"Christianity started out in Palestine as a fellowship; it moved to Greece and became a philosophy; it moved to Italy and became an institution; it moved to Europe and became a culture; it came to America and became an enterprise." Sam Pascoe
@waldemarkirszniok2987 ай бұрын
Nice quote!
@DneilB0077 ай бұрын
That is a killer quote! Thanks for sharing it!
@LordMerlic7 ай бұрын
Well said!
@METVWETV7 ай бұрын
Except it's nonsense. The Greeks and Italians became servant
@dnjj18457 ай бұрын
It came to the Americas via brutal imperialism.
@cynthiao.5437 ай бұрын
I’m doing a “read the Bible in a year” program; I’m on day 97. Most of the Old Testament is new to me. And I really dislike what I’m reading. …so weird and full of horrible things….I heard Bart say one time, when asked if he believes in God…”you mean the god of the Old Testament, the Jewish god? No, I don’t”…..my sentiments exactly. Former Christian , current agnostic. The proof just isn’t there.
@raphaelrossi63398 ай бұрын
I’ve met so many Christians that have said, “but that’s not what God or Jesus meant. What he really meant was…” And project their own idea as to what an ideal God would really mean. A psychological comforting that you know the truth while most people don’t.
@Cole2058 ай бұрын
This is because the mindset of the O.T. Js is alien to the European mind
@John.Flower.Productions8 ай бұрын
If you think Christians are bad, you would be shocked/amazed by the so-called Jews.
@Cole2058 ай бұрын
@@John.Flower.Productionsbased
@sherwinsy72508 ай бұрын
but how would they know what GOD or Jesus really meant exactly?😂
@Yesica19938 ай бұрын
I've met so many anti-Christian bigots (online) who have never read the full Bible, have no clue what it says about anything, and yet still won't stop ranting and raving against it.
@kurtoogle45768 ай бұрын
I really appreciate the point that Jill Hicks-Keeton is making here. I was 17 when I sat down and thoroughly read the whole bible. After that, I have often been baffled by the radical differences between Christian cultures and the Canon. The seemingly deliberate avoidance of historical, cultural, and textual context is particularly frustrating to me.
@raycaster43988 ай бұрын
"Cherry-picking" the Bible it's called. Leaving out the man-concocted innumerable inconsistencies, scientific impossibilities, errors, horrific misogyny, slavery, homophobia, infanticide, genocide, global ecocide, etc.
@he1ar17 ай бұрын
I tried to read the cable when I was 16/17. I couldn't get past Leviticus. I couldn't understand what I was reading.
@Jd-8087 ай бұрын
I wonder if Christian cultures weren’t reading the Bible like modern-day Evanglicals
@ThetennisDr7 ай бұрын
I'm glad super happy that I didn't read the bible until I became born again christian. The bible is Satan's playbook and the church also so churches are prob the human trafficking huts.... Jesus still god even if some book is garbage
@T-417 ай бұрын
Thanks, Dr. Ehrman for exposing us to the work of another of your very impressive colleagues. This was super interesting.
@davidk75297 ай бұрын
My parents didn’t gloss over _any_ of the violence in our daily devotions for homeschool. Our family’s doctrine fully embraced the sadistic nature of their god toward anyone and everyone who dares to even _consider_ defying him, and there was no restraint about informing us children of all the details in order to establish an absolute, unshakable fear that would keep us in obedience to parental authority.
@thetopface7 ай бұрын
Same. My dad believed that hurricane Katrina was YHWH punishing New Orleans.
@hemiolaguy7 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry for you!
@Tina060197 ай бұрын
Gruesome, eh?
@MrYoko1017 ай бұрын
Sounds like growing kids god’s way
@MichaelSmith-jd8od7 ай бұрын
Yep!! I found the parenting philosophy of that community to be a particularly onerous one once you spent a minute examining it and the wreckage it caused amongst many many churches where it took root.
@kimojolly51018 ай бұрын
To me, what is amazing about the bible is how consistently useful it has been for politicians during the past 2000 years, and ESPECIALLY most recently. I think it is very important for you to teach us HOW the bible was constructed (misquoting jesus) but also this latest piece on HOW the bible is utilized by white usa evangelicals (the good book). If the bible can help walk Trump into power, that will be quite the dubious feather in its cap.
@garyluciani10828 ай бұрын
Not from their perspective. For them it's a wonderful feather in the cap.
@MrDalisclock8 ай бұрын
The discussion of evangelicals trying to rescue god from the atrocities such as the Canaanite genocide reminds me of William Lane Craig just going on about Divine Command Theory and per that standard anything god does is defacto good because God is inherently good. Which is consistent yet horrifying.
@normative8 ай бұрын
It's not consistent, it's meaningless. If you simply DEFINE good as "what God commands and does" then ascribing goodness to God loses any independent force. It's like saying a piano must be in tune because I've defined "in tune" to mean whatever the current state of the piano is.
@MrDalisclock8 ай бұрын
@@normative I agree it renders the idea of morality pretty meaningless if literally "Good is whatever God says it is" especially when people like WLC claim to believe in objective morality at the same time and conflate it with divine command theory
@michaelhenry17638 ай бұрын
It reminds me of the Supreme Court
@axellludvic34908 ай бұрын
Thankfully Israelites were a subset of the larger Canaanite population. This doesn't negate the horrific stories of the bible.
@IkarusKommt8 ай бұрын
A child cannot understand an adult, and a soldier cannot understand an officer. Why should that be any different with God?
@vadim666er8 ай бұрын
All I know is if there were topless women at church I’d still be going there every week
@judithsmith95827 ай бұрын
I recently met a Baptist who did not realize they were Protestant.
