Sacrilegious Discourse - Bible Study for Atheists

Husband & Wife

Husband and Wife are two non-believers who have always wanted to read the Bible. Why would we subject ourselves to this you might ask? From our perspective it helps us understand where the Christians around us, here in the Midwest, are coming from when they quote the Bible at us. Husband is basically an Atheist and wife leans Agnostic but mostly Atheist and we’re just having some fun at the Bible’s expense while learning more about what our neighbors claim we’re going to hell over.Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. 1d ago

    Matthew Chapters 9-10 Q&A: Bible Study by Atheists

    Matthew Chapters 9–10 crank the New Testament weirdness machine up another notch, and this Q&A episode digs into every “wait, what the hell?” moment. We’re talking Jesus forgiving sins before healing paralysis, tax collectors with collaborator vibes, bleeding women trapped in purity-law hell, dead girls getting touched despite ritual impurity rules, and blind men somehow being the only people who can “see” what’s supposedly going on. Then Chapter 10 rolls in like a cursed recruitment brochure: Jesus gives the Twelve authority to cast out demons and heal diseases, tells them to avoid Gentiles and Samaritans for now, warns them they’ll be hated, and casually drops the whole “I did not come to bring peace, but a sword” line like that won’t be quoted by every dangerous religious weirdo for the next 2,000 years. The hosts also detour through Beelzebub/Lord of the Flies, Simon Peter’s rock nickname, apostles vs. disciples, military church manipulation, and why “family values” apparently come with a metaphorical sword and a side of abandonment. This one is packed with theological side-eye, political dog whistles, purity-law nonsense, and the growing realization that the New Testament may be more readable than the Old Testament, but somehow even more infuriating. Or, as the episode puts it: it’s “wrong on top of wrong on top of wrong.” 👉 Listen now at sacrilegiousdiscourse.com 👉 Join our godless rebellion on Discord: discord.gg/VBnyTYV6nC 👉 Support the snark on Patreon: patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourse 📌 Topics Covered: Matthew 9:1–8 — Jesus forgives sins before healing paralysis, because apparently disability needed a theological subplot.Matthew the tax collector — Why calling a tax collector was politically loaded, not just “Jesus made a quirky friend.”The bleeding woman — Ritual impurity, social exile, and how one miracle supposedly fixed her whole damn life.Beelzebub / Lord of the Flies — Ancient Philistine gods, demon accusations, and Bible writers possibly trolling rival deities.The Twelve get superpowers — Jesus graduates the disciples into apostles and basically launches Ancient Avengers: Galilee Edition.Gentiles and Samaritans excluded… for now — A reminder that early Jesus-movement priorities were way more Jewish-focused than modern Christianity likes to admit.“Not peace, but a sword” — The family-values Jesus quote that sure sounds less cuddly when you actually read it.Why follow Jesus at all? — Apocalypse anxiety, charisma, community, miracles, and the timeless appeal of belonging to the “special” group. 💬 Best Quote from the Episode: “It's just, it's like it's wrong on top of wrong on top of wrong.”

