1. Craig and Troy return to the Table of Duties and discuss the vocations of family. How does God expect a Godly man to operate in his family? What does He expect of the wife? What does He expect of the children?
  2. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FOUR, Mike, Jason, and Wade continue the guys' discussion of anthropology, now taking up the Flood and Noah. We hope you enjoy the episode!
  3. Oftentimes we interpret our prayers through the lens of our emotions, or our passion behind the prayers we pray. When those prayers aren't answered the way we want, we examine the level of passion, or our method of prayer, to see what needs to be fixed.
  4. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY-ONE, Mike, Jason, Wade, and Tyler continue the guys’ discussion of anthropology. They discuss what it means that Adam’s son, Seth, and all after him, are made in Adam’s image and likeness, the “and he died” refrain of chapter five, human corruption, the Nephilim, and our temptation to externalize sin and internalize salvation, among other things.
  5. Is Proverbs 31 inspiring or burdening to women? Is it a passage that's just for women? What do you think when you think about Proverbs 31? Where is the gospel in this passage?
  6. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY, Jason, Wade and Mark continue the guys’ discussion of anthropology. Our focus this time around is life in the world after the first murder, where power and status became a driving force.
  7. Today on the Christian History Almanac podcast, we head to the mailbag to answer a question about Explo '72.
  8. Give to Caesar what is Caesar's, and unto God what is God's. But hold on . . . what about "Give to my neighbor what is my neighbor's"?
  9. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND NINETEEN, Mike, Jason, and Wade continue the guys’ discussion of anthropology. Our focus this time around is the first murder, as Cain kills his brother Abel in a rage over sacrifice and God’s favor.
  10. Sometimes our resistence to forgiveness is that we are attempting to give Christ-less grace.
  11. The Thinking Fellows discuss the notion of worldliness.