Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Elaine Pagels May 6th at St James Madison Avenue on Revelation

Elaine Pagels, the Harrington Spear Paine Professor of Religion at Princeton University, will speak at St. James’ Church at 6:30pm on Monday, May 6. The church is located at the corner of Madison Ave. and 71st St., and the talk is FREE. Pagels, the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship, is best known for her work on the Gnostic Gospels, and is most recently the author of Revelations: Visions, Prophecy, and Politics in the Book of Revelation (Viking, 2012), which was favorably reviewed in the New York Times Book Review and the New Yorker. She will offer Art, Music, and Politics in the Book of Revelation, a multimedia presentation on the use of language and imagery from the Book of Revelation in times of war and conflict.

Friday, April 12, 2013

May 5th 12.45am-3.30pm Miriamic Procession at the Cathedral of St John the Divine, NYC


1047 Amsterdam Avenue at 112th Street New York, New York 10025 stjohndivine.org 212.316.7490
The Congregation of Saint Saviour presents
The Miriamic Procession
Professors Phyllis Trible, Deirdre Good and Robyn Neville
The Miriamic procession is both auditory and visual. The sound starts with the
glorious song of Miriam who sings the "Song of the Sea" in Exodus 15
celebrating Israel's deliverance with music and dance. The Miriamic
procession continues in the New Testament from Mary, the mother in the birth
stories, through women disciples in Jesus' ministry, to the women at the
empty tomb and at the resurrection. Miriam's song resonates in the Magnificat,
the lament psalms of Pistis Sophia, the Manichaean psalms, Peter Abelard's
Easter sermon, and medieval and baroque music of the east and west. Mary's
role and function as the mother of Jesus advances in the procession from
Christological debates into medieval texts with a particular focus on Mary in
medieval Ireland.
Professor Trible will discuss Exodus 15 and traditions around Miriam
Professor Good will discuss Luke 2, John 20 and traditions around Mary and
Mary Magdalene
Professor Neville will discuss the dynamic narrative history of Mary in the early
and medieval church
Sunday, May 5, 2013
Conference Room, Cathedral House
Registration Fee: $25.00 (includes lunch)
12:45 – 1:30 pm: Registration and Lunch
1:30 – 3:30 pm: Course
Please RSVP by May 1 to office@saintsaviour.org or 212.316.7483.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Pompei of the North: 8,000 (and counting) Roman artefacts in London

Six months into the dig of Bloomberg place (yes, the London dwelling to be of our own Mayor Bloomberg perhaps when he leaves office) archaeologists have uncovered the largest site of Roman finds in London to date.


Archaeologists have so far discovered 8,000 objects and expect that to rise to 10,000 by the time the project is finished. These include writing tablets, clothing, jewellery and pottery as well as parts of buildings that will help build a picture of thriving London life from around 40 AD to the fifth century.

Ms Jackson said: “Why the site is so incredibly important is the preservation of archaeological finds which are normally decayed, or lost or destroyed on other sites.” The reason many of the objects are so well preserved is that one of London’s lost rivers, the Walbrook River, ran under the site, with the damp conditions preserving the objects.

Michael Marshall, Roman find specialist at Mola, said the findings would “completely transform” understanding of Roman London. “There are very few civilian sites. This is the largest assemblage discovered in London.”

Over 150 fragments of writing tablets have been discovered in one room - in what was described as similar to finding an abandoned filing cabinet - with information written on or scratched into them about people who lived in London at the time.

Archaeologists expect to double the number of names known in London to over 30, although nothing is certain. Mr Marshall said: “It’s an amazing accident when the text survives.”

Ms Jackson added: ““These are really exciting; there are only 14 references to London in all of Roman literature.”
The objects ended up in the ground generally from two ways, people throwing objects into refuse pits, or throwing them into the river as offerings.

The wetness of the ground proved particularly fortuitous, helping preserve the organic remains, and Mr Marshall called it the “best site in London” for Roman remains.

“No oxygen could get at the organics, so wood, leather, horn, and occasionally textiles survive in these conditions. The rest of the city of London doesn’t get that water logging. It gives us a picture of what it would have been all over the whole city.”

Saturday, March 30, 2013

CBS Sunday Morning on Mary, Jesus' mother

Tomorrow at 9.00 ET, Martha Teichner reports on Mary, Jesus' Mother with interviews on "The Testament of Mary" now in previews on Broadway and conversations on Mary with Profs Robin Jensen, Craig Evans, myself and a Catholic priest at St Mary's Church in NYC. Enjoy!!