    1h 21m
  2. 1d ago

    Matthew Chapter 8 Q&A: Bible Study by Atheists

    Matthew Chapter 8 gets the Q&A treatment, and apparently this chapter is less “gentle Jesus meek and mild” and more “propaganda speed-run with a side of drowned livestock.” In this episode, we dig into Matthew 8, including Jesus healing the leper, praising a Roman centurion, calming a storm, and committing what can only be described as biblical pig-based property damage. The big theme? Outsiders get it while insiders fumble the theological football. Lepers, Gentiles, women, servants, demon-possessed men, and pig-adjacent communities all become props in Matthew’s attempt to prove Jesus is the Messiah. We also get into the whole “don’t tell anyone” weirdness, aka the Messianic Secret, which feels suspiciously like a literary patch for “why didn’t everyone recognize Jesus if he was supposedly magic God-boy?” There’s also plenty of prophecy stuffing, especially Matthew’s use of Isaiah to claim Jesus fulfilled scripture, while conveniently ignoring the broader Jewish context. Shocking, we know. The episode gets into ritual impurity, leprosy, Second Temple sacrifice, demon possession as pre-scientific ableism, the Sea of Galilee’s storm drama, and why the townspeople were maybe less “awed by divine power” and more “dude, you just killed our entire herd of pigs.” 👉 Listen now at sacrilegiousdiscourse.com 👉 Join our godless rebellion on Discord: discord.gg/VBnyTYV6nC 👉 Support the snark on Patreon: patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourse 📌 Topics Covered: Matthew 8 and the theological propaganda machine working overtimeJesus healing a leper and flipping ritual impurity logic on its headThe Messianic Secret: why does Jesus keep saying “don’t tell anyone”?Roman centurions, Gentile outsiders, and faith-based narrative convenienceIsaiah prophecy stuffing and Christians cherry-picking the Hebrew BibleDemon possession, ableism, Lexapro Jesus, and ancient medical ignoranceJesus calming the storm and doing “only God can do that” symbolismThe infamous pig massacre: demons, swine, Gentile territory, and economic chaos 💬 Best Quote from the Episode: “Jesus the pig killer. Yeah, pig killing.”

    1h 15m
  3. 2d ago

    Matthew Chapter 10: Bible Study by Atheists

    Matthew Chapter 10 is where Jesus stops being a solo miracle worker and starts assembling his supernatural street team, the twelve disciples, now unofficially rebranded as the Tucci Gang Demon Hunters. He gives them authority to drive out demons, heal diseases, raise the dead, cleanse leprosy, and apparently wander around like first-century paranormal freelancers with no money, no extra sandals, and no backup plan. Because nothing says “divine mission” like unpaid labor and probable flogging. The hosts dig into the weirdness of the disciple roster, two Simons, Matthew forever branded as “the tax collector,” and Judas getting introduced with a full-on spoiler tag: “the guy who betrays him.” From there, the episode swerves into one of the biggest theological headaches in Christianity: if Judas’ betrayal was part of God’s master plan, was he really a villain… or just the guy brave enough to follow the script? Then Jesus tells the apostles not to go to Gentiles or Samaritans, which is awkward for anyone pretending early Jesus was already running a universal love-and-hugs campaign. The hosts also drag the “take no gold, silver, bag, extra shirt, sandals, or staff” instructions into the modern age and point out how hilariously incompatible that is with wealthy pastors, church real estate, televangelist jets, and the general money-hoovering machinery of modern Christianity. And then Matthew 10 gets dark. Jesus says he didn’t come to bring peace but a sword, demands loyalty above parents and children, warns families will turn on each other, and basically gives off major “cult leader with a persecution complex” energy. Naturally, the episode detours into space trash, sparrows, human extinction vibes, Robert Downey Jesus, and whether the disciples were true believers, opportunists, or just very committed members of the weirdest startup in Galilee. 👉 Listen now at sacrilegiousdiscourse.com 👉 Join our godless rebellion on Discord: discord.gg/VBnyTYV6nC 👉 Support the snark on Patreon: patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourse 📌 Topics Covered: Matthew 10 and the official formation of the twelve apostlesJesus gives the disciples demon-hunting superpowers, because apparently that’s transferable nowTwo Simons, one Judas spoiler, and Matthew still being “the tax collector”Jesus tells them to avoid Gentiles and Samaritans — universal savior branding pending“Don’t take money” becomes deeply inconvenient for rich pastors and televangelistsJudas: betrayer, plot device, or unpaid divine subcontractor?Jesus says he brought a sword, not peace — so much for gentle hippie JesusThe hosts spiral gloriously into sparrows, space junk, cult psychology, and Robert Downey Jesus 💬 Best Quote from the Episode: “I don't think Jesus likes the Christians of today.”

