Author Q and A: Fraser Watts

November 29, 2007

In December, Templeton Foundation Press will publish Jesus and Psychology edited by Fraser Watts, director of the Psychology and Religion Research Group at the University of Cambridge.

 

TFP Editor: What would you like readers to take away from this book? 

 

Watts: A fresh understanding of the personal significance of what they read in the Gospels and of the psychological processes that affect how they read them.

 

TFP Editor: What new contributions does this book present to both biblical studies and psychology fields?

 

Watts: A more specific focus on a psychological reading of the Gospels (rather than the Bible more generally); a broad approach including: the psychology of Jesus himself, the psychological significance of his teaching and personal encounters, and the psychology of how the Gospels are read and portrayed.

 

TFP Editor: How do you anticipate the fields of biblical studies and psychology growing in the next ten years? 

 

Watts: There has been a marked growth of interest in recent years, signaled, for example, by Wayne Rollins’ 1999 book, Soul and Psyche: The Bible in Psychological Perspective. So far, psychological approaches to the Bible have lagged behind social science approaches, but I think that will catch up over the next ten years.

 

TFP Editor: What other research projects is your group at Cambridge undertaking? 

 

Watts: Religious violence: recruitment and de-radicalization; experimental investigation of religious cognition; investigating atheism dialogue between theology and psychology; and the intellectual history of natural theology.


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