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The Word Made Human

Podkast av The Sacred Humanist

engelsk

Historie & religion

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Les mer The Word Made Human

Welcome to The Sacred Humanist. In this series of commentaries on the Judeo Christian scripture, we explore the ancient texts of the Bible—not as divine revelations, but as deeply human writings shaped by struggle, hope, fear, and imagination. The purpose of these commentaries is to uncover the human wisdom woven into ancient scripture—wisdom born not of divine decree, but of lived experience, moral struggle, and the timeless pursuit of a better world. These stories were crafted by people much like us, wrestling with the same questions we still ask: How should we live? How do we build a just society? And what meaning can we make in a fragile world? Some of the books we explore still hold profound meaning for our lives today, others can be discarded entirely as relics of a harsher past, and many fall somewhere in between—inviting us to sift through them thoughtfully, keeping what enlightens and letting go of what no longer serves. This commentary doesn’t preach answers from above—it listens for wisdom from within. thesacredhumanist.substack.com

Alle episoder

27 Episoder

episode Christians Worship a Greek God cover

Christians Worship a Greek God

This episode explores one of the most consequential, and least acknowledged, shifts in religious history: the moment Christianity exchanged the Hebrew God of story, argument, and moral responsiveness for the Greek ideal of an unchanging metaphysical absolute. Tracing the transition from Jewish narrative theology through Jesus’ rabbinic-style moral dialogue and into the Platonic and Aristotelian frameworks that shaped early Christian doctrine, we examine how a God who debated, regretted, and relented was gradually frozen outside of time. What emerges is not just a theological evolution, but a moral one, revealing how certainty replaced conversation, system replaced story, and why recovering the older, more human way of thinking about God may be essential to understanding moral progress itself. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thesacredhumanist.substack.com [https://thesacredhumanist.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

5. feb. 2026 - 9 min
episode When We Chose Better cover

When We Chose Better

Christians often insist that without God’s revelation, humanity would have no moral compass, no way to distinguish right from wrong. This episode challenges that claim head-on, using slavery as the clearest test case. Scripture regulated human bondage, defended it, and sanctified it for centuries, while humanity eventually recognized, often against the church and its texts, that owning another person is morally indefensible. The abolition of slavery was not a triumph of revelation but of conscience: proof that moral progress does not descend from heaven but emerges from human empathy, reason, and courage. If that’s true, then the most sacred act in history may not have been obedience to God, but the moment we chose to be better than our scriptures. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thesacredhumanist.substack.com [https://thesacredhumanist.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

9. jan. 2026 - 9 min
episode The Minor Prophets cover

The Minor Prophets

The Minor Prophets are almost always misunderstood. Treated as religious messengers delivering divine commands, they are read as mouthpieces for God rather than as critics of the very systems that claimed to speak for Him. But read together—and read honestly—the Minor Prophets emerge as something far more radical: ethical insurgents who challenged priestly religion, destabilized divine authority as the source of morality, and forced responsibility back onto humanity itself. Their anger is not theological; it is moral. Their concern is not belief, but behavior. Long before modern humanism named the idea, these voices insisted that justice does not require revelation, only honesty—and that no amount of worship can excuse the harm humans choose to do to one another. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thesacredhumanist.substack.com [https://thesacredhumanist.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

12. des. 2025 - 9 min
episode The Evolution of Moral Imagination cover

The Evolution of Moral Imagination

In this episode of The Word Made Human, we dive into the sweeping moral journey hidden inside the Bible—not as a divine monologue, but as a centuries-long human conversation filled with conflict, yearning, and radical imagination. We’ll trace how the text moves from tribal survival ethics to the explosive justice of the prophets, from the introspection of wisdom literature to the compassion-first vision of the gospels—and then examine how Paul’s attempt to impose unity stalled that upward arc for nearly two millennia. Finally, we explore how modern humanism resumes the very moral trajectory the biblical writers began, completing the shift from divine authority to the shared voice of human longing. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thesacredhumanist.substack.com [https://thesacredhumanist.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

4. des. 2025 - 10 min
episode According to who? cover

According to who?

In today’s episode of The Word Made Human, we’re diving into one of the most revealing, and most misunderstood, features of the Bible: the phenomenon of pseudepigrapha—texts written under someone else’s name. Far from being a scandal, this ancient practice opens a window into the real process by which scripture was shaped: not by a single divine voice, but by generations of human authors adapting old stories to new crises. In this conversation, we’ll explore how pseudepigraphy functioned, why it was so common, and what it tells us about the Bible as a profoundly human creation—and why recognizing that truth changes how we read it today. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thesacredhumanist.substack.com [https://thesacredhumanist.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

26. nov. 2025 - 12 min
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