The B-Side Bible: The Hidden Tracks of the ancient world.

Why Mark's Gospel Survived

36 min · 1 de jun de 2025
Portada del episodio Why Mark's Gospel Survived

Descripción

Mark’s Gospel is short, raw, and famously ends in silence — no nativity, no resurrection appearances, no triumphant conclusion. So how did this rough first draft of the Jesus story survive when flashier Gospels came along? In this episode, we explore the surprising reasons Mark’s Gospel made the final cut. From apostolic name-dropping and Gentile appeal to performance-ready storytelling and possible Homeric influences, The B-Side Bible uncovers the overlooked genius of Christianity’s first Gospel. Whether you're a theology nerd, a Bible history buff, or just love a good underdog story — this one’s for you. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2198328/support]

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16 episodios

episode The Biblical Obsession with 40: From a Biological Metaphor to 1st Century Propaganda artwork

The Biblical Obsession with 40: From a Biological Metaphor to 1st Century Propaganda

If you read ancient biblical literature, a specific mathematical rhythm keeps hitting the script. The rain falls for forty days in Genesis. Moses vanishes onto Mount Sinai for forty days. Israel wanders the desert for forty years. Jesus starves in the Judean wilderness for forty days. Through a modern, Western lens, it looks like a bizarre coincidence—or a divine obsession with a digital stopwatch. But on the B-side of history, the number forty was never a statistic or a literal countdown. It was a highly sophisticated cultural code. In this 16th episode of The B-Side Bible, host Mark Kerrigan strips away centuries of theological varnish to conduct an objective, socio-historical post-mortem on scripture's most ubiquitous number. Leaving modern moralising completely at the door, we look at how ancient Near Eastern writers weaponised the number forty to reconstruct a broken national identity and launch high-stakes first-century political movements. We unpack: * The Biological Link: How ancient scribes used the universal metric of human pregnancy—the forty-week gestation period—as a deliberate metaphor for cultural incubation and historical labour pains. * The Babylonian Trauma: Why displaced Judean priests in the 6th century BCE used "forty years in the wilderness" to explain that a slave mentality takes an entire biological generation to die off before a free society can be birthed. * The New Testament Mirror Match: How the Gospel writers used a forty-day desert fast as an aggressive piece of typological branding, proving to a first-century audience under Roman military occupation that Jesus was the "New Israel" who passed the tests the old nation failed. We aren't here to preach; we are here to figure out how the text actually worked for the audience who first heard it. Grab your headphones and discover why the "side stories" are the ones that change how you see everything. Listen now and dive deeper into the unedited tracks of ancient history at www.narranimatestudios.com.au [http://www.narranimatestudios.com.au]. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2198328/support]

29 de may de 202637 min
episode Gnostic Christianity - Enlightenment or Heresy artwork

Gnostic Christianity - Enlightenment or Heresy

Long before Christianity settled into creeds and councils, it was a field of competing ideas — and some of the most striking came from the movement we now call Gnosticism. In this episode, we trace the rise of the Gnostics: the teachers who shaped it, the world that produced it, and the ideas that set them apart. We explore their dualistic cosmos, their vision of a flawed material world, the role of the Demiurge, the pursuit of hidden knowledge — and why these ideas became such a challenge to the emerging orthodox church. This is not about heresy hunting. This is about understanding the diversity and complexity inside early Christianity — and how alternative Christianities grew, argued, adapted, and sometimes survived in the shadows. Join us as we step back into the second century and meet a Christianity very few people ever learn about — the Gnostic imagination. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2198328/support]

10 de nov de 202530 min
episode The Gospel of Judas artwork

The Gospel of Judas

For nearly two thousand years, Judas Iscariot has stood as Christianity’s ultimate betrayer. But one ancient text — discovered in Egypt and finally brought to light in the early 21st century — tells a different story. In this episode, we explore The Gospel of Judas, an early Gnostic text that repositions Judas not as the villain, but as the one disciple who understood Jesus’ true mission. We examine where this gospel came from, who wrote it, why it emerged in the theological battleground of the 2nd century, and what it reveals about the diversity of belief in the early Christian world. This is not a rehabilitation of Judas for shock value. It is a window into a time when Christian identity was still fluid, disputed, and contested — and when new interpretations were created to challenge the rising orthodoxy. Join us as we step inside the world of Gnostic Christianity and encounter one of the most controversial alternative tellings of the Jesus story — the Gospel of Judas. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2198328/support]

7 de nov de 202535 min
episode The Number of the Beast artwork

The Number of the Beast

If there’s a celebrity among numbers, it’s 666. It shows up where you least expect it: on horror posters, in guitar solos, on stolen highway signs, on novelty merchandise, and even in cheeky bus timetables. Whole marketing campaigns have timed releases to it, bands have built careers around it, and newsrooms can’t resist a headline that sneaks it in. For some, 666 is spooky; for others, it’s a wink and a nudge—an inside joke that pop culture keeps telling. But why, where did this number come from and why is it so deeply connected with evil and the devil. In today’s episode of the B-side Bible we are looking at where this number came from, how it became firmly embedded into the collective imagination and is it really the Devil’s number or is there a more prosaic meaning behind all the hype.  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2198328/support]

27 de oct de 202533 min