@thetopface7 ай бұрын
lol yeah. When I was a kid, I had to explain to my older cousin (family of Baptists) who was/is a teacher that Catholics are Christians. She didn’t think they were like “bad” or “false” Christians, but that they didn’t even consider themselves to be Christians.
@melanieahrens67397 ай бұрын
@@thetopfaceI’ve noticed lately that “Christian” seems to be a synonym for “Protestant” to a lot of evangelicals.
@kathryngeeslin95097 ай бұрын
Many Baptists consider themselves non-protestant.
@voidagent7 ай бұрын
Most "christians" don't even know what the word "christian" means. They will say what they think it means but it will be wrong.
@Happynappyroots966 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂 sounds about right
@LordMerlic7 ай бұрын
Not only is Bart an exceptional author, but quite proficient as a host and moderator.
@grit16796 ай бұрын
Now that you mention it, it makes a lot of sense, Bart is involved with so many moderated debates/discussions as a participant, but in the process of that he has probably picked up on a lot of good techniques for moderating.
@hissupremecorrectfulnessre94788 ай бұрын
I don't even grant that the Bible is good fiction.
@Snick39278 ай бұрын
Yes, as a child, I could see that bible stories were not at all strong. As an English professor, I know a weak-themed, poorly constructed narrative when I see one.
@robertunderwood10117 ай бұрын
If I didn’t know that Tolkien himself said that Lord of the rings was pure fiction and not allegory, I would be willing to accept it as Devine Scripture equivalent in moral power and guidance to the Mahabharata. In fact, I prefer it to the Bible But I also got to give credit where credit is due It was really religious genius to transfer from the idea of making sacrifices to God to the idea of God, making One great sacrifice for us. I still don’t believe it But I admire it
@thorpeaaron11108 ай бұрын
Jericho is the Achilles Heel for any Christian because you can't justify the killing of innocent civilians.
@John.Flower.Productions8 ай бұрын
Why would _the killing of innocent civilians_ need to be justified outside of the reason given in the text?
@MrDalisclock8 ай бұрын
I'd argue numbers 31 or 2 Samuel 24 are arguably worse.
@chrisstathe91838 ай бұрын
Today the elect bring the gospel in the hope it saves from the judgement all deserve and those destroyed in the ot are a example of those that are judged for their wickedness which they have from birth.
@John.Flower.Productions8 ай бұрын
@@MrDalisclock If 2 Samuel 24, why not 1 Chronicles 21? It is the same story.
@MrDalisclock8 ай бұрын
@@John.Flower.Productions Yahweh is Satan? Bold assertion
@anthonycraig2748 ай бұрын
Unless you want to indoctrinate children, why would anyone want to tell a child such an awful story and basically lying about it.
@jasonGamesMaster8 ай бұрын
Because they ARE indoctrinating kids... there is no concern not to, it's the whole plan
@Ulyssestnt8 ай бұрын
Huh?you sure you are in the right comment section here bud?
@geraldineclarke54348 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@geraldineclarke54348 ай бұрын
My comment was on the original statement not the reply,
@hannahstraining74768 ай бұрын
My question, too. Turning the Walls of Jericho into a talking-vegetable cartoon in which no one dies is beyond twisting the textout of all comprehension. Why do they teach it at all?
@Karenonflute8 ай бұрын
I started reading the Bible critically a few months ago and the last thing I would call it is a “good book”. The God of the Bible condones everything from genocide to incest - not exactly my idea of “good”! I can’t think that humans 2000-3000 years ago condoned these things either!
@John.Flower.Productions8 ай бұрын
Where in The Bible is incest not condemned, let alone condoned? Your idea of good is nothing more than that, your idea.
@Karenonflute8 ай бұрын
Ever read about Lot and his daughters? That would be a start. How about Abraham and his sister Sarah? Not to mention the times uncles marry their nieces, et al! Perhaps you should actually READ that book!
@avalokitesvara40928 ай бұрын
@@Karenonflute The Lot episode is not presented in a positive light. The Bible generally condemns incest - although incestuous relationships are presented. Clearly, the ancient Hebrews approved of genocide and all the rest, since they bragged about it.
@Karenonflute8 ай бұрын
@@avalokitesvara4092. I am not sure actual Hebrews condoned any of this. It is only my opinion, but it seems to me that the Bible was written by elites for elites to justify their behavior, and does not really apply to the average people living in the Levant at that time. Being powerless, they just had to go along for the ride. After all, elites have never had a problem marrying close blood relatives in order to keep power in their immediate families (think Hapsburgs and Queen Victoria and Albert and who she married off her children to). And way too many powerful leaders have used genocide to solve their problems.
@kobe518 ай бұрын
I think condoning Slavery is enough to tell you this book is not authorized by a good, moral superior being.
@TheHandofJove8 ай бұрын
Bart I would love to see your reaction to Jordan Petersons nonsense readings of the biblical texts. He is the number 1 person spreading biblical misinformation right now.
@eddiezanryder8 ай бұрын
Jordan looks at things 2 steps back. I find he readings interesting.
@CalisthenicsWorldview8 ай бұрын
Yet Christians think he's championing Christianity. He doesn't even hold the normative view of Christianity, nor does he believe Jesus was raised from the dead (Making his faith vain). He said "Im afraid of it being true".
@brendanerickson23638 ай бұрын
He lost all respect from me after I think he knowingly misinterpreted Nietzsche to fit his own ideological goal. Kinda 🐍 Also his response to the conversation he had with Destiny.
@gottfriedosterbach39078 ай бұрын
Leave Jordan Peterson in the obfuscating mire where he belongs.
