Program Unit Online June Annual Meeting 2026

Schleiermacher Unit

Call for Proposals

(Co-sponsored with the Open and Relational Theologies Unit for the June online meeting)

Structuring the Future: Time and Development

This session investigates the theological and philosophical implications of time anddevelopment by bringing the thought of F.D.E. Schleiermacher into conversation with Open and Relational Theologies. We would like to explore how structures of human self-consciousness, especially temporality, shape religious consciousness. For example, we invite papers that ask:  

  • How do organic and developmental processes—natural, biological, or historical—serve as analogies for understanding divine immanence and its dynamic relationship to creation? 
     
  • What is the relationship between time and eternity in Schleiermacher’s thought, and how does this relationship impact development in the present? 
     
  • How does Schleiermacher’s understanding of the infinity of the universe, novelty, and contingency influence, converge with, or diverge from open and relational perspectives? 
     
  • In what ways might theological understandings of God’s relationship with time inform our ethical and practical engagement with pressing contemporary issues? 

We are interested in a wide range of methodological approaches, including papers that: analyze key texts and concepts (e.g. doctrine of creation) in relation to temporality; critically or constructively compare Schleiermacher’s thought with Open and Relational Theologies; explore concepts of development, novelty, cosmic processes, and the interplay between structures of human self-consciousness and divine action. 

The Schleiermacher Unit is committed to diversity and inclusivity. Pre-arranged sessions or panel proposals should reflect diversity of gender and/or race and ethnicity. Diversities of rank, method, and sub-discipline are also highly encouraged.

 

Statement of Purpose

The unit promotes scholarship – from specialists and non-specialists alike – that critically engage the thought and influence of Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834). We encourage constructive, historical, and textual analyses that open new lines of inquiry into Schleiermacher’s oeuvre and contribution to contemporary discussions in theology, religious studies, philosophy, ethics, and hermeneutics.

Steering Member Mail Dates
Andrew Packman apackman@unitedseminary… - View
Enoch Kuo, Princeton University enoch.kuo@shu.edu - View
Logan Hoffman logan.hoffman@indwes.edu - View
Shelli Poe, Iliff School of Theology spoe@iliff.edu - View
Review Process: Participant names are visible to chairs but anonymous to steering committee members until after final acceptance/rejection
This process has served us well in the past few years.