Agnostic Bible Study w/ Joe Teel

Early Christian History Shocked Me (What Nobody Told Me Growing Up)

14 min · 12 mei 2026
aflevering Early Christian History Shocked Me (What Nobody Told Me Growing Up) artwork

Beschrijving

The centuries after Acts can feel like walking into a room you never knew existed and realizing everyone has been arguing in there for a long time. We trace that overlooked stretch of early Christian history from the New Testament’s first circulation through the 300s and early 400s, and why it can be so disorienting if you were taught a simple timeline that jumps straight from Jesus and the apostles to the modern church. We start with New Testament canon formation: how different communities used different collections, why some writings were valued but did not make the final cut, and why it matters that the earliest surviving list matching today’s 27 books shows up in Athanasius’ 367 AD letter. From there, we talk about early Christian diversity and the reality that groups like Marcionites, Valentinians and other Gnostic movements, and Ebionites were not just footnotes they were real people building real churches with real arguments about what Christianity should be. Then we dig into doctrinal development: how debates over the nature of Jesus, the Trinity, authority, and acceptable belief grow over time through argument, philosophy, and councils, and how everything shifts when Christianity becomes tied to Roman imperial power. We also look honestly at the church fathers, not as a single perfect choir, but as influential thinkers who often disagree and sometimes clash. If you want a more grounded understanding of Christianity’s origins, this is your invitation to read broadly, compare perspectives, and engage the sources for yourself. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves church history, and leave a rating or review so more people can find the show.

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Alle afleveringen

28 afleveringen

aflevering The Case Against New Testament Simplicity (Part 2) artwork

The Case Against New Testament Simplicity (Part 2)

The New Testament can feel like a smooth, finished story until you start asking what happened behind the scenes. I use a movie analogy to make the point: you can love the film and still admit it took edits, choices, and a messy process to get to the final cut. That’s how studying New Testament history has felt for me, and it’s why I keep pushing back on the idea that the Gospels are simple. We dig into oral tradition and why human memory matters, especially as the Jesus movement spreads beyond its original Jewish context into the wider Gentile world. Then we move into eyewitness claims and the questions historians naturally ask: which Gospels even claim eyewitness status, what counts as direct eyewitness material, and how many layers sit between the events and the written texts. I also walk through why Matthew and John raise unique issues, including scenes Matthew could not have personally witnessed and why John reads so differently from the Synoptics in theology, structure, and timeline. From there, we zoom out into modern New Testament scholarship: the Gospels as internally anonymous writings, debates over traditional authorship, Markan priority and source criticism, and why figures like Papias and Irenaeus matter for understanding how the four-Gospel framework becomes more stabilized over time. If you care about gospel authorship, early church tradition, and how theology and history intersect, this one will give you a lot to wrestle with. Subscribe, share the episode, leave a review, and then drop a comment with your strongest pushback or biggest question.

3 jun 202634 min
aflevering Did the Idea of Hell Develop Over Time? | Conversations with Christians artwork

Did the Idea of Hell Develop Over Time? | Conversations with Christians

Two trillion years is still not eternity, so what does it mean to say someone suffers forever? That’s the question that kicks off a free-flowing “Conversations with Christians” chat between me, Joe Teal, and my buddy Drexur John from the Philippines. We get into the hardest parts of the doctrine of hell without hiding behind easy answers: eternal conscious torment vs annihilationism, whether “separation from God” is its own kind of punishment, and why the idea of never-ending pain creates a massive fairness problem for anyone trying to think clearly. From there we wrestle with repentance and morality. If a murderer truly changes, where does that leave the person whose sins look smaller but never “turns”? Drexur explains repentance as a heart-level shift that produces fruit, not a get-out-of-hell trick, and we talk about earthly consequences even when someone claims forgiveness. We also hit “once saved always saved,” the idea of lost rewards, and why fear is a shaky foundation for faith. Then we go full Bible-nerd and ask the question I always want answered: can you show hell in the Old Testament. We talk Sheol as a more neutral realm of the dead, how Second Temple Judaism shapes later afterlife ideas, and why terms like Gehenna, Hades, and Tartarus sound like an evolving picture influenced by culture, language, and time. We even touch the Apostles’ Creed and the “harrowing of hell” as theology that develops around Scripture. If you care about biblical history, Christian theology, deconstruction, or just want a serious conversation that doesn’t talk down to you, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves these debates, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

31 mei 202639 min
aflevering My Case Against The Simplicity Of The New Testament - ABS EP 23 artwork

My Case Against The Simplicity Of The New Testament - ABS EP 23

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.

27 mei 202629 min
aflevering How Historians Actually Read the New Testament - ABS EP 22 artwork

How Historians Actually Read the New Testament - ABS EP 22

You can read the New Testament for devotion, or you can read it like an ancient historian and those are not the same project. I grew up being told the Bible is not only a holy book, but a history book, and I didn’t even know there was another way to approach it. Then I started hearing scholars ask questions I’d never been taught to ask: When was it written? Who wrote it? What sources stand behind it? Why do the Gospels tell the same stories differently, and what can historians actually know with confidence? We break down the biggest mindset shifts behind historical criticism and New Testament scholarship, including why historians are comfortable with uncertainty and why their conclusions often sound like “most scholars think” rather than church style certainty. From there, I explain source criticism using the synoptic problem: the striking overlap between Matthew, Mark, and Luke, the logic behind Markan priority, and why theories like Q and redaction criticism exist in the first place. Whether you love those models or hate them, understanding the methods helps you understand the debates. We also slow down and separate historical questions from theological questions. History can investigate what early Christians believed, how traditions developed, and how context shaped the texts, but it has limits when it comes to proving the supernatural. Finally, we talk about why context matters so much, how comparing sources like Paul’s letters and the later Gospels changes the timeline, and why faith conversations often stall when people are using different frameworks. Subscribe, share this with a friend who debates Bible topics, and leave a rating or review so more people can find the show.

25 mei 202629 min
aflevering The Trinity Is More Complicated Than Most Christians Realize artwork

The Trinity Is More Complicated Than Most Christians Realize

Imagine getting dropped into the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD and being asked to explain the Trinity on the spot. Could you define Father, Son, and Holy Spirit the way Nicene Christianity eventually does without accidentally sliding into modalism, tritheism, or subordinationism? That thought experiment kicks off a deep dive into why the Trinity became one of the most philosophically demanding doctrines in Christian history, and why “it’s plainly in the Bible” can be a lot harder to defend once you look at the timeline. I’m Joe Teel, and I’m not trying to convert you or deconvert you. I’m trying to slow down, open the text, and ask honest questions about how Christian doctrine forms. We start by laying out what the Nicene doctrine actually claims: one God, one divine essence, three distinct persons, each fully and equally God. Then we look at why early Christians kept landing near ideas later branded as heresy, not because they were careless, but because Scripture itself contains real tension points. From there we follow the trail through the Gospel of John and Paul’s letters, where high Christology and language of obedience, prayer, and exaltation sit side by side. Then we zoom out to early church fathers Justin Martyr, Tertullian, and Origen, watching terminology and theological frameworks evolve in real time. Finally, Arius forces the conflict into the open and Nicaea responds with homoousios, “of the same essence,” turning interpretation into official orthodoxy. If you care about the Trinity, the Nicene Creed, early church history, or the biblical basis for Christian theology, you’ll get a clearer map of why the debate got so intense. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves theology, and leave a review, then tell me where you land on doctrinal development.

20 mei 202632 min