

Joel Green – Conversion in Luke-Acts
May 10, 2016
Joel Green, Dean at Fuller Theological Seminary and author of "Conversion and Luke-Acts," explores the intricate links between cognitive science and biblical scholarship. He discusses the embodied and relational nature of conversion, moving beyond individualistic views. The conversation delves into the mind-body connection, challenging dualistic interpretations. Green highlights conversion as a transformative journey through scripture, examining figures like Peter and Judas, and emphasizes the role of community practices in nurturing ongoing spiritual growth.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Cognitive Linguistics Redefines Conversion
- Cognitive linguistics challenges traditional internal, individualistic views of conversion.
- Conversion must be understood as embodied and relational, influenced by community contexts.
William James Limits Conversion View
- William James shaped modern conversion as internal, subjective, crisis-led.
- This view misses conversion’s communal and embodied dimensions emphasized in Luke-Acts.
Brain Science Illuminates Conversion
- Brain injury cases reveal emotions, will, and memories have neuronal substrates.
- Conversion involves holistic brain-based human changes, not purely spiritual transformations.