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I recently came upon this podcast as I was looking for an interview with one who just came to Christ, Molly Worthen.
I have listened to season one over the last couple of weeks.
What I find remarkable is the conversations are applicable to you wherever you are at this moment in your life. A believer is giving as much to think about and ponder as an agnostic or atheist.
It is a first rate show with more than superficial conversations and each episode can stand on its own.
I would urge you to give this show a couple of episodes and try it out. I do not believe you will be disappointed
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I first discovered this podcast while reading Justin's book of the same title, and I'm glad I did! Each episode is uniquely crafted to explore the renewed interest in God from various angles. I appreciate how it brings together different voices and perspectives while telling a compelling story. As a believer, this podcast has reminded me that there is more to Christianity than behavior or beliefs!
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This podcast is my current favorite (just finished episode 7). I find it fascinating. The host covers the stories of those disillusioned by secularism and atheism, those who have come to confess the human desire for purpose in life, those who could no longer deny the existence of the transcendent, and those who changed their mind about religion in general being harmful to society--acknowledging that when people give up one god, they'll make something else god (like politics, social justice, sex, feminism, or academics) and those gods are arguably proving to have a more harmful affect on society. If you're interested in critical thinking and stories, this podcast beautifully weaves them together. If you're feeling doubt, disillusionment, or curiosity, you'll likely find food for thought in this podcast. Bonus: bountiful British accents 😆
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Fabulous mix of pragmatic, thoughtful and spiritual, I'm drinking it up like a cool drink of water on a hot, dry day
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I loved the first season of The Surprising Rebirth…, in spite of its clunky title. I waited expectantly and impatiently for season two, only to find it has gone down a rabbit hole of obsession with the ARC and other far-right elements and personalities. Alarm bells went off when, during the first, ARC broadcast of season two, Ayaan Hirsi Ali equated progressives with treachery and spoke about her approval of Donald Trump’s agenda in the U.S. Then the podcast just couldn’t let it go, and the first several episodes of season two lovingly massaged every possible angle of revived masculine participation in church — which, although to be celebrated if it isn’t just a mask for Christian nationalism, is very different from hearing individual stories of newfound faith from people who once had none. Why the myopic, minute-by-minute focus on the state of Jordan Peterson’s faith life? Do we care more about Peterson, the pied piper of bro culture, than anyone else? Clearly (and surprisingly!) the Surprising Rebirth producers do. The rest of us may not. Unless the show returns to individual in-studio interviews, and balances conservative voices with more center and progressive ones, its focus has drifted regrettably from its inception. I’m very sad, as we in the U.S. need desperately to hear from less politically strident followers of Jesus, and many of us rely on the U.K. for the sanity that much of the evangelical church here is lacking.
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