
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


How responsible do you feel for it all? Reflecting on his recent trip to Denver for the Bivocational National Conference, Mark shares how even after all the lectures, sessions, workshops, and meaningful conversations, one solitary moment sealed all others: it happened Sunday morning on a Colorado mountain with an insight about God, the world, and how our calls to ministry - in the church, in the marketplace, in academia - are invitations to play in all that God has called into being.
Then Mark sits down with Dr. Marion Taylor of Wycliffe College to talk about how we interpret the Bible. Editor of The Handbook of Women Interpreters, Marion expounds on factors that allowed Catholic women's writings to endure where those of Protestant women didn't and why European women enjoyed more posterity than women in North America. She talks about how even as many literary women wrote fiction that would become timeless Western classics, their stories were rooted in Scripture and faith, and she gives us a roadmap into how we might read women interpreters' worldviews. She tells us how women influenced social justice and shaped a culture, and shares how when we uncover lost writings of women, we recover a cohort of mentors for a new generation.
Follow Up This Week's Guest
Get Dr. Taylor's The Handbook of Women Interpreters.
Get Dr. Taylor's Let Her Speak for Herself.
Stay Connected
"Like" WikiGod to get updates on Facebook.
Follow WikiGod on Twitter.
Never miss an episode! "Subscribe" or "Listen Later" on iTunes, Stitcher, Pocket Casts, Overcast, and TuneIn.
Reach Out
Leave a comment, voice message, or direct email via the WikiGod website.
Explore BIC Canada - the denomination that accredits Mark and supports this project.
Next Week's Episode 49
Youngdo Kang (Part 1) – Pastor, Founder of City Lights
By Mark GroleauHow responsible do you feel for it all? Reflecting on his recent trip to Denver for the Bivocational National Conference, Mark shares how even after all the lectures, sessions, workshops, and meaningful conversations, one solitary moment sealed all others: it happened Sunday morning on a Colorado mountain with an insight about God, the world, and how our calls to ministry - in the church, in the marketplace, in academia - are invitations to play in all that God has called into being.
Then Mark sits down with Dr. Marion Taylor of Wycliffe College to talk about how we interpret the Bible. Editor of The Handbook of Women Interpreters, Marion expounds on factors that allowed Catholic women's writings to endure where those of Protestant women didn't and why European women enjoyed more posterity than women in North America. She talks about how even as many literary women wrote fiction that would become timeless Western classics, their stories were rooted in Scripture and faith, and she gives us a roadmap into how we might read women interpreters' worldviews. She tells us how women influenced social justice and shaped a culture, and shares how when we uncover lost writings of women, we recover a cohort of mentors for a new generation.
Follow Up This Week's Guest
Get Dr. Taylor's The Handbook of Women Interpreters.
Get Dr. Taylor's Let Her Speak for Herself.
Stay Connected
"Like" WikiGod to get updates on Facebook.
Follow WikiGod on Twitter.
Never miss an episode! "Subscribe" or "Listen Later" on iTunes, Stitcher, Pocket Casts, Overcast, and TuneIn.
Reach Out
Leave a comment, voice message, or direct email via the WikiGod website.
Explore BIC Canada - the denomination that accredits Mark and supports this project.
Next Week's Episode 49
Youngdo Kang (Part 1) – Pastor, Founder of City Lights