|
A systematic theologian, Michael Welker works through the
biblical traditions and through philosophical and sociological
theories to address questions of contemporary culture. Warning
against a reductionist systematics that can block, as well as guide,
thought, he has focused on the interplay among religious, legal,
moral, scientific, and other cultural codes that shape the ethos of the
postmodern world. His work is exceptionally wide-ranging, and he
has recently considered problems of pluralism in societies, cultures,
and canonic traditions, as well as exploring notions of human
personhood in pre-modern, modern, and contemporary periods.
In God the Spirit (1992 and 1994), he articulates a broad spectrum
of experiences of the Spirit, searches and quests for the Spirit,
and skepticism toward the Spirit informing contemporary
theological reflection. His interweaving of diverse testimonies and
accounts of God and God's action among human beings illuminates
how different people and different groups of people throughout
history have served as bearers of God's revelation. Professor and chair
of systematic theology in the Theological Faculty of the University of
Heidelberg, he has been director of the university's Internationales
Wissenschaftsforum since 1996. Dr. Welker is a graduate of the
University of Tübingen where he studied with Jürgen Moltmann
and earned a doctorate in theology in 1973. Ordained in the
Evangelische Kirche der Pfalz, he received a Ph.D. from Heidelberg
in 1978. He was professor of systematic theology in the
Theological Faculty of the University of Tübingen from 1983 to
1987 and, for the next four years, professor and chair of Reformed
theology in the Theological Faculty of the University of Münster.
He has held an honorary research fellowship at the Institute for
the Advanced Study of Religion of the University of Chicago
Divinity School and has been a visiting professor at McMaster
University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and the Princeton
Theological Seminary as well as a guest professor at the Harvard
Divinity School. Dr. Welker serves on the board of advisors of the
John Templeton Foundation. A member of the Consultation on Science and Religion of Princeton's Center for Theological Inquiry
since 1993, he is a member of the editorial boards of Dialog: A
Journal of Theology, Evangelische Theologie, Jahrbuch für Biblische
Theologie, Journal of Law and Religion, Process Studies,
Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal, Verkündigung und Forschung,
and Word and World. He has published some 200 articles in
scholarly journals and written or edited more than twenty books.
In addition to four recent works in German, including Kirche im
Pluralismus (2000), his latest studies are: What Happens in Holy
Communion (2000), which has been published in six languages;
(edited with John Polkinghorne) The End of the World and the Ends
of God: Science and Theology on Eschatology (2000), which has been
translated into Korean; (with John Polkinghorne) Faith in the
Living God: A Dialogue (2001), which has been translated into
Korean and Chinese; (edited with Ted Peters and Robert John
Russell) Resurrection: Th eological and Scientific Assessments (2002);
and (with Wallace M. Alston) Reformed Theology: Identity
and Ecumenicity, which was published in 2003 by Wm. B.
Eerdmans. He is currently editing a volume on Pneumatology for
Eerdmans, which will be published next year as Exploring the Work
of the Holy Spirit.
|