Home Annual Meeting Call for Papers Groups Open and Relational Theologies
AAR Event Calendar
<<  May 2013  >>
 S  M  T  W  T  F  S 
     1  2  3  4
  5  6  7  8  91011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930 
Comment Registration
Login/Register to post remarks in articles accepting comments.




Open and Relational Theologies PDF-NOTE: Internet Explorer Users, right click the PDF Icon and choose [save target as] if you are experiencing problems with clicking. Print E-mail

Call for Proposals

This Group plans to explore two themes:

  • Postcolonial theology in relation to themes common in open, relational, and/or process theologies including, but not limited to power, love, social structures, redemption, justice, violence, forgiveness, salvation, and authority. We prefer proposals addressing these themes or others from overtly open, relational, or process theological perspectives

  • The Emergent Church. Proposals may explore theological, social, institutional, cultural, ecclesial, or doctrinal issues or related matters. We prefer proposals that show a link or potential connection between Emergent Church issues and open, relational, and/or process thought

Mission

This Group brings together scholars of diverse interests and concerns. Prominent among those who participate are scholars who label themselves as process-oriented, openness-oriented, Wesleyan, feminist, liberationist, Arminian, trinitarian, evangelical, etc. Those participating generally affirm the following:

  • Theology involves speculation about who God truly is and what God really does

  • God’s primary characteristic is love

  • Creatures — at least humans — are genuinely free to make choices

  • God experiences others in some way analogous to how creatures experience others

  • Both creatures and God are relational beings, which means that both God and creatures are affected by others in give-and-take relationships

  • God’s experience changes, yet God’s nature or essence remains the same

  • Creatures are called to act in ways that please God and make the world a better place

  • The future is open — it is not predetermined by God

  • God’s expectations about the future are often partly dependent upon creaturely actions

Anonymity of Review Process

Proposer names are visible to Chairs but anonymous to Steering Committee members.

Questions?

Thomas Oord
Northwest Nazarene University
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Method of Submission

 
Future Issues

In the next March issue of

Spotlight on Theological Education

Theology and Ecology: New Directions


In the next May issue of

Spotlight on Teaching

Online and Hybrid Teaching in Religious Studies


In the next October issue of

Spotlight on Teaching

Team-teaching in Religious Studies

Banner