Greystone Conversations
A podcast by Greystone Theological Institute
Categories:
69 Episodes
-
The Diverse Unity of the Reformed Tradition: The Myth and Reality of "Hypothetical Universalism"
Published: 30/06/2021 -
Jeremiah, Dramatic Dialogue, and "Conjugating" the Gospel
Published: 16/06/2021 -
Seamus Heaney's "Digging" and Vocation as Cultivation
Published: 09/06/2021 -
Confessing God With and Because of Scripture
Published: 02/06/2021 -
In Times Like These: God's Occasional Reconfiguration of His Church
Published: 26/05/2021 -
On Being Pastored Intellectually
Published: 19/05/2021 -
Christian Conviviality in a Hyperindustrial World: Reflecting on Ivan Illich - Part 2
Published: 05/05/2021 -
Christian Conviviality in a Hyperindustrial World: Reflecting on Ivan Illich - Part 1
Published: 28/04/2021 -
Exploring the Order of Scriptural Reality as Reality
Published: 14/04/2021 -
The Eternal Generation Of the Son: What It Is and Why It Matters
Published: 07/04/2021 -
Scripture, Theology, and Liturgy for the Renewal of the Church: Pastoral Perspectives
Published: 31/03/2021 -
Remember or Remembered? Identity, Memory, And Dementia
Published: 24/03/2021 -
The "Biblical" in "Biblical Theology"
Published: 17/03/2021 -
Spiritual Warfare in the Library: The Grave Danger of Theological Suspicion in the UK Church - Part 2
Published: 03/03/2021 -
Spiritual Warfare in the Library: The Grave Danger of Theological Suspicion in the UK Church - Part 1
Published: 24/02/2021 -
Christianity and Classical Culture in the Third Century
Published: 17/02/2021 -
The Mission of the Church in a Changing World (and Church)
Published: 03/02/2021 -
Reformed, Not Calvinist: Recovering Reformed Distinctions and Identity
Published: 27/01/2021 -
Enjoy God Forever? Augustine, Westminster, and the Enjoy/Use Distinction
Published: 20/01/2021 -
Ecclesial Conscience and "Common Sense": The Conscience as Shared Knowledge
Published: 13/01/2021
The podcast of Greystone Theological Institute, exploring questions of theology, ethics, church faith and life, and more from the perspective of confessional Reformed catholicity.