Can we use Mountain Dew and Doritos for communion, or must the elements be bread and wine? Communion is one of the most prominent Christian rituals. Although celebrated differently by different traditions, from sharing loaves of bread and a common cup to distributing oyster crackers and little plastic cups of grape juice, the practice is meant to remind us of and transform us into the body of Christ. We might wonder what the earliest Christians did to celebrate communion, and what the boundaries are within which we might improvise this ritual in various times and places.
In this episode, Dr. Dru Johnson talks to Dr. Janelle Peters, author of the forthcoming Paul and the Citizen Body, about communion, Paul's intellectual influences, and Bible literacy. They examine the traditions associated with communion and its connection to the rituals of the ancient Hebrews. From there, they consider Paul's usage of the Torah in his letters and his appropriation of Greco-Roman literary tropes and ideas. They conclude with a discussion of Paul's views on rituals and practices such as communion and wearing head coverings, and the state of Bible literacy in the rising generations.
Show notes:
Show notes by Micah Long.
Credits for music used in TBM podcast can be found at: hebraicthought.org/credits.
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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