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Gen 19: Lot’s Daughters: Trauma, Revenge, and an Inverted World

36 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Gen 19: Lot’s Daughters: Trauma, Revenge, and an Inverted World

Descripción

Guest: Dr. Kirsi Cobb. The story of Lot and his daughters (Genesis 19:30–38) is often read as a tale about incest and the origins of Moab and Ammon. But what if that is not the story's primary concern? In this episode, we explore a provocative alternative reading. Drawing on trauma studies, Dr. Cobb argues that the daughters' actions in the cave may be best understood as the response of deeply traumatized women who have witnessed the collapse of their entire world. We examine how the events earlier in Genesis 19—Lot's willingness to hand over his daughters to a violent mob, the destruction of Sodom, the loss of their mother, and the annihilation of everything familiar—reshape our understanding of what happens in the cave. The conversation raises difficult questions about victimhood, agency, patriarchal power, trauma repetition, and the unsettling ways victims can sometimes become perpetrators. Topics Discussed * Traditional interpretations of Lot's daughters * The connection between Genesis 19 and the origins of Moab and Ammon * Why the biblical text offers so little moral commentary * Lot's shocking offer of his daughters to the men of Sodom * Trauma theory and biblical interpretation * The loss of safety, trust, and family in Genesis 19 * Trauma repetition and reenactment * Patriarchal pressures surrounding lineage and offspring * Whether Lot's daughters should be viewed as villains, victims, or something more complicated * How biblical narratives portray the long-term effects of violence The conversation centers around Dr. Cobb's study, "Did Lot Get His Just Desserts? Trauma, Revenge, and Re-enactment in Genesis 19.30-38." Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 47.2 (2022): 189-205.

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19 episodios

Portada del episodio Gen 19: Lot’s Daughters: Trauma, Revenge, and an Inverted World

Gen 19: Lot’s Daughters: Trauma, Revenge, and an Inverted World

Guest: Dr. Kirsi Cobb. The story of Lot and his daughters (Genesis 19:30–38) is often read as a tale about incest and the origins of Moab and Ammon. But what if that is not the story's primary concern? In this episode, we explore a provocative alternative reading. Drawing on trauma studies, Dr. Cobb argues that the daughters' actions in the cave may be best understood as the response of deeply traumatized women who have witnessed the collapse of their entire world. We examine how the events earlier in Genesis 19—Lot's willingness to hand over his daughters to a violent mob, the destruction of Sodom, the loss of their mother, and the annihilation of everything familiar—reshape our understanding of what happens in the cave. The conversation raises difficult questions about victimhood, agency, patriarchal power, trauma repetition, and the unsettling ways victims can sometimes become perpetrators. Topics Discussed * Traditional interpretations of Lot's daughters * The connection between Genesis 19 and the origins of Moab and Ammon * Why the biblical text offers so little moral commentary * Lot's shocking offer of his daughters to the men of Sodom * Trauma theory and biblical interpretation * The loss of safety, trust, and family in Genesis 19 * Trauma repetition and reenactment * Patriarchal pressures surrounding lineage and offspring * Whether Lot's daughters should be viewed as villains, victims, or something more complicated * How biblical narratives portray the long-term effects of violence The conversation centers around Dr. Cobb's study, "Did Lot Get His Just Desserts? Trauma, Revenge, and Re-enactment in Genesis 19.30-38." Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 47.2 (2022): 189-205.

Ayer36 min
Portada del episodio Gen 18 : Praying Through Questions

Gen 18 : Praying Through Questions

Guest: Dr. Steven Mann. In Genesis 18, Abraham stands before God and does something remarkable: he prays not by making requests, but by asking questions. As God reveals His intention to judge Sodom and Gomorrah, Abraham responds with a series of probing questions about justice, mercy, and the fate of the innocent. Is this the Bible’s first prayer of intercession? Is Abraham praying, arguing, or seeking justice? And what does this extraordinary encounter teach us about the role of questions in our own prayer lives? In this episode: * Why questions play such a central role in Genesis 18 * God’s opening question: “Shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do?” * How questions invite reflection and deepen relationships * Whether Abraham is praying, bargaining, arguing, or interceding * The connection between prayer and the pursuit of justice * What Abraham’s boldness reveals about his relationship with God * Why questioning God can be an expression of faith rather than doubt * The surprising rarity of intercessory prayer in the Hebrew Bible * What Genesis 18 teaches us about praying for others today The episode centers around Dr. Mann's study, "Ask and You Shall Intercede: The Peculiar Perlocutionary Power of Asking God Questions." Bulletin for Biblical Research 29.2 (2019): 208-224.

