Dale
Dale Tuggy (PhD Brown 2000) was Professor of Philosophy at the State University of New York at Fredonia from 2000-2018. He now works outside of academia in Middle Tennessee but continues to learn and podcast.
podcast 256 – Aaron Shelenberger, from trinitarian to unitarian – Part 3
Reading the gospel of John in its first-century context is eye-opening!
Reading comprehension quiz: Johann 17:1-3
Sure, he’s the only king. But is ONLY this guy the only king?
podcast 255 – Aaron Shelenberger, from trinitarian to unitarian – Part 2
How could God allow mainstream Christian doctrine to go astray?
podcast 254 – Aaron Shelenberger, from trinitarian to unitarian – Part 1
A trinitarian apologist changes his mind.
podcast 253 – The Apostle Paul a Unitarian
A Congregationalist minister argues that Paul’s theology is unitarian.
podcast 252 – Fred Sanders on Seeing the Trinity in Scripture, and his Secret
Can we “see” the NT authors assuming that God is triune?
podcast 251 – Is the Trinity Biblical? Schumacher vs. Griffin
A 2018 trinitarian vs. biblical unitarian debate.
podcast 249 – Tuggy vs. Brown debate – The God of the Bible is the Father alone
Biblical unitarianism vs. what Dale calls one-self trinitarianism.
The Tuggy-Brown debate: Dale’s opening statement
Did Dr. Brown adequately rebut my argument from six NT facts?
podcast 248 – How Trinity theories conflict with the Bible
The Father ain’t the Trinity. So, God can’t be both.
The Arguments of Hebrews 1-2 – Part 2
No, the man Jesus is not the Genesis creator; his and our God is.
Caught between catholic tradition and the Bible
Dr. Brown is caught between the traditional claim that God is the Trinity and the clear NT claim that God is the Father.
Blue Babies Pink: from evangelical Christian to liberationist
This man’s journey reflects and reveals some problems with present-day evangelical teaching.
Dunn on Jesus as kyrios (“Lord”) in the New Testament
In calling Jesus “Lord,” is Paul asserting that Jesus is God himself?
Moses Stuart on Nicea
A trinitarian evangelical Bible scholar comments on the subordinationist theologies both of Arius and of his accusers.