Christ our contemporary : Rudolf Bultmann's "Christus praesens" in retrospect and prospect (1991)
Academic work
Discipline
Theologian
James Franklin Kay (born May 18, 1948) is the Joe R. Engle Professor of Homiletics and Liturgics Emeritus, and Dean and Vice President of Academic Affairs Emeritus at Princeton Theological Seminary.[1]
In 1981, while a student at Union, and in consultation with the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, senior pastor of the Riverside Church, New York City, Kay authored what became known as the ("augmented") Riverside baptismal formula: "In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, one God, Mother of us all," derived from the classical axiom that the ad extra works of the Persons of the Trinity are indivisible and based on Julian of Norwich's insight that Jesus Christ exercises the ministry of "Mother" towards the faithful.[2]
Kay's thirty-year tenure at Princeton Theological Seminary was marked by his chairing the Miller Chapel Renovation Committee (1995-2000) for the oldest house of worship in continuous use in the former Borough of Princeton, New Jersey. He also oversaw the designing of Scheide Hall in conjunction with Ford, Farewell, Mills, and Gatch, Architects, and the selection of the Paul Fritts Organ donated by the American philanthropist, Joe R. Engle. From 2002-2014, Kay directed the Joe R. Engle Institute of Preaching, securing for its work significant grants and endowments, and widening its outreach to Spanish-speaking pastors.
In 2010, Kay was appointed the Seminary's Dean of Academic Affairs by then President (now Sir) Iain R. Torrance. Following President Torrance's retirement at the end of 2012, he continued to serve until his own retirement in 2018, under President M. Craig Barnes, with the additional title of Vice President of Academic Affairs. In this role, Dean Kay assisted the Seminary with its inter-institutional relations with Princeton University and Rutgers University, as well as with several overseas partnerships authorized by President Barnes. They included the Inter American University of Puerto Rico, Presbyterian University and Theological Seminary in Korea, Yonsei University in Korea, Faculdade Unida, a graduate school of theology and religion, in Brazil, and the renewing of contacts with theological faculties in Cuba, Costa Rica, Ghana, Nigeria, and South Africa.
Kay has edited the journals The Princeton Seminary Bulletin (1994-2000) and Theology Today (2005-2010). As editor of the latter, he initiated its transformation from an American print journal to an international electronic journal in cooperation with SAGE publications. He has also lectured widely on the history, theology, and practice of Christian worship and preaching, as well as on homiletical theories--both those emerging from antiquity and from the post-Enlightenment era. In 1997, Kay was the Forrester/Warrack Lecturer at St. Andrews University, Scotland. From 2012-2018, he served on the Executive Committee of the American Theological Society.
Associate Professor of Homiletics and Liturgics (1995–1997)
Joe R. Engle Associate Professor of Homiletics and Liturgics (1997–2001)
Chair of the Practical Theology Department (2001–2005)
Joe R. Engle Professor of Homiletics and Liturgics (2001–2018)
Director of the Joe R. Engle Institute of Preaching (2002–2014)
Dean of Academic Affairs (2010–2013)
Dean and Vice President of Academic Affairs (2013-2018)
Joe R. Engle Professor of Homiletics and Liturgics Emeritus (2018)
Dean and Vice President of Academic Affairs Emeritus (2018)
On November 17, 2000 James Kay was awarded the Alumnus of Point Loma (APL) Award by Point Loma Nazarene University.[3] In March 2012, in conjunction with the Centenary of the Inter American University of Puerto Rico, he was honored by its Trustees with a special Resolution of Appreciation.
——— (2008). "Blackduck". In Cole, Jr., Allan Hugh (ed.). From Midterms to Ministry: Practical Theologians on Pastoral Beginnings. Grand Rapids: Eerdmanns. pp. 51–64. ISBN978-0-8028-4002-8.
——— (2004). "He Descended into Hell". In van Harn, Roger E. (ed.). Exploring and Proclaiming the Apostles' Creed. Grand Rapids: Eerdmanns. pp. 117–129. ISBN0-8028-2120-0.
——— (1999). "The Lex Orandi in Recent Protestant Theology". In Cunningham, David S.; del Colle, Ralph; Lamadrid, Lucas (eds.). Ecumenical Theology in Worship, Doctrine and Life: Essays Presented to Geoffrey Wainwright on His Sixtieth Birthday. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 11–23. ISBN0-19-513136-3.
——— (1999). "The New Rites of Baptism: A Dogmatic Assessment". In Spinks, Bryan D.; Torrance, Iain (eds.). To Glorify God: Essays on Modern Reformed Liturgy. Edinburgh, Grand Rapids, MI: T & T Clark, Eerdmanns. pp. 201–212. ISBN0-567-08606-2.
——— (2019). "The Place of Prayer in Theological Method: A Conversation with Sarah Coakley". In Fergusson, David; McCormack, Bruce (eds.). In Schools of Faith: Essays on Theology, Ethics and Education in Honour of Iain R. Torrance. London: T & T Clark. pp. 117–127. ISBN978-0-567-66793-9.
——— (2010). "Preacher as Messenger of Hope". In Read, Robert Stephen (ed.). Slow of Speech and Unclean Lips: Contemporary Images of Preaching Identity. Eugene, OR: Cascade Books. pp. 13–34. ISBN978-1-60608-521-9.
——— (1998). "Preaching at the Turn of the Ages". St. Mary's College Bulletin. 40 (Spring). St. Andrews: St. Andrews University: 64–78. Warrack Lecture.
——— (2018). "Promissory Kerygmatics". In Jacobsen, David Schnasa (ed.). Toward a Homiletical Theology of Promise. Eugene, OR: Cascade Books. pp. 87–105. ISBN978-1-532-61391-3.
——— (2000). "Pulpit Eloquence and Its Pauline Strictures: The Triumph of Rhetoric in Modern Homiletical Theory". Papers of the Annual Meeting. The Academy of Homiletics: 173–184.
——— (2001). "The Renovation of Miller Chapel". The Princeton Seminary Bulletin. 22 (new) (1). Princeton: Princeton Theological Seminary: 16–32. ISSN0032-8413. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
——— (2003). "Rudolf Bultmann (1884-1976)". In Hastings, Adrian; Mason, Alistair (eds.). Key Thinkers in Christianity. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 140–146. ISBN0-19-280279-8.
——— (2001). "2 Cor 4:3-6; 2 Cor 4:5-12; 2 Cor 4:13-5:1; 2 Cor 5:6-17; 2 Cor 5:16-21; 2 Cor 6:1-13". In van Harn, Roger E. (ed.). The Lectionary Commentary: Theological Exegesis for Sunday's Texts vol.2, The Second Readings: Acts and the Epistles. Grand Rapids, MI ; London: Eerdmanns , Continuum. pp. 243–264. ISBN0-8028-4752-8.