Great And Spacious Podcast

Episode 146 - My Emotional Support Virgin

1 h 51 min · 31. maj 2026
episode Episode 146 - My Emotional Support Virgin cover

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/fan_mail/new] To celebrate Joseph Smith’s sacred calling to spiritually wife other men’s wives, aaaAAAaaa serves up the Orson Hide and Seek, named for Apostle Orson Hyde, who was conveniently away dedicating Palestine while Joseph secretly married his wife, Marinda. The drink combines Utah-made Stinger hard apple cider with a hidden shot dropped into the glass, because nothing says “restored gospel” like a surprise second relationship concealed inside the first one. The intro immediately wanders into beautifully unnecessary territory: fake temple wedding photos taken at prom, the anatomical inappropriateness of the word “erected” appearing anywhere near a temple, post-half-marathon stair descent, Alan Parsons Project arena music, Apple TV betrayals, HBO’s Neighbors, and the revelation that Mel Gibson is making a two-part, multiple-timeline, Satan-origin-story sequel to The Passion of the Christ. The overall vibe is cider, sore quads, neighbor feuds, and everyone slowly realizing that reality has fired parody and taken its job. History: [00:26:40] Abigail begins with the “Law of Sarah,” the biblical consent loophole Mormon polygamy borrowed from the story of Abraham, Sarah, and Hagar, an enslaved woman whose reproductive exploitation somehow became inspirational source material for religious men looking to make their erections doctrinal. From there, the segment traces the recurring historical pattern of powerful men finding ancient scripture and announcing that their penis has a biblical precedent: early Christian clergy keeping supposedly chaste “spiritual” women in their homes, church councils having to explicitly outlaw decorative live-in virgins, Protestant rulers rummaging through Abraham for permission to take second wives, and Puritanism turning sex into something intensely policed rather than remotely healthy. The segment then connects that same architecture of control to Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, emphasizing that Gilead’s use of Hagar, coerced reproduction, religious hierarchy, and ownership of women was assembled from things societies have actually done. Abigail brings the argument home through Mormon purity culture, where women are trained to treat sexual desire as contamination until marriage, then expected to become sexually available overnight. In that system, Joseph Smith’s marriages to teenage girls are not rendered harmless by claims that they may have been “eternity only”; placing a child in a marriage-shaped relationship with a prophet who controls her family’s salvation is already coercive. The segment closes with the only reasonable theological conclusion: purity culture is bullshit, subjugating women is bullshit, and any man attempting the latter should prepare for an extremely hostile review of his genitals. FHE: 01:22:47 For this week’s Family Home Evening from hell, Moroni takes the group through the CES Letter’s section on Joseph Smith’s polygamy and polyandry, beginning with the fact that many members were raised on the polished Emma-and-Joseph love story while being told absolutely nothing about the other thirty-something women in the celestial waiting room. The discussion focuses on Joseph’s marriages to women already married to living husbands, including Marinda Hyde while Orson Hyde was away on a mission, and the Church’s attempt to soften the whole thing by suggesting some of the relationships were merely dynastic or eternal. The hosts immediately identify the gaping problem: if sealing families together was the point, why was Joseph sealed to other men’s wives and teenage girls before being sealed to his own children? The group then works through the ways Joseph violated the rules supposedly revealed in Doctrine and Covenants 132: marrying already-married women, keeping unions secret from husbands and Emma, taking teenage girls and women who were obviously not virgins, marrying mother-daughter and sister sets, and using promises of exaltation or angel-with-a-sword threats as divine coercion. The rage reaches operatic levels with the Fanny Alger barn account, sworn statements denying polygamy from people participating in it, and the realization that “Praise to the Man” was apparently written about a man whose actual modus operandi involved secrecy, dishonesty, and spiritually branded sexual predation. The episode ends by placing Joseph Smith beside Warren Jeffs in an absolutely damning side-by-side comparison: many wives, underage wives, married women, mother-daughter pairings, sister wives, and the same prophetic authorization structure used to turn abuse into obedience. Warren Jeffs may have pressed the accelerator through the floor, but the road map was already there. After surviving the ecclesiastical sewage fire, the group regains just enough emotional stability to praise Oscar, a tiny Jack Russell puppy, instead of any dead prophet. Dog man. Follow us on Insta @gr8_and_spacious, Twitter @gr8andspacious, Discord (https://discord.gg/ewzxRmUhK) and Reddit u/gr8_and_spacious for behind-the-scenes shenanigans, hilarious memes, and maybe even a sneak peek at our next episode.. If you've got a burning question, a hilarious anecdote, or just want to say hi, shoot us an epistle at greatandspaciouspod@gmail.com. And don't forget to like, subscribe, and leave a review of our podcast! Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/support]