@Ematched8 ай бұрын
@@brendanerickson2363 oh, what was Peterson’s response to his Destiny convo?
@Owain_Lord_Of_Glyndyfrdwy8 ай бұрын
I really don't understand where the "white" part comes in. What is that supposed to mean? Or is it just a pejorative now?
@iananderson19018 ай бұрын
I found that interesting as well. Do others teach a different way? It hurts the argument because it seems like it comes from a place of racism
@colin_mockery8 ай бұрын
I had this thought too...I personally have the perspective of having been raised in a majority white baptist church, but i hear plenty of the same arguments from other churches/believers of other races.
@AwesomeIsCea7 ай бұрын
@@theCarbonFreeze She addressed around 44:00 that many groups are doing it, and that she’s specifying white evangelicals as an example. So good job not listening.
@Owain_Lord_Of_Glyndyfrdwy7 ай бұрын
@@AwesomeIsCea Yeah, I wrote the comment before that point. But it's ridiculous. She could have said "red head evangelical" at that point. She chose "white" because it is perceived as a pejorative. Only to Americans this doesn't sound weird.
@gabitamiravideos7 ай бұрын
Maybe because most of the published authors that engage in this kind of apologetics are white evangelical? Or maybe it’s just because she is is white and was raised baptist. I think a person talking about their own tradition are less liable to be accused of bashing other traditions because of sectarianism. Don’t you think it would be weird if a white scholar started studying misogyny in black churches? Or a catholic scholar studying Christian scientists?
@jacobsutton95288 ай бұрын
Now I gotta go listen to “the good book” by Tim Minchin.
@stevebeeney90228 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tip. I've only heard his song "Ginger."
@mikeharrison18688 ай бұрын
Highly commended!
@mikeharrison18688 ай бұрын
@stevebeeney9022 worth seeking out everything he's done. A ton of great stuff, much of it hilarious.
@multiversogeek1427 ай бұрын
And Thank You Jesus
@amy_pieterse7 ай бұрын
I was just thinking that
@thescoobymike8 ай бұрын
This is my first time hearing of her. I hope she does more interviews in the podcast circuit.
@susandougherty96737 ай бұрын
Great interview, I really enjoyed this guest.
@pazley6127 ай бұрын
Awesome podcast guest and topic! Please invite her again to talk about other similar topics she covers.
@BunnyWatson-k1w8 ай бұрын
At 13:05. When I used to teach adult Sunday school at church we spent and entire year on the Old Testament followed by a year on the New Testament. When we got to the violent parts in the OT against targeted groups, one lesson a student asked if this was a case of genocide. I replied it certainly was, if we use a current day definition of genocide. Not every Christian wants to accept these inconvenient parts of the Bible. I think societies were radically different. People approached every aspect of life differently than today. Marriages were often arranged, violence was a common occurrence, slavery was common in some contexts, social class kept many people in a lifetime of poverty, and changing one's life was very difficult. I try to bring out lessons that God wants Christians to hear. Why is the Bible relevant for today? How do we learn more about ourselves when we follow God? How can we become better people by following Christ's teachings?
@BenSolomonIM7 ай бұрын
The thing is this, if this book (collection of books) is really talking about God, the creator of the universe, we wouldn't have genocides, slavery and him being defeated in battle due to the opposition having 'iron chariots'. We would have had guidance from the beginning that genocide, war, slavery and other things are wrong, and outlawed, which it is not. We have created 'god' in our image, based on what we can read in all religious texts...
@stephenarmiger83438 ай бұрын
Good stuff! Jill, Roman Catholics are not your intended readers, but, having been baptized into that sect, limiting clergy to unmarried men and unmarried women was particularly harmful for me growing up. I so much enjoy Biblical Scholarship in contrast to dogma. I so much enjoy reading the Bible as human culture. I very much enjoyed reading Why We Believe in gods by J. Anderson Thompson. We create them and then worship our creations. Children create imaginary friends, but eventually outgrow them. I have outgrown imaginary beings. I still enjoy reading the Iliad. Stories about Heracles, Perseus, Theseus, Athena. But I don’t slay oxen and offer burnt offerings.
@Sxcheschka8 ай бұрын
Imaginary Friends aren't always outgrown, and in fact, it's perfectly fine for people to have them into their adulthood. I have conjured my own Tulpa who is also my wife and we care about each other very much. For so long as you understand what it is, and not let yourself be controlled by the thoughtform, you are fine, just as anybody else with supernatural beliefs.
@aek030307318 ай бұрын
I also am addicted to alliteration (and assonance, as you can assertain) but I never attributed it to my Baptist upbringing. Would you say that Baptist preachers are Bible Benevolence Barkers?
@alanhilder18838 ай бұрын
The alliteration I know came from the Monty Python sketch called Bells.
@charlesbrowne95907 ай бұрын
You sent me to the dictionary. I’ve ascertained your assonance.
@MichaelSmith-jd8od7 ай бұрын
That was my experience growing up in a well known mega in So. Cal. that was Baptist adjacent... The pastor and his wife even named all their children starting with the letter "M" making their initials MMac
@MH55YT8 ай бұрын
Thank you Jill for contributing. I watch all of Bart's podcasts and re-watch many of them again. Your insight was inspiring and helpful. I'll put your book on my reading list. As I am old, I need to wait until you publish it as an audio book. You are far younger than Bart so I don't understand how you could have been in the same class at Duke? Were you one of his students/
@jesse63447 ай бұрын
Great interview! I found the research done by Hicks-Keeton thoughtful and enlightening. I’m going to buy the book for my daughter.
