My guest this week is Dr. Yonder Gillihan, a professor of Theology with special expertise in the Dead Seas Scrolls. He's also my older brother, so our discussion included some of our personal history with religion and the Bible. You'll hear how Yonder's relationship with the Bible has changed over the past four decades, and how he not only made peace with the Bible but even made friends with it.
Some of the topics we get into include:
The place of the Bible in my brother's and my early family life
Why young people often find the Bible to be a tedious and irrelevant book
Common frustrations that push people away from the Bible
Classical studies as a slippery slope into Biblical studies
Different questions we can bring to religious texts
Using the Bible to understand its authors
The irreconcilable contradictions in the Bible (e.g., the two creation accounts in Genesis)
Why the Bible has endured for thousands of years
Tradeoffs among some of the popular Bible translations, and the value in reading from multiple translations
The Bible as a mosaic of conversations among people who don’t always have the same ideas
Understanding the person of Jesus Christ as presented in the four gospels
The extent to which the Bible reveals an all-encompassing and unconditional love
The many perspectives that the Bible embraces and affirms
Conflicting accounts of Jesus’s resurrection in Mark vs. Matthew
Biblical inconsistencies as a reminder of the messiness of human life
Here are the translations we discussed (affiliate links):
Jewish Study Bible
New International Version Study Bible (the translation I grew up with)
New Revised Standard Version
The New Jerusalem Bible
The John Prine song Yonder mentioned is called "Fish and Whistle."
Here's more about the scholar Terry Eagleton.
Yonder Gillihan, PhD, completed his bachelor's and master's degrees at Ball State University and his doctorate at the University of Chicago.
He has taught at Yale Divinity School and Dartmouth College, and currently is an associate professor in the Theology Department at Boston College. Yonder's research interests include the Dead Sea Scrolls, Matthew and Paul, apocalypticism, and Christian origins within the context of Jewish sectarianism in the late Second Temple period.
His research methods include the application of modern social-scientific methods to ancient communities, with emphasis on the relationship between voluntary associations, and local and imperial authorities.
Yonder is heavily invested in teaching his students to read and appreciate the Bible, as I'm guessing you'll gather from our discussion.
Find Yonder online at his faculty page on the Boston College website.