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episode Episode 149 - A Burning in the Boobies artwork

Episode 149 - A Burning in the Boobies

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/fan_mail/new] The episode opens with the HeartSell, named after Bonneville Communications’ deeply cursed phrase for “strategic emotional advertising that stimulates response,” which is apparently what happens when Jesus hires Don Draper and gives him access to ward directories. The drink itself is a pink, spiritually manipulative little number made with Five Wives raspberry lemonade vodka, elderflower liqueur, lemon juice, bitters, cranberry juice, and Sprite, because nothing says “pure witness of the Spirit” like branding your own feelings into a sales funnel. The intro then pinballs through the usual sacred chaos: callbacks that have outlived their joke warranty, a proposed workplace security upgrade from “talk downs” to “put downs,” sober concert disappointment, Hoppers being an unhinged Pixar wildlife fever dream, the high school reunion clothes-bag crisis, “God is such a girl dad” TikTok theology getting launched directly into the sun, cult podcast detours, fairy smut logistics, and an accidental seminar on orgasms that somehow still feels more epistemologically sound than Moroni’s promise. History: [00:33:53] Abigail’s history segment takes the CES Letter’s spiritual witness problem and sails it directly to Jolly Old England with Matthew Philip Gill, a British former Latter-day Saint who claimed angelic visitations, brass plates, interpreters, new scripture, and a restored church, because apparently Joseph Smith’s whole thing needed a BBC reboot. Raised in Mormonism and fluent in its emotional vocabulary, Gill claimed that Moroni visited him as a child and that Raphael later told him a divine gift was coming. After deciding the LDS Church was doing the sacrament wrong, he left and eventually produced the Chronicles of the Children of Aaronek, including the Book of Jeraneck, a new ancient record about Hebrew-adjacent people migrating to Britain after the Tower of Babel and building Stonehenge as a temple. The hosts gleefully unpack how Gill’s story mirrors Joseph Smith’s almost beat for beat: angelic messengers, ancient metal plates, a special translator, a hidden sacred record, a last prophet preserving the story of a destroyed people, and a modern man claiming the title of prophet, seer, revelator, and translator. The only real difference is that Gill’s version comes with Stonehenge, National Treasure-style 3D glasses, Hobbit-font website energy, and an alarming number of names ending in “-neck.” The segment’s central burn is that mainstream Mormons can immediately see Gill’s claims as absurd, but only because they are standing outside the story. From that angle, the whole thing becomes an inconvenient British mirror held up to Joseph Smith, complete with brass plates, bad typography, and neck-based scripture lore. FHE: [01:26:23] The FHE/CES Letter discussion breaks down the central problem with spiritual witnesses: every religion has people who sincerely feel that God, the Spirit, the universe, or some emotionally resonant internal kazoo has confirmed their beliefs are true. The hosts compare LDS, FLDS, RLDS, and Latter Day Church of Jesus Christ testimonies, pointing out that they all sound suspiciously like they were made from the same testimony casserole: “I know Joseph Smith was a prophet, I know this church is true, I know this guy with a new book and a blurry Jesus picture is God’s special boy.” Which raises the obvious problem: if contradictory religions all produce the same feelings, maybe the feelings are not the truth detector. The segment also digs into the unreliability of revelation, including Joseph Smith’s failed Canada copyright revelation and the deeply convenient explanation that some revelations are from God, some are from man, and some are from the devil. The hosts roast the idea that members are supposed to trust prophetic discernment when even the prophet apparently cannot tell whether he has God, ego, or Satan on the line. From there, they take on Boyd K. Packer’s “a testimony is found in the bearing of it,” fast and testimony meeting anxiety, faith being redefined as believing against evidence, Paul H. Dunn’s fake faith-promoting stories, patriarchal blessings as life GPS, and the church’s habit of taking normal human awe, connection, music, nature, mushrooms, and emotion, then slapping a “Property of the Holy Ghost” sticker on it. Follow us on Insta @gr8_and_spacious, Twitter @gr8andspacious, Discord (https://discord.gg/ewzxRmUhK) and Reddit u/gr8_and_spacious for behind-the-scenes shenanigans, hilarious memes, and maybe even a sneak peek at our next episode.. If you've got a burning question, a hilarious anecdote, or just want to say hi, shoot us an epistle at greatandspaciouspod@gmail.com. And don't forget to like, subscribe, and leave a review of our podcast! Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/support]

