
Philosophy of Religion
Hidden Treasures in the Book of Job
by Hugh Ross(2014)
An exploration of the Book of Job from a scientific and theological perspective, addressing questions of suffering and God's apparent silence.
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Episodes featuring this book

Divine Hiddenness and Reasonable Nonbelief
When someone prays and hears nothing back, when a sincere seeker finds only silence, what does that tell us about whether God exists? Divine hiddenness is one of philosophy's most emotionally charged problems. If a loving God exists and wants relationship with us, why does he not make himself known to those who genuinely seek him? This exploration examines the problem from every angle, beginning with the raw experience of unanswered prayer and tracing it through scripture, the mystics, and contemporary analytic philosophy. John of the Cross described the dark night of the soul; Mother Teresa endured fifty years of spiritual darkness documented in her private letters. J.L. Schellenberg's argument from reasonable nonbelief gives the ancient cry rigorous philosophical form, claiming that the very existence of sincere seekers who find nothing is incompatible with a perfectly loving God.

Blaise Pascal | The Mathematician Who Found God
The man who proved that nature does not abhor a vacuum, and then wrote the most honest account ever given of why the universe terrifies us. Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Blaise Pascal. Blaise Pascal lived only thirty-nine years, and in those years he changed mathematics, physics, probability theory, and the history of Western prose. But at the center of his life was a night in November of 1654 that he could never describe, only remember. After that night he turned from the world of scientific triumph toward a book he would never finish, a book about what it means to be a human being suspended between two infinites, looking for a God who chooses to remain hidden. This episode follows Pascal from the Paris household where he taught himself geometry in secret as a child to the small room in which he died at thirty-nine with the record of his conversion sewn into the lining of his coat. Three hours of gentle narration for deep rest. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts.

What Did Dostoevsky Actually Believe About God?
Hell is not punishment from God. It is the inability to love. This three-hour episode traces the Orthodox Christian tradition that shaped everything Dostoevsky ever wrote, from Isaac the Syrian and Maximus the Confessor to Gregory of Nyssa and the hesychast monks. What does it mean that sin is not a crime requiring penalty but a sickness requiring healing? That salvation is not a transaction but a transformation of the whole person? These are the questions buried inside The Brothers Karamazov, The Idiot, and Crime and Punishment. This episode is a companion to our earlier Dostoevsky exploration. Where that episode examined his ideas through a philosophical and psychological lens, this one traces them to their source: kenosis, theosis, apophatic theology, prelest, and sobornost.

Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky | Book Summary
A slow walk through the novel in which a theory is put to the test with an axe. This episode traces Fyodor Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment from the Wiesbaden hotel room where it was drafted in the summer of 1865 to the Siberian riverbank where it ends. We follow Rodion Raskolnikov from the rehearsal in the pawnbroker's apartment, through the murder and the long delirium that follows, into the cat and mouse interviews with the investigator Porfiry Petrovich, into the narrow room where Sonya reads from the Gospel of John, and finally into the Haymarket and the voluntary confession. Along the way we sit with Marmeladov in the tavern, read the mother's letter, meet Svidrigailov in his long bored afternoon, and walk with Raskolnikov through one of the longest and strangest interior arguments in the nineteenth century novel. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts.

We Should Never Have Been Born | Cioran's Darkest Philosophy
Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Emil Cioran. Some nights the thought you cannot chase away is the one you most need a voice to name. Emil Cioran wrote for sixty years about the pointlessness of existence, and lived for eighty four years. The gap between what he argued and how he lived is the honest center of his work. This long quiet episode follows him from a Carpathian village where a priest's son ran barefoot among graves, through the cafes of interwar Bucharest, through a dark political period he spent the rest of his life working against, through the small Paris attic he shared with Simone Boue for over fifty years, and into the final afternoons in the Luxembourg Gardens. A calm unhurried portrait of the most rigorous stylist of despair in twentieth century literature, and of the quiet stubborn survival that was his truest answer to his own philosophy. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts.

Zoroastrianism: The Religion That Invented Good and Evil
Where did the idea of good and evil actually come from? Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Zoroastrianism, the most influential ancient religion most people have never heard of. This three-hour episode traces the full arc of Zoroastrian thought, from the passionate hymns of the Gathas to the living communities that carry this ancient fire into the present. This episode explores the cosmic dualism of Ahura Mazda and Angra Mainyu, the revolutionary ethics of free will and the goodness of the material world, the astonishing influence this tradition exercised on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and the Zoroastrian communities that continue to practice the world's oldest revealed religion.