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What Early Christians Thought about the Kingdom of God? | Tyler Hoagland

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Manage episode 512296471 series 3591665
Inhalt bereitgestellt von Daniel Mikkelsen (NT Greek Tutoring). Alle Podcast-Inhalte, einschließlich Episoden, Grafiken und Podcast-Beschreibungen, werden direkt von Daniel Mikkelsen (NT Greek Tutoring) oder seinem Podcast-Plattformpartner hochgeladen und bereitgestellt. Wenn Sie glauben, dass jemand Ihr urheberrechtlich geschütztes Werk ohne Ihre Erlaubnis nutzt, können Sie dem hier beschriebenen Verfahren folgen https://de.player.fm/legal.

How did early Christians understand the Kingdom of God—and how did their view move beyond the Gospels into Paul, Acts, and the Apostolic Fathers?

In this episode of Exploring the Language of Scripture, Daniel Mikkelsen speaks with Tyler Hoagland, independent scholar of early Christianity, about how the Kingdom of God was conceived in the first 150 years after Christ.

Drawing on his doctoral research, Tyler shows how the Greek terms βασιλεία (basileia)kingdom—and βασιλεύω (basileuō)to reign—reveal a royal and participatory dimension often lost in translation. The conversation traces how the Gospels, Paul, and The Shepherd of Hermas continue the Kingdom theme in different ways, challenging modern assumptions about what “God’s reign” meant for the earliest believers.

Together they explore how the Apostolic Fathers extended that vision, how context and language shape meaning, and why returning to the Greek helps recover a richer, more unified understanding of the Kingdom in early Christianity.

Don’t Miss the Next Episode:
In the next episode, Daniel Mikkelsen is joined by Josh Ip Cho-suen to explore whether Paul taught two ways of salvation —one for Jews and another for Gentiles—and how this idea has been developed within the Paul within Judaism perspective. Building on the earlier conversation with Seth Postell, a Messianic Jewish scholar, the discussion considers what Paul’s teaching on salvation reveals about the relationship between law, grace, and the Jewish Messiah.

📚 Free Guide — Why Struggle with Greek?
Avoid the four most common pitfalls and start making real progress:
🔗 https://ntgreektutoring.com/why-struggle-with-greek

Chapters:

00:00 – Coming Up...
01:04 – Meet Tyler Hoagland: Scholar of the Kingdom of God in Early Christianity
02:43 – From Struggling Student to PhD in New Testament
05:54 – How Greek and Hebrew Transform Bible Reading
08:56 – Greek Insights You’ll Miss in Translation
13:21 – Creation, Incarnation, and Greek Allusions to the Tabernacle
18:01 – Why Study the Kingdom of God Before 150 CE?
21:42 – Why “Kingdom of God” Is Hard to Define
29:40 – Paul’s Royal Language in 1 Corinthians
40:17 – The Kingdom in Acts: Linked to Jesus’ Name
52:17 – What Is the Shepherd of Hermas?
01:02:50 – The Kingdom of God in the Shepherd of Hermas
01:13:23 – Kingdom Language Beyond the Gospels
01:25:36 – Living the Kingdom Today

🎵 Music Credits:
Music from #Uppbeat
🔗 https://uppbeat.io/t/all-good-folks/aspire

Please, let us know what you thoughts on the episode.

Support the show

If you enjoyed this episode of Exploring the Language of Scripture, please consider becoming an Explorer! Your support helps keep the podcast ad-free, allows us to bring in more guests, and enhances the content we create. By joining our Explorer community, you’ll receive exclusive benefits, including Q&As, priority for Greek tutoring applications, and discounts on tutoring. Explore more and join the Explorer programme here: Become an Explorer.

Podcast Keywords:
biblical languages, New Testament, Old Testament, Christ, bible study, Relationship with God, learn biblical languages, Biblical Theology, Christianity, Covenants, New covenant, old covenant, language acquisition, Biblical Greek, Biblical Hebrew.

  continue reading

Kapitel

1. Coming up... (00:00:00)

2. Meet Tyler Hoagland: Scholar of the Kingdom of God in Early Christianity (00:01:04)

3. From Struggling Student to PhD in New Testament (00:02:43)

4. How Greek and Hebrew Transform Bible Reading (00:05:54)

5. Greek Insights You’ll Miss in Translation (00:08:56)

6. Creation, Incarnation, and Greek Allusions to the Tabernacle (00:13:21)

7. Why Study the Kingdom of God Before 150 CE? (00:18:01)

8. Why “Kingdom of God” Is Hard to Define (00:21:42)

9. Paul’s Royal Language in 1 Corinthians (00:29:40)

10. The Kingdom in Acts: Linked to Jesus’ Name (00:40:17)

11. What Is the Shepherd of Hermas? (00:52:17)

12. The Kingdom of God in the Shepherd of Hermas (01:02:50)

13. Kingdom Language Beyond the Gospels (01:13:23)

14. Living the Kingdom Today (01:25:36)

29 Episoden

Artwork
iconTeilen
 
Manage episode 512296471 series 3591665
Inhalt bereitgestellt von Daniel Mikkelsen (NT Greek Tutoring). Alle Podcast-Inhalte, einschließlich Episoden, Grafiken und Podcast-Beschreibungen, werden direkt von Daniel Mikkelsen (NT Greek Tutoring) oder seinem Podcast-Plattformpartner hochgeladen und bereitgestellt. Wenn Sie glauben, dass jemand Ihr urheberrechtlich geschütztes Werk ohne Ihre Erlaubnis nutzt, können Sie dem hier beschriebenen Verfahren folgen https://de.player.fm/legal.

