The Christian Humanist Podcast
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Podcast Description
Three Christians, teachers, and intellectuals gather digitally to hold forth on literature, theology, philosophy, and other things human beings do well. Taking the question at hand utterly seriously and ourselves not at all, the Christian Humanists attempt to record weekly during the school year and take on some interesting questions. Our website, should you wish to visit us, is http://www.christianhumanist.org, and our email is thechristianhumanist@gmail.com.
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Episode 70: Epistemology | Michial Farmer moderates a conversation with David Grubbs and Dr. Nathan Gilmour about epistemology, the philosophical investigation of how we know what we know. A central concern of philosophy since the 17th century and a valid question before that, epistemology comes in a definite range of options. Among the thinkers and ideas discussed are Plato, Thomas Aquinas, Descartes, Locke, Hume, Kant, Hegel, Pierce, Kuhn, and micro-fairies. | 2/21/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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2 |
Episode 69: Sidekicks | David Grubbs moderates a conversation with Michial Farmer and David Grubbs about the hero's companion, a figure known in modern comic books as the sidekick. Whether spurring ancient heroes on to great deeds or providing the reader a surrogate in modern fiction, the sidekick is always good for a helping hand (or, in the case of children's movies, actually to save the day). Among the texts and other artifacts discussed are Beowulf, Gilgamesh, The Iliad, the Lone Ranger, Teen Titans, Huckleberry Finn, and Big Trouble in Little China. | 2/14/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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3 |
Episode 68: Romanticism | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about the Romantic movement of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The strong development of nationalism, a deep love for the imagination, the cult of the artist as solitary individual, and other developments stay with us even today. Among the artists, artifacts, and other stuff discussed are the American and French Revolutions, the Enlightenment, Ralph Waldo Emerson, the Grimm Brothers, Lord Byron, the artist's biography and its importance to the Romantics, and other such things. | 2/7/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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4 |
Episode 67.2: Good News for Anxious Christians | Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour discuss Phillip Cary's book Good News for Anxious Christians, a popular-press theology book dedicated to countering what Cary calls "The New Evangelicalism." Focusing on their own interactions with high school and college students in the evangelical world, the hosts talk about Cary's particularly timely warnings against moral irresponsibility and the anxiety that comes when consumerism gets together with Christian piety. | 1/31/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 67.1: The Office of Assertion | Nathan Gilmour and Michial Farmer discuss Scott Crider's book The Office of Assertion, a composition textbook rooted in classical rhetorical traditions. Moving freely between their own teaching practices and the differences between classical and contemporary educational theory, the discussion digs into Aristotle's responses to Plato, the Renaissance of classical rhetoric as a response to rhetoric's decline in the academy, and other matters of education and rhetoric. | 1/24/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 67.03: The Best Music of 2011 | Michial Farmer gives a rundown of the best music from the year 2011. | 1/3/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 67.02: St. Nicholas at Nicea | David Grubbs recites the new Christmas classic, the Saint Nicholas Smackdown. | 12/23/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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8 |
Episode 67.01: Singing Faith | Nathan Gilmour preaches a sermon at Athens Christian Church on December 18, 2011 about the Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55) and the ways that the songs we sing make the world we inhabit. | 12/22/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 67: A Christmas Carol | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion on the Christmas classic "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens. Along the way the discussion ranges from philosophical and literary backgrounds all the way to whether Dickens is an agent of secularization when it comes to the Christian holiday. Among the writers and ideas discussed are Thomas Malthus, Pliny the Younger, Tiny Tim, Genesis, Christ among the children, and when ghosts started carrying chains around. | 12/20/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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10 |
Episode 66: Desert Island Books | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about what books they'd bring with them if they were stranded on a desert island. So that the description doesn't give away the books, this text shall end here. | 12/13/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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11 |