@robertmarshall13678 ай бұрын
I suspect that what's happening in Gaza today is a shocking echo of the book of Joshua 49:22
@mikeoveli10288 ай бұрын
Great interview. I love leaning about the Bible. I never went to church as a child, but I have been sorounded by theology from culture. I got enough to feel guilty about everything but never got the redemption.🙄
@Flapperjaw8 ай бұрын
As a nutritionist I appreciate you promoting vegetables to children , even if you do try using religion to reach that end . 23:27
@battlerushiromiya6518 ай бұрын
I wonder why white evangelicals are taken as normative of how christianity and the Bible should be read and understood. Rarely do you hear a book on how catholics, lutherans or even episcopalis deal with the bad parts of the Bible. Maybe becauee they are more honest about interpretation of interpretations on ideas( and not even the written text.) In the Bible are what constitute and drive their faith?
@Cole2058 ай бұрын
Because W.E.s are the burden-beasts of political Zionism. So they're also the fall guy. Or.. Fall Goy! 😂😅
@John.Flower.Productions8 ай бұрын
_Maybe becauee they are more honest about interpretation of interpretations on ideas( and not even the written text.)_ If that was not an attempt at being funny, let me know and I will explain it to you.
@battlerushiromiya6518 ай бұрын
@@John.Flower.Productions Please explain.
@schmidtcs8 ай бұрын
Non-evangelical Christian’s are less likely to see the Bible as literal or inerrant, so it’s not such a problem I’m guessing.
@John.Flower.Productions8 ай бұрын
@@battlerushiromiya651 Only people who actually believe what they claim to believe are open to judgement/condemnation/persecution/ridicule/et cetera. Catholics/Shiites/Unitarians/Et cetera will accept anything over their professed beliefs; therefore they are of no consequence to any form/system of societal control.
@Chris_The_Humanist8 ай бұрын
This was so great! Awesome guest.
@Pop-wn3il8 ай бұрын
Thanks. Great discussion!
@Here_For_Now8 ай бұрын
I think in this day and age in America, separating evangelicals by skin colour is kind of problematic. Churches are very mixed, and what do you do with a preacher like Voddie Baucham, who has influence on many groups and is prominent in public discourse around womens' roles? And what of a 'mixed' pastor? Where do they fall? I don't know, it just strikes me as ill-suited to current evangelical reality.
@Arven87 ай бұрын
Right - ill-suited to reality. But well-suited to liberal academia and the publishing world, where yapping about the evils of white men is applauded.
@ZodiacBoi428 ай бұрын
I really find this interesting, I was raised Baptist too and it’s weird to think back on the violence I was taught as a small child. And how many problems that can cause. I’ll definitely be reading her book, I’m sure I’ll learn a lot.
@robbabcock_8 ай бұрын
Thanks for a fascinating interview!
@tulpas938 ай бұрын
Thanks, you two! ❤❤
@raycaster43988 ай бұрын
I've read from 'the Good Book' just this morning! Darwin's 'On The Origin of Species,' the most important book EVER.
@bradrcool8 ай бұрын
Awesome! but dang that's a dense morning read
@raycaster43988 ай бұрын
@bubbles581 A jest. No. No scientific faith, creed, scirpture or Grand Poobah.
@davidk75297 ай бұрын
Don’t lean into that one… Darwin was merely a pioneer of the field, though an important one. Always emphasize progress toward more accurate science.
@megavide06 ай бұрын
Thanks for this introduction! I've recently had a discussion about morality in the Bible and especially about Jeptha's burnt offering (in Judges 10, 11) .... Bought her "Good Book" right away... definitely seems like the book I want to read right now.
@kjmav101358 ай бұрын
Phyllis Trible’s Texts of Terror is a great book. I can see how what this author is saying relates to what Trible had to say. I’m going to love this book!
@greaterthan50548 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed the interview, but I must say that the “some feminists are really misogynists” made me uncomfortable. Someone says “I’m the gatekeeper, I decide the quality and content of what you are thinking.” It’s a good and relevant point that someone may not know how their views were influenced, but it just feels a bit too much “no true Scottish person.”
@SpaveFrostKing8 ай бұрын
I think the point was that they're both feminists and misogynists, rather than them being misogynists instead of feminists.
@hannahstraining74768 ай бұрын
I think her point is that there are a lot of pseudo-feminists like Kathleen Parker and Megan McCardle who claim to be feminists but continually justify the patriarchal status quo in their opinion columns.
@greaterthan50548 ай бұрын
@@hannahstraining7476 Thank you for the information. I'm not well read, so please correct me if I'm wrong, but I could not find an instance where these two women have ever claimed to be feminists. Kathleen Parker wrote a book called "Save the Males," so clearly not a feminist. Megan McCardle described herself as a "right-leaning libertarian" and she mainly focuses on business and technology in her writing and career.
@jamesmccarthy31987 ай бұрын
That part of her interview made me undcomfortable too.
@moodyonroody53137 ай бұрын
yup - and I say that as a feminist if feminist means being fair to and appreciatimg persons without penises especially children ... at a time when some feminists believe in trans people destroying girls' and womens' dignity and safety. ... and lesbians and gay men .... Or maybe I'm a femalist?
@Mac_an_Mheiriceanaigh8 ай бұрын
hi editor, there is a section around 37:40 that I think was meant to be cut from the episode
@alexanderweddle39488 ай бұрын
Pour une raison inconnue, tout à coup il fallait que j’écoute la composition “Ascenseur Pour L’échafaud” par Miles Davis.
