Christian Humanist Profiles

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 267:30:15
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Sinopsis

Interviews with Christian intellectuals, faithful thinkers, and other human beings writing well.

Episodios

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 236: Theology of Consent

    24/10/2022 Duración: 01h33s

    When we set several theologies next to each other, naming their core claims helps us to make sense of their relationships, even as we grant that more complexity rewards careful reading and study.  So without necessarily reducing them, we can speak and write about Calvin’s theology of sovereignty, Schleiermacher’s theology of experience, Bultmann’s theology of kerygma, Thomas Aquinas’s theology of revelation, and so on.  In his book Theology of Consent from SacraSage, Jonathan Foster proposes a certain notion of consent, borrowing elements from Rene Girard’s mimetic theory and others from Alfred North Whitehead’s process thought, to make a bid for our understanding of the ways in which we engage with God.  Christian Humanist Profiles is glad to welcome Dr. Foster to talk with us about some of his ideas.

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 235: God after Einstein

    16/10/2022 Duración: 01h13min

    As a student in a good Old Testament Introduction class will be able to tell you, Genesis 1 borrows structures and symbols and maybe even vocabulary from Babylonian texts like Enuma Elish to paint its particular picture of creation.  Likewise Proverbs 8 casts world-making in terms of international wisdom traditions, and John 1 appropriates Greek philosophical vocabularies to tell us of the logos who becomes sarx.  In his recent book God After Einstein: What’s Really Going on in the Universe, John Haught presents some possibilities for God-talk in light of three great immensities with which modern science concerns itself: the great spans of time from the Big Bang to last week; the great spans of distance that an expanding universe encompasses; and the great spans of complexity that emerge with life, consciousness, and everything that comes with them.  Christian Humanist Profiles is glad to welcome Dr. Haught to talk about all that and more.

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 234: The Right

    01/08/2022 Duración: 57min

    When my students ask me–and soon enough they learn not to ask me–I always tell them I’m an unrepentant left-winger; after all, I’ve never thought that a Capetian monarch should rule France, so once that question is settled, I’m pretty well in place on that question.  Of course, the seating arrangements in the Estats General have come down to us as our lexical inheritance, so I suppose we should talk a bit about the Right.  The good news here is that we’ve invited Matt Continetti to the show, whose recent book The Right gives us a good sense of the tensions that characterize conservatism over the last century or so.

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 233: Reading History with Michael Burger

    11/07/2022 Duración: 55min

    Some truths seem self-evident once somebody has spoken them, but someone needs to make that move.  So here goes: whenever any of us teaches, that teacher teaches something.  Teaching a mechanic how to maintain an automobile’s engine involves things that teaching differential calculus doesn’t, and neither of those is quite the same as teaching Shotokan karate.  Michael Burger’s new book Reading History from University of Toronto Press sets out to explore what it might look like to teach history, and Christian Humanist Profiles is happy to welcome him to the show to talk about that book and that enterprise.

  • Christian Humanist Profiles Episode 232: Bart Ehrman

    27/06/2022 Duración: 55min

    I’ve had a working hypothesis for quite a while now that stories about the devil tell us about as much about an author’s priorities as anything else. Milton’s devils and especially his version of Satan lead a reader into some profound worries about the powers of rhetoric and reason. Goethe’s Mephistopheles can’t seem to keep up with the ambition of Heinrich Faust, and his attempts at temptation are farcical compared to the grandeur of the great man’s desires. And certainly nobody who’s read C.S. Lewis’s Screwtape Letters can mistake the features of 20th-century life that stand as the Oxford Don’s pet peeves. Bart Ehrman, in his new book Journeys to Heaven and Hell, examines another kind of story, a set of narratives in which the living have a look at what awaits the dead, and discovers a similar dynamic: what’s magnified on the other side tells some fascinating stories about the struggles of this side. And I’m glad that he’s joining us on

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 231: Roosevelt Montas

    06/06/2022 Duración: 01h49s

    When I started my undergraduate years at Milligan College in 1995, its interdisciplinary Humanities sequence was already a well-established hallmark of its educational project.  In each of my first four semesters we read history and theology and literature and philosophy and all kinds of texts from different eras, always letting each inform the others.  Dr. Roosevelt Montas’s journey from the Dominican Republic to New York City differs from my own from Indiana to Georgia, but we share a love for the questions that arise from these books and the life of teaching the same.  Christian Humanist Profiles is thrilled to welcome Roosevelt to the show to talk about his new book Rescuing Socrates.

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 230: Falsehood and Fallacy

    16/05/2022 Duración: 01h06min

     I’m still a young enough professor that I don’t remember a time before “critical thinking” was a buzzword in the profession.  Back in the fall of 2000, when first I started, John Bean convinced me that the goal of core-curriculum classes should be to introduce novices to the practices and standards of the university disciplines, and I still think that’s about right.  A decade later, concerns had shifted to helping students engage in metacognition, the examination of one’s own thought-processes, and I’m still a fan of that as well.  But some time in the last decade, if you believe some social psychologists, something went seriously wrong in American epistemology through entire limbs of the body politic, and in response a new call went forth: critical thinking became less a bonus and more a bulwark, something to save us from the idiocy that so many of us invite into our eyeballs through our phone screens.  Dr. Bethany Kilcrease’s book Fal

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 229: My Body Is not a Prayer Request

    09/05/2022 Duración: 01h01min

    Victoria Reynolds Farmer talks with Amy Kenny about her new book "My Body Is not a Prayer Request."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 228: Render Unto Caesar

    18/04/2022 Duración: 01h14min

    Nathan Gilmour talks with John Dominic Crossan about his new book "Render Unto Caesar."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 227: Restless Devices

    11/04/2022 Duración: 52min

    Christina Bieber Lake talks with Felicia Wu Song about her recent book "Restless Devices."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 226: When Bad Thinking Happens to Good People

    04/04/2022 Duración: 59min

    Nathan Gilmour talks with Larry Shapiro about his recent book "When Bad Thinking Happens to Good People."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 225: The Most Misunderstood Women of the Bible

    28/03/2022 Duración: 51min

    Victoria Reynolds Farmer talks with Mary DeMuth about her recent book "The Most Misunderstood Women of the Bible."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 224: Ars Vitae

    28/02/2022 Duración: 01h15min

    Nathan Gilmour talks with Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn about her recent book "Ars Vitae."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 223: Nothing Less than Great

    21/02/2022 Duración: 56min

    Nathan Gilmour talks with Harvey Weingarten about his recent book "Nothing Less than Great."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 222: Following the Call

    14/02/2022 Duración: 01h02min

    Nathan Gilmour talks with Charles Moore about his recent anthology "Following the Call."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 221: Dante's Indiana

    07/02/2022 Duración: 56min

    Michial Farmer talks with Randy Boyagoda about his recent book "Dante's Indiana."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 220: American Democratic Socialism

    31/01/2022 Duración: 01h07min

    Nathan Gilmour talks with Gary Dorrien about his recent book "American Democratic Socialism."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 219: Open and Relational Theology

    20/12/2021 Duración: 54min

    Nathan Gilmour talks with Thomas Jay Oord about his recent book "Open and Relational Theology."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 218: The Great Sex Rescue

    30/08/2021 Duración: 43min

    Katie Grubbs speaks with Sheila Gregoire about her book "The Great Sex Rescue."

  • Christian Humanist Profiles 217: The Herods

    16/08/2021 Duración: 01h01min

    Nathan Gilmour interviews Bruce Chilton about his recent book "The Herods."

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