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    cgj

    Explore "cgj" with insightful episodes like "Episode 261 - Shea Tuttle: Exactly As You Are", "Episode 261 - Shea Tuttle: Exactly As You Are", "Episode 243: Stanley Hauerwas— You Are Not Accepted", "Episode 243: Stanley Hauerwas— You Are Not Accepted" and "Episode 201 - Jerry Herships: Rogue Saints" from podcasts like ""Crackers and Grape Juice", "Crackers and Grape Juice", "Crackers and Grape Juice", "Crackers and Grape Juice" and "Crackers and Grape Juice"" and more!

    Episodes (35)

    Episode 261 - Shea Tuttle: Exactly As You Are

    Episode 261 - Shea Tuttle: Exactly As You Are
    We could all use the comfort of Fred Rogers right about now. Joining this episode of the podcast is author Shea Tuttle, the author of "Exactly as You Are: The Life and Faith of Mister Rogers." Mister Rogers touched the lives of many, and that is an understating of his impact. A Presbyterian minister, Fred Roger ensured that the Grace of God was shared with everyone he met, whether in person or in The Neighborhood. Yet, while extending Grace Mister Rogers also expected us to grow. Growth is what we need now, to grow out of the hate, bigotry, racism, and nationalism that plagues us today.

    Shea Tuttle is the author of "Exactly as You Are: The Life and Faith of Mister Rogers" and co-editor of "Can I Get a Witness? Thirteen Peacemakers, Community Builders, and Agitators for Faith and Justice." Her essays have appeared at Greater Good Magazine, The Toast, The Other Journal, Role Reboot, and Jenny. She holds an M.Div. from Candler School of Theology at Emory University in Atlanta.

    Shea lives in Virginia with her family.

    https://www.eerdmans.com/Products/7655/exactly-as-you-are.aspx
    https://www.sheatuttle.com/

    Episode 261 - Shea Tuttle: Exactly As You Are

    Episode 261 - Shea Tuttle: Exactly As You Are
    We could all use the comfort of Fred Rogers right about now. Joining this episode of the podcast is author Shea Tuttle, the author of "Exactly as You Are: The Life and Faith of Mister Rogers." Mister Rogers touched the lives of many, and that is an understating of his impact. A Presbyterian minister, Fred Roger ensured that the Grace of God was shared with everyone he met, whether in person or in The Neighborhood. Yet, while extending Grace Mister Rogers also expected us to grow. Growth is what we need now, to grow out of the hate, bigotry, racism, and nationalism that plagues us today.

    Shea Tuttle is the author of "Exactly as You Are: The Life and Faith of Mister Rogers" and co-editor of "Can I Get a Witness? Thirteen Peacemakers, Community Builders, and Agitators for Faith and Justice." Her essays have appeared at Greater Good Magazine, The Toast, The Other Journal, Role Reboot, and Jenny. She holds an M.Div. from Candler School of Theology at Emory University in Atlanta.

    Shea lives in Virginia with her family.

    https://www.eerdmans.com/Products/7655/exactly-as-you-are.aspx
    https://www.sheatuttle.com/

    Episode 243: Stanley Hauerwas— You Are Not Accepted

    Episode 243: Stanley Hauerwas— You Are Not Accepted
    You're Not Accepted.

    That is a hard truth to swallow.

    Today’s episode is a preview for you, a tasting if you will, of our latest project; 'You’re Not Accepted.' The podcast formerly known as Hermeneutics has received a makeover since we finished our examination of the theological alphabet. For our first episode of 'You're Not Accepted,' we talked with Stanley about his essay in Minding the Web entitled “Preaching in the Ruins.”

    On each episode of 'You're Not Accepted,' we will discuss a different essay from the one and only Stanley Hauerwas. That’s right, the Hauerwas Mafia is going full Hauerwas! Stan the man will join us periodically and we will do our best to contain Jason the fanboy.

    So, that is what you need to know about today’s episode. Enjoy.

    https://crackersandgrapejuice.com/show/youre-not-accepted/
    https://www.facebook.com/crackersnjuice
    https://twitter.com/crackersnjuice
    https://www.instagram.com/crackersandgrapejuice/

    Episode 243: Stanley Hauerwas— You Are Not Accepted

    Episode 243: Stanley Hauerwas— You Are Not Accepted
    You're Not Accepted.

    That is a hard truth to swallow.

