2015-2016 Inaugural Academic Lectures

The 2015-16 academic year will witness the delivery of four inaugural lectures at RTS Orlando to mark the appointment of Dr. Charles E. Hill as John R. Richardson Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity and the promotions of Drs. James L. Coffield, Scott K. Coupland, and Scott R. Swain to the rank of professor. Details for the appointments and lectures are as follows:

Tuesday, October 20, 2015 | 2:00p in the Pamplin Chapel

Scott R. Swain, Ph. D.
Professor of Systematic Theology
Academic Dean

Appointed:June 1, 2015

B. B. WARFIELD AND THE BIBLICAL DOCTRINE OF THE TRINITY

Lecture Description

B. B. Warfield’s entry on the Trinity in The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, published in 1915, has exercised considerable influence on later Reformed and evangelical Trinitarian theology. The lecture examines the revisionist nature of Warfield’s teaching on the triune God, noting historical precedents within the Reformed tradition for his views, and discusses patterns of biblical and theological reasoning that weigh against Warfield’s proposal.

Tuesday, November 24, 2015 | 2:00p in the Pamplin Chapel

James L. Coffield, Ph. D.
Professor of Counseling

Clinical Director of the MAC Program Appointed: June 1, 2015

CURRENT ISSUES IN CHRISTIAN COUNSELING

Lecture Description

The landscape of Christian counseling is changing. With the new emphasis on neuropsychology and changing cultural standards, the field of Christian soul care is trying to more clearly define itself.

Tuesday, February 09, 2016 | 2:00p in the Pamplin Chapel

Charles E. Hill, Ph. D.
John R. Richardson Professor of 

New Testament and Early Christianity
Appointed: August 27, 2014

TOWARD A THEORY OF THE EARLY DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEW TESTAMENT TEXT

Lecture Description

Since the 1950s the field of NT textual criticism has been struggling to find an overarching theory to undergird its practice. At that time the influx of second- and third-century papyrus fragments of NT books had overthrown Westcott and Hort’s theory of an unbroken line of carefully copying, from the beginning up to the fourth-century codices Vaticanus and Sinaiticus. What the early period of copying seemed to show instead was a pattern of loose or free copying, denoting a more casual attitude towards the preservation of the text. For the past 60 or more years, then, the prevailing tendency, the default theory, in NT text criticism has been to assume a period of free or even chaotic copying up until the fourth century, when both church and canon were established by the state. This approach leaves us with a significant gap between the “originals” and our earliest copies, a gap which is often seen as unbridgeable due to the lax copying standards of the earliest scribes. The present paper argues that the continued discovery and analysis of NT papyri, as well as recent developments in related fields, have changed our picture of the early NT scribal tradition significantly.  It is time to offer a better-informed model for our understanding of the early development of the NT text.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016 | 3:00p in the Pamplin Chapel

Scott K. Coupland, Ph. D.
Professor of Counseling
Academic Director of the MAC Program
Appointed: June 1, 2015

ADVANCES IN NEUROBIOLOGY: A NEW HORIZON FOR CHRISTIAN COUNSELORS

Lecture Description

The past decade has seen an explosion of research in the field of interpersonal neurobiology. By God’s design our brains are inescapably social organs, and the implications of this can enrich Christian counselors’ understanding of the relational nature of sin, sanctification, and the healing process.