Thinking Christian

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Your weekly guide to solid Christian thinking on faith, science, culture, and Christian confidence. Thinking Christian is hosted by Tom Gilson, who also runs the top-ranked blog of the same name. He's a senior editor at The Stream, (stream.org) and the author of multiple books including the 2020 release, Too Good to Be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality

Tom Gilson


    • Feb 19, 2022 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 22m AVG DURATION
    • 37 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Thinking Christian

    Episode 3-5, Pastors' Equipping Series: Explaining How Perfectly Right Jesus Got It on Marriage

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2022 27:33


    Jesus got marriage right. Really right, and right in ways the rest of us can really appreciate, if we think about it in the right context. So His teaching provides a good introduction to biblical teaching on all sexual morality, for those who aren’t so sure the Bible gets it right. This sermon accompanies a Pastors’ Corner article at The Stream, where I’m a writer and senior editor. It’s in the Practical Ministry Explainer series, and it’s titled “How to Begin Teaching the Truth About Homosexuality.” It’s for pastors who want to begin teaching especially on homosexuality but aren’t sure where to start or what fireworks they may set off. This is the first in a series of steps toward complete and open teaching on sex, sexuality, and gender. And it’s got a couple of creative twists in it that I think you’ll enjoy. We’d love to get pastors’ feedback on the Pastors’ Corner, both here and at The Stream. We’re asking you help us help you by filling out a short questionnaire to let us know how we’re doing and how we can serve you better. We invite you to use this message not just as information but as a sample sermon. We do ask that in your bulletin and online postings you give credit to Tom Gilson and to The Stream, with whom this work is being done in cooperation, with links both to The Stream and to this podcast page. Download the transcript for a written form of this sermon as well. If you're not a pastor, please consider yourself a member of the congregation listening and learning. You're most welcome here! And then do please send this podcast to your pastor. There'll be more like it to come!

    Episode 3-4: How to Find Your Authentic Self

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 32:57


    It’s a top priority in our culture: Finding your authentic self. Could it be, though, that we’ll find that better through finding an authentic view of God? This episode recorded from a sermon given at The River Church in Liberty Township, Ohio, on January 23, 2022. You can view it on video here. Visit https://www.thinkingchristian.net for a free chapter download of the book many say is giving them surprising, yet faithful new insights into Jesus Christ. I mentioned it in the podcast: Too Good to Be False: How Jesus’ Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality. You can get your preview, a chapter that will astonish you on the greatness of Jesus’ love, by visiting thinkingchristian.net.

    Episode 3-3: Pastors' Equipping Series: Sample Sermon on Christian Exclusivism vs. Pluralism — (Optionally) Christmas Themed!

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2021 34:23


    Christians aren’t supposed to say we have the one truth. That’s the word around our culture, anyway. We’re supposed to be “humble” about our beliefs; to give equal worth and respect to all other beliefs. That’s what culture tells us, but what does God say? Clearly Jesus claims to be the one way, the one truth, and the one life, through whom alone we can come to the Father. But how does that square with Christian humility? How do we live that out without arrogance? And why isn’t God like an elephant? You weren’t expecting that last question, I’m sure! That’s okay, it’s just a teaser to a fun part of this sample sermon on Christian Exclusivism vs. Religious Pluralism. I present this early in December, with a Christmas theme as part of it, but you can easily extract that part out and use the rest of it any time of the year. This comes to you in cooperation with The Stream, where you'll find a wealth of accompanying information, in the form of a one-page summary “explainer” article covering this material and more, with links in it to all the supporting documentation you could want in order to make sure you're representing the truth in this message if you use it. Also here at Thinking Christian, find a written version of this sample sermon. We invite you to use this, not just as information but as a sample sermon. We do ask that in your bulletin and online postings you give credit to Tom Gilson and to The Stream, with whom this work is being done in cooperation, with links both to The Stream and to this podcast page. Check out the Thinking Christian blog for a written form of this sample sermon as well. If you're not a pastor, please consider yourself a member of the congregation listening and learning. You're most welcome here! And then do please send this podcast to your pastor. There'll be more like it to come!

