Scriptural Works

First John: Abiding Love, Church Trauma, and How Divided Churches Heal | Dr. Janette H. Ok | Ep. 28

1 h 4 min · I går
episode First John: Abiding Love, Church Trauma, and How Divided Churches Heal | Dr. Janette H. Ok | Ep. 28 cover

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Professor Janette H. Ok brings First John out of the realm of familiar church phrases and back into the pressure of a community trying to hold together after rupture. Her reading treats the Johannine Epistles not as abstract doctrine or devotional language, but as pastoral formation for churches marked by division, doubt, loss, and contested belonging. First John’s repeated language of abiding, confession, children of God, antichrist, and love works like a musical fugue: the same themes return again and again, each time drawing the community more deeply into a shared way of life. Identity comes before performance. Readers do not love in order to become God’s children; they learn to love because that identity has already been given. The conversation moves from Greek exegesis to church life with unusual clarity. Ok shows why “God is love” cannot be reduced to sentiment, why confession of Jesus must take material form, and why 1 John 3 turns Christ’s self-giving death toward economic care for brothers and sisters in need. Love is not only feeling, belief, or private spirituality; it is the refusal to close one’s compassion when another member of the household lacks food, shelter, or support. The discussion also explores church trauma, quiet leaving, intergenerational faith, and the challenge of speaking to people caught in the middle of divided congregations. For pastors, teachers, students, and engaged readers, this Johannine Epistles podcast offers a sharp reading of First, Second, and Third John as community formation under pressure, where confession, love, and belonging are practiced until they become a way of life. Fuller Profile: https://fuller.edu/faculty/janette-ok/

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28 episodes

episode First John: Abiding Love, Church Trauma, and How Divided Churches Heal | Dr. Janette H. Ok | Ep. 28 artwork

First John: Abiding Love, Church Trauma, and How Divided Churches Heal | Dr. Janette H. Ok | Ep. 28

Professor Janette H. Ok brings First John out of the realm of familiar church phrases and back into the pressure of a community trying to hold together after rupture. Her reading treats the Johannine Epistles not as abstract doctrine or devotional language, but as pastoral formation for churches marked by division, doubt, loss, and contested belonging. First John’s repeated language of abiding, confession, children of God, antichrist, and love works like a musical fugue: the same themes return again and again, each time drawing the community more deeply into a shared way of life. Identity comes before performance. Readers do not love in order to become God’s children; they learn to love because that identity has already been given. The conversation moves from Greek exegesis to church life with unusual clarity. Ok shows why “God is love” cannot be reduced to sentiment, why confession of Jesus must take material form, and why 1 John 3 turns Christ’s self-giving death toward economic care for brothers and sisters in need. Love is not only feeling, belief, or private spirituality; it is the refusal to close one’s compassion when another member of the household lacks food, shelter, or support. The discussion also explores church trauma, quiet leaving, intergenerational faith, and the challenge of speaking to people caught in the middle of divided congregations. For pastors, teachers, students, and engaged readers, this Johannine Epistles podcast offers a sharp reading of First, Second, and Third John as community formation under pressure, where confession, love, and belonging are practiced until they become a way of life. Fuller Profile: https://fuller.edu/faculty/janette-ok/

Yesterday1 h 4 min
episode Rethinking the Johannine Epistles: Community, Rhetoric, and Hospitality | Dr. Warren Carter | Ep. 27 artwork

Rethinking the Johannine Epistles: Community, Rhetoric, and Hospitality | Dr. Warren Carter | Ep. 27

Dr. Warren Carter rethinks the Johannine Epistles as formation documents rather than polemical tracts. This episode moves beyond the older “Johannine community crisis” model associated with Raymond Brown and asks what 1 John, 2 John, and 3 John do for believing audiences. Carter explains why mirror-reading is risky when interpreters reconstruct opponents too confidently from heated passages about antichrists, deceivers, and those who “went out.” The conversation locates his reading within debate over the Johannine community, from Hugo Méndez’s challenge to the hypothesis to Paul Anderson’s modified defense and the cautious middle position many scholars now adopt. The result is a reading of the Johannine Epistles as writings that build communal identity, ethical discernment, and practice across Christian networks. The discussion clarifies the distinctive shape of each writing. 1 John is not a conventional letter but a literary-theological discourse whose repetition, contrasts, and family language train communities to recognize what it means to abide in God. The “children of God” language in 1 John 3:1 grounds ethics in gift before task: identity is received before it is performed. Love is also economic. In 1 John 3:16–18, material sharing becomes a test of communal love in a stratified Greco-Roman setting. By contrast, 2 and 3 John are occasional letters addressing disputes over teachers, travel, authority, and welcome. Hospitality is theological, not merely polite. To receive or refuse traveling teachers shaped doctrine, legitimacy, money, and authority across assemblies. Carter helps readers see why the Johannine Epistles remain vital for thinking about identity conflict, discernment, and community life under pressure. BOOK 1, 2, and 3 John: An Introduction and Study Guide: Multiple Readings, Deconstructing Constructions, https://www.amazon.com/John-Introduction-Deconstructing-Constructions-Testament/dp/0567704203/ref=sr_1_1

23. maj 20261 h 12 min
episode Micah 3 and Corrupt Leaders: Survival Literature, Trauma, and Hope | Dr. Dan Epp-Tiessen | Ep. 26 artwork

Micah 3 and Corrupt Leaders: Survival Literature, Trauma, and Hope | Dr. Dan Epp-Tiessen | Ep. 26

