Agnostic Bible Study w/ Joe Teel
A single sentence can hide a thousand assumptions, and “the Bible clearly says” might be the clearest example. When I zoom out from modern certainty and look at early Christianity, the New Testament starts to feel less like a simple answer key and more like a long, human historical process: authors writing to real communities, scribes copying by hand for centuries, and later readers arguing about what counts as Scripture and what the text means. I lay out my case against New Testament simplicity by working from the ground up. We talk about manuscript transmission and why we have copies of copies rather than original autographs, what textual variants are (and why most are small but some are not), and how famous passages can be missing from earlier manuscripts. From there we move into canon formation: how different churches circulated different writings, why some books outside the New Testament were treated seriously, and why books now inside the canon were disputed for generations, including Hebrews and Revelation. Then we hit the part people often skip: interpretation and translation. Christians disagree on major doctrines while insisting the text is clear, and every harmonization, cross-reference, and theological system is an interpretive move. Add in Bible translation choices from Koine Greek, footnotes, and editorial decisions, and the “simple” story gets even harder to defend. If you like thoughtful conversations about church history, biblical scholarship, and early Christian origins, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more curious readers can find the show.
28 episoder
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