34 episodes

Dr. W. Travis McMaken carries on conversations with friends, books he’s reading, and the strange voices inside his head. He is a professor of religion and author of books on theology. On Twitter: @WTravisMcMaken

The McKrakenCast W. Travis McMaken

    • Religion & Spirituality
    • 4.7 • 3 Ratings

Dr. W. Travis McMaken carries on conversations with friends, books he’s reading, and the strange voices inside his head. He is a professor of religion and author of books on theology. On Twitter: @WTravisMcMaken

    Part 5 - Scots Confession, History & Theology (final installment)

    Part 5 - Scots Confession, History & Theology (final installment)

    This is the 5th and final part in a series of adult education (Sunday School) classes that I taught at St. Charles Presbyterian Church (USA) in the early months of 2020. It provides a fairly thorough discussion of the Scots Confession's history and theology targeted (hopefully, effectively so) at the generally educated churchgoer. Part 5 continues exploring the background of the Scots Confession. It deals with life and times of John Knox, the principal author of the Scots Confession, cover his departure from England in 1554 to avoid the reign of "Bloody Mary" Tudor, his time in Geneva and Frankfurt, his return to Scotland in 1559, and his legacy. It also explores chapters 21 - 25 in the confession itself, addressing topics like the purpose of the sacraments, the sacraments of baptism and the Lord's Supper, the Holy Spirit's work in the sacraments, government and civil authority, and the two gifts given to the church.This is Part 5 in a 5-part series. You can find the series index here. Click here for the blog post corresponding to this episode, and click here to access this content on YouTube.
    =========================
    I write books. I run a blog. I have a YouTube channel. I teach. 

    • 54 min
    Karl Barth: Spiritual Writings - A conversation with the editors

    Karl Barth: Spiritual Writings - A conversation with the editors

    Join me for a conversation with Dr. Ash Cocksworth (Twitter, University of Roehampton) as we talk about our recently released co-edited volume, Karl Barth: Spiritual Writings, in the Paulist Press Classics of Western Spirituality series. We discuss how Ash and I got to know each other and came to work together on this volume, what our favorite things about the book are, who should read the book, how politics relates to spirituality, and much more. Marmite even comes up at one point and a brilliant bit of wordplay by yours truly falls totally flat. It was a fun conversation.Ash and I were joined by my friend, Dr. Kate Hanch (Twitter, First St. Charles United Methodist Church), who functioned as our special guest host and moderator for the conversation. Once you’ve ordered your copy of Karl Barth: Spiritual Writings, head over to Fortress Press to pre-order Kate’s forthcoming book, Storied Witness: The Theology of Black Women Preachers in 19th-Century America.
    =========================
    I write books. I run a blog. I have a YouTube channel. I teach. 

    • 1 hr 20 min
    Reflecting on the Lectionary Texts for the Third Sunday in Lent (RCL Year C)

    Reflecting on the Lectionary Texts for the Third Sunday in Lent (RCL Year C)

    This is the third of what has been a three part series of adult spiritual formation / education (Sunday School) classes that I recently finished teaching at St. Charles Presbyterian Church (USA), here in March of 2022. The date for this particular recording was March 20, 2022. During this series, I lead discussion of the Revised Common Lectionary texts for these Sundays in Lent. Many thanks to my sisters and brothers who joined in the conversation. 
    This Sunday's readings were:
    Isaiah 55:1-9
    Psalm 63:1-81
    1 Corinthians 10:1-13
    Luke 13:1-9
    You can access these readings here.
    We discussed things like:
    Spiritualizing vs eschatological / apocalyptic approaches to the Judeo-Christian tradition in these texts
    More on Judaism, Christianity, and the perils of supercessionism
    A God-inspired vision of what the world could be if we could "buy...without money" and not "labor of that which does not satisfy"
    God's people as attracting the interest of the nations and drawing them in rather than a geographically expansionist view
    A moral interpretation for God's thoughts and ways being different than ours
    Allegorical interpretation in Paul even if the Reformers didn't much care for it as an interpretive strategy
    Bad things don't happen to you because you're a bad person
    =========================
    I write books. I run a blog. I have a YouTube channel. I teach. 