Episode 65: Academic Conferences | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the world of the academic conference, digging into their antecedents, their peculiarities, and why Gilmour doesn't much like them. The last third of the episode is dedicated to dreaming up better ways to do conferences. Among the ideas, people, and stereotypes we dig into are Plato's Symposium, the Royal Society, the MLA, the blustering pedant, the perpetual sneer, and the academic conference's drinking problem. | 11/29/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 64: Environmentalism | Nathan Gilmour moderates the beginning of a discussion with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer (Gilmour had a meeting to make, so the others finished it up) about environmentalism, Christian responses to the same, literary treatments of the natural world, and other groovy stuff. Among the texts and ideas discussed are Genesis, Romans, Augustine, Leonardo da Vinci, Baruch Spinoza, and naive city-slicker environmentalists. | 11/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 63.11: Technical Difficulties | Michial Farmer apologizes for some technical difficulties that have prevented this week's episode from airing and announces some plans for the immediate future. | 11/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 63.1: Reality Television | Michial Farmer and Nathan hold forth on Reality Television, demonstrating once more Gilmour's lack of connection with pop culture. We take on the origins in the documentary format, the shift from documentary's high self-regard to reality TV's self-awareness as entertainment, and discuss why it's alright (according to Farmer) to mock a divorce if it's a Kardashian divorce. Among the TV shows, thinkers, and other ideas we take on are An American Family, The Real World, The Weakest Link, The Soup, Survivor, conservative localism, celebrity narcissism, Mythbusters, and Project Runway. | 11/8/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 63: The End of the World as We Read it | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the apocalypse, apocalyptic literature, and otherwise about the end of things. Working our way from Biblical apocalyptic to modern-day end-of-the-world stories, we focus on the assumed philosophies of history that inform each sort of apocalyptic. Among the texts, ideas, and writers we discuss are Revelation, Daniel, the Dead Sea Scrolls, Dante's Purgatory, Shakespeare's Henry V, Walker Percy's Love in the Ruins, and WALL-E. | 11/1/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 62: Aeschylus | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and David Grubbs about the Greek tragedy Prometheus Bound, traditinally attributed to Aeschylus. Prometheus is a character whose career makes sense in the context of Greek henotheism, becomes unintelligible at the height of Christian literary sensibility, and makes a comeback in some interesting ways as modernity overtakes classical Christianity as the dominant intellectual context in literature. Among the texts, writers, and ideas we discuss are Aeschylus, Boethius, Dante, Milton, Shelley, the New Atheism, and Dostoevsky. | 10/25/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 61: Euripides | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about Athenian tragedian Euripides and two of his plays. Euripides is the "bad boy" among Greek playwrights, and we talk a bit about his strange biography before digging into his horrendous pictures of gods. Among the texts, writers, and ideas we engage are comedians as biographers, deus ex machina, gods as allegories, Platonic and Aristotelian readings of tragedies, and Melville. | 10/18/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 60: Sophocles | David Grubbs moderates a conversation with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about Greek tragedy as a genre and specifically about Sophocles, the most-read artist in the genre. Along the way we focus on the broad range of readings that Sophocles has inspired, all the way from Aristotle to Freud. Among the texts, writers, and ideas we discuss are Oedipus Rex, Antigone, Aristotle's Poetics, Freud's Interpretation of Dreams, Bonhoeffer, and Martin Luther King Jr. | 10/11/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 59: Godwin's Law | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about Internet discourse, the vices that seem to inhere in Internet exchanges, and why a long online discussion is probably at some point going to involve Hitler. Although technology is always on the table, rhetoric is really the name of the game. Among the writers, ideas, and other bad habits we discuss are psychologizing one's opponent, posting manifestos on Facebook, making people into devils, exhibiting classical virtue in online life, and acknowledging just how wise John Mark Reynolds can be when he gets Platonic on your head. | 10/4/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 58: Christian Right, Christian Left | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with (Comrade) Nathan Gilmour and (Ayatollah) David Grubbs about the strange relationships between political parties and Christian confession in America. One of the central questions (that we try really hard to answer) is whether and to what extent partisan identity stunts moral reasoning. Among the ideas and phenomena we discuss are the U.S. Constitution, the Abolition movement, the Social Gospel, Focus on the Family, whether or not the current Christian Left deserves that title, and some suggestions for how Christians can relate to political parties. | 9/27/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 57: Libraries | David Grubbs moderates a conversation with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the history, role, and changing face of libraries. Our conversation involves, among other things, Farmer debunking yet another myth about the American founders and Gilmour telling a story involving Touret's Syndrome and a colostomy bag. Among the writers, libraries, andother interesting bits we discuss are Bede, Ben Franklin, academic databases, public libraries, seminary libraries, and the Internet's relationships with modern libraries. | 9/20/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 56: Civil Wars | nNathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and David Grubbs about civil wars, starting with the Absalom revolt (which seldom gets called a civil war) and ending with the Sunni/Shi'ite conflicts in Iraq (which erroneously get called civil wars, according to Grubbs). Along the way we wrestle with the tensions between the duty to one's countrymen and dedication to ideas and individuals that characterize each such struggle. Among the wars, people, and other artifacts that