Jung and the Bible

Jung and the Bible by Wayne Rollins, published by Wipf and Stock Publishers in September 2013, offers a unique perspective on the interpretation of biblical texts through the lens of Carl Jung’s psychological insights. This edition, comprising 164 pages, explores the profound connection between the imagery and narratives of Scripture and their impact on the human psyche, engaging not only those within religious circles but also artists and creators who may feel disconnected from traditional religious institutions.
In this book, Rollins delves into Jung’s assertion that the Bible serves as an “utterance of the soul,” presenting it as a treasury of spiritual experiences shared by our ancestors. Readers will find discussions on key biblical figures and themes, including the exploration of personal destiny, the significance of dreams and visions, and the role of symbols and archetypes. The text emphasizes the complexities of good and evil and the overarching presence of the divine, inviting readers to reflect on their own spiritual journeys and the enduring relevance of biblical narratives in contemporary life.
Official synopsis Publisher
Out of the life and thought of a noted psychologist, Carl Jung, comes a captivating approach to reading and interpreting the Bible. The book opens with the question, “Why is it that the images, characters, and stories of Scripture have the power to catalyze the imagination of the human psyche, not only among religious people, but also among artists, moviemakers, playwrights, and songwriters, some of whom are disenchanted with church, clergy, and established religion?” The answer to the question begins with Jung’s statement that the Bible is an “utterance of the soul.”
Jung sees the Bible as a treasury of the soul (psyche), that is, the testimony of our spiritual ancestors proclaiming in history and law, prophecy and psalm, gospel and epistle, genealogy and apocalypse, their experience of the holy, and drawing us and others through us into that experience.
The Bible is no stranger to Carl Jung. No document is cited by Jung more often, and no cast of characters from any tradition is summoned to the stage of Jung’s discourse with greater regularity than are the Adams and Abrahams, the Melchizedeks and Moseses, the Peters and Pauls of Judaeo-Christian Scripture–185 biblical figures in all.
Beyond that, the realities and experiences that concern Jung most are also those that occupy prime attention in the writings of biblical authors: a sense of soul, of personal destiny and call; an openness to the wisdom of dreams, revelations, and visions; the power of symbols and archetypal images; the riddle of evil within God’s world; and above all, the sense of God–the numinous, the Holy, at the center of things.
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