21. juni 20261 h 48 min
episode Episode 148 - The Cock of Dawn artwork

Episode 148 - The Cock of Dawn

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/fan_mail/new] Abigail opens the episode by officially declaring everyone “babies,” because pregnancy has apparently turned the podcast into a haunted nursery with better swearing. The drink this week is the Kinderhook, Line, and Sinker, inspired by an Instagram reel and made to look like a tiny aquarium: orange peel cut into fish shapes, rosemary as aquatic garnish drama, Nerds as fish gravel, and equal parts Calypso Ocean Blue Lemonade and UV Blue. It is adorable, alarmingly alcoholic, and aesthetically the closest Mormon hoax culture has ever come to being served in a cup. The intro spirals beautifully through the usual GASP ecosystem: pregnancy digestion discourse, a brutally spicy Calabrian chili pizza incident, emergency McDonald’s milkshake intervention, Claudia’s wedding with angry bridal chickens, Vegas adventures at the Sphere and Meow Wolf, buffet lobster confusion, Four Seasons friendship taxonomy, Coleman Domingo devotion, Sheep Detective, Daniel Craig’s general erotic menace, and an argument over whether the new James Bond video game man is hot or just a generic white guy rendered by a bored algorithm. History: [00:38:30] Abigail uses the Kinderhook Plates as a doorway into the Golden Age of Hoaxes, when nineteenth-century America was basically a novelty factory powered by cheap newspapers, spiritualism, fake relics, public spectacle, and white people trying to Bible-fy everything they found in the dirt. She gives the quick version of the Kinderhook scam, where some dudes made fake plates, buried them, “found” them, and handed them to Joseph Smith because he had unfortunately branded himself as the ancient-metal-plate guy. Then she zooms out to the Cardiff Giant, PT Barnum making a fake version of an already fake giant, and the extremely American legal conclusion that you cannot counterfeit a counterfeit. From there, Abigail drags the whole genre of fake Hebrew artifacts, mound-builder myths, Utah desert folklore, and Mormon treasure fantasies through the evidence shredder. The Brewer Cave/Manti Cave legend gets special treatment, complete with alleged giant mummies in metal armor, blonde and red hair, stone boxes, Jaredites, glowing angel Ether, secret maps, and BYU people occasionally almost doing actual scholarship before Paul R. Cheesman wanders in like a gullibility raccoon. The segment also detours through Montezuma’s treasure legends near Kanab, Lovelock Cave red-haired giants, Nephilim nonsense, Blind Frog Ranch vibes, and Graham Hancock getting verbally shoved into the academic trash compactor. Abigail’s closing thesis is clean: real archaeology has context, dating, material culture, stratigraphy, and evidence. Hoax archaeology has “trust me, bro, the Smithsonian hid the giant bones.” FHE: [01:40:06] aaaAAAaaa takes the Kinderhook Plates into full family-home-evening fever dream by explaining how Joseph Smith’s “translation” process is only slightly more rigorous than putting a rock in a hat and asking your friends for Mad Libs. After roasting Joseph for failing the Book of Abraham, failing the Kinderhook Plates, and therefore not exactly earning the benefit of the doubt on the Book of Mormon, aaaAAAaaa produces a white top hat, a rock, and a sacred participatory activity from the Lord, apparently. Abigail and Moroni are conscripted as scribes for a fake ancient translation, contributing words like Bartholomew, the Unbroken, penis, Oxyrhynchus, monkey paw, proto-Indo-European, pangolin, the spiciest pizza ever, and the ruby of Dunshire. The resulting “translation” is a glorious scripture-flavored garbage hymn about Bartholomew the Unbroken, whose penis is compared unto a pangolin, who dwells in Oxyrhynchus, eats the spiciest pizza ever, descends from Pedro Pascal, and receives the sacred word “Porphyryus,” meaning “give me five dollars and do not ask follow-up questions.” The bit works because it makes the point without needing a whiteboard: if Joseph’s translation method is functionally indistinguishable from chaotic hat-based improv, maybe the problem is not that critics lack faith. Maybe the problem is that the prophet keeps trying to sell clunkers from the same cursed dealership. Follow us on Insta @gr8_and_spacious, Twitter @gr8andspacious, Discord (https://discord.gg/ewzxRmUhK) and Reddit u/gr8_and_spacious for behind-the-scenes shenanigans, hilarious memes, and maybe even a sneak peek at our next episode.. If you've got a burning question, a hilarious anecdote, or just want to say hi, shoot us an epistle at greatandspaciouspod@gmail.com. And don't forget to like, subscribe, and leave a review of our podcast! Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/support]