    Episode 3-2 — Pastor Equipping Series: Sample Sermon on the Faith-Science Challenge (Emphasis on the Virgin Birth of Jesus)

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2021 29:24


    Faith vs. Science: It feels like David approaching Goliath, with no sling and no stones. Or at least, that’s the way a lot of people want us to feel it. As pastor, you know there’s pressure on Christians to deny the faith in favor “almighty science.” With this podcast we offer you a sample sermon you can use (see below) to begin preaching the truth, that faith has nothing to hide and nothing to fear from science. With Christmas approaching — and possibly some final sermon prep still waiting to be done — we present this with with a special emphasis on Advent and the Virgin Birth. Skeptics say it’s got to be a fable, because “Science shows that’s impossible.” Christians typically know a good first answer, which is, “With God all things are possible.” I’m not sure that always comes across as strong with skeptics as it could. Their charge against us there has a whole lot worse problems than they realize. They’re probably the ones believing fables. Provable to be fables, I mean; provable in ways even they would have trouble denying. This comes to you in cooperation with The Stream, where you’ll find a wealth of accompanying information, in the form of a one-page summary “explainer” article covering this material and more, with links in it to all the supporting documentation you could want in order to make sure you’re representing the truth in this message if you use it. Also here at Thinking Christian, find a written version of this sample sermon. We invite you to use this, not just as information but as a sample sermon. We do ask that in your bulletin and online postings you give credit to Tom Gilson and to The Stream, with whom this work is being done in cooperation, with links both to The Stream and to this podcast page. This isn't all we have to offer on the topic. Check out the Thinking Christian blog for a written form of this sample sermon, and visit The Stream on or after the evening of October 1 for a one-page pastors' explainer article on critical race theory, with loads of links to additional information you can use. (I'll update these program notes with a link there as soon as it's ready.) If you're not a pastor, please consider yourself a member of the congregation listening and learning. You're most welcome here! And then do please send this podcast to your pastor. There'll be more like it to come!

    Episode 3-1 — Pastors' Equipping Series: Sample Sermon on Critical Race Theory

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2021 34:48


    Updated: See the summary explainer article at The Stream! Critical race theory: Could you preach on it in church? Teach it in a small group? How would you approach it? Should you even address it in church? That last question calls for a definite answer yes. It’s too influential, and too much of a false gospel, to let your congregation try to sort it out on their own. Still, though, how would you preach on it? This podcast gives you a sample of teaching you can use, not just as information but as a sample sermon. You’re free to use it; that’s what it’s for. We do ask that in your bulletin and online postings you give credit to Tom Gilson and to The Stream, with whom this work is being done in cooperation, with links both to The Stream and to this podcast page. This isn’t all we have to offer on the topic. Check out the Thinking Christian blog for a written form of this sample sermon, and visit The Stream on or after the evening of October 1 for a one-page pastors’ explainer article on critical race theory, with loads of links to additional information you can use. (I’ll update these program notes with a link there as soon as it’s ready.) If you’re not a pastor, please consider yourself a member of the congregation listening and learning. You’re most welcome here! And then do please send this podcast to your pastor. There’ll be more like it to come!

    Episode 2-9: Stories of Apologetics and Practical Church Ministry with Pastors

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2021 24:12


    (Related Blog Post: Apologists and Pastors Connecting for Ministry: Stories of How You Can Do It) Okay, now what? Now that you know the secret word, the one key word I spoke of in episode 8, the one that answers the question, How can we have greater ministry in the church, now what? That’s the question several people asked me after they listened to that podcast. “I want to build good relationships with pastors. I even get that having lunch together is a good way to do it. How do I get started, though?” In this episode I tell stories of half a dozen ways or so that I’ve found to connect with pastors, in my church or in others, and start building real friendship. This time there are two secrets. One of them is the variety of ways you can go about meeting pastors. The other is more important: Your interest in them had better be real. It need not become a lasting friendship, since those are rare and they’re hard to predict before you find them, but it’s not about manipulating your way into ministry, either. It’s about meeting the pastor as a respected leader in God’s church. And listening. That’s secret number two for this episode. You’ll have to listen in to hear more on secret number one. This episode is part of the Season 2 emphasis on Heat to Light: Moving Through Cultural Controversy Toward the Light of Spiritual Transformation. Be sure to visit the Thinking Christian blog, and get your free chapter download from Too Good to be False: How Jesus’ Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality. Follow the Thinking Christian podcast on the podcast app of your choice, and please give it a positive rating there, too. Thank you! Note regarding publishing schedule: This has been a season of tough family crises, including my dad’s passing away last month. I expect to resume a full weekly podcasting schedule very soon.

