POPULARITY
Pastor Kirk Hall continues his expository study through the Romans Epistle - Romans 14:10-23
In today's show we set aside the question of whether we can say the Scriptures are true, reliable, accurate, historically verifiable, false, fake, or toxic, to ask whether they are holy--whether they are in themselves, and whether (and how) they make us holy. Reframing the question this way avoids many of the pitfalls of the past centuries and opens up new possibilities for theological reasoning. Show Notes: 1. The texts we discuss vis-à-vis their being-holy and making-holy qualities are Joshua 8:1–29, Nehemiah 7:7bff, and Mark 9:1. We also refer to Romans 1 and I Timothy 3:16. 2. Yes! Paul Hinlicky (i.e. Dad) has a forthcoming commentary on Joshua in the Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible series. Personal favorites of mine are Ephraim Radner on Leviticus, Robert Jenson on Ezekiel, and Joseph Mangina on Revelation. 3. Walter Brueggemann's book is Theology of the Old Testament. 4. Karl Barth's essay is "The Strange New World within the Bible." 5. The texts of Luther's mentioned in this episode are the Large Catechism (Apostles' Creed, Article III, §40) and "The Freedom of a Christian" (sometimes known in English as "Concerning Christian Liberty"). 6. Heiko Oberman's take on Scripture and tradition can be found in The Dawn of the Reformation. 7. Paul Hinlicky's book on God's nature and revelation in light of the gospel is Divine Complexity. 8. You can read about half of Origen's homilies on Joshua on Google Books. 9. Here is the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification. More about us at sarahhinlickywilson.com and paulhinlicky.com!
The concluding episode of Martin Luther's Concerning Christian Liberty! The text comes from Henry Wace and C. A. Buchheim, First Principles of the Reformation, London: John Murray, 1883. If you’d like, you can follow along on archive.org. This podcast takes requests! If you would like to request a specific book, sermon, or other Christian text, please e-mail us at churchhistorypodcast@gmail.com or tweet us @OralHistoryPod. Next week will see the first in a short series of readings from the Council of Trent! Reader: Adam Christman
Listener, you may find the content of "part 4" a bit familiar. Due to my exhaustion and the lateness of the hour in which I recorded a previous episode, I accidentally read part 4 instead of part 3 and mis-labelled the episode. I have fixed the audio to correctly reflect which section THIS episode contains. In addition, I recorded the skipped section and released it as the newest version of "part 3" (listed as SGB 9). I apologize for the confusion. The text comes from Henry Wace and C. A. Buchheim, First Principles of the Reformation, London: John Murray, 1883. If you’d like, you can follow along on archive.org. This podcast takes requests! If you would like to request a specific book, sermon, or other Christian text, please e-mail us at churchhistorypodcast@gmail.com or tweet us @OralHistoryPod. Reader: Adam Christman
We had a mix up! Due to the lateness of the hour we recorded what we listed as SGB 9, "part 3" of this text, was actually part 4. We skipped a section! THIS episode with part 3 rectifies the situation with what is ACTUALLY part 3. Enjoy! The text comes from Henry Wace and C. A. Buchheim, First Principles of the Reformation, London: John Murray, 1883. If you’d like, you can follow along on archive.org. This podcast takes requests! If you would like to request a specific book, sermon, or other Christian text, please e-mail us at churchhistorypodcast@gmail.com or tweet us @OralHistoryPod. Reader: Adam Christman
We continue Martin Luther’s Concerning Christian Liberty this week with part 2. The text comes from Henry Wace and C. A. Buchheim, First Principles of the Reformation, London: John Murray, 1883. If you’d like, you can follow along on archive.org. Come back next week for part 3! This podcast takes requests! If you would like to request a specific book, sermon, or other Christian text, please e-mail us at churchhistorypodcast@gmail.com or tweet us @OralHistoryPod. Reader: Adam Christman
This week, we begin Martin Luther’s Concerning Christian Liberty. The text comes from Henry Wace and C. A. Buchheim, First Principles of the Reformation, London: John Murray, 1883. If you’d like, you can follow along on archive.org. Come back next week for part 2! This podcast takes requests! (Just not "Free Bird.") If you would like to request a specific book, sermon, or other Christian text, please e-mail us at churchhistorypodcast@gmail.com or tweet us @OralHistoryPod. Reader: Jonathan McCormick
2017 is the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation. We began our look back at that period last week with the Schleitheim Confession. Today, we read the Letter of Martin Luther to Pope Leo X. The text comes from Henry Wace and C. A. Buchheim, First Principles of the Reformation, London: John Murray, 1883. If you’d like, you can follow along on archive.org. Come back next Monday for the first part of Martin Luther’s Concerning Christian Liberty. Would you like to request a specific book, sermon, or other Christian text? E-mail us at churchhistorypodcast@gmail.com or tweet us @OralHistoryPod.
#20- Four Questions Concerning Christian Liberty, 1 Corinthians 6:9-12