1. As Gretchen Ronnevik was with her family at Mount Carmel Bible Camp, she ran into her friends, Nathan and Joy Hoff who run an internship program in California for young adults at their church.
  2. David and Adam discuss secularism and its challenges.
  3. Kelsi chats with the Reverend Jacob Smith about the authority of Scripture - how we define it and what it means for us - both Christian and non-Christian.
  4. David and Adam talk about Friedrich Nietzsche's parable of the madman and its implications for thinking about morality and ethics.
  5. Do we have an obligation to find and furnish evidence for our beliefs?
  6. David and Adam use an old Greek myth as the starting point for a conversation about confirmation bias and other shortcomings to understand and make sense of things.
  7. We Can Be Heroes… In this episode, we discuss death and resurrection, hierarchy and authority, corporatism, Christian nationalism, self-sacrificial love, building a body without Christ as its head, the symbolism of salvation without the Lamb, pop culture tropes, the hero's journey, and teaching Christians not to doubt their salvation.
  8. David and Adam reflect on the parable of the invisible gardener, which John Wisdom (1904-1993) and Antony Flew (1923-2010) developed to illustrate epistemological and linguistic issues associated with theology.
  9. David and Adam talk about the epistemologies and apologetics of Mormonism, Islam, and Christianity.
  10. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIVE, Mike, Jason, and Wade discuss the head, the heart, and where Christianity should aim.
  11. Some resources for thinking about faith and reason
  12. This episode covers realism, nominalism, and much more in under 40 minutes.