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.
Give: Visit our Donate Page if you would like to support OnScript’s work.
Ben Witherington III & Jason Myers - Views on Paul
Jules Martinez-Olivieri - Christology, Liberation, Participation
Mark and Luke Glanville - Refuge Reimagined
Mike Bird & Scott Harrower - Trinity Without Hierarchy
Wil Gafney - Womanist Midrash
John Behr - Origen and the Early Church, Pt 2
John Behr - Origen and the Early Church
Garrick Allen - Manuscripts and All that Other Stuff on the Page (Paratexts)
Jemar Tisby - The Color of Compromise
Jeremy Schipper - Black Samson
Richard Rice - The Future of Open Theism
Kevin Grasso - Christ-Faith in Paul's Letters
Don Payne - Already Sanctified
Esau McCaulley - Reading While Black
Justo González - Prayer in the Early Church and Today
Chris Green - Sanctifying Interpretation
Erin Heim with Dru Johnson - MeToo and the Apostle Paul (part II)
R. T. Mullins & Steven Nemes Debate Divine Simplicity
Jeannine Brown - The Gospels as Stories
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