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 240 – Dr. Beau Branson on the Monarchy of the Father – Part 2
Is the first Catholic conciliar statement about a tripersonal God in the late 9th c.?
podcast 239 – Dr. Beau Branson on the Monarchy of the Father – Part 1
Can one be a trinitarian without believing in a tripersonal God?
podcast 238 – Dialogue with a Catholic Listener
“What bothers me most is the rhetorical move you’re making with this claim that everyone before Nicea (or so) was a ‘Unitarian.'”
podcast 237 – Levine and Witherington on Luke – Part 2
Some friendly disagreements about the prodigal son, women in Luke, and the deity of Christ in Luke.
podcast 236 – Levine and Witherington on Luke – Part 1
The first ever Jewish and Christian commentary on a biblical book.
As easy answer to: What is “the” Trinity doctrine?
“The Trinity doctrine, at least for orthodox Christians, is found in the seven ecumenical councils.”
podcast 235 – The Case Against Preexistence
Some reasons why we should think that the New Testament writers don’t believe that Jesus literally existed before his time in the womb.
God-Talk interview on biblical unitarian theology – Part 1
Dale interviewed on the God-Talk podcast about biblical trinitarian theology and the Bible.
podcast 234 – Dr. James R. Gordon on the extra Calvinisticum – Part 2
Is the “extra Calvinisticum” both biblical and theologically helpful?
podcast 233 – Dr. James R. Gordon on the extra Calvinisticum – Part 1
The “extra Calvinisticum” and the coherence of Chalcedonian christology.
podcast 231 – Swinburne’s Social Theory of the Trinity
A leading Christian philosopher explains his “Social” Trinity theory.
Do Christians worship three Gods?
An evangelical author and blogger attempts a sort of primer on “the Trinity.”
podcast 230 – The Failure of Fashionable Antiunitarian Arguments
Would a God who is a single Person fail to be perfect?
too many Jesuses vs. too many “Jesuses”
Deciding to call just one of the three selves in your christology “Jesus” doesn’t fix the fact that your theory has two too many selves.