2018 Church History Symposium: Financing Faith

By February 6, 2018

The 2018 Church History Symposium will be held 1-2 March 2018, splitting days between BYU campus and the Conference Center in Salt Lake City. The program committee has assembled a full slate of panels addressing the theme for this year’s conference, “Financing Faith: The Intersection of Business and Religion.” 

In addition to the two days of panels, the conference will feature two keynote speakers. The first will be Dr. Sharon Murphy, professor of history at Providence College, who will speak on Thursday, March 1, from 7:00-8:00 PM in the auditorium of the BYU Conference Center. Dr. Murphy is a renowned expert on economic history in the nineteenth century and is the author of Investing in Life: Insurance in Antebellum America (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010) and Other People?s Money: How Banking Worked in the Early American Republic (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2017). She is currently working on an investigation of the public perception of banks around the Panic of 1819, and an examination of the relationship between southern banks and American slavery. The topic of her keynote address will be ?Financing Faith: Mormonism and Banking in the 1830s and 1840s.? It should be an informative and enlightening presentation. The other keynote will be given by Bishop Gerald Causse on Friday, March 2, from 10:45-11:45 AM in the Little Theater of the LDS Conference Center in Salt Lake City. Bishop Causse is the Presiding Bishop of the church and will provide his thoughts on church finance and business.

The Church History Library will also have a special display in the reading room from February 26 to March 10. The display will consist of various financial documents throughout the history of the church including a Kirtland Safety Society note, an account of the Camp of Israel (Zion?s Camp), Nauvoo city scrip, promissory notes from Winter Quarters, currency from Utah Territory, and a ledger of the Perpetual Emigration Fund.

Several Bloggernaclers are on the program, including the JI’s Andrea Radke-Moss, Robin Jensen, and David Grua, as well as BCC’s Sam Brunson.

Article filed under Announcements and Events


Comments

  1. What odd timing to overlap with RootsTech (March 1-3), which surely draws some of the same attendees.

    Comment by acw — February 6, 2018 @ 5:49 am

  2. Will the proceedings of the conference be available via YouTube or some other media afterwards?

    Comment by Dan Scheer — February 6, 2018 @ 12:49 pm

  3. Regarding the timing, the Church History Symposium is regularly held that week. This year RootsTech joined us. We hope that many people can sample both events!

    Comment by Devan Jensen — February 6, 2018 @ 1:05 pm

  4. Though unrelated, does JI plan to put out its annual round up on books scheduled to be published in 2018 or have I missed the post?

    Comment by Bryan Thomas — February 18, 2018 @ 4:08 pm

  5. Bryan Thomas, you aren’t the only one who has been hoping the annual round up post for 2018 will show up. 🙂

    Comment by Curtis Cahoon — February 23, 2018 @ 1:32 pm

  6. Bryan Thomas, here is the 2018 RSC lineup: https://rsc.byu.edu/blog/a-new-year-inspiring-new-publications/

    Comment by Devan Jensen — February 23, 2018 @ 1:35 pm

  7. Benchmark Books has a list of forthcoming books for 2018 at https://www.benchmarkbooks.com/forthcoming-books/

    Comment by Bryan J Thomas — February 25, 2018 @ 7:29 am

  8. Transcript of Bishop Caussé’s talk from the BYU Church History Symposium: https://www.mormonnewsroom.org/article/bishop-causse-church-finance-church-history-symposium-transcript-2018

    Comment by Devan Jensen — March 7, 2018 @ 8:31 am


Series

Recent Comments

Steve Fleming on BH Roberts on Plato: “Interesting, Jack. But just to reiterate, I think JS saw the SUPPRESSION of Platonic ideas as creating the loss of truth and not the addition.…”


Jack on BH Roberts on Plato: “Thanks for your insights--you've really got me thinking. I can't get away from the notion that the formation of the Great and Abominable church was an…”


Steve Fleming on BH Roberts on Plato: “In the intro to DC 76 in JS's 1838 history, JS said, "From sundry revelations which had been received, it was apparent that many important…”


Jack on BH Roberts on Plato: “"I’ve argued that God’s corporality isn’t that clear in the NT, so it seems to me that asserting that claims of God’s immateriality happened AFTER…”


Steve Fleming on Study and Faith, 5:: “The burden of proof is on the claim of there BEING Nephites. From a scholarly point of view, the burden of proof is on the…”


Eric on Study and Faith, 5:: “But that's not what I was saying about the nature of evidence of an unknown civilization. I am talking about linguistics, not ruins. …”

Topics


juvenileinstructor.org