    • 47 min
    Reflecting on the Lectionary Texts for the Second Sunday in Lent (RCL Year C)

    Reflecting on the Lectionary Texts for the Second Sunday in Lent (RCL Year C)

    This is the second of what should be a three part series of adult spiritual formation / education (Sunday School) classes that I'm currently teaching at St. Charles Presbyterian Church (USA), here in March of 2022. The date for this particular recording was March 13, 2022. During this series, I will be leading discussion of the Revised Common Lectionary texts for these Sundays in Lent. Many thanks to my sisters and brothers who joined in the conversation. 
    This Sunday's readings were:
    Genesis 15:1-12, 17-18
    Psalm 27
    Philippians 3:17-4:1
    Luke 13:31-35
    You can access these readings here.
    We discussed things like:
    Abram / Abraham's 318 "trained men" and what he could possibly have to be afraid of
    Suzerain treaties 
    Genesis 15:6 and its influence on the Abrahamic faiths (Judaism, Christianity, Islam)
    Depictions of Jesus's relationship with the Pharisees and the place of Jesus-following Pharisees in the early days of what would become Christianity
    The apocryphal Lives of the Prophets
    Feminine imagery for God / God and gender
    =========================
    I write books. I run a blog. I have a YouTube channel. I teach. 

    • 47 min
    Reflecting on the Lectionary Texts for the First Sunday in Lent (RCL Year C)

    Reflecting on the Lectionary Texts for the First Sunday in Lent (RCL Year C)

    This is the first of what should be a three part series of adult spiritual formation / education (Sunday School) classes that I'm currently teaching at St. Charles Presbyterian Church (USA), here in March of 2022. The date for this particular recording was March 6, 2022. During this series, I will be leading discussion of the Revised Common Lectionary texts for these Sundays in Lent. Many thanks to my sisters and brothers who joined in the conversation. 
    This Sunday's readings were:
    Deuteronomy 26:1-11
    Psalm 91:1-2, 9-16
    Romans 10:8b-13
    Luke 4:1-13
    You can access these readings here.
    We discussed things like:
    My complicated relationship to the liturgical year and lectionary
    Lent, Zwingli, and the origins of the Reformed tradition
    How maybe Ash Wednesday should come before Mardi Gras
    How we should treat "aliens" / immigrants
    How observation of the Sabbath is explained differently in Exodus 20 compared to Deuteronomy 5
    How the Jewish and Christian traditions identify God and God's people by telling stories / recounting history
    The protoevangelium in Genesis 3:15 and the Reformed tradition's problems with replacement theology / supercessionism
    Calling on the name of the Lord and why LORD shows up in all capital letters in the Old Testament 
    =========================
    I write books. I run a blog. I have a YouTube channel. I teach. 

    • 49 min
    Part 4 - Scots Confession, History & Theology

    Part 4 - Scots Confession, History & Theology

    This is Part 4 in a series of adult education (Sunday School) classes that I taught at St. Charles Presbyterian Church (USA) in the early months of 2020. It provides a fairly thorough discussion of the Scots Confession's history and theology targeted (hopefully, effectively so) at the generally educated churchgoer. Part 4 continues exploring the background of the Scots Confession. It deals with life and times of John Knox, the principal author of the Scots Confession, from the history of Scotland leading up to his birth to Knox's departure from England in 1554 to avoid the reign of "Bloody Mary" Tudor. It also explores chapters 16 - 20 in the confession itself, addressing topics like the marks of the church, universal salvation, the supersessionism in Reformed ecclesiology, the afterlife, and the authority of Scripture.
     
    This is Part 4 in a 5-part series. You can find the series index here. Click here for the blog post corresponding to this episode, and click here to access this content on YouTube.
    =========================
    I write books. I run a blog. I have a YouTube channel. I teach. 

    • 56 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
3 Ratings

3 Ratings

jtorr183 ,

One greater than a mere podcaster is here!

Dr. McMaken is a Reformed theologian, who in spite of his many duties as university professor, manages here to share his erudite yet conversational voice on a wide range of theological topics.

Do what you must while listening (house cleaning chores for me, usually🥴), but please learn and become a better theological thinker!

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