podcast 169 – Athanasius’s On the Nicene Council – Part 1
With this episode we continue our series on the 4th-century creed-producing councils of catholic bishops.
With this episode we continue our series on the 4th-century creed-producing councils of catholic bishops.
To the contrary, it seems possible that there be just one perfect being, one self who is all-knowing, all-powerful, completely good, and so on.
0.75x 1x 1.25x 1.5x 2x 0:0000:31:50 podcast 40 – Dr. Stephen T. Davis on Christians in Philosophy Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsPlayer EmbedShare Leave a ReviewListen in a New WindowDownloadSoundCloudStitcherSubscribe on AndroidSubscribe via RSSSpotify In this episode I talk with Christian philosopher Dr. Stephen T. Davis on the occasion of the start of his phased retirement from Claremont McKenna College (and the Claremont Graduate University). We discuss his… Read More »podcast 40 – Dr. Stephen T. Davis on Christians in Philosophy
0.75x 1x 1.25x 1.5x 2x 0:0000:39:28 podcast 20 – review of the Lewis-Rogers debate – part 1 Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsPlayer EmbedShare Leave a ReviewListen in a New WindowDownloadSoundCloudStitcherSubscribe on AndroidSubscribe via RSSSpotify In his debate with Muslim apologist Shadid Lewis does Reformed Christian apologist Anthony Rogers establish the consistency of the Trinity and monotheism? That is, does he prove that the Trinity doctrine is not… Read More »podcast 20 – review of the Lewis-Rogers debate – part 1
Would a God who is a single Person fail to be perfect?
Do our earliest surviving post-New-Testament writings interpret Proverbs 8 as being about the pre-human Jesus?
Why did Roman rulers and polemicists find early Christianity so alarming, rather than just another religion?
Is the first Catholic conciliar statement about a tripersonal God in the late 9th c.?
Professor Swinburne: we can argue from reason alone that the one God is a Trinity.
What are the essential teachings which one must accept to be a Christian?
Dr. Hurtado on his book God in New Testament Theology.
What if the official god of your theology isn’t the one who actually gets his way in your life?
Theologians say that God is everywhere, which is to say omnipresent or ubiquitous. But why do that say this, and what does the claim mean?
Evaluating Dr. Craig’s unique take on “two natures” christology, his “Neo-Apollinarian” theory.
In this episode I’m joined by Dr. William Vallicella, aka “The Maverick Philosopher” to discuss the recent controversy
An interesting and much more recent statement from John Hick, along the lines of my last post. …Since then [around 1993] the focus of much theological discussion has moved from christology to the doctrine of the Trinity. This is partly because theology always does go the rounds of the traditional topics – creation, sin, incarnation, atonement, Trinity, church, heaven and hell – and after a… Read More »Is the doctrine of the Incarnation prior to & the source of trinitarian doctrine? – Part 2
Did Christ die in order to display God’s love for us, rather than his wrath towards us?
In this episode we hear a voice from 1852 describing a lost species of American Christianity:
Did Isaiah predict that someday God would become a baby?