
302 episodes

Mere Fidelity Mere Fidelity
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- Religion & Spirituality
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4.8 • 282 Ratings
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From the Mere Orthodoxy Podcast Network: thoughtful weekly conversations about theology, the culture, and the church, hosted by Matthew Lee Anderson, Derek Rishmawy, Alastair Roberts, and Andrew Wilson.
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The Age of AI, with Jason Thacker
When students started turning in papers written by artificial intelligence, educators were caught flat-footed. We knew that machines would replace many human tasks, but we thought the humanities were immune to that. Have our writing standards fallen so low that we can no longer write better than computers? Or are we about to experience the awakening of Artificial Consciousness? Matt and Alastair discuss this situation with Jason Thacker, the Chair of Research in Technology Ethics at the ERLC.
Full show notes at www.merefidelity.com.
Timestamps:
Written by a Bot [0:00]
The ChatGPT Panic [2:45]
What is human? [6:48]
Is intelligence important? [11:09]
Going Full Hobbit [20:57]
Did we do this on purpose? [28:00]
Inevitable Arms Race [34:44]
Covid Tech-lash [45:20]
AI(dolatry) [52:34] -
Protestants & History, with Paul Gutacker
On this episode of Mere Fidelity, historian of history Paul Gutacker joins Matt, Derek, and Alastair to talk about the changing and sometimes fraught relationship that Protestants have had with the notions of “history” and “tradition.” Paul’s book, The Old Faith in a New Nation, particularly examines how nineteenth century debates about slavery, etc., influenced our ideas about the roles of Scripture and Church in regard to history.
Full show notes at www.merefidelity.com.
Timestamps:
Neo-Calvinism [0:30]
My Fellow Subjects [2:08]
Meta-history [3:22]
What is Biblicism? [4:37]
Misusing History [9:54]
Scripture’s Changing Role [14:42]
Tradition or History [18:41]
Church Disputes [23:36]
Foreigners [27:06]
Spirit and Letter [29:35]
Hermeneutical Precedent [42:42]
How should pastors use history? [46:05] -
A Billion Dollars
What would you do with a billion dollars to strengthen the Western Church? The question is straightforward enough, but the answers are where it gets interesting. The full Mere Fi cast and crew (Andrew, Matt, Derek, and Alastair) put their heads together to figure out what project would move the needle most. Christian billionaires, pay attention!
Full show notes at www.merefidelity.com.
Timestamps:
An Expensive Museum [0:00]
Matt: The Role of the Church [3:23]
Barking Up the Money Tree? [9:22]
Alastair: Think Bigger [11:24]
Derek: Think Longer [15:16]
Deep and Wide [19:02]
Andrew: Doubts and Questions [22:14]
What Would God Fund? [25:29]
Denominationally Opaque Commercials [31:47]
Formation [37:37]
Collective Funding [44:14] -
The Man of Lawlessness
When you come across a passage of Scripture that just throws you for a loop, who do you go to for guidance? Matt turns to Alastair and Derek. Let the Mere Fi cast and crew be your Scriptural support group. Today we look at another passage from the Apostle Paul that just doesn’t really sound like what we’d expect. Along the way we encounter the beasts of Revelation, ancient dictators, and fractal Mini-Me’s.
Full show notes at www.merefidelity.com.
Timestamps:
Matt Works Out His Apocalyptic Pauline Issues [3:12]
The Substance & Symbols of Lawlessness [10:18]
Don’t Dehistoricize (Beasts of Revelation) [17:54]
Preview Eschaton [24:19]
The Restraining [33:09]
How would you preach it? [41:02] -
The Genesis of Gender, with Dr. Abigail Favale
These days, it seems nobody without a doctorate in biology knows how to tell men apart from women. How did it come to this? And what can be done about it? Andrew, Matt, and Alastair talk to Dr. Abigail Favale, author of The Genesis of Gender, about how the gender paradigm arose, swallowed the concept of sex (like a "giant Pac-Man monster"), and brought into question the very existence of human nature.
Full show notes at www.merefidelity.com.
Timestamps:
The Gender Paradigm [0:00]
Sex Becomes Gender [8:24]
Is Human Nature Real? [16:15]
Practical Excursus [18:12]
Contraceptive Context [24:11]
Contradictions [31:52]
Corrections [38:57] -
Tolkien Dogmatics, with Austin Freeman
J.R.R. Tolkien is known as the language professor who created a fantasy world and constructed several languages for fun. However, those who get to know his writing and thought well discover that behind those seemingly frivolous projects lie deeply seeded theological ideas. And where better to discuss the intersection of theology and fiction than here on Mere Fidelity. Austin Freeman, author of Tolkien Dogmatics, joins Matt, Derek, and Alastair to delve into the wealth of thought hidden in Middle Earth.
Full show notes at www.merefidelity.com.
Timestamps:
Theology & Literature [0:00]
Imaginary World [4:45]
Actual World [10:37]
What Dogmas? [14:28]
Gift of Death [20:26]
Peer Comparison [27:13]
Sub-Creation [35:08]
The Bombadil Question [42:39]
Customer Reviews
Most Engaging Podcast
I really enjoy this podcast. I love both the depth and lightheartedness with which they address theological and cultural questions, and they consistently choose such worthwhile questions to discuss and authors to host. I invariably come away having learned a lot and been highly entertained while doing it. I especially love that they give air time to genuine disagreements, among themselves or between themselves and their guests in a very cordial yet sharpened and purposeful way. This is a skill nearly everyone could probably get better at in our current culture. In addition, I love that they honor the contributions of thoughtful feminine authors on culture and theology. I can happily listen to more episodes of this podcast consecutively than any other show.
Engrossing, Stimulating, Practical
Great panel of hosts, fantastic guest queue - every episode is intellectually stimulating and fascinating, yet there is always pragmatic application and a practical, down to earth focus. Edifies me, and helps me love God and neighbor with my heart, soul, mind (and strength if I’m listening while jogging, haha)…Perhaps the best part of this podcast is how charitable convos are, and that while the hosts take their guests and content seriously, they don’t take themselves too seriously. Refreshing!
Used to be good
For a long time, this podcast was my favorite. Recently (because of their sponsors?) they’ve moved to interviews with rather weak authors, and the pushback/engagement is soft. The podcast used to be somewhat intellectually rigorous and stimulating, but now it’s a big pillow fight, an extended infomercial for the latest evangellyfish pop-theology publication. It’s losing its edge. It’s disappointing to me, because I’ve been a faithful listener since the beginning.