1. Kelsi chats with singer/songwriter, Andy Gullahorn, about his writing process and the impact of ending stories with the good news of grace and the gospel.
  2. Everybody’s Working for the Weekend. In this episode, we continue our Lenten tradition of reading Luther’s Galatians commentary in March, discussing past and present idolatry and why we keep falling for the same sales pitches from the same gods.
  3. agnus Persson joins Scott and Caleb Keith to discuss the decline of Christianity in Europe.
  4. David and Adam continue the discussion on woke culture and ideology.
  5. This episode introduces the topic of our next few episodes, where David and Adam discuss woke culture and ideology.
  6. Nearly two decades ago, Pope Benedict XVI (formerly Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger) delivered what is often called the Regensburg lecture. Though it was meant to rekindle the relationship between faith and reason (or science and theology) in higher education, much of the world—or at least the Muslim majority world—got distracted by a brief reference he made to a fifteenth-century dialogue about Islam, its theological voluntarism, and the consequences of such a view of God.
  7. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-SIX, Mike and Wade are joined by Prof. Joshua Johnson from the college to discuss education as formation. Despite Wade’s best efforts, the guys got a little distracted at a few points, but we think it was fun, and the topic is one we hope to return to in the future.
  8. Where have all the Christians gone? New research reveals that this question is becoming more common as Americans abandon Christianity.
  9. Today on the Christian History Almanac podcast, we remember the Broadway debut of “Jesus Christ Superstar.”
  10. This is the last episode in David and Adam’s series on the philosophical and scientific reasons for believing in God’s existence.
  11. Today on the Christian History Almanac podcast, we head to the mailbag to answer a question about Christianity and sports.
  12. David and Adam discuss how reason’s competence (with respect to the Christian tradition) has changed over the centuries.