    Episode 2-8: What Pastors Wish Apologists Knew About Ministering in Their Churches

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2021 23:31


    The Secret Word? There’s one key word — you’d almost think it was a secret word — that answers the big question Christian apologists have been asking for years: How can we have greater ministry in the church? We apologists have our answers, but they’re typical apologists’ answers. We think it’d be solved if we could get churches thinking more like we do. On one level I totally agree: The church needs to put a lot more emphasis on discipleship of the mind. If only we could persuade them of that! And maybe we could, if only they were there already. I don’t know how we can simply persuade them to listen to us, though, until after we’ve persuaded them to listen to us. We apologists should know enough about circular arguments to know that circular causation doesn’t work, either. Most of us also know that we bear responsibility for our corporate nerdiness, and maybe even our combativeness. We’re not all guilty of that, in fact, maybe not even most of us; but enough of us are to stain our reputation. We’ve known about that for a good while, too, though, so that’s not the secret. Not Really … Pastors Know It! Apologists are still missing one crucial ingredient — and it’s one that every pastor knows is no secret at all. While we’ve been thinking the church needs to catch up with us in discipleship, pastors have been wishing we’d catch up with them in this one most crucial ministry skill. Listen and find out why. See the related blog post: “Apologists and Pastors, Here’s How We Can Finally Work Together (And We’d Better Get To It!)” This episode is part of the Season 2 emphasis on Heat to Light: Moving Through Cultural Controversy Toward the Light of Spiritual Transformation. Be sure to visit the Thinking Christian blog, and get your free chapter download from Too Good to be False: How Jesus’ Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality. Follow the Thinking Christian podcast on the podcast app of your choice, and please give it a positive rating there, too. Thank you! Note regarding publishing schedule: This has been a season of tough family crises, including my dad’s passing away last month. I expect to resume a full weekly podcasting schedule very soon.

    Episode 2-7: Equipping Pastors for the Cross-Cultural Missionary Work We Must All Do Now

    Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2021 22:56


    Dorothy told Toto, “I have a feeling we aren’t in Kansas anymore.” I’d say what used to be Kansas isn’t Kansas anymore. No town, large or small, remains unaffected. Our world has changed drastically in the past several decades, so much that church ministry everywhere in both the U.S. and Canada (especially Canada), not to mention the rest of the Western world, has become cross-cultural missionary work. Some of it has to do with new people groups coming our way through immigration, but much of it has to do with transitions in Western culture itself. Pastors can only remain true to their calling by seeing themselves as cross-cultural missionary leaders. Their work was challenging enough already; now it’s really daunting. No one can change it by hoping it isn’t so, though, so how’s a pastor to keep up? Through teamwork with others, of which I hope to be one. With this podcast and the accompanying blog post I’m narrowing my season-long focus on “Heat to Light: From Cultural Conflict to Spiritual Transformation” even tighter. I’m here to serve pastors as they serve the Lord and his church, specifically through: Explainers for pastors on recent cultural trends, Specific practical ministry applications related to those trends, and Sample sermons pastors may freely borrow from. That’s the portion of today’s new ministry trends I’m qualified to help with. It’s coming soon, starting next weekend. This episode explains the reasons why. It’s the challenge of cross-cultural missionary work, brought home to us in the United States. If this is encouraging to you, I strongly suggest you also look at the sample chapter I’m giving away free from my latest book, Too Good to be False: How Jesus’ Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality. Download it at ThinkingChristian.net!

    Episode 2-6: Life, Death, Hope, and the Stakes We Face: Thoughts Following the Passing of My Father

    Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2021 16:37


    He was the greatest dad ever, and now, as I’m reflecting on my father’s passing from life into greater life, I can only think of the great hope we have and the high spiritual stakes we face, we who remain following Christ and making his name known on earth. If you're finding this podcast encouraging, informing, or equipping to you, please pass it along to a friend. Subscribe to it or follow it on your podcast app of choice, and please also give it a five-star rating there. It really helps! And be sure to check out ThinkingChristian.net for my free offer of a full chapter from my newest book, Too Good to be False: How Jesus’ Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality.

