1. The year was 1961. We remember the "Virgin Mother of a Thousand Egyptians," Lillian Trasher. The reading is from Christopher Harvey, a 17th-century poet, his "Nativity."
  2. The year was 1979. We remember the theologian Hans Küng. The reading is a word for Advent on the Incarnation from Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
  3. Can We Just Have A Civil Christmas? In the episode, what was Christmas like during the Civil War? Puritans, holiday traditions, and why the Church is an incarnate Church.
  4. The year was 1551. We remember Father György Martinuzzi. The reading is from Scott Cairns, "Christmas Green."
  5. The year was 1989. We remember Romanian pastor and dissident Laszlo Tokes. The reading is from Alan Jones, "May Christmas Come."
  6. In the final episode, Dan and Debi are joined by John Warwick Montgomery to discuss what it means that God delivers us from evil.
  7. In the sixth episode, Dan and Debi sit down with Erick Sorensen to talk about what it means that God tempts no one but rather protects us.
  8. In the fifth episode, Dr. Steven Paulson talks about how God answers our prayer for forgiveness with the proclamation of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
  9. In the fourth episode, Dan and Debi sit down with Gretchen Ronnevik to ask what all is wrapped up in “daily bread.”
  10. In the third episode, the reverend Paul Walker outlines why we ask God "thy Kingdom come."
  11. In the second episode, Ken Jones explains the first petition of the Lord's Prayer.
  12. In episode 1, Dan and Debi talk with Donavon Riley about Luther's exposition of the Lord's Prayer.