14. juni 20262 h 1 min
episode Episode 147 - Imagine Being Whelmed artwork

Episode 147 - Imagine Being Whelmed

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/fan_mail/new] The episode opens with the crew already several sips into the "False Doctrini", a “martini” only in the sense that Mormon doctrine is “unchanging”: technically presented with confidence, spiritually fraudulent, and dressed up in the right glassware. Abigail explains that the drink is raspberry lemonade mixed with Five Wives pink raspberry lemonade vodka, shaken up as a false doctrine tribute to polygamy, God changing his mind, and the sacred LDS art of pretending yesterday’s eternal truth was merely a seasonal accent wall. The intro then derails beautifully through pop culture and moral panic: Andy Serkis allegedly doing Animal Farm dirty, true crime rage over The Crash, bishlet news, non-gay hockey romance with suspiciously emotionally literate men, Lord of the Flies, Widow’s Bay, drunk escape rooms, secret Murphy doors, and the eternal question of whether every respectable basement should contain either hidden booze or an ominous interrogation chair. The vibe is raspberry lemonade chaos with a little legal deposition energy and just enough podcast-host ADHD to qualify as liturgy.  History: [00:22:59] Abigail’s history segment starts with the question “what is a prophet?” and immediately answers it with the spiritual precision of a brick through a stained-glass window: an audacious bullshit mediocre man. She breaks down “prophet, seer, and revelator” as less three distinct divine job titles and more one corporate Mormon leadership smoothie, then pivots into prophecy as historical interpretation rather than fortune-telling. Revelation gets reframed as anti-imperial political theology in dragon clothes, not a spooky end-times spreadsheet, which leads to the real test: if prophets cannot correctly interpret the moral emergencies happening right in front of their stupid faces, what exactly are we calling prophecy? The main historical meat is Spencer W. “Spanker Wanker” Kimball, whose pedigree Mormon lineage, Arizona childhood, illnesses, apostleship, and presidency become a case study in how one sad biography and one raspy voice do not magically produce moral authority. Abigail covers The Miracle of Forgiveness, its sexual shame machinery, its victim-blaming rape rhetoric, its masturbation panic, and its explicit harm to queer members. She also digs into Kimball’s role in racist teachings about Native Americans and the Indian Placement Program, then connects his presidency to the 1978 priesthood and temple ban reversal. The segment’s thesis lands hard: prophets did not need supernatural revelation to know racism, coercion, homophobia, and sexual shame were harming people. They needed the courage to tell the truth when truth threatened their own power, and historically, the brethren chose the folding chair marked “institutional cowardice.”  FHE: [01:43:24] The FHE segment turns to the CES Letter’s Prophets section, where aaaAAAaaa notes that Jeremy Runnells has clearly moved past humble question-asker and entered his “I have receipts and rage” era. The crew walks through the chapter’s recurring indictment: yesterday’s doctrine is today’s false doctrine, and yesterday’s prophet is today’s heretic. They hit Adam-God theory, blood atonement, polygamy, the priesthood and temple ban, and the eternal LDS shell game where leaders claim they cannot lead the church astray until the church needs to quietly shove an old prophet under the doctrinal bus. The discussion gets especially sharp around Brigham Young, Spencer W. Kimball, Gordon B. Hinckley’s Larry King polygamy dodge, Brazil and the logistical collapse of racial gatekeeping, and the financial/institutional pressures surrounding church reversals. The Mark Hofmann section becomes a full discernment autopsy: prophets, seers, and revelators failed to spot a forger and murderer sitting under their noses, while the Tanners, actual professional church critics, had better instincts about the Salamander Letter. The episode then takes a long political detour through Mamdani, Jeff Bezos, city-owned grocery stores, Trump phones, gerontocracy, psychedelics, Barbie vans, toxic men, and baby prison, because apparently no CES Letter discussion is complete until someone has proposed a DMT-powered rebirth canal museum visible from space. Somehow, it all circles back to the core point: if someone claims to speak for God, the bare minimum should be causing less harm than the average elected goblin with a podcast mic. Follow us on Insta @gr8_and_spacious, Twitter @gr8andspacious, Discord (https://discord.gg/ewzxRmUhK) and Reddit u/gr8_and_spacious for behind-the-scenes shenanigans, hilarious memes, and maybe even a sneak peek at our next episode.. If you've got a burning question, a hilarious anecdote, or just want to say hi, shoot us an epistle at greatandspaciouspod@gmail.com. And don't forget to like, subscribe, and leave a review of our podcast! Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/support]