    Episode 2-5: A Conversation with Gay/Progressive Leader Brandan Robertson

    Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2021 71:13


    I had a most interesting conversation on Thursday with Brandan Robertson, who is a leading spokesman for gay and progressive Christianity, on everything from the character of Jesus, to the nature of the Bible, to Christianity’s connection to slavery. Not much on homosexuality; it wasn’t one of our topics this time. We connected originally through an article I’d written at The Stream. As always, there was more that could have been said. I’m still curious why he’s so critical of Jesus, whom he takes to be God in the flesh, and in the same light also, how he could think Christians and Muslims worship the same God. He actually caught me off guard when he answered a certain question I’d asked, saying, “Inerrancy.” I hadn’t studied the history of that doctrine, but now that I’ve had a chance to look through it, I have trouble understanding how he could make the point he followed through on it with. I believe he left the door open for more conversation, though, so maybe I’ll have a chance to ask him these things. I’d rather meet him over coffee, but I enjoyed the talk, and I’d do it again gladly this way, too. I think he’s expecting we would talk about sexuality if we meet again this way. That’s been done a lot, though, and I don’t know what progress we could make without first walking through the one main issue he himself brought up near the end. Our differences really hinge on what we take to be our best sources, our authority, that which determines what we believe. I’m thinking that would be very interesting to talk about. Also on YouTube (podcast audio is enhanced compared to YouTube audio):

    Episode 2-4: Heat to Light — Our Lost Moral High Ground, and How to Begin Reclaiming It

    Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2021 26:39


    Remember when Christianity held the moral high ground? Not just Christianity, the faith delivered to us in Christ and his word, but Christianity in the form of church-going people? Those days are over. Western culture sees Christian culture as intolerant, homophobic, bigoted, backward, and on and on the list continues. And here’s why this really matters in our efforts to see the heat of cultural conflict turned to the light of spiritual transformation: Knowing this, we can better equip ourselves to answer the first, most urgent question on the minds of so many questioners and seekers, not to mention skeptics and unbelievers. The main question isn’t what it used to be: Is Christianity true? Now the question is whether Christianity is even good. In today’s podcast I also announce an upcoming conversation with progressive pastor Brandan Robertson. I wrote about him on The Stream a couple weeks ago; he responded on Twitter; now we’ve agreed to continue that conversation live on video this coming Thursday, May 6, at 7 pm Eastern Time. Keep an eye for a new blog post at Thinking Christian, where I’ll be announcing where and how you can tune in. If you’re finding this podcast  encouraging, informing, or equipping to you, please pass it along to a friend. Subscribe to it or follow it on your podcast app of choice, and please also give it a five-star rating there. It really helps!

    Episode 2-3: From Heat to Light: Worldviews in Conflict

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2021 25:08


    You want to help move people from conflict to understanding, but here’s the problem you run into: Everyone on one side of the issue thinks everyone else has gone nuts. There’s a reason for that: From their perspective, they’d have to be crazy to believe what they believe. And that in turn traces back to serious, difficult divisions in our worldviews. We don’t just see parts of reality differently, we see almost all of it differently. Today’s episode of the Thinking Christian Podcast helps explain how that happens, and points in a direction toward improved understanding. It’s just one step in moving from heat to light, but it’s really helpful, in fact crucial. That’s why we’re encouraging you to pass it along to a friend, along with the blog post that accompanies it. Please follow it on your podcast app of choice, too, and give it a 5-star rating. It’ll help us all move from the heat of cultural conflict to the light of spiritual transformation, in this crazy season in the history of our world. And be sure, too, to check out your free preview chapter of Too Good to be False: How Jesus’ Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality, available for free from here.

    Episode 2-2: Grace and Truth in Heat-to-Light Conversations

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2021 23:30


    Someone’s brought the heat of cultural conflict into your home or your church. Maybe it’s their own dispute with Christianity, or maybe they need your guidance on an issue they’re dealing with elsewhere. Either way, it’s got potential to be difficult, possibly even to turn hot. Heat-to-light transformations depend on keeping Christ at the center and knowing what to say about the issues, but not just that. They also require that we approach them according to the character of Jesus, by the power of the Holy Spirit. John 1:14 and 1:17 tell us Jesus was “full of grace and truth.” It says it twice, for emphasis, I believe. This is the way we must approach all our relationships, but especially interactions that have potential to turn hot. Today’s podcast is about walking in grace and truth, and how that looks in practice. There’s more to be found on Jesus Christ in a free download. It’s an entire chapter of Tom Gilson’s Too Good to be False: How Jesus’ Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality. Find it here! And if you’re enjoying this Season 2 of the Thinking Christian Podcast, on “Heat to Light: Nurturing Spiritual Growth Out of Cultural Conflict,” please give it a great rating on your podcast app of choice, and click the “Follow” or “Subscribe” button there, too. Thank you!