we discuss are the Roman Civil War, the English Civil War, the American Civil War, and Hank Williams Secundus. | 9/13/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 55: Enlightenment 101 | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about the fascinating period known as the Enlightenment. Using the theme of compartmentalization, the Humanists attempt to articulate connections between the scientific, philosophical, political, and religious tendencies of thinkers between the late seventeenth and the early nineteenth centuries. Among the texts, ideas, and intellectuals we discuss are Rene Descartes, Blaise Pascal, Adam Smith, David Hume, John Locke, Isaac Newton, Immanuel Kant, Emanuel Swedenborg, and Jonathan Edwards. | 9/6/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 54: The Brains in the Body | David Grubbs moderates a conversation with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about intellectuals within the Church, some of the ways that intellectuals have related to the Church, and some suggestions about how intellectuals might relate to the Church. We take on the advantages and the drawbacks of the monk, the hermit, and the philosopher-king models along the way, and Gilmour manages to alienate church-planters one more time. Among the texts, authors, and ideas discussed are Plato, Milton, Emerson, Pope Gregory the Great, John Calvin, church planting, and congregational life. | 8/30/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 53: Welcome Back! | Nathan Gilmour moderates a conversation with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about... the Christian Humanist Podcast! We recount the roots of the show, the sorts of episodes that we tend to record, and the fights that always seem to show up when people write nice things about our show. Among the ideas and episodes we discuss are the curator episodes, the triptychs, the Christian Humanist Blog, and the future of the project. See www.christianhumanist.org for an index, by episode number, of the shows discussed. | 8/23/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 52: Theological Dramatics | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with Nathan Gilmour and David Grubbs about Nathan's recent book Theological Dramatics: Two Christological Case Studies. Along with some discussions of John Milton's Paradise Regained and Aemelia Lanyer's Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum (the two texts that the book discusses), the conversation ranges into the relationships between poetry, sermon, and criticism; and church and academy. Among the texts, ideas, and writers that we discuss are John Milton, Aemeila Lanyer, the possibility of Christian literary criticism, New Historicism, and Jesus poems. | 7/28/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 51: Archaeology | David Grubbs and special guest host Luke Chandler moderate a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour on the topic of archaeology, especially as it concerns the excavation of Biblical sites and the effects that archaeology has had on the ways that Christians read the Bible and think about the lives of our forebears. Among the texts, ideas, and artifacts that we discuss are the Khirbet Qeiyafa site, the practice and disciplines of archaeology, David and Goliath, the Enuma Elish, the Chronicles of Narnia, Augustine, and modern theology. | 6/17/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 50.1: Seven Nation Army | Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour have some great news. It won't take long--have a listen! | 5/21/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 50: Christian Humanist University | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about Christian Humanist University, a Platonic ideal of a college, and what such an ideal might do for the way that we imagine and evaluate real colleges. Among the texts, ideas, and other realities we discuss are core curriculum, the purpose of a university, college athletics, specialization, relationships between college and society, and college architecture. | 5/10/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 49: George Herbert | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about the seventeenth-century English poet George Herbert. In addition to readings from three of his poems, the discussion ranges from the nature of devotional poetry to the current MFA culture of active poets. Among the texts and artists we discuss are George Herbert, "The Pulley," "The Collar," "Holy Scriptures I," The Country Parson, and The Temple. | 5/3/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 48: Literary Canons | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the concept of canon and the ways that it affects the ways that we receive the Bible, teach literature, and otherwise engage important texts. We propose ways to think about the "great books" in our specialty areas and discuss expansions and contractions of the canon. Among the texts, ideas, and writers we engage are the Bible, Beowulf, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Mark Twain, Women's Studies, and Derrida. | 4/26/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 47: Travel | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about travel, the relationships between home and the road, adn some historical changes in conceptions of travel. Our musings revolve around the imagination of travel, from wilderness wandering to pilgrimage to colonization to vacation. Among the texts, ideas, and historical figures we engage are Deuteronomy, the Vikings, Spring Break, cosmopolitanism on the cheap, truckers, pilgrimage, and Milton. | 4/19/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 46: Cybernetics | Nathan Gilmour moderates a LONG discussion of cybernetics, those relationships between humanity and technology that define everyday existence. Our conversation ranges from ancient philosophies of technology to movie and comic book bad guys to modern philosophical engagements with the character of technology. Among the artifacts and writers we touch