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The Tikvah Podcast

Dru Johnson, Jonathan Silver, and Robert Nicholson on Reviving Hebraic Thought

The Tikvah Podcast

Tikvah

Judaism, Politics, Religion & Spirituality, News

4.6620 Ratings

🗓️ 24 October 2019

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The English Catholic writer G.K. Chesterton famously described the United States as “a nation with the soul of a church.” Americans, even now, are a uniquely religious people, and it is impossible truly to understand the American Founding and the American story without reference to Scripture in general, and the Hebrew Bible in particular.

And yet, while one can sometimes undertake the academic study of the Bible in our universities—uncovering the text’s strands of composition, its dating, and its relation to ancient Near Eastern culture—less easily available in our institutions of higher learning is the opportunity to mine the Hebrew Bible for its moral and political wisdom, its manner of thinking, its ability to speak to the urgings of the soul.

The Center for Hebraic Thought (CHT) at The King’s College is trying to change that. Founded in partnership with the Philos Project, the CHT aims to “re-capture our understanding of the biblical authors’ patterns of thought and how they can inform our understanding today.” Last month, the CHT hosted a launch event featuring Philos Project Director Robert Nicholson in conversation with CHT Director Dru Johnson and Tikvah’s own Jonathan Silver. This week, the Tikvah Podcast brings you a special broadcast of this eye-opening discussion about the wisdom of the Hebrew Bible and why 21st-century America needs a revival of Hebraic thought.

Musical selections in this podcast are drawn from the Quintet for Clarinet and Strings, op. 31a, composed by Paul Ben-Haim and performed by the ARC Ensemble.

Transcript

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0:00.0

The Catholic wit G.K. Chesterton once famously described the United States as a nation with the soul of a church.

0:15.4

Americans, even now, are still a uniquely religious people, and it is impossible to truly understand the American

0:22.1

founding and the American story, without reference to scripture in general, and the Hebrew

0:27.2

Bible in particular. And yet, while one can sometimes undertake the scientific study of the Bible

0:32.5

in our research universities, uncovering the strands of composition and authorial voice of the text, its dating,

0:40.1

and its relation to ancient Near Eastern archaeology, less easily available in our colleges

0:45.3

and universities, is the opportunity to mine the Hebrew Bible for its moral and political wisdom,

0:51.2

its manner of thinking, its ability to speak to the urgings of the soul,

0:55.9

urgings that demand that we know the human condition and our own place in it.

1:00.1

Welcome to the Tikva podcast. I'm your host, Jonathan Silver. There's a new initiative at the

1:05.0

King's College in New York that aims to change the way that the Hebrew Bible is read and studied

1:10.0

in the universities.

1:11.6

The Center for Hebraic Thought at the King's College was recently founded in partnership with the Phelos Project,

1:17.6

and its goal is to recapture our understanding of the biblical author's patterns of thought,

1:22.6

and how they can inform our understanding today.

1:25.6

Last month, the Center for Hebraic Thought

1:27.7

hosted a launch event where I joined Phelos Project founder and executive director Robert

1:32.7

Nicholson and Center for Hebraic Thought Director and the King's College professor, Drew Johnson.

1:38.4

This is not our podcast's usual format. Since this is a short week with our celebration of Sukkot,

1:44.1

and since, after all,

1:45.4

Simchat Torah is our celebration of the study of the Hebrew Bible, that the conversation is apt

1:51.0

and that you'd find it interesting. Let me just emphasize what, of course, you'll hear in this

...

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