During this year’s General Meeting, the President read out the names of BNTS members who had successfully completed their PhD since the last meeting, and the Society applauded their success.
Congratulations to the following:
Owen Edwards, University of Chester, “Hebrews, Allegory, and Alexandria”
Emily Gathergood, University of Nottingham, “The Midwifery of God: Tokological Deliverance in 1 Timothy 2:15 in Light of Early Jewish and Christian Readings of Genesis 3:16”
Siobhán Jolley, University of Manchester, “Reimaging the Magdalene: Liberative Reception Criticism and the Counter-Reformation Magdalene”
Thomas J .Parker, Vrije Universiteit/Queens Foundation, “Jesus and Scripture: A Comparative study of the Use of the Old Testament and Jesus Traditions in Hebrews, James, 1 and 2 Peter”
Nathanael Vette, University of Edinburgh, “Scripturalized Narrative in the Gospel of Mark”
Joshua D. A. Bloor, University of Manchester, “Purifying the Consciousness: Cult, Defilement, and the Perpetual Heavenly Blood of Jesus in the Epistle to the Hebrews”
Brian Bunnell, University of Edinburgh, “Kingdom of God in the New Testament”
Florenc Mene, University of Edinburgh, “Nomina Sacra in the Corpus Paulinum in the First Millennium: The Textual and Visual Transmission of θεοc, κυριοc, ιηcουc, χριcτοc, and υιοc in the Papyri and Majuscules of Romans, 1 Corinthians, Philemon, and Hebrews”
Jim Leavenworth, University of Edinburgh, “Suffering for Our Sakes: The Soteriological Thought Process of Ignatius of Antioch”
Grace Au, University of Edinburgh, “Paul’s Designations of God in Romans”
Bertalan (Berti) Józsa, University of Edinburgh, “‘Work’ in the Gospel of John – a Cognitive Perspective”
Sofanit Abebe, University of Edinburgh, “Apocalyptic spatiality in 1 Peter and selected 1 Enoch literature: a comparative analysis”
Ezekiel Shibemba, Nazarene Theological College, “Refreshing and Restoration in Acts 3:19-21: The Role and Impact of Isaiah 2:1-5”