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New Credo Podcast: Is the Bible a Work of Ancient Philosophy?

Is philosophy in conflict with Christianity? At its heart, philosophy is a love for wisdom that uses the mind with its reason as well as the heart to understand big ideas of reality. Who is God, who am I, and what is this world? These are questions that, universally, humans have asked from the very beginning. The Bible is asking and answering the same questions. Therefore, philosophy is not to be separated from the study of theology since the sacred scripture itself is a work of ancient philosophy. The New Testament is implanted within the culture of Greek ideas and both Jesus and his apostles engage with these ideas to present a coherent picture of both the Creator and his world. We must dismiss that modern, artificial tension between philosophy and Christianity if we are to reclaim the vision of the good, the true, and the beautiful presented to us by Jesus himself, the greatest of philosophers.

In this episode, Jonathan Pennington joins Matthew Barrett to discuss what wisdom, philosophy, and human flourishing have to do with the Christian life. In doing so, they make a compelling case for why we should consider Jesus the greatest philosopher of all time.

Jonathan T. Pennington

Jonathan T. Pennington is Professor of New Testament Interpretation at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Pennington is the author of The Sermon on the Mount and Human Flourishing, Reading the Gospels Wisely, and Heaven and Earth In the Gospel of Matthew. He is also on the preaching staff at Sojourn East in Louisville, Kentucky.

Matthew Barrett

Matthew Barrett is Research Professor of Theology at Trinity Anglican Seminary. He has been appointed the McDonald Agape visiting scholar at Dominican House of Studies and the Thomistic Institute. He is the founder of Credo. He is the author of award-winning books like Simply Trinity and On Classical Theology. Currently he is writing a Systematic Theology with Baker Academic. He is the theologian-in-residence of Anselm House at St. Aidan’s Anglican Church. Subscribe to his newsletter to receive updates on his writing.

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