Many of us approach Scripture with an "intellectualist" lens: we're seeking clear ideas with straightforward moral application for our lives. Often we do so unconsciously, because of our church background or the way we were first introduced to the Bible. This way of reading Scripture, while not entirely bad, disassociates us from the text. We don't read novels or poems like this, so why would we apply this lens to some of the greatest literary works of all time?
In this episode, Dru Johnson interviews Dr. Matthew Mullins, Associate Professor of English and History of Ideas at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, about learning to love the Bible. Matthew Mullins wants to help us overcome our "Cartesian eyes" and read Scripture with our whole selves: emotion, rationality, and activity. They discuss Matthew's book, Enjoying the Bible: Literary Approaches to Loving the Scriptures, and how to read the Bible as literature instead of as a textbook. As we pursue more engaged reading of Scripture, we can understand the cares and concerns of the biblical authors, as well as transform the way we think and live.
Show notes:
Matthew Mullins's talk: “You Can’t Understand the Bible If You Don’t Love Poetry”
Show notes by Micah Long.
Credits for the music used in TBM podcast can be found at: hebraicthought.org/credits.
Listen to an Article: Malcolm Guite on Poetic Imagination and Biblical Prophecy
A Realist Christian Response to the Horror of Trauma (Scott Harrower)
Why Scripture Doesn't Talk about Law, Religion, or Belief (Joshua Berman)
Scripture on Policing in America
A Philosophical Theology of the Old Testament (Dr. Jaco Gericke)
Introducing Dr. Jeremiah Unterman (CHT Fellow)
Is the NT Just Stoic Philosophy? [Corrected]
Group Therapy for Anxiety in the Old Testament
Economic Thought in the Bible
Is God Perfect? Does that Matter? Peter Leithart Workshop, Part 2
Is God Perfect? Does that Matter? Peter Leithart Workshop, Part 1
Is God Perfect? Does that Matter? Peter Leithart Lecture
The Hebraic Roots of Modern Equality
Moral Progress in the Bible?
Hebraic Thought in Christmas, Part 2: Humble Moms and Shepherds
Nerdy Episode: Baby Yoda, Christmas, & Hebrew Narrative
Hebraic Thought in Christmas, Part 1: Endangered Babies
The Idea of Christian Calling
Hebrew Ethics: Radical in the Ancient Near East, Yet So Familiar to Us
Genesis as Rationality in the Ancient Near East
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