Episodios

  • When ‘Biblical’ Isn’t Neutral: How Definitions Shape Faith
    Apr 5 2026

    This episode explores how the meanings of words like “biblical,” “truth,” and “obedience” are shaped by communities, history, and power, and why those definitions matter more than mere doctrinal disputes.

    Using Amos’s call to remember as a moral act and cultural examples like Orwell’s Newspeak and The Book of Eli, the conversation connects language, control, and embodied belief to argue that the church’s crisis is about definition rather than doctrine.

    It ends with a call to re-examine inherited definitions and to live theology faithfully, not just argue about it.

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    6 m
  • When God Roars: Amos and the Politics of Justice
    Mar 12 2026

    Pastors Gordon Clark and Michelle Alexandra explore the prophet Amos—a shepherd from the margins—whose lived experience fuels a sharp critique of systemic injustice, the language of war, and the ways power obscures human suffering.

    They offer pastoral application: resisting euphemism, cultivating empathy across divides, and practicing moral attentiveness so faith aligns with the vulnerable and pursues truthful, peace-seeking action.

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    7 m
  • Tithes or Taxes? How Church Giving Feeds Institutions, Not Communities
    Oct 4 2025

    This episode examines how large-scale tithing often channels donation dollars into salaries, buildings, and denominational overhead rather than public goods, functioning like a hidden, regressive tax on the poor.

    It contrasts institutional giving with secular models, explores the role of prosperity theology and manufactured consent, and calls for rethinking generosity to prioritize community investment and real social uplift.

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    6 m
  • The Cosmic Escape Hatch: Rethinking the Rapture
    Oct 3 2025

    This episode explores how the modern rapture doctrine emerged in the 19th century and functions as a social escape mechanism, especially in communities facing economic hardship.

    Using historical research and sociological studies, it examines the link between rapture beliefs, prosperity gospel teachings, and decreased local investment, while highlighting alternatives like liberation theology and engaged spirituality that lead to measurable community improvements.

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    6 m
  • Doomsday on Repeat: Why People Still Believe the End Is Near
    Sep 27 2025

    This episode examines why apocalyptic religious prophecies persist despite hundreds of failed predictions and how the same groups often dismiss clear climate science.

    We unpack the psychological drivers that sustain denial, the harm inflicted on children raised in rapture culture, and the rising movement of young believers who embrace environmental stewardship as a faithful response.

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    5 m
  • The First Proxy War: How Persia Bankrolled the Peloponnesian War
    Sep 19 2025

    Wars can be controlled from afar. This episode explains how ancient Persia, after failing to conquer Greece directly, funded Sparta to weaken Athens — effectively inventing proxy warfare.

    We trace the economic power of Athens' silver mines, Persia's strategic financial support, and the parallels to modern conflicts where outside funding prolongs wars. Follow the money to see who truly benefits from continued fighting.

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    4 m
  • 1984: The Virtue of Selfishness vs. The Second Sex.
    Sep 9 2025

    This episode reads George Orwell’s 1984 as a warning about what happens when intimacy itself is undermined: loneliness and fear replace trust, private pleasure substitutes for solidarity, and love becomes policed. The host critiques Julia’s private rebellion and explains why secret resistance is easy to crush when connection is atomized.

    Instead of settling for coping or transactional hookups, the episode calls for redefining sex and relationships as spaces of mutual liberation—where boundaries, communication, and shared responsibility heal trauma and create collective freedom. Intimacy becomes resistance when it is public, reciprocal, and life-giving.

    Ultimately, reclaiming connection is framed as a political act: refusing permanent disengagement and rebuilding love as a feast open to everyone is how we push back against Big Brother, patriarchy, and social isolation.

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    6 m
  • At Antioch .mp3
    3 m