First Things Podcast First Things
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First Things is published by The Institute on Religion and Public Life, an interreligious, nonpartisan research and education institute whose purpose is to advance a religiously informed public philosophy for the ordering of society.
Learn more: www.firstthings.com/learnmore
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Orthodox Christian Education
In this episode, John Mark Reynolds joins Mark Bauerlein to discuss the Saint Constantine School and Orthodox Christian education in the United States.
Music by Frederic Chopin licensed via Creative Commons. Tracks reorganized, duplicated, and edited. -
Reimagining Christian Political Duty
In this episode, Ephraim Radner joins Mark Bauerlein to discuss his new book, “Mortal Goods: Reimagining Christian Political Duty.”
Music by J. S. Bach/C. Gounod, public domain. Track edited, cropped, and merged with another track. -
The Story of the Comfort Women
In this episode, J. Mark Ramseyer joins Mark Bauerlein to discuss his co-written new book, “The Comfort Women Hoax: A Fake Memoir, North Korean Spies, and Hit Squads in the Academic Swamp.”
Music by J. S. Bach/C. Gounod, public domain. Track edited, cropped, and merged with another track. -
Film and Faith
In this episode, Carson Holloway joins Mark Bauerlein to discuss his new book, “Film and Faith: Modern Cinema and the Struggle to Believe.”
Music by Frederic Chopin licensed via Creative Commons. Tracks reorganized, duplicated, and edited. -
Jesus Isn’t Woke
In this episode, Lucas Miles joins Mark Bauerlein to discuss his new book, “Woke Jesus: The False Messiah Destroying Christianity.”
Music by J. S. Bach/C. Gounod, public domain. Track edited, cropped, and merged with another track. -
The Left’s Dark Money
In this episode, Scott Walter joins Mark Bauerlein to discuss his new book, “Arabella: The Dark Money Network of Leftist Billionaires Secretly Transforming America.”
Music by Frederic Chopin licensed via Creative Commons. Tracks reorganized, duplicated, and edited.
Avis des utilisateurs
very well done
Mark Bauerline does a great job. Interesting and lively interviews about serious topics.
Audio Quality must be fixed
I’ve been a print subscriber for years. I’ve listened to the podcast for at least 5 yrs.
Based on the content alone, I would give 4 or 5 stars.
But the audio quality has become so bad that recently I have stopped listening to several interviews partway through. Interviews I was interested in. I just couldn’t hear it easily.
FT podcast wasn’t always this bad. Need to find a solution.
Can’t hear it
Interesting podcast, but I have to struggle in order to listen to it because the audio is not balanced. The quiet parts get way too quiet that I can’t hear them in the car and then when someone speaks at normal volume again it begins blasting because I had to crank the volume a ton. I’m willing to listen to all kinds of philosophy podcasts where tech comes second, ideas first, but this is bad. Sorry for the poor review but it’s actually preventing me from listening. If things change I’ll gladly revisit this.