7. juni 20262 h 17 min
episode Episode 146 - My Emotional Support Virgin artwork

Episode 146 - My Emotional Support Virgin

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/fan_mail/new] To celebrate Joseph Smith’s sacred calling to spiritually wife other men’s wives, aaaAAAaaa serves up the Orson Hide and Seek, named for Apostle Orson Hyde, who was conveniently away dedicating Palestine while Joseph secretly married his wife, Marinda. The drink combines Utah-made Stinger hard apple cider with a hidden shot dropped into the glass, because nothing says “restored gospel” like a surprise second relationship concealed inside the first one. The intro immediately wanders into beautifully unnecessary territory: fake temple wedding photos taken at prom, the anatomical inappropriateness of the word “erected” appearing anywhere near a temple, post-half-marathon stair descent, Alan Parsons Project arena music, Apple TV betrayals, HBO’s Neighbors, and the revelation that Mel Gibson is making a two-part, multiple-timeline, Satan-origin-story sequel to The Passion of the Christ. The overall vibe is cider, sore quads, neighbor feuds, and everyone slowly realizing that reality has fired parody and taken its job. History: [00:26:40] Abigail begins with the “Law of Sarah,” the biblical consent loophole Mormon polygamy borrowed from the story of Abraham, Sarah, and Hagar, an enslaved woman whose reproductive exploitation somehow became inspirational source material for religious men looking to make their erections doctrinal. From there, the segment traces the recurring historical pattern of powerful men finding ancient scripture and announcing that their penis has a biblical precedent: early Christian clergy keeping supposedly chaste “spiritual” women in their homes, church councils having to explicitly outlaw decorative live-in virgins, Protestant rulers rummaging through Abraham for permission to take second wives, and Puritanism turning sex into something intensely policed rather than remotely healthy. The segment then connects that same architecture of control to Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, emphasizing that Gilead’s use of Hagar, coerced reproduction, religious hierarchy, and ownership of women was assembled from things societies have actually done. Abigail brings the argument home through Mormon purity culture, where women are trained to treat sexual desire as contamination until marriage, then expected to become sexually available overnight. In that system, Joseph Smith’s marriages to teenage girls are not rendered harmless by claims that they may have been “eternity only”; placing a child in a marriage-shaped relationship with a prophet who controls her family’s salvation is already coercive. The segment closes with the only reasonable theological conclusion: purity