    Season 2, Episode 1: What Easter Tells Us About Moving from Cultural Conflict to Spiritual Transformation

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2021 22:22


    Heat to Light: Moving from Cultural Conflict to Spiritual Transformation That's the theme of Season 2 of the Thinking Christian podcast, opening on Easter weekend with a focus on Jesus, not only his death but with surprising relevance, even his birth! See the accompanying blog post here: "From Heat to Light: Transforming the Heat of Cultural Conflict Into the Light of Spiritual Growth." And along with it, download this new preview chapter from Tom Gilson's Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality. It's free here for all new followers of the Thinking Christian blog.

    The Unimaginable Greatness of God

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2021 14:15


    A creative-thinking reflection on God's greatness — using imagination to see how far God's imagination, power, knowledge and love exceeds even what we can imagine it to be.

    Episode 18: Thanksgiving in 2020? A Message from a Psalmist Who Wondered, Too

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2020 24:35


    Thanksgiving in 2020? You're not the first to wonder about that! I'm right there with you. And without using the year 2020 as the reason, one of the psalmists was, too. Psalm 89 begins with praise and promise, recalling gladly God's covenant to keep the seed of David on the throne of Israel. A great opening! But then takes an abrupt turn to, "But You have cast off and abhorred, You have been furious with your anointed. You have renounced the covenant of Your servant; You have profaned his crown by casting it to the ground." The psalmist is actually charging God with breaking his own promises — and he keeps that charge going all the way to the end of the psalm. No return to praise there. Maybe that was the end of it all? But no, it wasn't. The psalmist asked (vs. 46-48), "how long, Lord?" He even reminded God he was running out of time, as if he were saying, "Look God, if you're going to keep your promise, you'd better start soon!" Sounds familiar, if you ask me. It's hard to hold on, even to the end of 2020, much less until we see God fulfill all we're praying for. How long until we can really give him thanks? The answer, of course, is you can give thanks as soon as you're convinced he's still a faithful God. We see how God answered this psalmist's prayer: Not during the author's lifetime, but that's okay: He knew what he was doing, and the answer he gave is truly magnificent. The Covenant Song snippet in this podcast episode came from a YouTube video by Dale's Bible Week. The song was written by Karen Barrie. If you like the podcast, you'll love A Christian Mind: Thoughts on Life and Truth in Jesus Christ, by Tom Gilson.

    Episode 17: 'The Other Worldview,' and How Jesus is So Much Greater Than You Knew

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2020 30:00


    The Thinking Christian podcast is back! I'm returning with thoughts on Peter Jones's excellent 2015 book The Other Worldview: Exposing Christianity's Greatest Threat. There are just two worldviews, says Jones: Oneism and Twoism. Of course these two have different manifestations. "Twoism" is Jones' term for the view that reality is two things: There is God, and there is his creation, and they are not the same sort of reality in any way. Near the start of this podcast I invite the listener into a new way of recognizing just how transcendent God is. Near the end, it's a study, drawn from Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality, in how amazingly transcendent Jesus was even in his ministry on earth. Oneism, Jones's term for what we usually call monism, is the view that reality is basically just one thing. It could be one spiritual thing, as in Eastern religions, or one material thing, as in atheistic naturalism. Either way Oneism's effect is to erase distinctions. We see it playing out in the call to destroy the gender binary, in animal rights activism, in the call to grant human rights to rivers and forests. Oneism ultimately fails due to its own internal contradictions. Twoism, by the way,  is the view of all three Abrahamic religions, Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, although Jones and I both focus on Christianity. Philosophers typically call it dualism, but Jones was wise to avoid that word, I think, since there are so many different "dualisms." this helps the reader focus on the one he's talking about. Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher; now also on YouTube! Please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you! I'm returning now after a long hiatus for health-related reasons (not COVID). My time away has given me opportunity to re-think the structure and schedule of this podcast. I'm still experimenting with it.

    Episode 16: Jesus' Incomparable Authority (from Luke 4 and 5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2020 12:10


    Jesus heals in Luke 4 and 5, and we're used to reading about his doing that. There's more to it than meets the eye, though: Unexpected authority in teaching, unexpected authority in forgiving, and unparalleled wisdom in giving a paralyzed man something he needed even more than legs to walk on — something I can speak on from personal experience. Based on material in my book Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality, available here. Many who've read this book have had their lives lit up for Christ, so I encourage you to see what God does for you through it! Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher; now also on YouTube! Please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    Episode 15: Jesus, the Hometown Hero?

