This episode is reproduced from a November interview on the OnScript podcast, courtesy of OnScript.
Dr. Dru Johnson interviews Dr. Esau McCaulley about his award-winning book Reading While Black: African-American Interpretation as an Exercise in Hope. They discuss listening to minority, oppressed, and specifically Black voices as necessary to reading Scripture well. Without critically engaging these various voices, we run the risk of reinforcing cultural biases and blind spots.
Dr. McCaulley also describes the unique gap he is trying to fill in biblical scholarship, as he navigates between both Black and white evangelical and progressive voices. Dr. McCaulley hopes to provide a biblical scholarship that is both faithful to orthodox Christianity and to the veracity of Scripture, while not neglecting justice. Stay tuned at the end for a speed round!
Learn more about Dr. McCaulley and his work.
Also mentioned: Dr. McCaulley's Sharing in the Son's Inheritance (NERDY)
Show notes by Micah Long.
From Christian-hater to CHT Co-Founder—Changed by Reading the Bible.
Ethical Ambiguity, Biblical Vigilantes, and Dr. Shira Weiss (CHT Fellow)
Introducing Dr. Joshua Berman (CHT Fellow)
Yoram Hazony: "An Individualist Approach To The Hebrew Bible" (NPR)
Yoram Hazony on the Bible as Philosophy
FAQ: Do We Think Like Ancient Folks Did?
FAQ: What About the New Testament?
FAQ: Why "Hebraic Thought" and not "Jewish Thought"?
FAQ: Justice as an Example of Hebraic Thought
FAQ: What is Hebraic Thought?
Center for Hebraic Thought *Coming Soon*
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