kata ta biblia

a blog exploring Christian origins, biblical studies, social/cultural history, method, education and the journey through academia

I'm goin' to UCLA!

ucla-sign.jpgI am pleased to report that I have been offered admission into the Ph.D. program in UCLA’s Department of History, to work under Scott Bartchy, and I have accepted the offer! The specialty is technically called “History of Religions,” but I will mostly be concentrating on Christian origins (especially the New Testament, but also beyond). I understand there was only one spot and I am tremendously honored to have been chosen.

Why UCLA? Several reasons, let’s go for bullet points (in no particular order):

  • I am excited to work with Scott Bartchy, who is a member of the Context Group and has significant experience in social concerns (e.g., slavery, gender roles, community formation) with the New Testament, using sociological and anthropological methods of historical research. I have become more and more drawn to social concerns in Christian origins and Bartchy will help me dive in with both feet. More on Bartchy below.
  • I also have a burgeoning interest in apocalypticism and Christian origins (as if anyone could define apocalypticism). I am especially interested in comparing and contrasting Jewish and Christian apocalyptic literature. A fairly recent addition to UCLA’s Departments of History and NELC, Ra’anan Boustan, has worked in Jewish apocalyptic issues and in Jewish-Christian relations, which is a great resource for my interests.
  • I have the freedom to piece together my own program, taking a combination of graduate seminars, directed readings, and even upper division undergrad courses not only in the History Department, but also in world-class departments like NELC and Classics.
  • Even though, I’m interested primarily in the New Testament and Christian origins, I can’t shake my interest in the history of Israel, subsequently of Judaism, and their literature. NELC faculty members such as Bill Schniedewind, especially with his interest in sociolinguistics of Hebrew and the social/cultural history of ancient Palestine, will provide deep wells of knowledge for my research.
  • In this program, I will get a well-rounded education, with some training in the history of western civilization generally and world religions.
  • The opportunity to do adjunct teaching in New Testament studies during my dissertation at several excellent Christian schools in the area. I think this will help prepare me by exposing me to various types of settings engaging students in biblical studies.
  • UCLA’s Department of History, according to US News and World Report, is one of the top ten history programs in the country. We all know that such rankings are tenuous, but it’s still nice. Check out the response to the rankings several years back by the American Historical Association.
  • I’ve met some of the graduate students who are studying in the history department and become friends with one of Bartchy’s grad students, Kevin Scull. They are happy and seem like tons of fun. That makes a world of difference!
  • Also, it doesn’t hurt that Fuller has plans to finish construction of their new snazzy library, which will apparently be the largest theological library on the Pacific Rim, in early 2009. I will certainly be frequenting Fuller’s campus while I’m in the program at UCLA.

Some more on Bartchy: He’s down to earth and has a balanced perspective. He’s a jazz pianist and marathon runner. Professor Bartchy is pretty progressive (see a couple articles on his earth-friendly home; and an online interview on his views of Christianity). He cares about his students, even the undergrads! (At a big research university like UCLA, that’s saying a lot.) Bartchy is involved in campus life, participating in panel discussions on religion. He founded and directs the Center for the Study of Religion at UCLA, which brings together disciplines that work on religion from various angles and which also offers an undergraduate major in religion. As I understand it, UCLA has been slow to consider religion as a valid field at a state sponsored university (with perhaps understandable skepticism), but Bartchy has been leading the way to establish the study of religion on campus. His dream would be the creation of a department of religious studies, where “we would have a budget, and we could call in scholars and very distinguished people who might not fit into the agenda of any particular department” except for a religion department. Bartchy is sensitive to various religious experiences in his teaching. In fact, he offers a helpful metaphor for dealing with difficult research issues: the moving around and adjustment of ideological buckets (maybe I’ll say more about that some other time). All of this to say that Scott Bartchy not only offers academic expertise that is quite relevant to my research interests, but he also models a kind of actively involved educator and mentor to students that I would like to become.

In one sense, my decision to study the New Testament within a history department is a statement about my modern sensibilities. While many are declaring the death of the historical method of interpreting the Bible, here I am signing up for historical scholarship on the Bible and the foundational period of Christianity and Judaism. I believe that postmodern-ish methods of interpreting the Bible from various minority perspectives and social locations are enormously helpful in both keeping the practice of the historical-critical method in check, while also offering unique points of view on how to apply our historical findings to the contemporary global situation. But, for myself, I would like to be firmly planted in the historical foundation of research before jumping too deeply into postmodern or postcritical approaches. What better way to do that than study the Bible and its historical context at one of the best history departments in the country?

ucla-band.jpg

Post to Facebook Post to Twitter Post to Delicious Post to Digg Post to Google Buzz Post to LinkedIn Post to StumbleUpon

  • http://justanapprentice.wordpress.com/ just an apprentice

    Congratulations! Sounds like hard work and a lot of fun.

  • http:///judyredman.wordpress.com/ Judy Redman

    Congratulations and best wishes.

  • http://www.lofitribe.com Shawn

    Congrats, Pat! Awesome!

  • Matt Hauger

    congrats, pat. Go… uh, whatever-the-mascot-of-UCLA-is-pluralized!

  • http://rdtwot.wordpress.com Nick Norelli

    Congrats! I look forward to the thoughts and posts your doctoral studies produce. :)

  • jimgetz

    Congrats!

  • http://theskyisbig.blogspot.com/ Ben Wideman

    Congratulations! Good to have you remain in the area.

  • http://ricchuiti.blogspot.com Tim Ricchuiti

    Congratulations on the acceptance! I did my undergrad at USC, and the draw of returning to Southern California is great enough that UCLA is one of the places I’m considering applying to for my own PhD studies. I’ll have to bother you to see what it’s like! Congrats again.

  • http://www.michaelhalcomb.blogspot.com michael halcomb

    kudos pat!

  • http://patmccullough.com/ Patrick George McCullough

    Hey everybody, thanks for the congrats! Matt: the BRUINS, of course! Tim: let me know if you’re really interested in the program and I’d be happy to chat.

  • http://www.jcbaker.info J.C. Baker

    Congrats on the UCLA offer and admission. I hope you will try to come and join us at the Context Group.

  • http://patmccullough.com/ Patrick George McCullough

    Thanks, J.C. I will absolutely be checking things out at the Context Group.

  • http://revelee.blogspot.com Eric Welch

    Congratulations. May your publications be many and your funding secure!

  • http://patmccullough.com/ Patrick George McCullough

    Thanks, Eric! If you choose UCLA as a home, I look forward to sharing the campus with you :)

  • Samuel Sukaton

    Congratulations!

    I had the pleasure of taking a few classes with Bartchy winter quarter of my freshman year, which pretty much derailed my major plans–I’m now a study of religion/history man, when I entered planning to do a double in English/Communication Studies.

    I suppose I’ll be seeing you TA for a few of my upper-div history classes in the next few years? =)

    GO BRUINS!

    (Especially North Campus-ers of course–you’ll get the reference once you’re here)