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November 19-21 // Denver, CO

CALL FOR PAPERS 2026

REIMAGINING THE CHURCH FOR A CHANGING WORLD:
Identity, Community, and Mission

Amid rapid cultural, religious, social, and technological transformations, long-standing assumptions about the nature and vocation of the church are increasingly being questioned. Shifting patterns of belief and belonging, the rise of individualised spiritualities, and growing ambivalence toward organised religion are reshaping how communal life is formed and how the church relates to the world it inhabits. These developments present not only significant challenges but also genuine opportunities for communal theological discernment. 

 

This conference explores how the church’s identity, community, and mission may be faithfully reimagined in continuity with biblical and theological foundations, while engaging critically, constructively, and creatively with the contemporary realities of a changing world.


Contexts of Transformation

 

To situate this reimagining of the church, the conference gives particular attention to the following interrelated contexts of transformation, offered as points of orientation rather than exhaustive categories:

 

  • Cultural and religious transformations, including shifting patterns of belief and belonging; the rise of post-Christian, post-secular, and plural religious landscapes; emerging spiritualities (such as Nones, SBNR, SBNA, and spiritual nomadism); anti-institutional sentiment; postcolonial perspectives; and various forms of communal life expressed beyond traditional ecclesial boundaries. 

  • Social and socio-political transformations, encompassing increasing polarisation and fragmentation within and beyond the church; contested visions of the common good; Christian nationalism and the entanglement of faith and political identity; war, peace, reconciliation, and social responsibility; questions of hospitality, inclusion, exclusion, otherness, unity, and diversity within the community of faith; and the church’s role in the public square.

  • Technological transformations, attending to the impact of digital media, artificial intelligence, and emerging technologies on communal life, presence, mission, and participation. Indicative issues include digital and hybrid forms of community and worship; embodiment and mediation in online spaces; new forms of relationality and belonging; ethical challenges posed by technological power; and digital contexts as spaces of formation, mission, and public engagement.

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Conference Orientation

 

Across these contexts, the conference is oriented by a threefold movement of reflection—contextual analysis, theological discernment, and constructive engagement: beginning with attentive awareness of the underlying social, cultural, philosophical, and historical forces shaping contemporary life; moving through theological discernment of where and how God’s ongoing self-disclosure and action are encountered and interpreted in dialogue with Scripture and the resources of Christian theology; and leading toward faithful and constructive forms of ecclesial engagement that seek responsible, imaginative, and contextually attuned expressions of Christian presence and witness. 

 

Individual contributions may engage different moments of this movement, while together the conference remains attentive to the complexity of contemporary realities and to the transformative, and often surprising, community-forming work of the Spirit within, through, and around the church, which deepens the church’s active participation in the life and mission of the triune God in and for a rapidly changing world.

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Call for Contributions

 

The Adventist Society for Religious Studies (ASRS) welcomes paper proposals from a wide range of disciplines, including—but not limited to—biblical studies, historical and systematic theology, ecclesiology, missiology, ethics, practical theology, philosophy of religion, sociology of religion, political theology, the social sciences, and interdisciplinary approaches within the broader field of religious studies. Forward-looking and constructive papers that engage Adventist perspectives in dialogue with the wider Christian tradition and contemporary scholarship are especially encouraged. Scholars at all career stages are warmly invited to submit proposals.

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Submission Guidelines

 

Abstracts
 

Proposals should not exceed 300 words and should include a working title, a clear statement of the paper’s focus and objectives, an indication of the approach employed, and an explanation of the paper’s relevance to the conference theme.

 

Abstract Submission


Abstracts should be submitted via the “Abstract Submission” button below by March 16, 2026.


Presenters must be members of the Society.


For queries, please contact the ASRS President Elect, Katrina Blue, at kblue@puc.edu.


 

Format


Website submission is strongly encouraged to ensure efficient processing. If you encounter technical difficulties, abstracts or papers may be submitted by email in MS Word or PDF format to Katrina Blue (kblue@puc.edu).

 

Notification of Acceptance
Authors will be notified of acceptance by May 21, 2026.

 

Paper Submission
Accepted presenters are required to submit a complete draft of their paper by November 1, 2026, to Oleg Kostyuk at oleg.kostyuk@ahu.edu.

 

Presentations and Publication
Presentations will be allotted 15 minutes, followed by 5–7 minutes of discussion. 

Selected papers may be considered for publication in a post-conference volume.​​

©2024 ASRS. All rights reserved.  

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