Dr Jonathan Birch
- Lecturer in Theology and Religious Studies (Theology & Religious Studies)
- Tutor - Lifelong Learning (External Relations)
email:
Jonathan.Birch@glasgow.ac.uk
Room 303 (1/1), No. 4 The Square, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, G12 8qq
Biography
Jonathan Birch is an intellectual historian who works at the intersection of religion and philosophy in European thought and culture. With an academic background in philosophy (BA Hons, MA), and the New Testament and its early modern reception (PhD), his primary research interest is the relationship between biblical hermeneutics and modern philosophy during the intellectual and cultural ferment of the European Enlightenment.
Jonathan graduated with his PhD from the University of Glasgow in 2013 and has held a number of posts in Theology and Religious Studies at the university since then. He teaches across a wide range of courses in the discipline, at different academic levels, from access to postgraduate. By vocational training, Jonathan is a teacher (PGCE, QTS), and this remains his first love. With twenty years of experience, Jonathan has taught thousands of students in the United Kingdom, beginning in his native Yorkshire, from very diverse backgrounds. In parallel to his work as an academic, Jonathan has worked in widening participation and lifelong learning at Glasgow for fifteen years and is committed to supporting students - from atypical educational backgrounds - to access higher education.
As an assessment professional with over twenty years of experience, Jonathan has maintained professional ties to the main educational systems in England, Wales, and North Ireland. He has served as a senior GCSE examiner in religious studies, principal A-Level philosophy examiner and lead assessment writer; he is currently chief A-Level philosophy examiner.
Research interests
- The early modern reception of the Bible (especially philosophical)
- Religion, irreligion and the Enlightenment
- The philosophy of religion
- The relationship between religion and science
- The modern reception of medieval theology and philosophy
- Historical Jesus studies
Supervision
I would be interested in supervising post-graduate students in the following areas:
- The early modern reception of the Bible (from apologetic to hostile perspectives and everything in between)
- Religion and irreligion in the Enlightenment
- The philosophy of religion
- The relationship between religion and science
- Historical Jesus studies
- Mutch, Emma
Digito Dei: An Argument for a Catholic Theology of Science
I am currently supervising doctoral students in the following areas:
- A Roman Catholic critique of methodological naturalism
- The Bible and the transatlantic slave trade
- Modern science and scriptural authority: a comparison of Christian and Islamic approaches
- The epistemology of religious experience
Teaching
Of courses that are still offered at the university I have convened and/or contributed to teaching the following:
- TRS1: The God Question: Exploring Christianity
- TRS1: The Search for Meaning: Judaism, Christianity and Islam
- TRS1: Creation to Apocalypse: Introduction to the Bible
- TRS 2: Christian Traditions and Transformations
- TRS 2: Mysticism and Spirituality
- TRS 2: Texts and Cultures of the Bible
- TRS 4: New Testament Texts (with Greek as an option): The Gospel and Letters of John
- TRS 4: New Testament Themes and Topics (with Greek as an option): Ethics and Politics
- TRS 4: Historical Jesus (with Greek as an option)
- TRS 4: Doctrine of God
- TRS 4: Political Theology
- TRS 5: Religion and Violence
- TRS 5: Church History and Theology
- TRS 5: Dr. Williams MTH: Bible, Doctrine, and Freedom of Interpretation