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Join us as we travel across England visiting well-known wonders and some lesser-known places on your doorstep – all of which have helped make the country what it is today. From a hut in Bletchley Park where modern computing evolved, to the iron railings in London to which suffragettes chained themselves in the fight for women’s right to vote, we’ll step back in time to the very roots of our national identity to bring you the people and the stories that have helped shape England. Irreplaceabl ...
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If you long to see transformation in your life, if you’d also like to dive deep into God’s Word to find answers to challenging doctrinal questions & find some hidden gems, or perhaps you’d like to know why the Bible APPEARS at times to contradict itself... then come with us on a journey as we explore the WHOLE council of The Word, Biblical history & culture. Warning: We dive deep, so if you are a surface swimmer and you are content with being spoon-fed baby food from a seeker-friendly pulpit ...
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Do the Anglo-Saxons still have relevance? Do they really matter? I’d like to posit that they do, and in this podcast, we'll be hearing directly from the Anglo-Saxons themselves in order to better understand who these people were and how they viewed the world around them. Join me, as we read from Bede's Ecclesiastical History, Alfred's Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Beowulf, and more. areopages.substack.com
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A Rogues Gallery Present ‘Bashing the Bishops’ a hilarious ‘Horrible history’s’/ Monte Python /Black adder inspired irreverent comedic series exploring some of the darkest moments of British History, kicking off with season one, the bloody story of the Prince Bishops of Durham. History is not dull! A riot of medieval ecclesiastical chicanery and comedic exposition - or saint gets head, or how to get a free cow?
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Machiavelli has created a ruthless guide on how to rule the country in his volume "The Prince". The book is dedicated to Lorenzo De Medici, the ruler of Florence. The author explains in simple language about the nature of great men and the characters of the government. The first chapter gives an outline of the book discussing various styles of ruling as a prince, character traits that a ruler should have and the political situation of Italy in the 16th century. The book is composed of 26 cha ...
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Immerse: Poets – 8 Week Bible Reading Experience

Tyndale House Publishers | Lumivoz

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Welcome to Immerse: Poets! An Immerse Bible Reading (and listening!) Experience Featuring the full New Living Translation (NLT) Bible version of Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs, Lamentations Immerse: Poets is the fifth of six volumes in Immerse: The Bible Reading Experience. Poets presents the poetical books of the First Testament in two groupings, dividing the books between songbooks (Psalms, Lamentations, Song of Songs) and wisdom writings (Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Job). ...
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Enjoy our unique weekly podcasts as we provide supplementary material for this year's Come Follow Me 2021 lessons. Our gospel scholars help you study the Doctrine and Covenants, Church History, and take and in-depth look at the life of the Prophet Joseph Smith. This podcast channel hosted on BuzzSprout is produced by Michael & Nancy James of Latter-Day Media and Latter-Day Network.
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On this episode, we're joined by Andrew R. Holmes, Professor of History at Queen’s University Belfast. Specialising in the history of religion in Ireland from the seventeenth century to the present, Andrew has authored significant works, including his most recent contribution is co-editing The Oxford Handbook of Religion in Modern Ireland (2024) wi…
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From the Archives: Revisiting an old favorite! Think you know the Reformation? Most Protestants reject Catholic teaching—but do we really understand what was at stake? In this episode, Dr. Guillaume Bignon unpacks the real debates between Catholics and Protestants and shows why they still matter for our faith today. Support the Podcast Support us o…
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In this episode, I sit down with Wyatt Graham, Executive Director of The Davenant Institute and TGC Canada, to explore what it means for Baptists to embrace Protestant retrieval today. We trace how Baptists began as a renewal movement within the wider church, seeking to recover biblical faithfulness, and how that story speaks into our present momen…
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In a time when discipleship often feels like a buzzword, how do we actually form Christians who know and love the faith? In this episode, I’m joined by Dr. Alex Fogleman, author of Making Disciples: Catechesis in History, Theology, and Practice. We dive into how the ancient practice of catechesis can revitalize discipleship today. From the early ch…
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What if the Baptists weren’t just a pragmatic breakaway movement—but a theologically rich tradition born out of deep conviction? In this episode, we’re joined by Dr. Matthew Bingham, Associate Professor of Church History at Phoenix Seminary and author of Orthodox Radicals: Baptist Identity in the English Revolution. We talk about the real origins o…
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Dr. Jenkins continues his discussion on the history of the Filioque by looking at the responses of the Latin west to the accusation leveled against it by St. Photios. What emerges are two responses, with one marking the future of Western theology, and the other a road pointed to by St. Maximos the Confessor, but untraveled. https://tinyurl.com/Doxa…
