1. David and Adam talk about the merits of minimal facts Christian apologetics.
  2. Craig and Dr. Steven Hein sit down at the 2024 Here We Still Stand Conference in San Diego for yet another discussion on Men in the Church.
  3. David and Adam dive deep into the limits of science in view of theology and metaphysics.
  4. After a bit of a hiatus, Gretchen Ronnevik and Katie Koplin sit down and catchn up.
  5. Some reflections on Christianity and political order as well as Christians and politics days before the 2024 US elections.
  6. This is our conversation from the podcast pre-conference at Here We Still Stand 2024 in San Diego, CA.
  7. David and Adam reflect on Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's famous commencement address at Harvard University in 1978.
  8. Watch Me Work. In this episode, we continue our discussion of justification and vocation as we read "Justification, Vocation, and Location in Luther's Reformation" by James A. Nestigen. Part two of our conversation continues with themes of vocation, location, repentance, humility, personal agency, divine instrumentality, atonement, the relationship of husband and wife to the land, the overlap of heaven and earth, and what to do when we feel like we’ve made a complete mess of our lives.
  9. David and Adam reflect further on the problem of evil.
  10. They Call Me Rhetorical Working Man. In this episode, we discuss Luther‘s teaching on justification and vocation while reading James Nestingen’s essay on the same topic. We cover feudalism, the rise of capitalism, how the reformation took hold in the cities in Germany, the three estates, the two kingdoms, church life versus social life, and the consequences for Christians of not being grounded in faith and prayer as detailed by Luther, in particular, in his explanations to the petitions of the Lord Prayer.
  11. David and Adam were joined by Dr. Lex Newman, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Utah, to talk about the problem of evil.
  12. Spirituality is not a friend of Christianity. More and more people abandon Christianity while maintaining spiritual beliefs, practices, or superstitions.