34 min listen
Reissue: Violence in the Bible Isn’t What You Think It Is (Matt Lynch)
Reissue: Violence in the Bible Isn’t What You Think It Is (Matt Lynch)
ratings:
Length:
32 minutes
Released:
May 6, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
This episode was originally published on October 16, 2020. We thought it was worth a reissue for our newer listeners.
Many readers of Scripture are jarred when God and Israel commit violence in the Old Testament. From the conquest of Canaan, to the lives of the biblical patriarchs, to the great flood in Genesis, we cannot avoid the fact that God and His people fight and kill. This can lead to a crisis of faith—how can God be good if He is violent?
Dr. Matt Lynch, Assistant Professor of Old Testament at Regent College, wants to reframe our questions; rather than merely worrying about God's use of violence, we could instead ask how the biblical authors are critiquing our use of violence. In this episode, Dr. Dru Johnson interviews Dr. Lynch about how the Bible portrays violence. They discuss Scripture's persistent connection between violence and tumult, and the difference between justified forceful harm and unjust violence. They also address the ethical connection between human beings and the rest of creation, and how violence in the Old Testament and New Testament separates humanity from God and the earth.
Show notes:
0:00 The problem of violence in the Old Testament and New Testament
2:25 Introducing Dr. Matthew Lynch and his work
7:12 Violence in Scripture versus violence in the modern world
11:50 War with the Canaanites in the book of Joshua
14:28 Ethics, ecology, and the environment
22:47 The New Covenant and our relationship to creation
24:24 The overarching perspective on violence in Scripture
29:15 Listening to the biblical texts for their questions
Dr. Lynch's new book: Portraying Violence in the Hebrew Bible: A Literary and Cultural Study
Show notes by Micah Long.
Credits for the music used in TBM podcast can be found at: hebraicthought.org/credits.
Many readers of Scripture are jarred when God and Israel commit violence in the Old Testament. From the conquest of Canaan, to the lives of the biblical patriarchs, to the great flood in Genesis, we cannot avoid the fact that God and His people fight and kill. This can lead to a crisis of faith—how can God be good if He is violent?
Dr. Matt Lynch, Assistant Professor of Old Testament at Regent College, wants to reframe our questions; rather than merely worrying about God's use of violence, we could instead ask how the biblical authors are critiquing our use of violence. In this episode, Dr. Dru Johnson interviews Dr. Lynch about how the Bible portrays violence. They discuss Scripture's persistent connection between violence and tumult, and the difference between justified forceful harm and unjust violence. They also address the ethical connection between human beings and the rest of creation, and how violence in the Old Testament and New Testament separates humanity from God and the earth.
Show notes:
0:00 The problem of violence in the Old Testament and New Testament
2:25 Introducing Dr. Matthew Lynch and his work
7:12 Violence in Scripture versus violence in the modern world
11:50 War with the Canaanites in the book of Joshua
14:28 Ethics, ecology, and the environment
22:47 The New Covenant and our relationship to creation
24:24 The overarching perspective on violence in Scripture
29:15 Listening to the biblical texts for their questions
Dr. Lynch's new book: Portraying Violence in the Hebrew Bible: A Literary and Cultural Study
Show notes by Micah Long.
Credits for the music used in TBM podcast can be found at: hebraicthought.org/credits.
Released:
May 6, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (90)
Crying for Justice: Why We Should Pray the ‘Angry‘ Psalms (Trevor Laurence): Pleas for justice in the book of Psalms—the imprecatory psalms—can make some Christians uncomfortable. They're often passed over in the psalter during worship. How do petitions for justice map onto the mission of Jesus? How are imprecatory prayers compat... by The Biblical Mind