on are Plato, Paul, Edgar Allen Poe, Darth Vader, Captain Hook, Kobo Abe, Neil Postman, Martin Heidegger, and Genesis. | 4/12/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 45: Language Is Sermonic | David Grubbs moderates a conversation with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about Richard Weaver's essay "Language Is Sermonic." Exploring the particular topoi of rhetorical construction and the philosophy that would elevate rhetoric to a place of prominence among the liberal arts, the Humanists wax analogical and say nice things about teaching composition. Among the texts and other subjects of discussion are "Language Is Sermonic," Richard Weaver, Plato, Thomas Aquinas, and rhetoric. | 4/4/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 44: Richard Weaver and Ultimate Terms | Michial Farmer moderates a conversation with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about Richard Weaver's essay "Ultimate Terms in Contemporary Rhetoric." The central idea, which the Humanists explore in some detail, is that modern discourse has some peculiarities in terms of our "god terms" and "devil terms" that make dialectic a more important helper to rhetoric than ever. Along the way we discuss Richard Weaver, so-called GI Rhetoric, evangelical devil-terms, and political rhetoric. | 3/29/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 43: Richard Weaver and the Phaedrus | Nathan Gilmour moderates a conversation with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about Richard Weaver's essay "The Phaedrus and the Nature of Rhetoric." Exploring Weaver's provocative connections between public speech, good and evil, and education, the discussion takes turns into philosophy, education, and all sorts of interesting places. Among the texts and authors we discuss are Richard Weaver, Plato, the Phaedrus, and Derrida. | 3/22/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 42: Asceticism | David Grubbs moderates a conversation about various forms of Biblical and Christian asceticism, including but not limited to monasticism and mendicant orders. As the topics move from historical era to historical era, our focus returns to the possibility of genuine difference from the world that serves the world in its difference. Among the historical figures and texts discussed are Genesis, Leviticus, Saint Anthony, Saint Francis, Chaucer, Martin Luther, Martin Luther King Jr., Saint Jerome, and Freud. | 3/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 41.01: The Christian Humanist Blues | Nathan Gilmour apologizes for another missed episode and encourages listeners to spread the word about the episodes they have enjoyed. | 3/8/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 41: Carpe Diem | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with Nathan Gilmour and David Grubbs about the long legacy of Carpe Diem. We get into the history, ideology, and human condition that makes sense of it, and we offer criticisms along the way. Among the texts, authors, and other artifacts discussed are Horace, Epicurus, Ecclesiastes, Thoreau, Herrick, Marvell, Carmina Burana, Bede, Dead Poets' Society, and Glee! (Yes, Gilmour watches Glee.) | 3/1/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 40.01: Neil Postman Was Right | Michial Farmer offers an apology for a podcast that never happens. Really the only relevant topic is the widespread Internet outages at UGA last week. | 2/22/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 40: The King James Bible | Nathan Gilmour moderates a conversation with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about the King James Bible, which has its 400th anniversary this year. From its literary influence to its translation philosophy, our discussion pays homage to one of the true literary monuments of the English language. Among the texts, authors, and topics discussed are the King James Bible (of course), Lord Byron, The Book of Mormon, Walt Whitman, dynamic equivalence, formal equivalence, metaphors in poetry, and 19th-century American religions. | 2/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 39: Town and Country | David Grubbs moderates a conversation with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the ways that people in different places and moments have distinguished between rural and urban life. The strange relationship between city and countryside has always involved both idealization and demonization, and those dynamics make for some fascinating developments as imperial cities give way to the City of God and eventually become suburbs. Among the texts and authors we discuss are Gilgamesh, Genesis, the Gospels, City of God, the Canterbury Tales, Paradise Lost, Huckleberry Finn, The Great Gatsby, The Return of the King, and Rabbit, Run. | 2/8/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 38: Nationalism | Michial Farmer moderates a lively discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about the history of national identity, beginning with the Greeks and Romans and finishing up with a discussion of post-9/11 American nationalism. Along the way we talk about the Old Testament's and the New Testament's treatments of nation, some legends and propaganda techniques that grow up around the middle ages and Renaissance, and even a bit about Egypt. Among the authors, texts, and historical moments we discuss are William T. Cavanaugh, C.S. Lewis, Philippians, Geoffrey of Monmouth, the Persian Empire, the Tea Party, and the U.S. Constitution (the document, not the sailing vessel). | 2/1/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 37: The Italian Renaissance | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about the Italian Renaissance and the broad spectrum of intellectual and artistic activity that emerges from that period. On the way we focus on the strong continuities between the concrete continuities between this fascinating time and what people in that moment called "the Dark Ages," and that discussion takes us into the realms of sculpture and politics and philosophy as well as poetry. Among the