The Destruction of Pharaoh's Host by John Martin

KLC PROJECTS

Exodus, Moses and God

Volume 2 of Craig Bartholomew’s ambitious four-volume project, Old Testament Origins and the Question of God, focuses on Moses and the Exodus. KLC is producing high-level course material through which pastors, students and interested lay people can explore this often-neglected foundation stone of Christian belief and its implications for the present-day church. The activation of this project is dependent on funding.

Project Plan

Community Info:

Primary Discipline(s): Theology, Biblical Studies

Base Community: Staff

Leader: Craig Bartholomew

Primary Author(s): Craig Bartholomew

Collaborators: tba

Acknowledgements: tba

Partner Organisations: tba

Funding: None

Recent Updates:

Problem: tba

Process: tba

Aims and Outcomes: tba

Development Timeline:

Next Meeting: None set

Projected Completion: tba

Quick Notes: tba

Progress Updates

Coming soon…

Tota Scriptura: Chapter Outline

Read about the proposed chapter outline and discussion topics that we plan to address in this book. There are specific areas where community expertise and advice could be especially helpful (see “Collaboration Opportunities”) and this contents page may help to clarify what kind of help we’re after.

Read More »

Tota Scriptura: Publication News

KLC has been instrumental in facilitating links with a top publishing outlet, and as a result of the generosity of our academic fellows, who read and interacted with the very lengthy proposal document, their motivations helped to secure a publishing contract.

Read More »

Collaboration Opportunities

If you have something to contribute to the following questions, email your thoughts to tota@kirbylaingcentre.co.uk.

When the team has a need for help or an area in which collaboration could be beneficial, their requests will be listed here. 

Your contributions are greatly appreciated and are integral to our vision of collaborative, interdisciplinary research. We endeavor to acknowledge all the efforts of our collaborators and to give due credit, but note that we can’t guarantee that any contribution will be used in the final product.

Do you have access to any essential journal articles on evangelicalism, evangelical hermeneutics/theology, the approach to politics/ethics, deconstruction etc. that you could send? I have plenty to read (!) but it would be good to know if there are any recent, must-read pieces on these topics. I do not have ATLA access at present.

While none of us is ever able to speak reliably for whole communities of believers, this research is interested in how evangelicalism is perceived outside of the picture in US media. What does it mean to be an evangelical outside of US conservatism? In other parts of the world? To what degree is your corner of evangelicalism affected by the politicization of US evangelicalism?

At this stage, anecdotal opinions are welcome, but I wouldn’t want anyone to generate fresh research on these topics; it is too early to know to what degree I will be using them. However, if you have existing publications or your own research that you are willing to share, it would be appreciated (and your research would be credited).

This does not intend to drag us all into controversy, but I know that many of us have experienced deeply negative aspects of evangelical theology or practice that either have caused us to leave or to consider leaving evangelicalism (or even Christianity itself).

Most of us rightly choose not to air these grievances publicly because we don’t wish to do reputational damage to the wider kingdom of God. This book likewise is not aimed at causing more harm. However, in the interests of taking seriously that the church may teach or do things that provoke crises of faith, I would like to publish anecdotes that illustrate problems with the modern movement.

If you have a story to tell, it should ideally be something that (a) is at least partly attributable to a feature of evangelicalism (rather than, say, the evil actions of a lone wolf among the sheep); (b) you are willing to have published; and (c) will not expose us to legal action.

Ancillary Resources

When the team produces research components and additional resources that may be of public interest, these will be made available here.