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Priests of History: Stewarding the Past in an Ahistoric Age with Sarah Irving-Stonebraker
MP3•Episode home
Manage episode 476171560 series 1457862
Content provided by The Christian Research Institute. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Christian Research Institute or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
How can Christians engage meaningfully with history?
In an age underpinned by the idea that life is about self-invention and fulfilment, contemporary Western culture holds that the past has little to teach us. We live in an age that historian Sarah Irving-Stonebraker terms as the “Ahistoric Age,” in which we are profoundly disconnected from history.
In the attempt to appear relevant, the church often embraces this ahistoric worldview by jettisoning the historic ideas and practices of Christian formation. But this has unintended consequences, leaving Christians unmoored from history and losing the ability to grapple with its ethical complexities.
Sarah Irving-Stonebraker joins Hank Hanegraaff to discuss what it means to be a priest of history and why it matters more than ever for Christians to maintain this critical conversation with the past.
To receive Priests of History: Stewarding the Past in an Ahistoric Age for your partnering gift, please click here. https://www.equip.org/product/cri-resources-priests-of-history-stewarding-the-past-in-an-ahistoric-age/
Topics discussed include:
…
continue reading
In an age underpinned by the idea that life is about self-invention and fulfilment, contemporary Western culture holds that the past has little to teach us. We live in an age that historian Sarah Irving-Stonebraker terms as the “Ahistoric Age,” in which we are profoundly disconnected from history.
In the attempt to appear relevant, the church often embraces this ahistoric worldview by jettisoning the historic ideas and practices of Christian formation. But this has unintended consequences, leaving Christians unmoored from history and losing the ability to grapple with its ethical complexities.
Sarah Irving-Stonebraker joins Hank Hanegraaff to discuss what it means to be a priest of history and why it matters more than ever for Christians to maintain this critical conversation with the past.
To receive Priests of History: Stewarding the Past in an Ahistoric Age for your partnering gift, please click here. https://www.equip.org/product/cri-resources-priests-of-history-stewarding-the-past-in-an-ahistoric-age/
Topics discussed include:
- What does it mean for Christians to be priests of history? (3:00)
- What does it mean for our age to be ahistoric? (5:00)
- Is there any purpose in a post-truth age? (8:35)
- The myth of progress—the secularization of ideas and progress in history (14:55)
- When did our modern ahistoric age begin? (18:30)
- Reducing history to ideology is a mistake because history is nuanced and complex (23:55)
- What is the purpose of a museum? The modern and political redefinition of what a museum is (27:30)
- What does the decline of history majors globally mean for civilization? (29:45)
- The five characteristics of an ahistoric age (32:00)
- What is digital tribalism? (36:30)
- What does it mean for the church to acculturate itself to the ahistoric age? (38:30)
- True Christianity is a way of life (46:00)
- The benefits of spiritual practice and disciplines (50:05)
- Doctrinal drift from orthodox Christian beliefs (53:00)
- Church is an embodied experience—what we do with our bodies matters (1:06:45)
- The value of historic Christian practices such as night vigils (1:08:50)
- The importance of maintaining a historical conversation with the past (1:13:25)
- The importance of history for Christians (1:16:30)
- Are we losing our literacy? The importance of reading in the digital age (1:22:45)
- How Sarah Irving-Stonebraker went converted from atheism to Christianity at Cambridge University (1:24:30)
- The importance of stories (1:38:30)
- Why is it important for Christians to be priests of history? (1:42:45)
- Listen to Hank’s podcast and follow Hank off the grid where he is joined by some of the brightest minds discussing topics you care about. Get equipped to be a cultural change agent.
- Archived episodes are on our Website and available at the additional channels listed below.
- You can help spread the word about Hank Unplugged by giving us a rating and review from the other channels we are listed on.
470 episodes
MP3•Episode home
Manage episode 476171560 series 1457862
Content provided by The Christian Research Institute. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Christian Research Institute or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
How can Christians engage meaningfully with history?
In an age underpinned by the idea that life is about self-invention and fulfilment, contemporary Western culture holds that the past has little to teach us. We live in an age that historian Sarah Irving-Stonebraker terms as the “Ahistoric Age,” in which we are profoundly disconnected from history.
In the attempt to appear relevant, the church often embraces this ahistoric worldview by jettisoning the historic ideas and practices of Christian formation. But this has unintended consequences, leaving Christians unmoored from history and losing the ability to grapple with its ethical complexities.
Sarah Irving-Stonebraker joins Hank Hanegraaff to discuss what it means to be a priest of history and why it matters more than ever for Christians to maintain this critical conversation with the past.
To receive Priests of History: Stewarding the Past in an Ahistoric Age for your partnering gift, please click here. https://www.equip.org/product/cri-resources-priests-of-history-stewarding-the-past-in-an-ahistoric-age/
Topics discussed include:
…
continue reading
In an age underpinned by the idea that life is about self-invention and fulfilment, contemporary Western culture holds that the past has little to teach us. We live in an age that historian Sarah Irving-Stonebraker terms as the “Ahistoric Age,” in which we are profoundly disconnected from history.
In the attempt to appear relevant, the church often embraces this ahistoric worldview by jettisoning the historic ideas and practices of Christian formation. But this has unintended consequences, leaving Christians unmoored from history and losing the ability to grapple with its ethical complexities.
Sarah Irving-Stonebraker joins Hank Hanegraaff to discuss what it means to be a priest of history and why it matters more than ever for Christians to maintain this critical conversation with the past.
To receive Priests of History: Stewarding the Past in an Ahistoric Age for your partnering gift, please click here. https://www.equip.org/product/cri-resources-priests-of-history-stewarding-the-past-in-an-ahistoric-age/
Topics discussed include:
- What does it mean for Christians to be priests of history? (3:00)
- What does it mean for our age to be ahistoric? (5:00)
- Is there any purpose in a post-truth age? (8:35)
- The myth of progress—the secularization of ideas and progress in history (14:55)
- When did our modern ahistoric age begin? (18:30)
- Reducing history to ideology is a mistake because history is nuanced and complex (23:55)
- What is the purpose of a museum? The modern and political redefinition of what a museum is (27:30)
- What does the decline of history majors globally mean for civilization? (29:45)
- The five characteristics of an ahistoric age (32:00)
- What is digital tribalism? (36:30)
- What does it mean for the church to acculturate itself to the ahistoric age? (38:30)
- True Christianity is a way of life (46:00)
- The benefits of spiritual practice and disciplines (50:05)
- Doctrinal drift from orthodox Christian beliefs (53:00)
- Church is an embodied experience—what we do with our bodies matters (1:06:45)
- The value of historic Christian practices such as night vigils (1:08:50)
- The importance of maintaining a historical conversation with the past (1:13:25)
- The importance of history for Christians (1:16:30)
- Are we losing our literacy? The importance of reading in the digital age (1:22:45)
- How Sarah Irving-Stonebraker went converted from atheism to Christianity at Cambridge University (1:24:30)
- The importance of stories (1:38:30)
- Why is it important for Christians to be priests of history? (1:42:45)
- Listen to Hank’s podcast and follow Hank off the grid where he is joined by some of the brightest minds discussing topics you care about. Get equipped to be a cultural change agent.
- Archived episodes are on our Website and available at the additional channels listed below.
- You can help spread the word about Hank Unplugged by giving us a rating and review from the other channels we are listed on.
470 episodes
All episodes
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