@mayito91008 ай бұрын
At minute 5:21 Jill claims that in Mark chapter 5 you can find the story of the Greek woman seeking healing for her daughter. I would love for Jill to show me where in chapter 5 she reads that story. I was not able to find it.
@cindybidwellglaze76988 ай бұрын
I know it's in Matthew 15, but don't see it in Mark, yet. I'll search.
@DougPlummer-tc5ew8 ай бұрын
Oh no she made a mistake. Blasphemous!
@Tanthyl8 ай бұрын
Mark 7 and Matthew 15, I looked it up
@chipnewtonguitarmusic5468 ай бұрын
Kudos to Jill for having a Miles Davis jazz record on the wall behind her!
@dbarker77948 ай бұрын
Good eye! Looks like it might be the score for the movie Elevator to the Gallows.
@chipnewtonguitarmusic5468 ай бұрын
@@dbarker7794 yes! That was the recording that he apparently hit on the idea of modal jazz...using simple melodic scales as a basis for improvisation.
@BunnyWatson-k1w8 ай бұрын
Props to anyone who likes Miles Davis. Or anyone who still loves jazz.
@feuergeboren57508 ай бұрын
Sounds like an intriguing book. I am not a believer but have to say, her take on the Syrophoenician women came off as somewhat biased. A plane reading of the account does not seem to imply Jesus was calling her a "b!tch". The juxtaposition was between israelite and non-israelite, not men and women.
@inmyleftmindinmyleftmind63378 ай бұрын
It was troubling to me that someone who says that we should take note of the actual words used in the interaction between Jesus and women then goes on to ignore the actual words used in an interaction between Jesus and a woman.
@clawedsimian8 ай бұрын
Interesting question whether bias against gentiles or against women was more controlling in the narrative as written. My opinion is that the religious/ethnic conflict was the active one at the time, whereas every local culture was patriarchal; that's so baked in it's a settled assumption not worthy of consideration and not an issue the text means to raise. but we can raise it now.
@michaeldeangelo79868 ай бұрын
Yeah, while she has good points generally, bits of the tenor show her obvious bias. As a result, her arguments weaken just a bit. Her explanation about singling out "White" evangelicals in relation to Trump's election betray her political bent. And as you stated above, the whole interaction between Jesus and the woman was misinterpreted by her as gender bias, not the Gentile/Jew prejudice that it actually was.
@Ryan90red7 ай бұрын
@@michaeldeangelo7986 You are completely leaving out that this is brought up in reguard to other positions that try to massage the text into a particualr meaning. She isnt adding context, she is making the point that it is even this more explicit reading that fails the egalitarian attempt to make the text morally righteous. You are not following the position the speaker is making. She is pointing out there are modern efforts to make the writing ethical in a modern way which are just as bad for understanding the writing as the fundamentalists that also want the writing to mean certain things they preconceive.
@alexanderwestphal97777 ай бұрын
@@notanemoprog dude the point is about how modern people try to say that the syrophoenician woman was an example to show the bible empowers women. so if you read it that way, that is the connotation and it doesnt work
@PlusDeltaM7 ай бұрын
One thing is for sure, Dr. Jill has excellent taste in jazz!
@Valdagast8 ай бұрын
Thought: If you need to do a lot of work to make a text 'good', it's not really a 'good' text. (scare quotes, because of course a text is not 'good' or 'evil' in itself).
@CurtW19628 ай бұрын
Can Satan create human bodies? And if he can't then how can he torture people that don't have bodies? Does God give people bodies so they can be tortured for eternity? And what crimes could possibly exist that warrant that punishment?
@earlinefontenette57278 ай бұрын
It is a must read. Parents should have their children read the bible from Genesis through revelations as soon as they reach the point of higher understanding and allow them to compare what they have read for themselves with what they have been told.
@sos16918 ай бұрын
That bible is oh so cleverly put together and the greatest deception ever foisted upon mankind, if not cleverly unpacked. Your guest is unpacking psychotic head-spinning.
@kjmav101358 ай бұрын
The evangelical feminist thing has been around since the late 60s. The late Letha Scanzoni was one of the early pioneers of evangelical feminism. It was a thing for a while. There was a magazine (a zine, really) called Daughters of Sarah back in the day. And, oh my God, I knew Scot McNight! It is so weird to listen to this and hear all these names when I actually paid attention to all this stuff!
@iananderson19018 ай бұрын
One editing point. Her voice was much louder than his so had to keep adjusting volume. Normally I end up getting Ehrman by osmosis
@hiddenfact59508 ай бұрын
If God has given a Devin book it should have what God wants from humans not just believing on God.
@breadfan74338 ай бұрын
Thank you Jill and Bart for such an interesting conversation.
@dbarker77948 ай бұрын
The book sounds interesting but why does she refer only to "white" evangelicals? Do white evangelicals nterpret the Bible differently than black or Hispanic evangelicals? That hasn't been my experience.
@michaelhenry17638 ай бұрын
She says why at the end of the podcast.
@Arven87 ай бұрын
Because it sells books. Criticizing white people is a cottage industry.
@moodyonroody53137 ай бұрын
Yes I agree - in UK biggest church-goers are Black evangelicals. I think she's dealing with USA only.
@MichaelSmith-jd8od7 ай бұрын
That's a good question. She does a good job answering that exact question posed by Bart in the latter half of the interview... I found it satisfactory that she was upfront with the scope of her analysis and didn't smuggle in some hidden agenda.
@Venaloid7 ай бұрын
10:15 - I distinctly remember the purple slushies in that veggie tales episode, and they did bring up how anachronistic that is in the episode, but I forget what kind of lame excuse they gave for going with it anyway.