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Reports of 9th Coptic Text on Holy Week: Pseudo Cyril of Jerusalem


Recent reports in MSNBC news identify an edited text by Pseudo-Cyril of Jerusalem, Homily on the Life and Passion of Christ, Ms 610 of the Pierpont Morgan Library, NYC. The manuscript probably dates from late 9th C CE. Some of the Brill 2013 book by R. van den Broek can be accessed through Google Books. 

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

April 19: Women & Girls, Made in God's Image, Wichita, Ks


2013 Women’s Summit of the Episcopal Diocese of Kansas 
Women and Girls:  Made in the Image of God April 19 – 20, 2013
St. James’ Episcopal Church | 3750 E. Douglas | Wichita, KS
Summit Overview: This is the first-ever diocesan Women’s Summit for the Episcopal Diocese of Kansas.

The Summit is designed for Episcopal women of all ages – from high school age and up!
The theme for the Women’s Summit is “Women and Girls: Made in the Image of God.”
The Summit will run from Friday evening, April 19, through Saturday afternoon around 5 p.m., April 20.
Registration and a light dinner will be held starting at 5:30 p.m. on April 19, with the program beginning at 7 p.m.

Three questions will be addressed during the Summit through presentations followed by facilitated
discussion in small groups. The keynote speaker will be Dr. Deirdre Good, a professor of New Testament at General Theological Seminary, our Episcopal Seminary in New York City.
Jodie Simon,  who teaches in  the Women’s Studies department at Wichita State, will be presenting on the question, “What does contemporary society and the media say to us about who we are as women?” Dr. Melissa Tubbs Loya, a Hebrew Bible scholar, will be presenting on the question, “What does the Bible say to us about who we are as women?”  
The third question addressed during the Summit is “What do we say to each other about who we are as women?”

Monday, March 04, 2013

Publication Date of the Iliad?

Recent research suggests that the date of the Iliad is 762BCE by treating languages like genes.

"Languages behave just extraordinarily like genes," Mark Pagel of the University of Reading said. "It is directly analogous. We tried to document the regularities in linguistic evolution and study Homer's vocabulary as a way of seeing if language evolves the way we think it does. If so, then we should be able to find a date for Homer."


The scientists tracked the words in the "Iliad" the way they would track genes in a genome.
The researchers employed a linguistic tool called the Swadesh word list, put together in the 1940s and 1950s by American linguist Morris Swadesh. The list contains approximately 200 concepts that have words apparently in every language and every culture, Pagel said. These are usually words for body parts, colors, necessary relationships like "father" and "mother."
The jury is out...

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Scholarship to support work that makes the church safe for ALL


Scholarship & Grant Programs
THE LOUIE CREW SCHOLARSHIP
In recognition of Dr. Louie Crew’s many years of prophetic witness in and beyond the Diocese, The OASIS – a justice ministry of the Episcopal Diocese of Newark – is pleased to announce a fund to support scholarly work that shares our mission “to make the church safe for ALL people, and to challenge the church when its interest is self-preservation and not prophetic witness.”
The OASIS will award up to two annual scholarships of $2,500. Scholarship applications will be vetted by a special Scholarship Committee which will include Dr. Crew and winners will be announced at our anniversary event in June.
We welcome applications from writers, students, and researchers. To apply:
  • Describe specifically in no more than 500 words how you will use the money to support ongoing scholarly work which shares the Oasis'
    mission "to make the church safe for ALL people, and to challenge the church when its interest is self-preservation and not prophetic witness."
  • At the top of the sheet include your name and contact information.
  • Attach a résumé no longer than one sheet.
  • On a third sheet, provide a name, postal address, phone number and any
    electronic address for two references who know you and your scholarship.
THE OASIS GRANT
We will also entertain applications for grants for specific projects within a congregation or ministry which are in keeping with our mission and goals. To be considered please supply the following information.
  • What is the purpose of the grant?
  • How will the grant be used that’s aligned with The Oasis’ mission?
  • What’s the expected outcome as a result of the grant?
Please answer in as much detail as necessary and send your application to us at the contact below. Please note that if a grant is awarded a full accounting of the expenditure will be required.
HOW TO APPLY
The application period for 2012 has already concluded. If you would like to be considered for next year's awards, please apply by April 1st, 2013.
Submit your application to by April 1, 2013 to:

The Oasis
c/o A.S.P.
611 Union Boulevard
Totowa, NJ 07512

or chair@oasisnewark.org

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