Using social scientific and comparative approaches, my research primarily focuses on the body and embodiment in the Hebrew Bible. This includes rhetorical uses of the body and closely related items, such as clothing, to construct ethnic identities, gender, and religious authority. I am also interested in how the medical humanities can inform biblical descriptions of pain and illness. Additionally, I have written on the reception of Hebrew Bible texts in the New Testament and Anglican Church.
I teach two of the required courses in Biblical studies in the bachelor's degree in Theology:
And I teach the required course in Old Testament in the master's degree in Theology:
I have also co-taught (with New Testament) an optional bachelor's course on "Reading the Bible with and without Jesus."
I supervise bachelor's and master's theses on Old Testament topics.