authors, artists, and others discussed are Dante, Petrarch, Machiavelli, Michelangelo, Leonardo, Castiglione, Pico de Mirandola, and the Medicis. | 1/24/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 36.01: Top Songs of 2010 | Michial Farmer discusses the best music releases of 2010 in a solo podcast. | 12/31/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 36: The Incarnation | David Grubbs moderates a conversation with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the doctrine of the incarnation and its relationship with Christmas. Although we just scratch the surface of this complex doctrine, it's a surface well worth scratching. Among the artifacts and artificers we discuss are Arius, St. Nicholas, Isaiah, Zeus myths, the gospels of Matthew and Luke, Christmas carols, John Milton, and Stevie Wonder. | 12/14/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 35: Christian Rock | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about the history, character, and aims of Christian rock and its later Contemporary Christian Music counterparts. Along the way we talk about the history of musical production, and David sees his normal continuity and Nathan insists on historical difference. Among the musicians, historical phenomena, and texts we discuss are Larry Norman, the Jesus Movement, Second Chapter of Acts, Steve Taylor, Audio Adrenaline, Mercy Me, and niche marketing. | 12/7/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 34: The Faerie Queene | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs, Nathan Gilmour, and special guest host Carla Ewert about Our discussion tackles the nature of allegory, relationships between literary theory and this particular text, and Carla's recent work on Book 3 for her Master's thesis. Among the texts and authors we discuss are Edmund Spenser, the Faerie Queene, John Milbank, [French theorist], C.S. Lewis, and John Bunyan. | 11/23/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 33: Classical Music | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about the divisions, history, and purposes of what folks call Classical Music. On the way the discussion digs into questions of how symphonic or operatic music stands sacred and why all three Humanists hold up classical music as worthy of a place within a Christian liberal arts education. Among the composers and artifacts we discuss are J.S. Bach, St. Hatthew's Passion, Beethoven's 9th, The Magic Flute, Plato, and Frederic Chopin. | 11/16/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 32.1: Church Music Revisited | David Grubbs and Michial Farmer continue last week's discussion about emotion and church music. Among the songs and texts discussed are St. Augustine, Karl Barth, that Manwich commercial with "Ode to Joy" in it, Friedrich Schleiermacher, C.S. Lewis, and "In the Secret." | 11/9/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 32: Church Music | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the music that Christians sing together. At the heart of the discussion is the purpose of congregational singing and historical shifts in what people expect from music. Among the texts, authors, and musical happenings discussed are Caedmon, the Psalms, Ephesians, Martin Luther, Fanny Crosby, the Jesus Movement, and Charles Wesley. | 11/2/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 31: Dogma and Doctrine | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about the history, role, use, and abuse of doctrine and dogma. We examine modern and postmodern objections to them and attempt a case for openly partiucular Christian doctrines. Among the texts and authors we discuss are the Nicene Creed, the New Testament, Pope Benedict XVI, George Lindbeck, and a certain unnamed preacher who seems to appear on jumbotron screens. | 10/26/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 30: Revenge | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and David Grubbs about revenge, the uneasy relationship that Christians have had with revenge, and the literary and pop-culture manifestations of revenge that interest us most. We disagree about whether abstract revenge or complex, literary-realist revenge is more dangerous, but we have fun getting there. Among the texts, authors, and other artifacts we discuss are the Iliad, Genesis 4, Romans, Matthew, Beowulf (with fanfare), The Scarlet Letter, Roger's Version, Ninja Gaiden, Tenchu: Stealth Assassin, the Princess Bride, and Unforgiven. | 10/19/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 29: Mentors | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the origins of the mentor-protege relationship, why mentee is not a word, and some of the influences that led the three Christian Humanists to the places we are today. Along the way we suggest concrete measures whereby colleges can facilitate mentoring and discuss why mandatory mentorship is probably a bad idea. Among the texts and authors and mentors we discuss are Athena, Mentor, Paul, Timothy, the Odyssey, C.S. Lewis, Walker Percy, and Walter Brueggemann. | 10/12/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 28.1: Heidegger | Michial Farmer discusses with Nathan Gilmour the work and influence of German philosopher Martin Heidegger. Central to the discussion is the nature, potential goods, and potential dangers inherent in Christians' engagements with thinkers with wildly different politics and beliefs. Among the texts and authors we discuss are Martin Heidegger (of course), Being and Time, Gilgamesh, the Gospel of Luke, and Being and Nothingness. | 10/5/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 28.01: A Week Off | Nathan Gilmour talks to the faithful listeners of CHP for a minute or two about ways to support our ongoing endeavors. | 9/28/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 28: Kings | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and David Grubbs about kings, kingship, and resistance to monarchy in selected spots in history. We range from King David to Richard Petty, and we manage to get Jesus in there along the way as well. Among the