
Hosted by two biblical scholars with diverse career backgrounds, Greg Camp (Sheffield University, Ph.D.) and Patrick Spencer (Durham University, Ph.D.), Scriptural Works focuses on a dynamic exploration of how to read and interpret scripture for greater meaning in today's postmodern world. Each episode unpacks the tools, methods, and insights that can be used to bring scripture alive, whether thro... more
| Publishes | Twice monthly | Episodes | 23 | Founded | a year ago |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of Listeners | Categories | Religion & SpiritualitySpiritualityChristianity | |||

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 Fi... more
What did ancient Israelites actually eat—and why should you care? Cynthia Shafer-Elliott pulls back the curtain on daily life in Iron Age Israel, and the picture is a far cry from the kings-and-battles narrative most readers default to. Her specialty... more
Think you know Luke's Gospel? Think again. Classical philologist Dr. Jan Kozlowski challenges the long-held assumption that the New Testament exists in a literary vacuum. With surgical philological precision, he demonstrates that Luke didn't just kno... more
What happens when an empire's boot presses down on a nation's throat for fifty years? Rev, Dr, Brad E. Kelle reframes the prophet Hosea through the lens of communal trauma—and the result redraws everything you thought you knew about eighth-century BC... more
The temples were packed, markets overflowed, and everyone worshiped harder than ever—yet the 8th-century prophets declared God despised every bit of it. Dr. Hemchand Gossai dissects what Amos, Isaiah, Hosea, and Micah were actually condemning: a soci... more
What happens when an elite Alexandrian intellectual gets schooled by two nobodies from the backwaters of Pontus—and one of them is a woman? Luke knew exactly what he was doing. In Episode 18, Acts 18-19 gets torn apart to reveal that Luke wasn't just... more
When read through narrative and ethnographic lenses, Acts 16 becomes a clash of markets, bodies, and authority, not a tidy conversion script. Luke’s pacing (the Macedonian summons, the river encounter, the delayed house visit, the silenced slave girl... more
Joshua Jipp's volume God's Acts for Israel, Gentiles, and Christians represents fifteen years of scholarship on Luke-Acts, arguing that this isn't theology you observe from a safe distance. It puts you in the dock. The narrative demands response. You... more
I appreciate the content and perspectives. However, I wish Greg spoke more and Patrick spoke less. (Greg appears to have more professional experience so I’d appreciate hearing more from him.) Also, the sound quality is pretty poor, especially with Patrick’s. (If he’s in high tech, I would expect his sound to be the best.) And often the sound level changes during an episode- I set my speaker at a certain level, then halfway through I have to adjust because I can hardly hear anything. Overall: con... more
How this podcast ranks in the Apple Podcasts, Spotify and YouTube charts.
Apple Podcasts | #247 |







Listeners, social reach, demographics and more for this podcast.
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Scriptural Works launched a year ago and published 23 episodes to date. You can find more information about this podcast including rankings, audience demographics and engagement in our podcast database.
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