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2020 10:40


    Jesus' first message in Luke was to his hometown crowd, who wanted to make him their hometown hero. See his integrity in action as he holds on to his true identity and mission. Based on material in my book Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality, available here. Many who've read this book have had their lives lit up for Christ, so I encourage you to see what God does for you through it! Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher. Also on YouTube! Please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    Episode 14: With All His Power, Jesus Still Came to Serve

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2020 8:40


    At the time of his temptation in Luke 4:1-13, Jesus showed character like no one else's. He had the power — Satan was right about this! — he had the power to turn the stone into bread. He was hungry enough, too. Yet here, as throughout the Gospels, Jesus refused to use his power to serve himself. He never used his extraordinary power for his own benefit. He came, as it says in Mark 10:45, to serve. This is Jesus' incomparable uniqueness. Based on material in my book Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality. Many who've read this book have had their lives lit up for Christ, so I encourage you to see what God does for you through it! Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher. As of this episode it also begins on YouTube. Please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    Episode 13: Wisdom in The Bible's Silence on Jesus' Childhood

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2020 8:14


    Have you ever wondered about Jesus' childhood? I have! Mary and Joseph knew his miraculous origin, yet they still must have wondered about him. So must his half-brothers and half-sisters. We, too, wonder what it was like. Yet maybe there was wisdom in the Bible's silence. Maybe we would have been misled to follow Jesus in ways he doesn't call us to follow him, such as being a craftsman — which not all of us are called to be. Based on a blog post, "Jesus Was Perfect. That's Why I'm Glad We Don't Have a Record of His First Thirty Years," and also on material in Tom Gilson's book Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality, available here. Many who've read this book have had their lives lit up for Christ, so I encourage you to see what God does for you through it! Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher. And please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your podcast provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    12 Bonus Track: 'Too Good to be False' with Archangel Radio

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2020 17:33


    I had an enjoyable talk on the radio this morning with Archangel Radio, Catholic radio in Mobile, Alabama, talking about the 3 primary points in Too Good to be False. Check it out!

    Episode 11: To Be Surprised Again by Jesus' Birth

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2020 7:08


    Is it possible to be surprised all over again by the story of Jesus' birth? Believe it or not, yes! Sure, it's just September, but we're taking things in order as we walk through the Gospel of Luke to discover the extraordinary again in Jesus' life, ministry, and teachings. Based on material in Tom Gilson's book Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality, available here. As noted in the podcast, others who've read it have had their lives lit up for Christ. Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher. And please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your podcast provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    Episode 10: Jesus' Birth, and the Expectation of the Extraordinary

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2020 12:11


    How can we ever hope to relate to a God as great as our God? I've asked myself that question and found my hope in Jesus, who came to be one of us. He himself, the hope of Israel, the hope of all the nations, is extraordinary beyond any hope of matching his character. Yet he came in humility, the man who was God, God who became man. In today's Thinking Christian podcast I explore the great things said about him at the time of his birth, by Mary, Zechariah, the angels, and Simeon, as recorded in the first chapters in Luke. They expected him to be extraordinary — and thus his story begins. Based on material in Tom Gilson's book Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality, available here. As noted in the podcast, others who've read it have had their lives lit up for Christ. Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher. And please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your podcast provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    Episode 9: Why Did They Write the Gospels?

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2020 8:14


    Why did the gospel authors write the gospels? For believers the answer might be a question: "Why even ask? Isn't it obvious?" That answer isn't universal, though. Today on the Thinking Christian podcast we launch a new series on Jesus through the gospels, starting with Luke's answer to that question in Luke 1:1-4, with a quick comparison to skeptics' unlikely theories about the gospels. Based on material in Tom Gilson's book Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality, available here. Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher. And please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your podcast provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    Episode 8: 'Too Good to be False' Through the Gospels

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2020 5:34


    Announcing a change in the plan for this podcast: Instead of a weekly podcast of 20-25 minutes, I'll be publishing up to 3 times a week, with shorter content focused on Jesus in the Gospels (with occasional other topics). I'm making the change in response to what I keep hearing from readers of my book Too Good to be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality (available here). They're discovering that Jesus is even greater than they knew — and many of them are calling it life-changing. I want to help keep those exploration alive. So join me as we begin a journey of discovery through the Gospels, seeing Jesus with fresh eyes. Please spread the word! Subscribe to the podcast, too, on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher. And please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your podcast provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    Episode 7: Skeptics Answer 'Too Good to be False'