    Today’s episode is a preview for you, a tasting if you will, of our latest project; 'You’re Not Accepted.' The podcast formerly known as Hermeneutics has received a makeover since we finished our examination of the theological alphabet. For our first episode of 'You're Not Accepted,' we talked with Stanley about his essay in Minding the Web entitled “Preaching in the Ruins.”

    On each episode of 'You're Not Accepted,' we will discuss a different essay from the one and only Stanley Hauerwas. That’s right, the Hauerwas Mafia is going full Hauerwas! Stan the man will join us periodically and we will do our best to contain Jason the fanboy.

    So, that is what you need to know about today’s episode. Enjoy.

    https://crackersandgrapejuice.com/show/youre-not-accepted/
    https://www.facebook.com/crackersnjuice
    https://twitter.com/crackersnjuice
    https://www.instagram.com/crackersandgrapejuice/

    Episode 201 - Jerry Herships: Rogue Saints

    Episode 201 - Jerry Herships: Rogue Saints
    Jerry Herships joins the podcast to talk about his newest book, 'Rogue Saints: Spirituality for Good-Hearted Heathens.' In this episode, we talk about what exactly Jerry means by "shitty church," if you are looking for a church how you can avoid one, and if you are a pastor how you can avoid pastoring one.
    ---------------
    More on the book: The world is full of good-hearted heathens, those who love people and those who want to do good in the world. They're not against God--they just have little use for church. Church is boring and hypocritical. Plus, who wants to sit through a sermon every week? But while organized religion doesn't appeal to them, these heathens long for a connection to something bigger than themselves: meaning, community, mission.
    ---------------
    Jerry Herships is the founding pastor of After Hours Denver, a faith community of rebels and misfits that meets in dives and pubs to talk God and the Holy over drinks while making PB&Js to pass out to the hungry and homeless of downtown Denver. A former bartender turned comedian, Herships was drawn into ministry after realizing that the connections and conversations he had with his customers were deeper and more real than anything he'd ever experienced in church. He is the author of Last Call: From Serving Drinks to Serving Jesus.

    https://afterhoursdenver.org/
    https://www.amazon.com/Rogue-Saints-Spirituality-Good-Hearted-Heathens/dp/0664264425
    https://www.wjkbooks.com/Products/0664264425/rogue-saints.aspx

    Episode 201 - Jerry Herships: Rogue Saints

    Episode 201 - Jerry Herships: Rogue Saints
    Jerry Herships joins the podcast to talk about his newest book, 'Rogue Saints: Spirituality for Good-Hearted Heathens.' In this episode, we talk about what exactly Jerry means by "shitty church," if you are looking for a church how you can avoid one, and if you are a pastor how you can avoid pastoring one.
    ---------------
    More on the book: The world is full of good-hearted heathens, those who love people and those who want to do good in the world. They're not against God--they just have little use for church. Church is boring and hypocritical. Plus, who wants to sit through a sermon every week? But while organized religion doesn't appeal to them, these heathens long for a connection to something bigger than themselves: meaning, community, mission.
    ---------------
    Jerry Herships is the founding pastor of After Hours Denver, a faith community of rebels and misfits that meets in dives and pubs to talk God and the Holy over drinks while making PB&Js to pass out to the hungry and homeless of downtown Denver. A former bartender turned comedian, Herships was drawn into ministry after realizing that the connections and conversations he had with his customers were deeper and more real than anything he'd ever experienced in church. He is the author of Last Call: From Serving Drinks to Serving Jesus.

    https://afterhoursdenver.org/
    https://www.amazon.com/Rogue-Saints-Spirituality-Good-Hearted-Heathens/dp/0664264425
    https://www.wjkbooks.com/Products/0664264425/rogue-saints.aspx

    Episode 198 - Mandy McDow: Being A Christian Doesn’t Mean Obsessing Over Someone Else’s Sexuality

    Episode 198 - Mandy McDow: Being A Christian Doesn’t Mean Obsessing Over Someone Else’s Sexuality
    Now that the sting of the UMC Special General Conference is lessening, what is next? How can those who are dissatisfied with the work done by the delegates in St Louis organize and be better prepared for GC2020?

