Episode: Matt interviews Christian Hofreiter (RZIM) on one of the most vexed issues in biblical studies ... genocide in the Old Testament. Christian Hofreiter has been pondering this question for a long time, and has written a groundbreaking work on the subject - Making Sense of Old Testament Genocide: Christian Interpretations of Herem Passages (Oxford University Press, 2018).
Guest: (from the RZIM site) The Revd Dr Christian Hofreiter is Director of RZIM Austria, Germany and Switzerland, the Zacharias Institut für Wissenschaft, Kultur und Glaube, a Research Fellow at the Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics, and, most recently, the author of Making Sense of Old Testament Genocide: Christian Interpretations of Herem Passages (Oxford University Press, 2018). A native of Austria, he has studied, lived and worked in Innsbruck, Brussels, London, Los Angeles, Washington, DC, and Oxford, and now lives with his family in Vienna, Austria.
From 2008-2012, Christian served with the Oxford Pastorate as a chaplain to the graduate student body at Oxford University, working closely with senior academics, leaders of various churches, and a broad variety of students. An ordained Anglican minister, he was also a member of the leadership team at St Aldates Church, Oxford.
In addition, Christian studied theology at Oxford University, earning three degrees (MA, MSt, DPhil), winning several prizes and scholarships, and gaining the top first class award in 2008. His doctoral research focused on the Christian interpretation of “genocide texts” in the Old Testament.
Before arriving in Oxford, Christian worked in a government relations firm in Washington, DC, which represented the interests of foreign governments and other clients to the United States Congress and Administration, and also served as deacon at the Church of the Resurrection on Capitol Hill.
Book: Making Sense of Old Testament Genocide: Christian Interpretations of Herem Passages (Oxford University Press, 2018) takes an historical look at how Christians through the centuries have addressed, wrestled with, and re-interpreted the 'herem' passages in the Old Testament. Herem is the practice of devoting people or objects to destruction (or removing them from use) at the behest of a deity. Hofreiter provides a critically rich and illuminating tour of the history of Christian engagement with these challenging biblical passages.
Help Support OnScript: Click through one of the links above to purchase Christian's book (or others, while you're in there) and the OnScript Podcast gets a whopping 2.5% or so (at no loss to you). Each bit helps us keep this operation going. Or visit our Donate Page if you want to join the big leagues and become a regular donor. Don't let us stop you from doing both.
Michael Barber - The Historical Jesus and the Temple
Nijay Gupta - Strange Religion
Brent Strawn - Honest To God Preaching
Garrick Allen - Words Are Not Enough
Ervine Sheblazm - Abraham's Bosom, Paul, and the Decline of Postmodernism
N. T. Wright and Michael Bird - Jesus and the Powers
David Tombs – The Crucifixion of Jesus: Torture, Sexual Abuse, and the Scandal of the Cross
Nathan MacDonald - The Tabernacle and Priestly Power
Top 10 Archaeological Discoveries in 2023 (Pt 1)
Sandra Glahn - Nobody’s Mother (Live Event!)
Jason Staples - The Idea of Israel in Second Temple Judaism
Carmen Imes - Being God’s Image
Kristine Garroway - Growing Up in Ancient Israel
Jenny Matheny - The Violence of Judges and Ruth’s Response
Lisa Powell - The Disabled God
Erin Raffety - From Inclusion to Justice
Matthew Novenson – Paul, Then and Now
Wolf Gruner - Jewish Resistance in Hitler’s Germany
Matt Lynch - Flood and Fury (on Old Testament Violence)
Stanley Porter and Bryan Dyer - Origins of New Testament Christology
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Hello Heaven Podcast
Devoted To Prayer
Cast The Word
Let Me Be Frank | Bishop Frank Caggiano’s Podcast | Diocese of Bridgeport, CT
The Bible Recap
BardsFM