This series has looked at the ways in which people of faith — and the witness they left behind in the stories included in the Scriptures — understood their experiences of God changed over the course of the Bible. So far, all of this has been in (and after) what we Christians call the Old … Continue reading The God of the Apostles
Last time we saw how the experience of Exile had a profound and transformational impact on Hebrew religion. While any statement generalizing the beliefs of tens of thousands of people is going to be oversimplified, we might say that the old Judaite elite left a destroyed Jerusalem monolaters of a local god they believed had … Continue reading The God of Judea
One of the most common debates among committed Christians over the centuries has been the relative importance of personal piety versus acts of compassion. It’s played out on a lot of fronts: The action versus contemplation debate in monastic circles, the faith versus works debate of the Reformation era, and in the present attacks today … Continue reading Happy Are Those… : A Reflection on Psalm 112
Overall the start of my pop cultural year has felt a big sluggish. So I'll reflect on that a bit during the deep dive section today. But first, the roundup. Roundup Music The past couple of weeks have been slow again for new album releases, with the only standout for me being indie group Ratboy's Singin' … Continue reading Culture Roundup (February 7, 2026): On Diminishing Returns
In the middle centuries of the first millennium BCE, the Hebrew peoples experienced a series of blows that drastically transformed how they understood themselves and their relationship with God. First, the fall of the kingdom of Israel to the Neo-Assyrian Empire, which created an influx of well-educated YHWH-worshiping refugees into the kingdom of Judah, and … Continue reading The God of the Exiles