@ktownjunkie8 ай бұрын
What makes white evangelicals stand apart from all other evangelical christians?
@Cole2058 ай бұрын
Because it's politically and socially acceptable to scapegoat Whites even though the O.T. is J-ish myth, used today for J-ish geopolitics! 😂😅
@endlesskev8 ай бұрын
Access to power
@Cole2058 ай бұрын
@@endlesskev tell us, what power do White Evangelicals ever gain, that isn't actually J-ish Israeli power?
@kentonnur8 ай бұрын
So the millions of Fundementalist, Pentecostal black evangelicals in Africa, US , England, etc are immune from treating the ‘Good Book ,in a self serving way ?
@Mac_an_Mheiriceanaigh8 ай бұрын
At the end of the episode they discuss this. She clarifies that she only engages with certain white evangelical authors for this book, but that other Christian groups, including other evangelical Christians, would likely be similar in some, if not all, ways
@RandiRain8 ай бұрын
I like her. Great talk. I do wonder why her coughing wasn't edited out like everything else though.
@LewisCoxIII8 ай бұрын
"The Bible is not an acient thing. It is a modern concept that is dealing with antiquity, thinking about antiquity, using texts that originated in antiquity, but Bible as people are using it now, that's a modern thing that they have made."
@DiegoStClair-wz5xj8 ай бұрын
As a Hispanic man I’m really disappointed that Jill felt the need to constantly mention she is directing her comments towards white people. Especially the sections about misogyny, my culture is 10x worse about that than white people have ever been.
@schmidtcs8 ай бұрын
She said that the group she studied was white evangelicals. She didn’t study any other group, so she’s not going to speak about any other group. That doesn’t mean it doesn’t apply to misogyny in other groups.
@jasonGamesMaster8 ай бұрын
Only speaking of what she knows. She's not an expert on those aspects. Maybe she will expand her research in the future, but she doesn't at this point. And tbh, I'd probably want a hispanic/latine scholar write that book/give that interview so as to ensure a more authentic vantage point.
@hurdygurdyguy17 ай бұрын
That was my thought, too. Evangelicalism isn't just for Whites, though they do seem to be the noisiest!!
@jetpackman018 ай бұрын
Just wanted to make a quick comment, the story of Jesus healing the syrophoenician woman's daughter is in Mark 7, not Mark 5. Also the fact Jill says there are no books in the ancient world that don't uphold patriarchal society. What about the Secret Book of John or the Gospel of Mary?
@jetpackman018 ай бұрын
@@notanemoprogI don't believe she's necessarily a grifter, it's just that she didn't come to Bart's podcast as well informed as she should have been.
@rhondah15878 ай бұрын
I find trying to shove ancient middle eastern Bronze Age culture into modern day culture is so contrary to the progress of humanity towards a truly cohesive and accepting of human differences type of society that the modern world needs. We need to put all those ancient writings from all the religions into the category of ancient mythologies that are historical and can teach us how people thought and lived back when humanity was a lot less informed about the world we live in. We can learn how far humanity has come from such destructive ideas and promote more humanism and the fact that all we have to lean on in this world is each other.
@Luissuarezdollar8 ай бұрын
Great pod yall
@williambrooks95488 ай бұрын
The basic bible teaching that God created the world that means He is responsible for a world in which everyone comes to die in unlimited ways. If God is all loving then the world was not created by Him. This is explained in the Course in Miracles & Disappearance of the University. I have studied both for 45 yrs and the healing of my mind & relationships is beyond works.
@grumpyparsnip4 ай бұрын
Fantastic. Just ordered a copy of her book.
@VladfishTheMagnificent7 ай бұрын
I'm reading through the Bible now, and I keep asking, "Why does this supposedly benevolent God condone slavery? If we are all made in His image and likeness, how utterly depraved is this idea of one human being owning another?"
@moodyonroody53137 ай бұрын
guess what, the context was when slavery was worldwide .... so yes.
@thomasdequincey58118 ай бұрын
Really??? The Producers couldn't come up with a better subject than this, or a better guest? This woman has wrote a hit piece. She's got her radical, left-wing, feminist beliefs and has then picked out the bits of the Bible that confirm her biases about those beliefs. It's Journalistic hackery at it worst. P.S. I think she's as rigid and unbending in her world view as any of the "innerant word of God" crew.
@Babbajune8 ай бұрын
Agree! I would not buy nor read this book.
@jamesmccarthy31987 ай бұрын
I couldn't agree with you more. Her political correctness nearly glows in the dark.
@DadeMurphy6667 ай бұрын
30:24 The Historicity of Paul's letter to 1 Timothy
@Mike-jl1rl7 ай бұрын
Great conversation!
@ZwelithiniGama8 ай бұрын
Bart please do a session on the origins of easters and Christmas one day
@schmidtcs8 ай бұрын
Religion for Breakfast has some great videos on that topic.
@eddiezanryder8 ай бұрын
@@schmidtcs love that channel
@TheTeanaciousLeaf7 ай бұрын
It won’t be what you think it is. It’s not all pagan origins
@TheTeanaciousLeaf7 ай бұрын
@@schmidtcsgreat idea!
@Sean-oy8xm7 ай бұрын
The justification for the terror in the Bible is the old “Us vs Them” mentality. The “evil” people got justice for being evil.
@thomasfarrow70538 ай бұрын
interesting discussion - Jill Hicks-Keeton is very engaging !
@MATTIASALM8 ай бұрын
I can't find the passage about the "dog woman" in Mark 5. Am I hearing her wrong, there?
