Alex Kirk joins us today to tease out the meaning of “holiness” in Leviticus. As he notes, “Everyone has a theology of holiness. The concept of the sacred is buried deeply in humanity. You can’t ultimately explain these feelings without recourse to God.”
Exodus 3: God’s Name is His Presence to Save
Genesis 22, Testing, and Faith
Naked and Unashamed
Third in our series on the Theology of the Pentateuch, Old Testament professor Alex Kirk shares his reflections on an often-overlooked aspect of the Fall: what does it mean that Adam and Eve were “naked and unashamed”? What did it mean for them to become conscious of this? He explains, “After she eats, the Serpent’s words come true but there is a cruel twist. Divine knowledge becomes nothing other than self-consciousness—that sinking feeling that you are on a stage with no clothes on.”
Absolute and Intimate Contingency: Genesis 1, Creation, and Our Relationship to God
Approaching the Mountain of God: Exodus 19 and the Nature of the Pentateuch
Over the next several months, Alex Kirk will be unrolling a new series for us: The Theology of the Pentateuch. It is just a small preview of our OT 500 course, The Torah, which is a deeper exploration of the foundational Old Testament doctrines of creation, sin, faith, redemption, the character of God, law, holiness, and blessing. We hope this whets your appetite to dig into the first five books of the Bible with fresh curiosity and appreciation.