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In this episode, we speak with Regius Professor of Divinity David Fergusson (University of Cambridge) about his research on Christian doctrine, theological ethics, and the history of Reformed theology, particularly within the Scottish context. David is the author of many works, including his latest book Reformed Humanism: Essays on Christian Doctri…
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In this episode, we sit down with theologian Ryan Hurd to explore one of the most profound and often misunderstood attributes of God: His mercy. Drawing from his deep engagement with classical theism, scholastic theology, and biblical exegesis, Ryan walks us through the rich doctrinal framework that helps us understand how God's mercy is not in con…
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In this episode Dr. Jenkins looks at the conflict between St. Photios the Great and Pope St. Nicholas, a confrontation that touched the question of the Filioque, but involved so much more, even scandalously so.https://tinyurl.com/Doxamoot2025https://tinyurl.com/OrthEd2025 Byzantine course: https://tinyurl.com/LuxchristiByzantiumStill Points: https:…
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This week Dr. Jenkins completes the discussion of the Frankish kingdom's descent into theological error (and the Pope's reprimand of them for it), and transitions to a key moment in Byzantine history which will bring East and West into conflict, and with it the first real disputes about the filioque.https://tinyurl.com/Doxamoot2025https://tinyurl.c…
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In this episode, we sit down with Bobby Jamieson, senior pastor of Trinity Baptist Church in Chapel Hill and author of the insightful new book Everything Is Never Enough: Ecclesiastes' Surprising Path to Resilient Happiness. Bobby draws on his scholarly background and pastoral heart to guide us through Ecclesiastes—not as a gloomy tragedy, but as a…
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In this episode, we are honoured to speak with Mary Laven, Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Jesus College. Mary is widely known for her influential work on the social and religious history of early modern Europe, particularly Italy. Her most recent book, co-authored with Abigail Brundin and Deborah Ho…
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In this episode Dr.Jenkins looks at how the politics of the Germanic peoples and their posture towards the Byzantine empire play into not only the question of the filioque, but the Schism itself.https://tinyurl.com/Doxamoot2025https://tinyurl.com/OrthEd2025 Byzantine course: https://tinyurl.com/LuxchristiByzantiumStill Points: https://tinyurl.com/S…
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Continuing his discussion of the schism, and the filioque's contribution to it, Dr. Jenkins this week looks at St. Maximos the Confessor (580-662). St. Maximos shows that in the 640s the Latins did not confess what would later be their doctrine, that the Spirit's person eternally procedes from the Son as He does also from the Father.https://tinyurl…
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In this episode, we’re joined by Jeremy Treat, pastor for preaching and vision at Reality LA and author of the new book, On the Incarnation: The Good News of Jesus for the Renewal of the World. Drawing from the brilliance of Athanasius—an early church father who defended the full divinity of Christ—Treat makes ancient theology come alive for modern…
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This episode Dr. Jenkins looks at the 5th and 6th centuries, the period after St. Augustine (d. 430), wherein the Latin west nearly unanimously embraced doctrine of the double procession of the Holy Spirit. But this confession came with no real theological explanation about what exactly this meant. https://tinyurl.com/Doxamoot2025https://tinyurl.co…
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In this episode, we are joined by Professor Emma Wild-Wood. Emma is Professor of African Religions and World Christianity and Co-director of the Centre for the Study of World Christianity at the University of Edinburgh. Her work includes research on religious encounters in East-Central Africa, particularly Christian conversion and the growth of mis…
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Are Baptists just LARP-ing when they talk about tradition and retrieval? In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Ian Clary—historian, theologian, and co-host of Into Theology—to explore how Baptists fit within both the Protestant and broader catholic tradition. We dive into questions of church history, patristic theology, and the resurgence of retrie…
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As we contiue our look at the question of the Schism, we pick up with the matter of Theology proper, that is, how do we think and speak of God in Himself, as opposed to how God works in Creation and Redemption, and how this impacts the question of the Filioque.https://tinyurl.com/Doxamoot2025https://tinyurl.com/OrthEd2025 Byzantine course: https://…
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Are courage, wisdom, humility, and justice gendered? Are certain virtues inherently masculine or feminine? Drawing on philosophical reasoning, Aristotelian ethics, and the incarnational model of Christ, we explore three compelling arguments for why virtue should be understood as fully human, not gender-coded. Support the Podcast Support us on Patre…
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Building off of last week's episode, Dr. Jenkins continues discussing the preconditions of the schism, the geographical, cultural, historical, and linguistic concerns that fed into the schism, though certainly didn't create it.The links for the two conferences this Fall with the St. Basil Center.https://tinyurl.com/Doxamoot2025https://tinyurl.com/O…
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A scriptural dive into how Christians should view politics and what level of engagement we should have and how do our attitudes and interactions with others on these delicate topics, reflect our relationship to Christ and how He loved even His enemies. This teaching will give you Biblical principles for interactions and how Jesus taught us to impac…
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