Back to All Events

Nicaea After 1700 Years: Looking Back and Looking Forward


  • Dominican House of Studies 487 Michigan Avenue Northeast Washington, DC, 20017 United States (map)

To commemorate the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea (325 A.D.), the Thomistic Institute invites paper proposals for its commemorative Spring 2025 Thomistic Circles conference on “Nicaea After 1700 Years: Looking Back and Looking Forward.”

Featuring:

Fr. Khaled Anatolios (University of Notre Dame)

Prof. Gary Anderson (University of Notre Dame)

Prof. Lewis Ayres (Durham University)

Fr. Andrew Hofer, O.P. (Dominican House of Studies)

Each session concludes with time for Q&A. Light refreshments, including snacks and coffee, will be served between the lectures.

What? A two-day conference on the theme of the theology and legacy of the Council of Nicaea, featuring plenary sessions and breakout paper presentations.

Where? Dominican House of Studies (487 Michigan Ave. NE, Washington, D.C. 20017)

When? Friday, February 7 to Saturday, February 8, 2025

Graduate Colloquium: We are pleased to offer a colloquium for current graduate and advanced undergraduate students concurrent with the Thomistic Circles Conference.



Call for papers

We invite proposals on themes concerning the Council of Nicaea itself, the events, ideas, and theological claims that gave rise to it, and its reception and significance in the patristic, medieval, and modern periods.  We also welcome submissions that engage the principles, legacy, and ongoing significance of Nicaea for contemporary theology and for the Church more broadly.

The deadline to submit a paper proposal has passed.


This event is in person only. If you cannot make it to the conference, be sure to listen to the lecture recordings after they are published on the Thomistic Institute podcast.

Previous
Previous
February 6

ChatGPT and the Foolishness of Speech: Why Human Communication Matters in a World with Artificial Intelligence

Next
Next
February 10

Is the Biblical View of Marriage too Idealistic?