Here is one of my ongoing book projects.
Saturday, April 4, 2026
Farmer-scholar
Here is one of my ongoing book projects.
Monday, March 30, 2026
Launch of Research Consulting Firm
I am Yung Suk Kim, PhD (Vanderbilt University), MDiv (McCormick Theological Seminary), pleased to announce the official launch of Stone Mountain Consulting and Research. I am founder of this firm. After more than 20 years as a professor and the author of more than 20 books and editor of 4 books, I have realized that the most "exceptional" scholarship is that which creates new needs for its readers. My journey—from the corporate world at LG in Latin America and Miami, Florida, to the halls of Vanderbilt (PhD) and Virginia Union (Full Professor)—has taught me that academic work is at its best when it is conscientious, interdisciplinary, and transformative. See my scholarly journey reflection. See also the Endorsements.
"Stone Mountain" reflects my philosophy: scholarship should be as strong and prevalent as stone, yet as calm and expansive as a mountain.
CONSULTING:
Through this firm, I am offering specialized, bilingual (English/Korean) consulting in:
PhD Coaching: Navigating the "tightrope" of dissertation research and defense.
Publication Strategy: Guiding authors through the proposal and peer-review process with top-tier presses.
Interdisciplinary Lectures: Bridging Biblical Studies with Cognitive Science, Psychology, and Justice.
I invite my colleagues and students to reach out. Let us work together to move away from individualism and toward a scholarship of human solidarity.
LECTURE EVENTS:
I offer 10 unique topics and arguments that provide informative and challenging insights for both contemporary life and scholarship. Please see the Service Menu for details.
I am also comfortable addressing any topic within biblical studies and the New Testament, with particular expertise in Pauline studies.
RESEARCH:
I will continue to research and publish books and articles at the crossroads of biblical studies and related fields. I have 10 ongoing book projects.
CONTACT: youaregood@gmail.com
CV Short Bio Blog Publications YouTube Podcasts LinkedInSunday, March 29, 2026
A Second Wind: Navigating Uncharted Scholarly Waters
Lately, I have experienced a second wind as I venture into uncharted waters. I am immersing myself in the study of the mind through the lens of biblical scholarship—a path that demands interdisciplinary exploration across psychology, cognitive science, and neuroscience. Throughout my career, my focus has remained constant: gaining critical, practical insights into ancient texts and their enduring relevance to contemporary life.
I am hopeful of reigniting my dormant scholarship and propelling it into a renaissance through pioneering study that incorporates all I have learned. I have always believed I am capable of more than I currently am—not due to inherent greatness, but because I am flexible, creative, and receptive to new energy from the divine. Consequently, I am reborn every day, every minute. This continuous rebirth also implies a frequent "death": a period of allowing my work to rest and evolve. While I strive to be authentically myself, I am never static. For this, I am grateful.
- The Lord's Prayer through the Lens of Cognitive Science: Renewing the Mind
- Embodied Kingdom: Luke's Mindful Theology of God's Present Reign
- The Fourth Horizon: The Mental World as a Critical Lens for Hermeneutics and Homiletics
- The Intersecting Life: Autobiographical Inquiry and Biblical Interpretation (multi-authored or edited)
- The Fourth Gospel and the Fragile Earth: Incarnation, Salvation, and Ecological Responsibility
- Wisdom Across Traditions: Biblical Wisdom Literature and East Asian Traditions
- Mind Matters: Cultivating Resilience through Acknowledgment, Acceptance, and Assurance
- The Double Embrace: The Activated Mind through the E.F.A. Protocol
- A Fourfold Approach to Mental Health: Biological, Psychological, Social, and Spiritual
- Rethinking Jesus: The Embodied Mind and the Art of Radical Empathy
Friday, March 27, 2026
My Seal
I like stone. It is strong and hard to break, but it breaks. It is everywhere, used for construction and pavement, and its usefulness is prevalent. I want to be that kind of a scholar—a Stone Mountain Scholar. For me, the mountain symbolizes something big, calm, and beyond myself, yet profoundly important for all of us. Indeed, the image of a stone-mountain has stayed with me since my youth.
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Faith
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Monday, March 23, 2026
Life is like a river
Life is like a river. A scholarly life flows, mindful of its end.
Here is a look at my upcoming book projects. As someone who is naturally organized, I’m constantly refining and updating my work—staying open to changes and progress in hopes of a "harvest" someday.
There is a clear trend in these works: a critical study of the mind at the intersection of biblical studies and other related fields.


I have made a promise to myself: I may not achieve everything, and that’s okay. I’m not going to burn myself out. I do this work simply because I love it.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
"Thinking Meat"
"By mind, I mean all that relates to our subjective felt experience of being alive, from feelings to thoughts, from intellectual ideas to inner sensory immersions before and beneath words, to our felt connections to other people and our planet. And mind also refers to our consciousness, the experience we have of being aware of this felt sense of life, the experience of knowing within awareness." (1)The idea of “thinking meat” also resonates with Paul Ricoeur’s hermeneutics and ethics, both of which take the location of the flesh seriously. He emphasizes that our genuine understanding of something does not arise from thinking alone; it must emerge through our bodily experience in the world. See his work Oneself as Another (University of Chicago Press, 1995).
"Mind is the essence of our fundamental nature, our deepest sense of being alive, here, right now, in this moment." (1)
"Yet beyond consciousness and its knowing within awareness of our subjective felt sense of being alive, mind may also involve a larger process, one that connects us to each other and our world. This important process is a facet of mind that may be hard to measure, but is nevertheless a crucial aspect of our lives we'll explore in great depth in the journey ahead." (1)
"Though we may not be able to quantify in numerical terms these facets of our mind at the heart of the experience of being here in this life, this intrinsically felt subjective phenomenon of living, and the ways we can feel our connections to one another and the world, are subjective phenomena that are real. These non-measurable facets of the reality of life have many names. Some call this our essence. Some call this our core, soul, spirit, or true nature. I simply call this mind." (1-2).
The points above highlight four pillars of mental health: biological, psychological, social, and spiritual. This implies that a robust mind requires balance across all four: the body, the psyche, the social, and the spiritual.



