Scriptural Works
Professor Dr. Danny Carroll opens Isaiah in a way that feels less like a safe tour through a famous prophetic book and more like an encounter with a text that still knows how to wound, unsettle, and expose. He guides listeners through the sweep of First Isaiah by tying its poetry, political rhetoric, and theological vision to the brutal realities of the eighth century BCE: Assyrian expansion, corrupt leadership, social breakdown, predatory economics, hollow ritual, and the seductions of imperial power. What emerges is not a flattened “timeless lesson,” but a prophet whose language is graphic, morally charged, and fiercely public. Carroll repeatedly shows that Isaiah’s critique is never just about private piety. It is about what happens when a people claim to worship God while building a society marked by arrogance, injustice, and self-protective religion. The episode also highlights how the book’s movement from judgment to hope, from failed kings to the vision of a different ruler, gives Isaiah both literary depth and enduring theological force. What gives the episode its particular edge is Carroll’s refusal to leave Isaiah trapped in the ancient world. Drawing on his bicultural background, his years teaching in Guatemala, and his experience reflecting on war, migration, and poverty, he explains why readers who have lived closer to violence and displacement often hear the prophets more clearly than those protected by comfort. That move gives the discussion unusual weight. Isaiah becomes a book about exile, national myth, false worship, holiness, and the ethical demands placed on communities that imagine themselves faithful while ignoring the human cost of their politics. The conversation also ranges into questions of immigration, empire, foreignness, and the way Scripture speaks to public life rather than merely to private devotion. The result is an episode that is both intellectually rich and strikingly easy to follow: serious biblical interpretation without academic fog, and accessible teaching without flattening the text’s bite. It is the kind of discussion that makes Isaiah feel dangerous again—in the best way. Profile: https://www.wheaton.edu/academics/faculty/daniel-carroll/ The Lord Roars: Recovering the Prophetic Voice for Today: https://www.amazon.com/Lord-Roars-Recovering-Theological-Explorations/dp/1540965082/ref=sr_1_1 Commentary: The Book of Amos (NICOT Series): https://www.amazon.com/Book-International-Commentary-Testament-NICOT-ebook/dp/B089LR8DMT Commentary: Hosea, Amos, Micah (Expositor’s Bible Commentary): https://www.amazon.com/Hosea-Micah-Expositors-Bible-Commentary-ebook/dp/B01N5Y1RDX
27 afleveringen
Reacties
0Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst
Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Scriptural Works community!