    36 min
  4. 4d ago

    Matthew Chapter 9: Bible Study by Atheists

    Matthew Chapter 9 is basically Jesus speed-running miracles like he’s trying to unlock every achievement before dinner. Paralytic guy? Healed. Tax collector? Recruited. Bleeding woman? Fixed by cloak-contact. Dead girl? “She’s just asleep,” apparently. Blind men? Sight restored. Mute man? Demon evicted. It’s a nonstop parade of illness, faith, demons, and theological whiplash, because nothing says “divine compassion” like treating disability and sickness as a spiritual checkout line. The hosts dig into the weird mechanics of Jesus healing people: does he heal anyone who asks, or is there some invisible mind-reading vetting process? Why does everyone have to physically “come to Jesus” before anything happens? And why does the Bible keep treating medical conditions, disability, and mental illness like demon problems instead of, you know, human realities? Naturally, this leads into a sharper critique of how religious communities can turn suffering into blame... “you weren’t healed because you didn’t have enough faith,” which is both cruel and depressingly familiar. Also covered: Matthew the tax collector joining the Tucci gang, Pharisees acting like ancient hall monitors, Jesus telling people not to spread the word about miracles he keeps doing in public, and the hosts realizing in real time that “come to Jesus” theology is literally being built right here in Matthew. It’s funny, bleak, sarcastic, and full of the kind of theological side-eye only Sacrilegious Discourse can provide. 👉 Listen now at sacrilegiousdiscourse.com 👉 Join our godless rebellion on Discord: discord.gg/VBnyTYV6nC 👉 Support the snark on Patreon: patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourse 📌 Topics Covered: Matthew Chapter 9 and Jesus’ miracle marathon of healing, forgiving, and casually raising the deadThe paralyzed man, sin-forgiveness logic, and why “God’s plan” gets ugly fastMatthew the tax collector joins Jesus’ crew — awkwardly, inside the Book of MatthewThe woman bleeding for 12 years and the surprisingly practical medical discussion hiding inside the miracle storyThe hosts accidentally unpack the whole “come to Jesus” framework in real timeBlind men, mute men, demons, and the Bible’s dangerous habit of spiritualizing disabilityPharisees, false prophets, modern Christian leaders, and religious performance theaterWhy calling illness “evil” can slide into some truly horrifying social consequences 💬 Best Quote from the Episode: “Why can't we just treat people like people and not throw in evil to things we just can't explain?”

    40 min
  5. 5d ago

    Matthew Chapter 8: Bible Study by Atheists

    Matthew Chapter 8 is where Little Maddie stops being a sermon-heavy morality lecture and turns into a full-blown supernatural roadshow. Jesus comes down from the mountain, immediately starts healing people, and somehow everyone acts like this is normal. We get a man with leprosy being declared “unclean,” a Roman centurion whose faith apparently impresses Jesus because he understands chain-of-command energy, and Peter’s mother-in-law getting cured just in time to start waiting on everyone. Because nothing says miracle like “congratulations, now get back to serving.” Then things get even weirder. Jesus heals crowds of sick and “demon possessed” people, which sends the hosts spiraling into the very fair question of why demons suddenly show up everywhere in the New Testament like biblical bedbugs. They also dig into whether some of these “possessions” were actually ancient misunderstandings of mental illness, epilepsy, or disability—because apparently if you didn’t have a modern diagnosis, congratulations, you were demon-adjacent. And then we hit the greatest hits: Jesus naps through a storm, gets annoyed when everyone panics about drowning, rebukes the weather like it forgot to clock in properly, and then later sends demons into a herd of pigs who promptly fling themselves into the lake. The town’s reaction? Less “praise God” and more “please take your pig-murdering magic show elsewhere.” Honestly? Reasonable. 👉 Listen now at sacrilegiousdiscourse.com 👉 Join our godless rebellion on Discord: discord.gg/VBnyTYV6nC 👉 Support the snark on Patreon: patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourse 📌 Topics Covered: Matthew Chapter 8 and the Bible’s sudden pivot into miracle-heavy chaosJesus healing a man with leprosy and the nasty “unclean” theology baked into itThe Roman centurion, servant/slavery questions, and weird faith flexingPeter’s mother-in-law getting healed and immediately turned into hospitality laborDemon possession, ancient ableism, epilepsy speculation, and mental health side-eyeJesus calming the storm after being rudely awakened from his holy boat napThe infamous demons-in-pigs story and the economic disaster of divine pig drowningWhy Matthew suddenly feels less like scripture and more like Supernatural: Bible Edition 💬 Best Quote from the Episode: “It’s almost like the miracles just stopped once we had the ability to record them.”