@chefchaudard35808 ай бұрын
It’s actually Mark 7 24-30
@BenSolomonIM7 ай бұрын
@@notanemoprog, why? because she can't remember where each verse is? 🤦♂
@MATTIASALM7 ай бұрын
@@chefchaudard3580 thanks! I guess the "bread" is Jesus' teachings and blessings, the "children" are the jews, and the "dogs" are the gentiles.
@arthurmcculloch14708 ай бұрын
I'm interested in where the idea that the bible is the 'word of god' came from, along with where the idea that god speaks thru a text came from. A really engaging video. I would have liked a bit af the natural history of 'goodness' as well.
@creatinechris7 ай бұрын
I enjoy hearing her perspective, but the “white male” this, “white male” that, “white male vegetables” was highly obnoxious……are we not done with this mantra?
@thealmightyaku-41537 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, that is the absolute central axis for most scholarship in the humanities.
@creatinechris7 ай бұрын
@@thealmightyaku-4153 Good point. Couldn't even make it past the 30 minute mark. Would highly recommend NOT having this type of video on the channel. If i wanted more "white people suck" and "men suck" videos my options are already limitless.
@simonbattle00018 ай бұрын
Thank you Jill Hicks-Keeton and of course you Doc Bart. Just a couple of thoughts though this interview leaves the viewer with at least a hundred. The first thing that came to me is an old thing. That being how someone who claims to have faith in this being they call god and knowing full well it's rules and regulations and the penalties for breaking any of those are, and yet will lie, corrupt and truncate this god's words and historical record without fear of consequence tells me that they do not believe a word of it. The other thing is my remembering of arguing with priest and "preachers" that the words on the pages have nothing to do with what the religious leader was saying it meant. Or being told I was not in "the spirit/holy ghost or I was evil and or rebellious and that was why I could not see it there way. Before I left religion behind I learned at last the secret to being a good christian or Catholic in the United States was "go along to get along." That is when it hit me that something I cared for very deeply was a fraud. It couldn't be true if it was built on lies along with a heavy dose of conjector steeped in Hocus Pocus.
@RLBays8 ай бұрын
Jill bringing the heat! I'm buying her book ASAP!
@chrisgrayling75847 ай бұрын
I got half way through and that was enough. Jill may have answered the questions I have later in the interview, but here they are (and they are highly relevant). 1. Why the repeated use of "white evangelicals?" 2. Does she subscribe to the belief in "white privilege" and hence, this repeated term, seemingly of apology? 3. Has she never been to a black evangelical church nor heard black preachers? (Evangelical preachers come in all colors). 4. Why call "Veggie Tales" a "white evangelical show?" 5. Does she in fact hate men herself? I do realize that much of Bart's audience is liberal (I am not) but Bart always provides accurate analysis and when appropriate, shares his political leaning. Jill seems very slanted and biased, which should have nothing to do with her academic findings or opinions. I'm bummed because I really wanted to like this interview.
@danielgibson87998 ай бұрын
24:28-24:47 That is definitely correct and definitely not what “Mark” believes. “Mark” is distinguishing between the historical Jesus and his relationship to peter, jacob (Jesus’ brother), and john with the “Christ” and his relationship to Paul. “Mark” is placing Paul above the historical Jesus. The historical Jesus must adapt to Paul’s ideology to achieve relevance.
@117-d7r8 ай бұрын
Misogyny is unspoken societal or personal opinions about how women should dress or behave?? Really? Does she not think there should be any societal standards for men and women and does she not have any personal standards for men/women?
@SpaveFrostKing8 ай бұрын
Nice strawman you got there.
@SpaveFrostKing7 ай бұрын
@@theCarbonFreezeHer full quote: “I use the work of a moral philosopher named Kate Manne, who said instead of trying to pry people's brains open and see if they hate women, really we should be focused on the experience that women have and focus on how they are encountering regulation of their bodies, of their social standing, of their opportunities in a world in which women, for example, have to work harder to get less in a patriarchal social order.” That goes well beyond personal opinions about dress and behavior, and it's certainly cartoonish to suggest she thinks men and women should have no societal standards. For example, Paul saying that women cannot teach or hold authority over a man is textbook sexism.
@117-d7r7 ай бұрын
@@SpaveFrostKing I don’t disagree that that is sexist, but it’s because there are two different standards for men and women based on sex only. It may be that sex differences lead to certain inequalities, but they shouldn’t be legally enforced. For example your quote she starts with a presupposition that “women work harder for less”, instead of a rigorous way of determining whether or not that statement is true or not. She complained that evangelicals define misogyny out of existence, but my quote of her that you ignored, shows she has defined misogyny into everything that involves women.
@jamesmccarthy31987 ай бұрын
This author laughs way too much; it makes what she says seem silly, trivial and inconsequential. She appears to think that everything she says is a joke and in so doing she isn't giving herself credit because she's making some good points.
@StamfordBridge7 ай бұрын
Bart is setting a light-hearted, conversational tone, and she is responding, as if she is talking with a friend. Academics talking with each other in a relaxed atmosphere will often strike up a humorous tone. It doesn’t mean they take their ideas less seriously.
@MichaelSmith-jd8od7 ай бұрын
Humm, I found her delightful and refreshing, not to mention a good communicator with a very bright mind. I think of one of my favorite communicators of all time - Richard Feynman - as a counter example of your critique.
@artawhirler7 ай бұрын
I'm an ex-Christian (so I know the Bible) and one time a Christian that I know (one of these typical "white evangelical" guys) was trying to shove his religion BACK down my throat, years after I had already spit it out. I looked this dude straight in the eye and told him that he was gonna spend the rest of his life making excuses for his God. He was strangely quiet for a minute; I don't think he had ever heard that before.