culture is bullshit, subjugating women is bullshit, and any man attempting the latter should prepare for an extremely hostile review of his genitals. FHE: 01:22:47 For this week’s Family Home Evening from hell, Moroni takes the group through the CES Letter’s section on Joseph Smith’s polygamy and polyandry, beginning with the fact that many members were raised on the polished Emma-and-Joseph love story while being told absolutely nothing about the other thirty-something women in the celestial waiting room. The discussion focuses on Joseph’s marriages to women already married to living husbands, including Marinda Hyde while Orson Hyde was away on a mission, and the Church’s attempt to soften the whole thing by suggesting some of the relationships were merely dynastic or eternal. The hosts immediately identify the gaping problem: if sealing families together was the point, why was Joseph sealed to other men’s wives and teenage girls before being sealed to his own children? The group then works through the ways Joseph violated the rules supposedly revealed in Doctrine and Covenants 132: marrying already-married women, keeping unions secret from husbands and Emma, taking teenage girls and women who were obviously not virgins, marrying mother-daughter and sister sets, and using promises of exaltation or angel-with-a-sword threats as divine coercion. The rage reaches operatic levels with the Fanny Alger barn account, sworn statements denying polygamy from people participating in it, and the realization that “Praise to the Man” was apparently written about a man whose actual modus operandi involved secrecy, dishonesty, and spiritually branded sexual predation. The episode ends by placing Joseph Smith beside Warren Jeffs in an absolutely damning side-by-side comparison: many wives, underage wives, married women, mother-daughter pairings, sister wives, and the same prophetic authorization structure used to turn abuse into obedience. Warren Jeffs may have pressed the accelerator through the floor, but the road map was already there. After surviving the ecclesiastical sewage fire, the group regains just enough emotional stability to praise Oscar, a tiny Jack Russell puppy, instead of any dead prophet. Dog man. Follow us on Insta @gr8_and_spacious, Twitter @gr8andspacious, Discord (https://discord.gg/ewzxRmUhK) and Reddit u/gr8_and_spacious for behind-the-scenes shenanigans, hilarious memes, and maybe even a sneak peek at our next episode.. If you've got a burning question, a hilarious anecdote, or just want to say hi, shoot us an epistle at greatandspaciouspod@gmail.com. And don't forget to like, subscribe, and leave a review of our podcast! Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/support]

31. maj 20261 h 51 min
episode Episode 145 - The Mummy With Papyrus in His Tummy artwork

