logo
episode-header-image
Yesterday
1h 22m

Ethan Vanderleek on the Intersection of ...

Paul Axton
About this episode
Ethan Vanderleek, a specialist on William Desmond describes to Paul, Desmond's project and its overlap with the Christology of Rowan Williams, William Desmond is one of our most important living philosophers, and Ethan explains how he poses a true metaphysical alternative to both modernism and postmodernism. If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donat ... Show More
Up next
Jan 26
Universal Salvation as the Embodied Meaning of Resurrection Extended to All
Paul, Nate, Jed, Karl, and Jim discuss how it is that meaning is always embodied, and how misorientation to the body constitutes sin, and salvation through Christ's body entails a new embodied meaning extended to all. If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to suppo ... Show More
1h 8m
Jan 24
Sermon: The Living Letters Written on Creation
Paul Axton preaches: The living letters brings together embodiment and meaning in the particulars of incarnation, and this is reflected in quantum mechanics and modern biology as discussed by David Bohm and Rupert Sheldrake. The letter that kills is on the order of a materialism ... Show More
31m 18s
Jan 19
Anselm's Reification of Language as the Human Problem
Paul, Karl, Andy, and Jim discuss the role of language in Anselm and its development through Descartes into foundationalism, and pose the idea of personalism, found in Christ, as the resolution to this universal tendency to trade the impersonal for the personal. If you enjoyed th ... Show More
1h 13m
Recommended Episodes
Sep 2025
Jesus as Prophet (Part 2)
<p>Many people today think of Christianity as a set of beliefs you take up, something you decide upon. But the Bible says Christianity is something that comes upon you. It’s not something you pick up—it’s something that picks you up. </p> <p>Jesus Christ is not a passive Savior. ... Show More
54m 23s
Jul 2025
True Spirituality
<p>The trouble with the Sermon on the Mount is it’s so familiar that almost nobody listens to it, almost nobody knows what it’s saying. How do we know that?</p> <p>At the very end of the sermon, it says the crowds were amazed at Jesus’s teaching. And that word, “amazed,” in Greek ... Show More
39m 33s