@sekovittol31247 ай бұрын
The violation of logical thinking begins to overpower religious thinking.
@getasimbe8 ай бұрын
Interestingly, everything she says about white evangelicals' treatment of the Bible's goodness applies also to black evangelicals, and I suspect other evangelicals too. I wonder if she only feels comfortable speaking on white evangelicals. I've often encountered this thing online where white people only attribute to other white people some negative quality that really applies more widely. Like homophobia for example. If you know black people, you'd know homophobia is absolutely as rampant, if not more so, in our community as in white communities. But I digress. Excellent topic and discussion between two founts of knowledge
@getasimbe7 ай бұрын
@@theCarbonFreeze To be fair, when I wrote that comment I hadn't finished watching the video. They actually address this in the video. So I think it's fair to approach her work in good faith based on what she said. But I also agree with you that often times, especially online, white men are an easy target for things that don't only apply to white men
@Arven87 ай бұрын
@@theCarbonFreeze Exactly.
@scottschoen33627 ай бұрын
Quite sometime ago I sent you a book. Did you get it, read it? It's called 'I Am is Inside Out'. Its approach of sacred knowledge and passages are referring to inner experiences and provide different understandings. I've written it as fiction so inner knowledge blended in is relatable, accessible and experientially self validating.
@mikeharrison18688 ай бұрын
I wonder how we'd regard it if the canon had been assembled in the late 200s, but Constantine, the Byzantines and the Sassanids had succeeded in completely wiping christianity out, instead of Constantibe converting - and the it was only rediscovered 50 years ago.
@Chuck-se5hh7 ай бұрын
Thank you for showing that the Bible really does need an awful lot of help to look good.
@hugopritchard84558 ай бұрын
I was somewhat disappointed by this lecture. It scrupulously avoided talking about the social construction of race in the white evangelical mind. I do not know how you could avoid it. It is the reason I am not a Christian and refuse to become one.
@moodyonroody53137 ай бұрын
But there are plenty of Black evangelical churches .... so maybe she's only talking about American white evangelicals?
@ArtieThomas8 ай бұрын
The best part of the Veggie Tales version is the parody of Monty Python and the Holy Grail with the French peas on the wall. Unfortunately as to the biblical writers is their general lack of humor (Jonah excepting).
@kjmav101358 ай бұрын
Jonah is hilarious!
@annemariededekind62717 ай бұрын
Wonderful. Thank you
@richardlynch57457 ай бұрын
sanitizing the story of the destruction of Jericho is appalling. I read the Bible through at the age of 12 and I thought there are problems here and started me and a path from believer to devout atheist. sugar coating Bible verses just illustrates the Bible as basis for living life is a big mistake. Bible as literature is the only way to view it.... ps love your podcasts 19:17
@scyldscefing39138 ай бұрын
Fascinating.
@theunclejezusshow82608 ай бұрын
Holey Eternal Omnipresent Greetingz. Thank Gord for Bart 🌠👋
@gregorymurphy61157 ай бұрын
Im reminded of my own lyrics when i quote "Races of the world will be gathered equal before women are considered people"
@Rascarrr7 ай бұрын
talk about being up your own arse
@Bjorn_Algiz8 ай бұрын
Hail! ❤ and hope all are tuning in and learning from all sources all around the world of our species 😊 love our history as a human species hehehe 😉
@BookHen-xn2bh8 ай бұрын
I have a friend who has never cut her hair in her life based on the passage by Paul.
@jeffkunce85018 ай бұрын
"Scripture" - that repeated term should be qualified as "white evangelical definition of scripture." There are christians who use the term "scripture," without the implications of inerrancy, nor documentary history, nor as a law book, nor even as a moral code. It is scripture because it has a foundational place in christianity and has stuck around for years. Scripture is a deep source for learning about morality over the millennia - both the good and the bad. But, especially how our understanding changes over time. Even, how it will continue to change in the future. Biblical scholarship is a huge part of that process, so keep up the good work!
@moodyonroody53137 ай бұрын
not necessarily white ... Moses married a Black woman didn't he? And anyway who cared about race at that time .... not that white racists didn't use the bible to justify Black slavery.
@geico19758 ай бұрын
Well, in my opinion, and from this conversation Jill Hicks-Keeton's "Good Book" answers an important question. Why has the Bible been the most and best selling book since forever? Because if one gets 'two or three' agreeing on a specific interpretation of scriptures, well then, Abracadabra BOOM! Another denomination and God lives:) LOL!
@DadeMurphy6667 ай бұрын
I can't find that story in Mark 5
@moodyonroody53137 ай бұрын
I never got over the Abraham sacrificing Isaac test but as for Christianity, what about 'I come with a sword' and what about the fact that Jesus relied on a rich woman ... and what about that he didn't marry ... and what about he said 'No one comes to the father except through me', condemning most of the world population to Hades/ Hell? And Paul said it was better to burn than marry, or something like that?
@PeloquinDavid8 ай бұрын
It's telling that American white Protestants can recite the Jericho story by heart. Growing up as a non-American Catholic, I heard/learned virtually nothing from the Iron Age fictional/mythic stories that the "Old" Testament mostly consists of (along with all the priestly stuff that most Christians ignore wholesale as being superseded). The only bits beyond Genesis and the Passover narrative in Exodus that we ever heard were the extracts from various prophets that supposedly foretold the advent of Christ and, of course, his moral teachings. To me that seems FAR more defensible for anyone claiming to be a "Christian" than to fetishize old stories from an Israelite past (an almost wholly imagined one, to judge by the latest available archaeology) that predates even late Second Temple Judahism - from which Christianity of course emerged.