto the ramp for Route 18 North. Shortly after getting onto Route 18 North the road will fork; stay to the left of the fork, in the right lane. Bear right onto this exit for Route 1 South/Trenton. Follow Route 1 South to Alexander Road (Princeton). Turn right onto Alexander Road and continue to the entrance of Princeton Seminary, which is the first left turn after College Road (Alexander Road will be Alexander Street at this point).

From the West

Take I-78 East into New Jersey. Exit onto I-287 South toward Somerville. Follow signs for Routes 202/206 South. Travel south on 202 for a short distance and then follow signs for Route 206 South. You will go around a traffic circle. Continue south on Route 206 for about eighteen miles to Nassau Street (Route 27) in the center of Princeton. Turn left onto Nassau Street and the first right onto Mercer Street and continue to the main entrance of Princeton Seminary, which will be on your left.

From the South

From southern New Jersey take I-295 North (becomes I-95 South) to the “Princeton Pike North” exit and continue on Princeton Pike for approximately five miles. Immediately after passing Library Place (on the left), the main entrance to the campus will be on your right.

From the East

Take I-95 West toward Trenton to the exit for I-295 North (becomes I-95 South) to the “Princeton Pike North” exit and continue on Princeton Pike for approximately five miles. Immediately after passing Library Place (on the left), the main entrance to the campus will be on your right.

From Philadelphia

Take I-95 North into New Jersey and exit at “Princeton Pike North” and continue on Princeton Pike for approximately five miles. Immediately after passing Library Place (on the left), the main entrance to the campus will be on your right.

Contact

If you have any questions or concerns, email us at barth.center@ptsem.edu or call us at 609-524-1981.

Please allow at least three business days for an email response.