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2020 19:00


    How will unbelievers answer the case for the Gospels in Too Good to be False? We haven't heard from major skeptics yet, though I'm sure that's coming. In the meantime we have clues, and I have a prediction: Some will say they see reality in the life of Christ like they've never seen before, and they'll turn to Christ. Others, though, will harden themselves against him, contributing further to the polarization between committed believers and committed atheists. Jesus said, "If they hated me, they will hate you also" (John 15:18). Yet he's worth following no matter what. Links mentioned: One skeptic's review (see the comments below the article) after reading the entire Too Good to be False.Studying Reviews of Stephen C. Meyer's Signature in the Cell.

    Episode 6: Jesus: Not an 'Ordinary Rabbi' Story

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2020 21:02


    Bob Seidensticker, atheist blogger at Patheos, tells us that if you "strip away" the miraculous from the story of Jesus, "you're left with a fairly ordinary rabbi." He says, "The Jesus story is nothing but the supernatural elements." In this episode of the Thinking Christian podcast I take him up on that. Take the miracles out of the Jesus story, and what do you have left? You have the character of Jesus, and even as stories go, even without the miracles as plot points, there's nothing remotely ordinary about who Jesus was. I could only tell part of that in one podcast, unfortunately. There's much more in my forthcoming book Too Good to be False. You can pre-order the book on Amazon today, and a free preview chapter is yours, too, if you simply subscribe to updates at the Thinking Christian blog. More on the book here! Subscribe to the podcast, too, on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher. Approximate Timings 0:36: Introducing the question, based on a comment by atheist blogger Bob Seidensticker: Take away the miracles from Jesus' story, and what do you have left? He says it's an "ordinary rabbi" story.2:30: Game on. Let's see what happens to the story without its miraculous element.3:22: Elements of a story: setting, plot, dialogue, character. Seidensticker comes out okay on the first two.5:15: What about dialogue and character, though?5:23: Interlude on an upcoming webinar, Junday, July 26 at 7:30 pm Eastern.6:30: Jesus' extraordinary claim in the Beatitudes9:14: Jesus' extraordinary authority claim in Matthew 5:17.12:45: Jesus' extraordinary — and extraordinarily fulfilled — commission to his disciples.16:20: So what, though? For one thing, Seidensticker is showing his prejudice against the story.18:20: Does this prove the story is true? Not on its own, though it does put pressure on the atheists' explanation for the story.

    Episode 5: Three Great Secrets in Too Good to be False

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2020 18:06


    For the whole year and a half I've been working on Too Good to be False, I've felt like I've been sitting on a secret -- two of them, actually -- secrets too great to hold inside. Now as the book nears its August 1 publication date, it's time to start getting the word out on those secrets. I've even discovered there's a third one, from those who've read pre-release copies of the book. Those three secrets: Jesus is better than you knew; he's too good to be false; and (the one that surprised me) this message turned out to be a "fun read," suitable for everyone from laypersons to the "professionals!" You can pre-order the book on Amazon today. A free preview chapter is yours, too, if you subscribe to updates at the Thinking Christian blog. Subscribe to the podcast, too, on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, or Stitcher. (Show transcript is automatically generated and uncorrected.) Show guide: 01:36: Source of some of the book's information 03:30: Secret 1: Jesus is way more amazing than you've realized. Even though that sounds like a strong statement, it's very probably true. 5:10: Confirmation from Sean McDowell, Josh McDowell, JP Moreland 6:49: It's about Jesus: What he didn't do. 9:45: Secret 2: Jesus is too good to be false. 11:15: More confirmation: J. Warner Wallace, Lee Strobel, Jeff Myers 13:40: Problems with the skeptics' backstory for the story of Jesus 14:45: Secret 3: What I never expected: This book is working for everyone from layperson to the "professionals." It's a "fun read!" 16:54: I don't want to be holding in these secrets any longer!

    Episode 4: Jesus and America's Freedoms

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2020 27:00


    People keep asking if America is a Christian country. Usually the question focuses on the Founders: Were they believers? Did they intend this to be a Christian nation? In this episode of the Thinking Christian podcast, Tom Gilson takes a different angle on the question, exploring how strongly Jesus influenced our country's founding, its Constitution, and its values, whether the Founders were Christians or not. Even taking our greatest errors, slavery and racism, into account, Jesus' impact is still undeniable. (Show transcript is automatically generated and uncorrected.)

