
The Broken Book Bible Podcast
Considering the Bible's saintly reputation, it packs surprising gore, horror, and depravity. As well as beauty, wisdom, and tedium. For millennia, the Bible has held Western culture captive to its strange stories of ancient people trying to figure out God.Maybe you're not religious, but you're curious about the Bible. Maybe you grew up in church, but you're looking for a new way to relate to the Bible. Welcome! We're Sam and Amanda. We're obsessed with the Bible. Sam is a liberal Presbyterian who became post-modern by studying the Bible too much. Amanda is a mystic naturalist Unitarian Universalist with Reformed and Evangelical roots. We are wrestling with what the Bible can mean in the midst of radical questioning, faith changes, depression, and self-doubt. We hope you'll join us as we appreciate, dissect, criticize, defend, and generally nerd out about the Bible from our progressive religious perspectives.
Where to Find Us
Where to Find Us
Podcast Directories: Stitcher, iTunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-broken-book-bible-podcast/id1172672907?mt=2 , Google Play
Email: sam@brokenbookpodcast.com & amanda@brokenbookpodcast.com
Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/brokenbookpod
Twitter: @BrokenBookPod
The Broken Book Bible Podcast
Mailbag Episode: Propecy, Song of Songs, and What would you ask the Historical Jesus? - Episode 27
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Sam and Amanda
Listener questions we consider -
What is your favorite and least favorite book of the Bible?
What would you ask Jesus (historical Jesus) if you had the chance?
Do you know anything about Song of Songs? I've heard some interpret it a source a metaphor about the relationship btw Yahweh and Israel, but that seems strange.
If you could become friends with someone from the Bible or a biblical author, who would it be and what would your friendship look like?