1. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND THIRTY, Mike, Jason, Wade discuss how human beings see themselves (for example, as consumers, producers, students, etc.) and how such paradigms are helpful or problematic.
  2. The Thinking Fellows continue their conversation on Gresham Machen's Christianity and Liberalism.
  3. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY-EIGHT, Mike, Jason, and Wade continue to discuss the Bennett Law, when confessional Lutherans teamed up with the Roman Catholics in Wisconsin to vote out the Republicans over the use of English in schools.
  4. Caleb, Scott, Adam, and Bruce discuss J. Gresham Machen's work Christianity and Liberalism. 
  5. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SEVEN, Mike, Jason, and Wade discuss the Bennett Law, when confessional Lutherans teamed up with the Roman Catholics in Wisconsin to vote out the Republicans over the use of English in schools.
  6. What responsibilities do individual Christians and their churches possess to fight against an antagonistic culture?
  7. Today on the Christian History Almanac podcast, we look at a German Moravian in the Colonies who played a crucial role in English Methodism (!)
  8. And We Are Live! In this episode, we go live for Holy Week and answer listeners' questions: election, repentance, the church, law and gospel, and on and on we go.
  9. Are Christianity and psychology compatible?
  10. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FOUR, Mike, Jason, and Wade continue the guys' discussion of anthropology, now taking up the Flood and Noah. We hope you enjoy the episode!
  11. In the cultural debate over God's existence, should the burden of proof rest on atheism rather than theism?
  12. In episode TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY-ONE, Mike, Jason, Wade, and Tyler continue the guys’ discussion of anthropology. They discuss what it means that Adam’s son, Seth, and all after him, are made in Adam’s image and likeness, the “and he died” refrain of chapter five, human corruption, the Nephilim, and our temptation to externalize sin and internalize salvation, among other things.