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Special Event at the English German Colloquium f. NT

Birgit Hallmann

by Birgit Hallmann

Beth Langstaff is still on medical leave. We pray for her recovery.

English German Colloquium f. New Testament
Special event on June 22nd:

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Yifat Monnickendam
Department of Jewish History
Tel Aviv

 
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On Tuesday June 22nd for the first time a joint seminar was convened by the Departments of Ancient History, New Testament (Ancient Judaism and Hellenistic Religious History/English-German Colloquium), and Jewish Studies. They hosted a book review panel to discuss Yifat Monnickendam's 2020 monograph “Jewish Law and Early Christian Identity. Betrothal, Marriage, and Divorce in Ephrem the Syrian,” which appeared with Cambridge University Press. Due to coronavirus restrictions, this seminar took place online via Zoom. The event drew an audience from all over the world with participants joining in from Japan, Israel, Germany, the UK, and the USA. The participants had been asked beforehand to read a chapter from the book (chapter 4 on 'Breaking a Marital Bond'), in order to make it easier for them to follow, and to make the event more interactive.

After an introduction to the book by the author, there followed three official responses: Prof. Dr. Michael Tilly (New Testament), Dr. Jessica van 't Westeinde (Ancient History), and Mark Hoover MA (Jewish Studies). The three responses sought to offer comments that reflected their respective disciplinary backgrounds. A discussion with the author ensued, and other attendees were invited to join in with questions or comments. This general discussion saw the participants interact chiefly on questions concerning the broader social and cultural context as well as questions pertaining to the Roman legal system. Except for some minor technological issues at the start, the overall feedback was very positive (by Dr. Jessica van 't Westeinde).

First guests at the Institute in 2021

Birgit Hallmann

By Birgit Hallmann

The winter semester is coming to an end here in Tübingen. Last week the English-German Colloquium for New Testament discussed “online” the work of M. Pawlak, Uni Tübingen, about "Paul and Diatribe: Romans as Dialogical, but Not Dialogue."

This week, for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic, we will be able to welcome again guests to the Institute.

Yuriy Mark and two of the leading Pastors of his Church in Mayen, will meet here for a Pastor´s retreat and for strengthen their relationship, and discuss church-related matters. Yuriy graduated, together with 5 other colleagues from TCMI in 1997, the first ever graduates from Ukraine. One of his professors at Haus Edelweiss was former Institute director Ronald E. Heine, who travelled across to Heiligenkreuz to teach History of Doctrine. After graduation, Yuriy started a bible college (Tavriski Christian Institute) back in Ukraine. In 2011 he entered the Doctor of Ministry programme at Acadia University in Nova Scotia, Canada.

Yuriy visited us in Tübingen previously in October 2017 for studies on his research work about  reconciliation between Christian communities in the Middle East, exploring how remembering and commemorating the victims of violence on all sides of a conflict might create the space for understanding and forgiveness between Christians. 

Yuriy Mark at the Institute,Oct. 2017

Yuriy Mark at the Institute,

Oct. 2017

Loren and Lois Stuckenbruck visiting the Institute in March

Birgit Hallmann

NEWS FROM TÜBINGEN

By Beth Langstaff

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We were very pleased to welcome Loren and Lois Stuckenbruck back to the Institute in the first week of March (our last visitors for quite a while, I suspect).

Loren is Professor for New Testament at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) in Munich and a member of the EES Board.

 One of the purposes of the visit was to start work on preparing the papers from the Symposium on the Lord's Prayer (held in 2018) for publication. We met with Prof. Michael Tilly and with Dr. Tanja Forderer, who has recently joined Prof. Tilly's department at the University, and made plans to meet again in July.

 Loren and Lois also came bearing gifts—the two volumes of the recently published T&T Clark Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism (https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/tt-clark-encyclopedia-of-second-temple-judaism-volumes-i-and-ii-9780567661449/) which Loren edited along with Daniel Gurtner. This donation is a very valuable addition to the Stuckenbruck library.

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While they were here, Lois and Loren also filmed a video of the new Institute facilities and of the library in particular, in which they very generously ask for donations to the Institute library to mark their respective birthdays. Loren is celebrating a “round birthday (einen runden Geburtstag)”, as one says in German, next week—his 60th.

password (Kennwort): Stuckenbruck

Happy birthday and many thanks to both Loren and Lois.

Germany has been hit hard by the coronavirus. Birgit Hallmann and I are both working from home. The summer semester is supposed to start on 20 April; as any classes as possible will be offered online via Zoom.

First guests at the new location of the Institute (Hintere Grabenstr. 20)

Birgit Hallmann

By Beth Langstaff

Greetings from Tübingen!

Last week,we were very happy to welcome Thomas and May May Blanton as our first guests in the Institute's new rooms. Tom is a Research Fellow of the Max-Weber Kolleg in Erfurt. He received his doctorate in Biblical Studies from the University of Chicago Divinity School. His most recent book is A Spiritual Economy: Gift Exchange in the Letters of Paul of Tarsus (2017). He is in the process of writing a book titled The Circumcision of Abraham: Modeling Ritual from Genesis to the Letters of Paul, and he read a section from this project for the English-German Colloquium.

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May May writes:

We were the first visitors to stay at the guest room in the Institute's new location. We stayed there for two nights. Beth and Birgit were excellent hosts, and we were pleased in all respects. Since I work remotely as metadata analyst for Atla (formerly American Theological Library Association), wi-fi access is necessary; there the access was excellent, and I was able to finish all of my work each day. I felt very much at home working in the Institute's new facility.

Tom writes:

My first visit to Tübingen was prompted by an opportunity to give a lecture at the English-German Colloquium in New Testament on October 29, 2019, jointly hosted by the Institute for the Study of Christian Origins and the Institut für antikes Judentum und hellenistische Religionsgeschichte at the University of Tübingen. Considering all of Tübingen's historic associations with excellence in biblical studies, of course I was very pleased to be able to participate in the colloquium. The paper that I presented showed how the Jewish philosopher-exegete Philo of Alexandria (Egypt) reinterpreted the texts of Genesis 17 in the first century CE. Philo largely avoided the biblical view of circumcision as a "sign of the covenant" between God and humans; instead, he interpreted covenant as a gift given with no stipulations. He did nevertheless advocate the practice of circumcision among male Jews, supplying medical, ethical, and philosophical rationales not present in the biblical text. The discussion that followed the paper was lively and thought provoking. I am grateful to Beth Langstaff, the Institute's Director, for the invitation to visit, and to Birgit Hallman, the office coordinator, for advice in planning the logistics of our visit. Based on my experience, the Institute is doing a great job promoting research on Christian origins at a high level of international scholarship.

Move of the Institute from Neckargasse 7 to Hintere Grabenstr. 20

(27. Sept. 2019)

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Theology in an Apron

Birgit Hallmann

by Birgit Hallmann

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Here in Tübingen we are in the middle of an intense summer semester.
It is always a special blessing for me when former students at the Institute drop by to talk about their work in their home countries. Last Friday, Eva from Hungary came by to bring us her two books, which she had written with our help.
She has studied the Christian spirit of women in their everyday lives (“Theology in an Apron”) and the effect of the Christian faith on the diaconal movement in Hungary. Both books have led to Eva being appointed to the Writers Society in Hungary two years ago.
So I can see that one small stone dropped into the water here in Tübingen can produce wonderfully wide circles.