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	<title>Apocryphicity &#187; 2007 SBL</title>
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	<description>A weblog devoted to the study of the Christian Apocrypha</description>
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		<title>2007 SBL Report</title>
		<link>http://www.TonyBurke.ca/apocryphicity/2007/11/22/2008-sbl-report/</link>
		<comments>http://www.TonyBurke.ca/apocryphicity/2007/11/22/2008-sbl-report/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Nov 2007 20:34:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Tony</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2007 SBL]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SBL Apocrypha]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[As promised in my last post, here are some brief comments about this year&#8217;s Annual Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature. Keep an eye out also for Jim Davila&#8217;s roundup on Paleojudaica (he may even have some good photos) and April DeConick&#8217;s comments on Forbidden Gospels. The meeting took place in sunny San Diego, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As promised in my last post, here are some brief comments about this year&rsquo;s Annual Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature. Keep an eye out also for Jim Davila&rsquo;s roundup on <a href="http://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/">Paleojudaica</a> (he may even have some good photos) and April DeConick&rsquo;s comments on <a href="http://forbiddengospels.blogspot.com/">Forbidden Gospels</a>.
<p>The meeting took place in sunny San   Diego, California&mdash;a wonderful location. Usually I try to take some time at conferences to check out the city a little but most of my wanderings were relegated to the boardwalk behind the hotels and a trip to the nearest mall for gifts for loved ones. One night was dedicated to a death-defying trip south of the border to Tijuana. After polling about 1000 other academics, I could find only one other brave soul willing to join me on this &ldquo;spiritual quest&rdquo; (the &ldquo;spirit&rdquo; in this case was a bottle of Tequila); in retrospect, they are far wiser for it.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">On day two I took in the papers of the Early Christian Families Group and an AAR session on &ldquo;The Holy Child: Traditions of the Infant and Child Jesus&rdquo;. In the evening I squeezed in at the end of the crowded session on &ldquo;Books of the Gospel of Judas: An Evening with the Authors&rdquo; and stayed around long enough to introduce myself to April DeConick (of Forbidden Gospels fame).</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Day three was spent at two Christian Apocrypha sessions. The highlight of these sessions for me was the presentation by Abraham Terian on his forthcoming edition of the <em>Armenian Infancy Gospel</em> (due next year from Oxford). This is a long-neglected text that has been in sore need of an edition. I also enjoyed the session on the &ldquo;Function of Apocryphal and Pseudepigraphical Writings in Early Judaism and Early Christianity.&rdquo; Several of the panelists referred to recent discussion of the concept of &ldquo;canon&rdquo;&mdash;namely, that canons are malleable and differ from one group or one location to another; so it is difficult to speak of one Christian or Jewish canon as if it was universal. The topic of the fluidity of what is &ldquo;canonical&rdquo; has been mentioned on Apocryphicity quite often in recent months; so I followed this discussion with interest.</p>
<p> On the final day of the conference I stayed only long enough to present my own paper on &ldquo;Heresy Hunters in the New Millennium.&rdquo; The paper was received well&mdash;Pierluigi Piovanelli provided a positive response and those present echoed my concerns about anti-Christian-Apocrypha apologetics. The highlight of the discussion that followed the paper came when a student of Darrell Bock stood up, declared his own apologetic interests (very brave in a room full of godless liberals), and said that he was taking from the session a lesson about the need to be scholarly rigorous in his treatment of the literature (and that&rsquo;s all we ask).
<p>The best part of any conference is the interactions with colleagues and friends that come at receptions, dinners, and late-nights at the bar. You can live down the street from someone but only really see them once a year at SBL or CSBS. And you also get a chance to finally meet face-to-face scholars whose work you have followed and admired from afar.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">To next year in Boston&#8230;</p>
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