
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When people assume that they are already familiar with the Bible, they may fail to read it with a critical or careful eye (if at all). The truth is that Western people's imaginations are usually far more shaped by social media and the entertainment industry, or by even the Greco-Roman world, than by the structures and styles of the Bible. Hence, even faithful churchgoers often need additional guidance and practice reading Scripture to become biblically literate.
In this episode, Dr. Dru Johnson talks with Dr. Heath Thomas, President Professor of Old Testament at Oklahoma Baptist University, about how we should approach reading Scripture. Among other things, readers should consider the grammar, literary devices, motifs, and type-scenes that begin in the Torah and then unfold throughout the prophets and the New Testament. Reading Scripture well requires habituating one's imagination toward that of the authors and their conceptual worlds. When we are fully immersed in the texts, we can join the project of contextualizing and applying the Bible to the modern world.
Shownotes:
Dr. Thomas's commentary on Habakkuk.
Dr. Thomas's work with the Hobbs College Library, an accessible collection of works that help people read Scripture.
Show notes by Micah Long.
By Center For Hebraic Thought4.8
213213 ratings
When people assume that they are already familiar with the Bible, they may fail to read it with a critical or careful eye (if at all). The truth is that Western people's imaginations are usually far more shaped by social media and the entertainment industry, or by even the Greco-Roman world, than by the structures and styles of the Bible. Hence, even faithful churchgoers often need additional guidance and practice reading Scripture to become biblically literate.
In this episode, Dr. Dru Johnson talks with Dr. Heath Thomas, President Professor of Old Testament at Oklahoma Baptist University, about how we should approach reading Scripture. Among other things, readers should consider the grammar, literary devices, motifs, and type-scenes that begin in the Torah and then unfold throughout the prophets and the New Testament. Reading Scripture well requires habituating one's imagination toward that of the authors and their conceptual worlds. When we are fully immersed in the texts, we can join the project of contextualizing and applying the Bible to the modern world.
Shownotes:
Dr. Thomas's commentary on Habakkuk.
Dr. Thomas's work with the Hobbs College Library, an accessible collection of works that help people read Scripture.
Show notes by Micah Long.

2,034 Listeners

19,477 Listeners

612 Listeners

1,100 Listeners

4,439 Listeners

329 Listeners

1,477 Listeners

5,990 Listeners

2,055 Listeners

553 Listeners

218 Listeners

297 Listeners

887 Listeners

573 Listeners

451 Listeners