Mark Glanville, PhD, is a scholar-pastor who ministers in a missional urban community, Grandview Calvary Baptist Church, Vancouver. Mark is also Professor of Old Testament and Congregational Studies at the Missional Training Center, Phoenix (missionaltraining.org). Mark has authored 'Family for The Displaced: A New Paradigm for the Gu0113r in Deuteronomy' (Ancient Israel and its Literature; SBL, 2018), a book on Exodus (Lexham, 2018), numerous refereed articles (including in the Journal of Biblical Literature, 2018), and book chapters. Mark is presently co-authoring a book, Providing Refuge: A Missional and Political Theology.
A Jazz-Talk How Biblical Law Shapes Missional Communities
Speaker(s): Mark Glanville
Date: Fall 2019
Length: 24
Product ID: RGDL4901AC
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Description
This is a Regent chapel talk given during the Fall of 2019.
This jazz-talk uses blues and jazz music to unpack the significance of biblical law for missional communities today. There are parallels between the development of blues and jazz and the development of biblical law: both have their roots in the atrocity of slavery. Blues and jazz developed in the oppression of slavery and of the reconstruction era in the U.S. Biblical law emerged from the atrocity of slavery in Egypt. This talk unfolds the significance of biblical law by looking at three laws in Deuteronomy, reflecting on their practical implications for God's-people-on-mission today.
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