texts, authors, and kings discussed are 1 and 2 Samuel, 1 Chronicles, the Iliad, the gospel according to St. Matthew, Beowulf, Charlemagne, and Elvis Presley. | 9/21/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 27: Superheroes | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the superhero, its literary antecedents, and some of its postmodern outgrowths. We go all the way from demigods and cowboys to Watchmen and Incredibles. Among the authors, texts, and heroes discussed are Homer, Gilgamesh, James Fennimore Cooper, John Wayne, Superman, Batman, the X-Men, the Incredibles, Kurt Vonnegut, and Alan Moore. | 9/14/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 26: Friendship | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about the practice of friendship, its development from Biblical and Homeric times to modern Facebook "friends," and detours along the way. In addition the discussion ranges from modern short-sightedness regarding friendship and an attempt at a Christian theology of friendship. Among the texts and authors we discuss are Homer, 1 Samuel, Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics, Cicero, the Inklings, The Lord of the Rings, Sherlock Holmes and James Watson, Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer, Martin Buber, and all sorts of others. We covered a bunch of text this episode. | 9/7/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 25: Plato | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about the Athenian philosopher Plato, the content of his philosophy, and his continuing influence for good and for ill in the Christian era. Along the way we dig into questions of the goodness of creation, the relationships between critical and laudatory versions of great individuals' stories, and how to live with teh ancients. Among the texts and authors we discuss are Plato's Republic, Euthyphro, Apology, Timaeus, and the Laws; C.S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia; E. Abbot's Flatland, and Allan Bloom's The Closing of the American Mind. | 8/31/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 24: A Second Start | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about the history of the podcast, our reasons for continuing the podcast, and what's in store for this year. Among the authors, podcasts, and texts we discuss are the Scriptorium Daily, CWC the Radio Show, John Calvin, and our own podcast. | 8/24/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 23: Fandom and Fanaticism | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs, Nathan Gilmour, and special guest host Victoria Farmer on what it means to be a fan, distinctions between partisan fandom and expert fandom, fan fiction, and other fantastic things. Among the texts and authors we discuss are Hanson, Tolkien, King's X, Foucault, Hegel, and Shakespeare. | 7/28/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 22.1: Science | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and special guest host Dan Dawson on science and faith, faith and science, history and all of the above, and what exactly tornadoes are. Discussions range from the historical illiteracy of the new atheists to the fear and ignorance that humanities types sometimes exhibit towards the laboratory. Among the texts and authors discussed are Carl Sagan, C.P. Snow, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allen Poe, Herman Melville, Averroes, Aristotle, and Sir Isaac Newton. | 6/23/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 22: Stage Comedy | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer, David Grubbs, and special guest host Ryan Gilmour on stage comedy and its televised descendants. We talk about medieval roots, Renaissance developments, American Vaudeville influences, and a whole mess about Saturday Night Live. We get to the improv, the standup, the sitcom, and all sorts of groovy things. Among the texts and comedy acts discussed are Beowulf, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Dave Chappelle, Richard Pryor, George Carlin, Saturday Night Live, and Second City. | 5/20/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 21: Literary Criticism | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion of literary criticism's roots, its character as distinctive from Literary Theory, and the place of criticism in teaching and in the creation of artistic works. Along the way the discussion deals with the material conditions that lead to contemporary literary criticism, the movements against which it has tended to react, and its promise for better reading. Among the authors and texts discussed are J.R.R. Tolkien, Cleanth Brooks, John Updike, Sir Philip Sidney, John Milton, and William Wordsworth. | 4/28/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 20: Judas | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion about Judas, the betrayer of Jesus, and his literary life and afterlife. Along the way the Humanists discuss controversial questions such as the nature of the gospels, the relationship between history and literature, and things that make a crucifixion scene worthy of meditation or of scorn. Among the texts, authors, and movies discussed this week are Genesis, Matthew, John, the York Mystery Plays, Dante, The Last Temptation of Christ, the Passion of the Christ, Countee Cullen, and Frederick Buechener. | 4/21/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 19: Detective Fiction | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Nathan Gilmour and Michial Farmer about detective fiction, its roots in Romanticism and Victorian literature, and the changes it undergoes as the television age progresses. Along the way we talk about the sidekick figure, the development of the wounded-warrior stereotype in the genre, and why those toys on NCIS don't really exist. Among the authors, texts, and television shows discussed are Edgar Allen Poe, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, G.K. Chesterton, Bones, House, The Wire, and the Talmud. | 4/14/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 18: Sports | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour on sports, their ethical weight, their psychological functions, their place in the history of civilization and of literary enterprise, and why nobody likes the Yankees. Among the contested ideas are the relative merits of civic sporting patriotism, the goods inherent in playing and in watching sports, and the art of televised football. Among the texts and authors discussed are Homer, John Updike, and A Dying Cub Fan's Last Request. | 4/7/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 17: Great Books and Critical Theory | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and David Grubbs about the shape of literary education and especially the fight between Critical Theory and Great Books curricula. Beginning with the Renaissance and moving forward into the age of research universities, they examine and critique various visions of general education. Among the texts and authors discussed are C.S. Lewis, Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, John Henry Newman, George Campbell, Adam Smith, and Thomas Malory. | 3/31/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 16.1: Horror Movies | David Grubbs and Michial Farmer hold forth on scary things, tracing their ancient roots and modern-era American and British flowering and exploring the sorts of things that movies do to scare audiences. Among the movies, texts, and authors discussed are Gilgamesh, Edgar Allen Poe, Horace Walpole, The Shining, H.P. Lovecraft, Jaws, Dracula, and Frankenstein. | 3/24/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 16: Christian Colleges | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with David Grubbs, Nathan Gilmour, and special guest co-host Chris Gehrz about the purpose and the future of Christian colleges, our experiences with them, and various theories of education--ranging from Reformed to Pietist--which inform life in the Christian college. Among the authors and texts discussed in this week's show are Arthur Holmes, Chris Gehrz, Will Willimon, and James K.A. Smith. | 3/17/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 15: Youth Ministry | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion of youth ministry, its roots in twentieth-century American youth culture, some departures from older ways of thinking about childhood, the different ways that youth ministers have tried to adapt to the cult of the young, and some interesting developments and alternatives. Among the texts, authors, and movements discussed in this episode are J.D. Salinger, Geoffrey Chaucer, Jack Kerouac, homeschooling, Johnson City style youth ministry, and chubby bunnies. (This might be the last time chubby bunnies ever makes the show notes for this podcast.) | 3/11/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 14: Literary Genesis | David Grubbs moderates a discussion of literary origin stories, starting in the Babylonian and other Levantine predecessors of Genesis, spending a fair bit of time on Genesis, and launching forth (after a detour through the Greeks and Romans, of course) into the Christian era's accounts of creation. Among the authors and texts discussed are Enuma Elish, Genesis, Rig Veda, the Gospel of John, Ovid, Caedmon, Paradise Lost, and the Chronicles of Narnia. | 3/3/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 13: The Death of Conservatism? | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion of Sam Tanenhaus's recent book The Death of Conservatism, its relative truth and worth, and how the Christian Humanists relate to various iterations of conservatism. Among the authors and texts with which we engage are Sam Tanenhaus, Edmund Burke, Neil Postman, Stanley Hauerwas, Augustine, and Plato. | 2/24/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 12: Movies: Tragedy | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion of the flexible, durable genre of tragedy, the ways that the Greeks thought about it and the Renaissance reinvigorated it, and the movies that take advantage of its power. Among the texts, authors, and movies discussed are Euripedes, Aristotle, Seneca, Chaucer, Shakespeare, The Godfather films, John Updike, Fargo, No Country for Old Men, and The Wire. | 2/17/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 11: Movies: Epics | David Grubbs moderates a discussion about the varieties of epic, the nationalist ideologies that motivate some of the theories of epic, the relationships between novels and epics, and how all of these discussions inform the Christian Humanists' common sense that most movies claiming to be epic movies are nearly unwatchable. Among the authors, texts, and movies discussed are Homer, Virgil, Beowulf, Hudibras, Troy, King Arthur, Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings movies, Garden State, and 300. | 2/10/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 10.1: Movies: Comedy | Michial Farmer and David Grubbs hold forth on the character of literary comedy, its place in Christian traditions, and why life is in fact one long Monty Python movie. Among the texts, authors, and movies discussed are Aristophanes, Shakespeare, Monty Python, Weird Al, G.K. Chesterton, Aristotle, and... no, at this point not even we believe this list. | 2/3/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 10: Literary Hell | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion of how life-after-death, especially the unpleasant sort, appears in literary texts, beginning in Classical poetry, moving through a healthy dose of medieval poetry, and finishing with a consideration of some interesting twentieth-century visions of Hell. Among the texts and authors we discuss are Homer, Virgil, Beowulf, Anglo-Saxon homilies, Guthlac, Genesis B from the Junius Manuscript, Dante, Langland, Gower, Milton, C.S. Lewis, and Sartre. | 1/27/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 9: The Haiti Earthquake | David Grubbs moderates a discussion of the national mythology, the spiritual realities, and the ongoing plight of Haiti, focusing on the comments of Pat Robertson and responses from some of