Episode: How is memory made and maintained in a community? Moreover, how can a community remember something they never witnessed? A. J. Culp walks us through recent turns in memory theory to explore how Deuteronomy, as a piece of literature, instantiates and reifies memory in Israel. We address misconceptions of memory as individualistic, how literature can form memory, and the use of memory for social identity. For Christians and Jews, the implications for their tradition's rituals and sacraments are manifest.
Guest: A. J. Culp is lecturer in Old Testament and biblical languages at Malyon Theological College and honorary research fellow at the University of Queensland. His books include Invited to Know God: The Book of Deuteronomy (Lexham, 2019) and the book discussed in this episode: Memoir of Moses, Puzzling Portraits.
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Darren Sarisky - Reading the Bible Theologically
Dru Johnson - Human Rites
Jonathan Greer - Behind the Scenes of the OT
Ellen Davis - Opening Israel's Scriptures
Ryan O'Dowd - Wisdom Literature and Commentaries
Kelly Murphy - Rewriting Masculinity
Ivan Satyavrata - Holy Spirit
Raphael Rodríguez - Jesus Darkly
Brent Strawn - The Bible is Not a Story
Daniel Hawk - The Violence of the Biblical God
Scott Harrower - God of All Comfort (Trinity & Horror)
Kyle Hughes - The Trinitarian Testimony of the Spirit
Sameer Yadav - Theology. Race, and the Mystical Tradition
Ervine Sheblatzm – Faultlines in the Horizon
Robert Alter - The Art of Bible Translation
Jeff McSwain - Simul Sanctification
Jon Levenson - Resurrection and the Restoration of Israel
(Theology) Michael Bruner - A Subversive Gospel
Michael Carasik - Jewish Commentary
Matthew Thomas - Paul's 'Works of the Law'
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