    Episode 3: An Unexpected Question About Jesus

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2020 20:09


    On this episode of the Thinking Christian Podcast, we see that sometimes the best way to learn more about Jesus is by asking a question about him that no one's expecting. Here's one that I'm sure you weren't expecting. This material is adapted from the forthcoming book Too Good to Be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality. Be sure to subscribe to the newsletter at Thinking Christian.net so you can get your free preview copy of chapter 1. Subscribe to the podcast, too, on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, and Stitcher. And please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your podcast provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    Podcast 2: Jesus Can Still Surprise You

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2020 17:54


    Jesus can still surprise you. It doesn't matter how long you've been following him, and it doesn't matter how much you've read the gospels. He's still going to surprise you with the unexpected. In this episode of the Thinking Christian podcast, I share two huge surprises in his life: His use of authority in his teaching, and his "leadership style," which (according to the textbooks) never should have worked. Yet it did. This material is condensed from the forthcoming Too Good to Be False: How Jesus' Incomparable Character Reveals His Reality. Be sure to subscribe to the newsletter so you can got your free preview copy of chapter 1. Subscribe to the podcast, too, on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, and Stitcher. And please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your podcast provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you! Guide to the episode: 1:48 — Passages we'd "never seen before" and "jump out at us" versus real surprises in the life of Christ 3:36 — Jesus' astonishing use of his own authority in his teaching. 4:46 — Using sources: Jesus in comparison to other rabbis and scholars of the day 5:51 — "I have not come to abolish the Law and the Prophets" ... in your church? 6:55 — "I have not come to abolish them, but to fulfill them." 9:24 — Totally in charge, even of his own trial and execution 10:43 — Jesus' "leadership style" 11:12 — Not a model leader! 11:53 —  Three ways Jesus led that no one else should ever try 13:28 — His "style" should have failed, according to the textbooks 15:13 — Yet it didn't. Why not? 16:15 — Don't take him for granted; stay surprised!

    Podcast Episode 1: "Too Used To Jesus"

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2020 16:13


    On this inaugural episode of a revamped Thinking Christian podcast, Tom Gilson describes a problem undermining American Christianity, subtly yet definitely: We've grown to used to Jesus. Drawing from images of biblical persons who knew Jesus, and contemporary non-Christians who may never even have heard of him, he leads us toward a new appreciation of Jesus' amazing magnificence. And then he invites us to consider just how much it could change our Christian lives if we quit being quite so used to Jesus. (This episode is adapted from a June 11 Thinking Christian blog post.) Subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Stitcher. (Other services pending links.) And please take a moment to rate the Thinking Christian podcast on your podcast provider of choice. It really helps make this content visible and available to more people. Thank you!

    The Spiritual Life of an Apologist

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2015 70:31


    My friend Brian Auten at Apologetics 315 has just posted audio from one of the discussions Tim McGrew and I led at Defend the Faith, a conference held at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary early last month. This one is on The Spiritual Life of an Apologist. For your convenience, listen here:

    Arrogant Christianity? (The Truth Holds Us: Full Version)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2011 27:47


    Are Christians arrogant when we say we know the truth? Is it morally acceptable for us to say we have access to truth that applies to every person? Or are we being offensive and rude, trying to impose our version of truth on everyone else? I posted a short version of this talk a couple months ago. Here is an extended 28-minute version.

    The Truth Holds Us (Short Version)

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2010 21:31


    Are Christians arrogant when we say we know the truth? I've finally been able to make a good recording of The Truth Holds Us. I enjoyed some great hospitality at Williamsburg Christian Academy this morning, and shared this message with their high-school group. At 21 minutes and a half minutes, this is about two-thirds to one-half the length of the full version of this talk. I cut it most in the historical/philosophical portion. My apologies for the quick and light treatment I gave it there, but it was necessary—you'll even hear the class bell ring near the end.

    On the Greatness of God

    Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2010 12:23


    A guided exploration of the greatness of God, unlike other podcasts I've done, in that it's not a talk I gave before a group. It is instead a meditation, intended for contemplation and worship—and to stretch your thinking about the greatness of God. You won't want to listen to it in your car, but someplace more relaxed than that.

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