his liberal critics. We delve into theodicy, Providence, apocalyptic, archaeology of knowleddge, and other topics, and the texts we discuss are the Biblical books of 1 Chronicles, Job, Ecclesiastes, and Revelation; Boethius, Calvin, The Wanderer, and Jon Levenson. | 1/12/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 8: Apologetics | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion of the theological enterprise called apologetics, starting from patristic endeavors and moving through high-medieval theology and finishing with the Humanists' suggestions for Christian apologists in the twenty-first century. Among the writers we discuss are Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Anselm, Thomas Aquinas, C.S. Lewis, Kierkegaard, John Milbank, Cornelius van Til, Ken Ham, and Richard Dawkins. | 1/12/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 7: Wars on Christmas | Nathan Gilmour, snotty English teacher, moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer on various attempts to stymie Christmas over the centuries, culminating in a discussion of the 21st century's versions of the same. Among the texts we discuss are Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Morte d'Arthur, Washington Irving's The Sketchbook of Geoffrey Crayon, A Christmas Carol, The Grinch who Stole Christmas, and various 24-hour news programs. Listen to hear our favorite story of St. Nicholas. | 12/10/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 6: Fantasy and Science Fiction | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about modern-era speculative fiction, including fantasy and science fiction. Discussion ranges from our early experiences with the genres to theological and philosophical curiosities within and objections to both. Among the authors we discuss are J.R.R. Tolkien, William Gibson, Philip K. Dick, Kurt Vonnegut, and Walker Percy. | 12/1/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 5.1: More on New Calvinism and Emergent | Technical difficulties unfortunately shorten a further discussion of Emergent and New Calvinism, this time focusing on border figures like Clark Pinnock, James K.A. Smith, and Michael Spencer. Further discussions of muti-site churches and book publishing almost get rolling. | 11/24/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 5: Neo-Calvinists vs. Emergent | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion about Emergent and New Calvinism, their perceived and real impact, their relationships to history, and other such things. Among other topics, the discussion treats Mark Driscoll, Brian McLaren, Tony Jones, celebrity culture in the church, multisite worship, and the plague of hipness in the Church. | 11/17/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 4: God and Country | Mchial Farmer moderates a discussion about the relationships between Christianity and American origins, Christian ethics and participation in the state, and resisting evil. Among other topics the hosts discuss Anabaptist politics, the Declaration of Independence, and the problems of being Christian and affirming the American Revolution. | 11/10/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 3: The Church Fathers and Christian Humanism | David Grubbs moderates a discussion with Michial Farmer and Nathan Gilmour about how Protestants and Catholics relate to the Church Fathers, how the Church Fathers relate to human learning, and how everyone after the Church Fathers keeps wanting to take them where they themselves preferred not to go. In the course of things we treat John Updike's use of Tertullian; the relationships between Augustine, Plotinus, and modern Christian philosophy; Protestant and Catholic "uses" of the Church Fathers, and other interesting things. | 11/3/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 2: John Calvin and Christian Humanism | Nathan Gilmour moderates a discussion with David Grubbs and Michial Farmer about the ways that John Calvin affects our scholarship, our theology, and other parts of our life and about Calvin's helpful reminders to 21st-century Christians. Along the way we treat Calvin's early interactions with Seneca, Calvin's attitudes towards worldly learning, and how Calvinism affected the course of medieval studies. | 10/27/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 1: The Christian Humanist | Michial Farmer moderates a discussion with Nathan Gilmour and David Grubbs about what Christian humanism means, how it plays into the life of the Church and of the academy, and how a Christian humanist might respond to common criticisms. In the course of things we trace humanism's roots in Patristic encouters with philosophy and rhetoric; the flowering of Christian Humanism in the Renaissance, especially in the work of Desiderus Erasmus; and some twentieth-century figures who have continued the project. | 10/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| Total: 88 Episodes |
Customer Reviews
Fantastic podcast for the thinking Christian
I'm not unbiased, being a fellow CPC member with Michial, but this is one of my favorite podcasts. The crew does a wonderful job of engaging their subject matter with all synapses firing -- they sure keep me on my toes. So far I have listened to each show more than once and have had to expand my book wish list accordingly. Thanks!
Even when I disagree...which is often
I disagree with these guys often but they put out a really great show that forces me to think. I tend toward a more Christian Anarchist understanding (a la Jacques Ellul) but I appreciate what they have to contribute. Keep up the good work. I give them 5 not because I agree but because they set a fairly high bar for discussion.
Great intellectual podcast
With a 1.5 hour commute every day, I listen to a lot of podcasts. This is one of my favorites. From insightful, well-argued discussions to witty banter between the hosts this podcast gives me my fix of intellectual literary discussion from a christian perspective while keeping me engaged and entertained.
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