    42 min
  6. May 24

    Matthew Chapters 6 - 7 Q&A: Bible Study by Atheists

    Jesus wraps up the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew chapters 6–7, and honestly? For once, the guy has some notes we can work with. This episode digs into Jesus calling out religious theater, public virtue-signaling, performative prayer, fake holiness, wealth obsession, and the ancient equivalent of “posting your charity work for likes.” Basically: stop posing for the gram, stop hoarding wealth, and maybe don’t turn piety into a branding exercise. Weirdly relevant in the age of influencer Christianity, prosperity gospel grifters, and politicians who couldn’t pass a Sermon on the Mount pop quiz if Jesus personally handed them the answer key. The hosts unpack the Lord’s Prayer, the linguistic weirdness of “daily bread,” fasting without making yourself look like a haunted Victorian orphan, the whole God vs. Mammon thing, and why “Mammon” was not originally a demon but absolutely got upgraded into one because Christianity loves giving abstract concepts horns. Then Matthew 7 rolls in with narrow gates, wide roads, good trees, bad trees, pearls before swine, and Jesus apparently doing ancient stand-up comedy with planks sticking out of people’s faces. Who knew Biblical Jesus had more sarcasm than most youth pastors? There’s also a surprisingly thoughtful discussion of anxiety, mental health stigma, black-and-white thinking, moral nuance, religious hypocrisy, and why “zero tolerance” policies are for babies. The episode takes some sharp turns into politics, Christian nationalism, Fox News values, Trump-era hypocrisy, and the deeply uncomfortable fact that the villains of the Sermon on the Mount are usually not atheists—they’re religious people performing goodness for social credit while ignoring the actual ethics they claim to worship. So yeah, this one has Bible scholarship, atheist side-eye, accidental Jesus appreciation, and plenty of “Christians, maybe read the damn book” energy. 👉 Listen now at sacrilegiousdiscourse.com 👉 Join our godless rebellion on Discord: discord.gg/VBnyTYV6nC 👉 Support the snark on Patreon: patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourse 📌 Topics Covered: Matthew 6–7 and the back half of the Sermon on the MountJesus vs. performative religion: stop making holiness your personal brandThe Lord’s Prayer, “daily bread,” and Greek words even ancient translators side-eyedFasting, beard oil, and why Jesus basically said “look normal, weirdo”Mammon: not originally a demon, but definitely capitalism’s creepy uncleAnxiety, rumination, mental health stigma, and ancient spiritual blame gamesThe narrow gate, the wide road, and why black-and-white morality is exhaustingFalse prophets, bad fruit, religious hypocrisy, and modern Christians missing the assignment 💬 Best Quote from the Episode: “God was not yelling at me, my friend. God was yelling at you.”

