Theology Made Podcast
In 1004 AD, a Byzantine princess arrived in Venice with a scandalous piece of gold luggage: a two-pronged fork. To the local clergy, this wasn’t high fashion—it was a theological rebellion. How did a simple tool for eating become “The Devil’s Pitchfork”? This week, we explore the “Trial of the Fork,” a forgotten war between human innovation and Divine design. We’ll follow the fork from the scathing rebukes of Saint Peter Damian to the pasta-fueled revolution of the Renaissance, finally uncovering how a “satanic” luxury became a mandatory standard of Christian “cleanliness.” It turns out, the history of how we eat is actually a history of how we view God. Theology Made is a listener/reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. If this episode left you wanting more than information about God, the Faith Without Fear workshop gives you a theological framework for actually interpreting your life, your doubt, and the world around you. It’s not more content to consume, it’s a lens that changes how you read everything. Workshop [https://theologymade.mykajabi.com/offers/RqeAzfaY] Get full access to Theology Made at substack.theologymade.com/subscribe [https://substack.theologymade.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
47 episodios
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