How did early Christians understand the Kingdom of God—and how did their view move beyond the Gospels into Paul, Acts, and the Apostolic Fathers?

In this episode of Exploring the Language of Scripture, Daniel Mikkelsen speaks with Tyler Hoagland, independent scholar of early Christianity, about how the Kingdom of God was conceived in the first 150 years after Christ.

Drawing on his doctoral research, Tyler shows how the Greek terms βασιλεία (basileia)kingdom—and βασιλεύω (basileuō)to reign—reveal a royal and participatory dimension often lost in translation. The conversation traces how the Gospels, Paul, and The Shepherd of Hermas continue the Kingdom theme in different ways, challenging modern assumptions about what “God’s reign” meant for the earliest believers.

Together they explore how the Apostolic Fathers extended that vision, how context and language shape meaning, and why returning to the Greek helps recover a richer, more unified understanding of the Kingdom in early Christianity.

Don’t Miss the Next Episode:
In the next episode, Daniel Mikkelsen is joined by Josh Ip Cho-suen to explore whether Paul taught two ways of salvation —one for Jews and another for Gentiles—and how this idea has been developed within the Paul within Judaism perspective. Building on the earlier conversation with Seth Postell, a Messianic Jewish scholar, the discussion considers what Paul’s teaching on salvation reveals about the relationship between law, grace, and the Jewish Messiah.

📚 Free Guide — Why Struggle with Greek?
Avoid the four most common pitfalls and start making real progress:
🔗 https://ntgreektutoring.com/why-struggle-with-greek

Chapters:

00:00 – Coming Up...
01:04 – Meet Tyler Hoagland: Scholar of the Kingdom of God in Early Christianity
02:43 – From Struggling Student to PhD in New Testament
05:54 – How Greek and Hebrew Transform Bible Reading
08:56 – Greek Insights You’ll Miss in Translation
13:21 – Creation, Incarnation, and Greek Allusions to the Tabernacle
18:01 – Why Study the Kingdom of God Before 150 CE?
21:42 – Why “Kingdom of God” Is Hard to Define
29:40 – Paul’s Royal Language in 1 Corinthians
40:17 – The Kingdom in Acts: Linked to Jesus’ Name
52:17 – What Is the Shepherd of Hermas?
01:02:50 – The Kingdom of God in the Shepherd of Hermas
01:13:23 – Kingdom Language Beyond the Gospels
01:25:36 – Living the Kingdom Today

🎵 Music Credits:
Music from #Uppbeat
🔗 https://uppbeat.io/t/all-good-folks/aspire

Please, let us know what you thoughts on the episode.

Support the show

If you enjoyed this episode of Exploring the Language of Scripture, please consider becoming an Explorer! Your support helps keep the podcast ad-free, allows us to bring in more guests, and enhances the content we create. By joining our Explorer community, you’ll receive exclusive benefits, including Q&As, priority for Greek tutoring applications, and discounts on tutoring. Explore more and join the Explorer programme here: Become an Explorer.

Podcast Keywords:
biblical languages, New Testament, Old Testament, Christ, bible study, Relationship with God, learn biblical languages, Biblical Theology, Christianity, Covenants, New covenant, old covenant, language acquisition, Biblical Greek, Biblical Hebrew.

  continue reading

Kapitel

1. Coming up... (00:00:00)

2. Meet Tyler Hoagland: Scholar of the Kingdom of God in Early Christianity (00:01:04)

3. From Struggling Student to PhD in New Testament (00:02:43)

4. How Greek and Hebrew Transform Bible Reading (00:05:54)

5. Greek Insights You’ll Miss in Translation (00:08:56)

6. Creation, Incarnation, and Greek Allusions to the Tabernacle (00:13:21)

7. Why Study the Kingdom of God Before 150 CE? (00:18:01)

8. Why “Kingdom of God” Is Hard to Define (00:21:42)

9. Paul’s Royal Language in 1 Corinthians (00:29:40)

10. The Kingdom in Acts: Linked to Jesus’ Name (00:40:17)

11. What Is the Shepherd of Hermas? (00:52:17)

12. The Kingdom of God in the Shepherd of Hermas (01:02:50)

13. Kingdom Language Beyond the Gospels (01:13:23)

14. Living the Kingdom Today (01:25:36)

29 Episoden

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