    1h 33m
  7. May 23

    Matthew Chapter 5 Q&A: Bible Study by Atheists

    Matthew Chapter 5 gets the full Sacrilegious Discourse treatment in this Q&A breakdown of the Sermon on the Mount, where Jesus climbs a mystery mountain, sits down like an ancient rabbinic professor, and starts handing out moral bumper stickers with eternal consequences attached. The hosts dig into the Beatitudes, “salt of the earth,” “light under a bowl,” anger, adultery, divorce, cheek-turning, Roman oppression, tax collectors, and the Bible’s deeply exhausting habit of making everything somehow worse for women. This episode asks the important questions: What the hell is a Beatitude? How does salt lose its saltiness? Why is calling someone “Raca” apparently a judicial incident? And why does Jesus keep turning basic ethical advice into spiritual surveillance? The discussion moves from Matthew 5:21–22 and “thought crime” murder, to Matthew 5:27–28 and lust-policing, to Matthew 5:31–32, where divorce gets framed through the usual ancient patriarchal nonsense. Spoiler: women are still being treated like property, and the hosts are absolutely not letting that slide. There’s also a surprisingly useful dive into “go the extra mile,” which turns out to be tied to Roman military occupation, not just your manager telling you to smile harder at work. Plus: Gehenna, Molech, Sanhedrin court drama, tax collectors being hated across cultures, and the realization that “be perfect” probably meant something more like “be complete” or “fully mature,” which is still a lot, but at least slightly less ridiculous than “never screw up or God lights you on fire forever.” 👉 Listen now at sacrilegiousdiscourse.com 👉 Join our godless rebellion on Discord: discord.gg/VBnyTYV6nC 👉 Support the snark on Patreon: patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourse 📌 Topics Covered: Matthew Chapter 5 Q&A and the Sermon on the Mount’s greatest hitsWhat “Beatitudes” actually means—and why they sound like holy bumper stickers“Salt of the earth,” ancient salt, and Jesus accidentally creating seasoning theologyRaca, “you fool,” Gehenna, and Bible-era insult crimesJesus, lust, adultery, and the ancient origins of spiritual thought-policingDivorce laws, women as property, and why Jesus did not go far enough“Turn the other cheek” vs. actual self-defense and systemic abuse“Go the extra mile” as Roman occupation resistance, not corporate team-building garbage 💬 Best Quote from the Episode: “Maybe one day we'll have a god that people believe in where women aren't chattel.”

    1h 7m
  8. May 22

    Matthew Chapter 7: Bible Study by Atheists

    Matthew Chapter 7 wraps up the Sermon on the Mount, and Jesus is apparently here to say: stop judging people, stop being a hypocrite, maybe stop hoarding wealth, and for the love of all things secular, quit pretending Christianity invented basic empathy. The hosts dig into “judge not,” pearls before swine, the Golden Rule, false prophets, bad fruit, narrow gates, and Jesus’ ominous little warning that not everyone yelling “Lord, Lord” gets through the heavenly velvet rope. Naturally, this all begins with a totally normal theological discussion about men injecting saline into their balls for cosmetic reasons. Because if Jesus says don’t judge, apparently that includes ball-related life choices. From there, the episode slides into Christian hypocrisy, empathy, societal pressure, why God is a terrible gift-giver, and how “don’t be a dick” somehow took three full Bible chapters to explain. The big takeaway? Matthew’s Jesus sounds way more reasonable than the God of the Old Testament, until the whole “wide gate to destruction” and “get away from me, evildoers” stuff shows up. So yes, there’s decent moral advice here. But also eternal punishment, vague spiritual gatekeeping, and plenty of room for Christians to ignore the parts they don’t like. 👉 Listen now at sacrilegiousdiscourse.com 👉 Join our godless rebellion on Discord: discord.gg/VBnyTYV6nC 👉 Support the snark on Patreon: patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourse 📌 Topics Covered: Matthew 7 and the end of the Sermon on the Mount“Judge not” — unless you’re judging Christian hypocrisy, apparentlyPearls before swine, bad fruit, false prophets, and other Bible-flavored insultsThe Golden Rule showing up like ancient empathy with brandingWhy “ask and you shall receive” doesn’t exactly work for atheists who triedNarrow gates, wide roads, and theological crowd controlJesus saying “I never knew you” like a divine breakup textSociety, body image, and the unexpected ethics of ball enlargement 💬 Best Quote from the Episode: “We had three chapters of this that could all be summarized by Wheaton’s Law. Don’t be a dick.”

    38 min
4.5
out of 5
37 Ratings

About

Husband and Wife are two non-believers who have always wanted to read the Bible. Why would we subject ourselves to this you might ask? From our perspective it helps us understand where the Christians around us, here in the Midwest, are coming from when they quote the Bible at us. Husband is basically an Atheist and wife leans Agnostic but mostly Atheist and we’re just having some fun at the Bible’s expense while learning more about what our neighbors claim we’re going to hell over.Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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