15 de jun de 202637 min
Portada del episodio Gen 17: Why Circumcision? From Laughter to Faith

Gen 17: Why Circumcision? From Laughter to Faith

Guest: Jonathan Inman. What is circumcision really about in Genesis 17? Drawing on biblical scholarship, anthropology, and close textual reading, we examine why circumcision became the covenantal sign given to Abraham and how it relates to the central drama of Genesis 17: Abraham's struggle to believe that God's promise of a son could still come true. The conversation moves beyond sociological explanations of circumcision and uncovers a profound theological message. The covenantal mark on Abraham's body is not simply about identity or membership—it is a sign of faith in God's ability to bring life, descendants, and a future where human possibility seems exhausted. Along the way, they revisit Abraham's laughter, the birth promise of Isaac, and the recurring tension in Abraham's life between trust and doubt. In This Episode * Why scholars have proposed so many different explanations for circumcision * Circumcision in ancient Egypt and the broader ancient Near East * The strengths and limits of anthropological approaches to biblical rituals * The structure of Genesis 17 and the covenant of circumcision * Abraham's laughter: skepticism, amazement, or something in between? * The significance of God's promise that Sarah will bear Isaac * How circumcision functions as a sign of faith in God's future promises * The relationship between the covenant sign and fertility, descendants, and continuity * Abraham as a model of both faith and doubt * What Genesis 17 teaches about trusting God when fulfillment seems impossible The discussion is based on, Jonathan D. Inman “Why Circumcision? A New Understanding of the Covenant Sign in Genesis 17.” Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 48, no. 2 (2023): 163–182.

8 de jun de 202630 min
Portada del episodio Genesis 16: Hagar and the Pattern Behind Biblical Heroes

Genesis 16: Hagar and the Pattern Behind Biblical Heroes

Guest: Prof. Edward Greenstein. Genesis 16 is often read as the story of Hagar, Sarah, and Abraham—a difficult episode marked by surrogacy, jealousy, and exile. But a closer look reveals something more. Hagar's story follows a literary pattern that appears throughout the Bible in the lives of some of Israel's greatest heroes. In this episode, we explore how Hagar's flight into the wilderness anticipates stories later told about Moses, David, Elijah, and others. Far from being a marginal figure, Hagar becomes the first character in Scripture to embody a recurring biblical pattern: the fugitive who flees into the wilderness, encounters God, receives a promise, and emerges transformed. What happens when we read Genesis 16 not only as family drama, but as the prototype of a larger biblical story type? And what does this reveal about the way the Bible invites us to understand Hagar's significance? In this episode: * Why biblical narratives often work through recurring story patterns * The sequence of motifs that define the "fugitive hero" type-scene * How Hagar's experience anticipates Moses, David, Elijah, and others * What literary parallels can teach us about characterization * Why Genesis 16 elevates Hagar's status in surprising ways * How recognizing these patterns enriches our reading of biblical narrative

1 de jun de 202641 min
Portada del episodio Gen 15: Why the Borders of the Land Keep Changing

Gen 15: Why the Borders of the Land Keep Changing

Guest: Dr. Aubrey McClain - In Genesis 15, God promises Abraham a land stretching “from the river of Egypt to the great river, the Euphrates.” But elsewhere in the Torah, the borders of the Promised Land look very different. Why? We explore how biblical borders are about far more than geography. They reveal theological ideas about covenant, identity, holiness, and Israel’s partnership with God. The conversation examines the multiple territorial descriptions found throughout the Pentateuch, the meaning of the Transjordan, and why Scripture preserves differing visions of the land. Rather than contradictions, these shifting maps may reflect different spiritual and political ideals within the biblical tradition. Among the questions explored: * Why does Genesis 15 describe such expansive borders? * Why do other biblical passages define the land differently? * What role does the Transjordan play in biblical thought? * Are biblical borders descriptive, aspirational, or theological? * What does it mean for Israel to “collaborate with God in defining territory”? The conversation stems around Dr. McClain's work,  The Transjordan in Biblical Literature: A Critical Spatial Approach.

25 de may de 202633 min