Episode 145 - The Mummy With Papyrus in His Tummy

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/fan_mail/new] The gang welcomes Moroni back, in the flesh, for another papyrus-themed adventure with the “POG-pyrus”, a frozen tropical concoction made from guava nectar, passion fruit rum, vodka, sweetened condensed milk, and POG soda, churned through Abigail and aaaAAAaaa’s Costco Ninja Slushi machine. The drink is visually promised to be a creamy, swirly Egyptian artifact of delight, although its alcohol apparently settles at the bottom like an archaeological layer waiting to ambush whoever reaches it first. The intro wanders gloriously through weaponized Song of Solomon reading during temple baptisms, raising children with honest conversations about death and anatomy, mortifying old Gmail archaeology featuring Moroni’s dream destination of “probably Costco,” and the usual pop-culture buffet: Beef, The Boys accidentally predicting Trump’s gold-idol aesthetic, Ted Danson continuing to age like a flirtatious national treasure in Man on the Inside, and the horrifyingly tactile tongue-based kissing gameplay in Mixtape. The hosts also celebrate the Bishlet turning three, condemn the tiny terrorists at Play-Doh and Fisher-Price who design noisy toddler toys, and give overdue love to listener P. Luke Firestoker for supplying the podcast with delightfully unhinged fake advertisements.   HISTORY: [00:27:41] Abigail brings history back to the Book of Abraham through a much better mummy story: a recently excavated Roman-era mummy from Oxyrhynchus, Egypt, found with a piece of papyrus deliberately placed on his body. Unlike Hor’s thoroughly ordinary funerary text that Joseph Smith spun into Abrahamic revelation, this papyrus reportedly contains a passage from Homer’s Iliad. Not just any dramatic passage about Achilles, grief, glory, or mortality, either. It is from the Catalogue of Ships, essentially the ancient world’s extended boat roster. Naturally, the hosts arrive at the only spiritually satisfying interpretation: this sweet mummy was autistic and loved boats. From there, the segment becomes an ecstatic sermon on archaeological garbage. Abigail explains how Oxyrhynchus became one of the richest sources of ancient papyrus fragments because the city’s dry rubbish heaps preserved discarded receipts, contracts, letters, magical texts, literary fragments, early Christian manuscripts, and probably at least some ancient smut. The city becomes the perfect rebuttal to Book of Abraham apologetics: yes, mummies can be buried with unexpected texts, including literature. But when trained scholars identify a papyrus as a passage listing ships, they do not get to announce that it secretly says, “Dear diary, it’s me, Abraham.” The true doctrine of the segment is simple and beautiful: history may belong to the victors, but garbage tells the truth.   FHE: [01:29:56] The hosts dive into the CES Letter’s Book of Abraham section, beginning with the Church’s own acknowledgment that Egyptologists agree the surviving papyrus fragments do not match Joseph Smith’s translation and are instead standard funerary texts dating long after Abraham. The hosts are less than impressed by an institution that effectively presents the evidence against itself and then asks members to believe harder anyway. They walk through the facsimiles and revel in Joseph’s catastrophic misses: the crocodile’s watery environment turned into cosmic theology, a funerary offering table upgraded into Abraham’s sacrificial altar, and the fertility god Min, visibly sporting an erection, identified by Joseph as God sitting on his throne revealing priesthood secrets. Heavenly Father, apparently, was having an extremely casual throne day. The discussion also tears into the parts Joseph labeled as revelations that “ought not to be revealed at the present time,” despite modern scholars being fully capable of reading them, and into the Book of Abraham’s heavy dependence on King James Bible wording centuries too late for an ancient Abrahamic record. The hosts discuss Robert Ritner’s rebuttal to the Church’s essay, especially his argument that the surviving papyri, facsimiles, and Joseph’s own Egyptian-language materials point directly to him producing religious text from Egyptian he did not understand. Jeffrey R. Holland’s evasive BBC defense of the translation gets dragged as well: calling something the word of God while admitting you do not understand how it was translated is not an answer so much as a theological shrug in a suit. The episode closes by returning to the season’s central frustration: members were taught the cleanest, most digestible version of Mormon history because the actual version sounds exactly as bizarre as it is. In the name of the sweet artistic mummy and garbage, amen. Follow us on Insta @gr8_and_spacious, Twitter @gr8andspacious, Discord (https://discord.gg/ewzxRmUhK) and Reddit u/gr8_and_spacious for behind-the-scenes shenanigans, hilarious memes, and maybe even a sneak peek at our next episode.. If you've got a burning question, a hilarious anecdote, or just want to say hi, shoot us an epistle at greatandspaciouspod@gmail.com. And don't forget to like, subscribe, and leave a review of our podcast! Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/support]

24. maj 20262 h 5 min