How Scripture Can Still Evolve with Peter Enns (Part 2)
In Part 2 of Ilia Delio’s conversation with author and biblical scholar Peter Enns, we explore deeper dimensions of scripture—and how our understanding of it must evolve alongside us.
Together, Ilia and Pete examine how the Bible is often misused as a political and cultural tool, and they ask: Can scripture still offer wisdom in a world facing ecological collapse, moral polarization, and spiritual disconnection?
This episode approaches:
- The New Testament through the lens of change and complexity
Why fundamentalist readings distort the transformative power of scripture - The psychological and planetary costs of static belief systems
- Whether scripture itself is part of a larger religious and cosmic evolution
Pete also shares where he looks for hope—and how embracing uncertainty may actually deepen our spiritual lives.
ABOUT PETER ENNS
“I think part of what it means for God to “reveal” himself is to keep us guessing, to come to terms with the idea that knowing God is also a form of not knowing God, of knowing that we cannot fully know, but only catch God in part—which is more than enough to keep us busy.”
Peter Enns (Ph.D. Harvard University) is Abram S. Clemens professor of Biblical Studies at Eastern University (St. Davids, PA). He has written several books including The Bible Tells Me So, The Sin of Certainty, How the Bible Actually Works, and his latest, Curveball: When Your Faith Takes Turns You Never Saw Coming. Pete is also cohost of the popular podcast The Bible for Normal People. The focus of his work centers on understanding the Bible as an ancient text and thinking through what it means to read that ancient text well today.
“Science without religion is lame and religion without science is blind.”
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