Dr. Dan Epp-Tiessen (Canadian Mennonite University) offers a close reading of Micah 3 as survival literature for communities enduring political collapse, military invasion, and generational trauma. Drawing on his Believer's Church Bible Commentary on Joel, Obadiah, and Micah, Epp-Tiessen situates the prophet within the brutal Assyrian and Babylonian campaigns against Judah, arguing that the prophetic books were intentionally shaped to help traumatized communities name their pain and survive faithfully. The episode unpacks Micah's searing cannibalism metaphor against corrupt rulers—leaders who flay the flesh of their people through land seizure, economic exploitation, and unjust governance—and the prophet's equally sharp critique of the false prophets who provided divine legitimation for the regime. The conversation explores Robert Wilson's distinction between central prophets (on the king's payroll) and peripheral prophets (rooted in marginalized communities), the dynamics of true versus false prophecy, and the remarkable intertextual moment in Jeremiah 26 where Micah 3:12 is quoted to defend Jeremiah from a lynch mob. Epp-Tiessen then traces Micah's rhythm of indictment and hope across the book's three judgment-deliverance cycles, culminating in the swords-into-plowshares vision of Micah 4, the vine-and-fig-tree promise of peasant security, and the gracious, merciful God of Micah 7. The result is a trauma-informed, peace-theology reading that holds together rigorous scholarship and ecclesial relevance—offering pastors, students, and serious readers a framework for hearing Micah's voice in contexts of contemporary injustice, polarization, and the urgent question of faithful leadership today. Joel, Obadiah, Micah (Belivers Church Bible Commentary Series): https://www.amazon.com/Obadiah-Micah-Believers-Church-Commentary-ebook/dp/B09RQG3PQH/? Concerning the Prophets: True and False Prophesy in Jeremiah 23:9-29:32: https://www.amazon.com/Concerning-Prophets-Daniel-Epp-Tiessen/dp/149825991X/ref=sr_1_1

9. maj 20261 h 5 min
episode Amos: The Prophet Who Set a Rhetorical Trap | Rabbi Yitzchak Etshalom | Ep. 25 artwork

Amos: The Prophet Who Set a Rhetorical Trap | Rabbi Yitzchak Etshalom | Ep. 25

Amos wasn't just preaching judgment—he was setting a rhetorical trap. And his audience walked right into it. Rabbi Yitzchak Etshalom unpacks the prophetic genius behind one of the Bible's most confrontational books. Amos stands before a northern Israelite audience and begins condemning their enemies one by one—Damascus, Gaza, Tyre, Edom, Ammon, Moab—circling the map while his listeners grow more self-satisfied with every oracle. Then he hits Judah, which raises an eyebrow. But seven nations have been condemned, and seven is a complete number. He should be done. He's not. Israel is number eight—the bullseye at the center of the geographic box he's drawn—and it's condemned not for one sin but seven, while every neighbor got just one. Rabbi Etshalom brings something rare to this conversation: a synthesis of traditional Jewish scholarship with modern literary and rhetorical analysis. He reads Amos as oral performance, not just written text—attending to wordplay, alliteration, and audience psychology that disappear in translation. His take on Amos's justice message is equally sharp. This isn't liberation theology retrofitted onto an ancient text. Amos targets individuals abusing power, not systemic institutions. And his famous call to "seek me and live" isn't generic spiritual advice—it's a specific summons back to Jerusalem and the Deuteronomic covenant. Rabbi Etshalom also makes the case that Amos established the template every literary prophet after him followed: end with hope. The final verses of restoration aren't a later addition—they're the rhetorical move of a prophet who understood that an audience has to leave with something worth carrying. Commentary on Amos: Amos: The Genius of Prophetic Rhetoric, https://www.amazon.com/Amos-Prophetic-Rhetoric-Yitzchak-Etshalom/dp/1592646336/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0

26. apr. 20261 h 12 min
episode Hidden Literary Echoes: Homer & Virgil in the Book of Acts | Dr. Michael Kochenash | Ep. 24 artwork

Hidden Literary Echoes: Homer & Virgil in the Book of Acts | Dr. Michael Kochenash | Ep. 24

What happens when you read Acts through the eyes of someone steeped in Homer and Virgil? Peter heals a man named Aeneas—the founder of Rome's mythic ancestor—and suddenly the narrative isn't just about miracles. It's a signal that the story is heading to Rome itself. A few verses later, Tabitha dies. Her name is translated Dorcas, meaning "deer," and Luke makes sure you know it. Why? Because Virgil portrayed Dido, the queen Aeneas abandoned on his way to build the Roman Empire, as a hunted and slain deer. In Virgil's telling, Dido is collateral damage—expendable for the glory of Rome. But Peter doesn't leave this woman for dead. He raises her. That's not a coincidence. That's Luke constructing the kingdom of God as everything the Roman Empire is not. Dr. Michael Kochenash lays out these connections with precision, arguing that Luke wove classical literary echoes into Acts that the earliest audiences would have recognized but that later readers—including us—almost entirely lost. Kochenash's method, which he calls "associative reading," doesn't require proving that Luke read Virgil's Latin. It requires showing that the content of these stories—transmitted through performances, visual art, retellings, and Greek paraphrases—was accessible to literate circles in the ancient Mediterranean. And the takeaway is stunning. Rhoda in Acts 12 becomes a Cassandra figure: she tells the truth about Peter's escape and is called crazy, just as Cassandra's accurate prophecies were never believed. Herod's death at the end of the same chapter activates the logic of divine retribution from Trojan War mythology. Even Paul's voyage to Rome in Acts 27 evokes not just Odysseus and Jonah but the end of Socrates' life. These aren't fringe readings. They recover the literary world that shaped how Luke wrote and how his first audiences understood what they were hearing. This episode will permanently change how you read the book of Acts. Website: https://kochenash.wixsite.com/home Book: Roman Self-Representation and the Lukan Kingdom of God: https://www.amazon.com/Roman-Self-Representation-Lukan-Kingdom-God/dp/1978707355

18. apr. 20261 h 6 min