Great And Spacious Podcast
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2111609/fan_mail/new] The crew returns from hiatus for season four with a surprise Moroni appearance, several deeply necessary pizza-related clues, and the announcement that this season will tackle the CES Letter instead of another book of scripture, because frankly, the Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, and Pearl of Great Price have already been dragged around the block wearing tap shoes. This week’s drink is the Anachronagroni, inspired by the Book of Mormon’s greatest hits of temporal nonsense. It’s built like a familiar cocktail from the wrong century: gin, Aperol, mezcal, sweet vermouth, bitters, and a blood orange garnish that initially appears to be a small citrus crime scene. The result is smoky, boozy, weirdly beautiful, and deeply appropriate for an episode about horses, steel, tapirs, and ancient scripture that somehow knows the 1769 King James Bible better than ancient America. History: [00:37:12] Abigail opens the history segment with a season-opener called “The Most Correct Book of 1769,” using the Book of Mormon’s King James Bible problem as the trapdoor into the larger issue: sounding scriptural does not mean sounding ancient. She walks through how the KJV became the default English-language sound of sacred authority, not because God speaks in thee-thou theater kid diction, but because centuries of printing, preaching, memorizing, editing, and standardizing trained English speakers to hear that cadence as “Bible.” The episode lingers especially on the 1769 Oxford edition edited by Benjamin Blayney, whose spelling, punctuation, marginal references, and italicization practices shaped the version of the KJV Joseph Smith likely knew. From there, Abigail turns the Bible into a cursed production history: William Tyndale, Coverdale, the Great Bible, the Bishops’ Bible, the King James Bible, Benjamin Blayney, and finally Joseph Smith’s Bible-flavored religious cosplay. There’s also a glorious detour into the 1631 “Wicked Bible,” whose missing “not” accidentally turned the commandment into “thou shalt commit adultery,” plus a damaged printing that made Deuteronomy describe God showing off his “great ass.” The bigger point, beneath the righteous giggling, is that the Bible itself is a long chain of copying, translation, correction, editorial choice, theology, cultural assumption, and occasional heresy-flavored slap fight. FHE: [01:29:20] The Book Club segment shifts into the first CES Letter section, Book of Mormon, with Abish giving background on Jeremy Runnells, the document’s origin, and why it spread so effectively. The CES Letter began as a collection of sincere questions from a believing Mormon trying to reconcile problems with LDS truth claims, not as a polished anti-Mormon manifesto. After receiving no official church response, it spread through Reddit, Facebook, Mormon forums, blogs, Mormon Stories, MormonThink, and ex-Mormon communities, becoming a portable faith-crisis packet for people who previously had to explain their broken shelves one awkward citation at a time. The group also notes that the Church still has not published a direct official rebuttal, leaving most responses to FAIR, Sarah Allen, Jim Bennett, apologists, podcasters, YouTubers, and other members of the unpaid “please make this make sense” brigade. 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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