    Rev. Mandy Sloan McDow is the Senior Minister at First United Methodist Church in LA and is the co-author of the forthcoming book, 'Out of the Depths: Your Companion After Divorce.' Follower her on Twitter - https://twitter.com/RevMama

    Episode 198 - Mandy McDow: Being A Christian Doesn’t Mean Obsessing Over Someone Else’s Sexuality

    Episode 198 - Mandy McDow: Being A Christian Doesn’t Mean Obsessing Over Someone Else’s Sexuality
    Now that the sting of the UMC Special General Conference is lessening, what is next? How can those who are dissatisfied with the work done by the delegates in St Louis organize and be better prepared for GC2020?

    Rev. Mandy Sloan McDow is the Senior Minister at First United Methodist Church in LA and is the co-author of the forthcoming book, 'Out of the Depths: Your Companion After Divorce.' Follower her on Twitter - https://twitter.com/RevMama

    Episode 197: Emma Green — Because Beth Moore is Their Pastor (GC2019)

    Episode 197: Emma Green — Because Beth Moore is Their Pastor (GC2019)
    The podcast team caught up with Emma Green to talk about the implications of what occurred at the Special General Conference in St. Louis. Emma argues the storyline coming out of #GC2019 is a common storyline being experience throughout the United States: a breakdown or inability to live in community with people who we disagree with. This struggle to maintain community is causing fracture throughout institutions that once held up our communities.

    Emma Green is a staff writer at ​The Atlantic, where she covers politics, policy, and religion.

    https://www.theatlantic.com/author/emma-green/
    https://twitter.com/emmaogreen

    Episode 197: Emma Green — Because Beth Moore is Their Pastor (GC2019)

    Episode 197: Emma Green — Because Beth Moore is Their Pastor (GC2019)
    The podcast team caught up with Emma Green to talk about the implications of what occurred at the Special General Conference in St. Louis. Emma argues the storyline coming out of #GC2019 is a common storyline being experience throughout the United States: a breakdown or inability to live in community with people who we disagree with. This struggle to maintain community is causing fracture throughout institutions that once held up our communities.

    Emma Green is a staff writer at ​The Atlantic, where she covers politics, policy, and religion.

    https://www.theatlantic.com/author/emma-green/
    https://twitter.com/emmaogreen

    Voices of the General Conference - Christy Thomas: Debriefed in St. Louis

    Voices of the General Conference - Christy Thomas: Debriefed in St. Louis
    By a slim margin the 'traditional plan' was selected to be the way forward for the United Methodist Church. Disciplinary action against LGBTQIA clergy will be swifter and without the benefit of due process. In all reality, the plan selected by the Special General Conference does not meet the UMC's constitutional requirements.

    Just an hour after the Special General Conference was adjourned, Crackers & Grape Juice sat down with our favorite thoughtful pastor, Christy Thomas, the debrief and talk about what is next as the UMC becomes more divided, and LGBTQIA persons are delivered a legislative knife in the back.

    Voices of the General Conference - Christy Thomas: Debriefed in St. Louis

    Voices of the General Conference - Christy Thomas: Debriefed in St. Louis
    By a slim margin the 'traditional plan' was selected to be the way forward for the United Methodist Church. Disciplinary action against LGBTQIA clergy will be swifter and without the benefit of due process. In all reality, the plan selected by the Special General Conference does not meet the UMC's constitutional requirements.

    Just an hour after the Special General Conference was adjourned, Crackers & Grape Juice sat down with our favorite thoughtful pastor, Christy Thomas, the debrief and talk about what is next as the UMC becomes more divided, and LGBTQIA persons are delivered a legislative knife in the back.

    Voices of the General Conference - Anna Golladay: See the Humanity

    Voices of the General Conference - Anna Golladay: See the Humanity
    If an effort to provide honest conversations from the 2019 Special General Conference, the Crackers & Grape Juice team invited supporters of all of the plans being considered by the United Methodist Church’s governing body to explain why the plan they support is the correct plan.

    Anna Golladay was removed from her appointment because she officiated a same-sex wedding. She has traveled to St Louis for the called General Conference as a lay observer, present to ensure the LGBTQ voices in her Bible-belt community are not ignored as the United Methodist Church meets to find a way forward.

    Voices of the General Conference - Anna Golladay: See the Humanity

    Voices of the General Conference - Anna Golladay: See the Humanity
    If an effort to provide honest conversations from the 2019 Special General Conference, the Crackers & Grape Juice team invited supporters of all of the plans being considered by the United Methodist Church’s governing body to explain why the plan they support is the correct plan.

    Anna Golladay was removed from her appointment because she officiated a same-sex wedding. She has traveled to St Louis for the called General Conference as a lay observer, present to ensure the LGBTQ voices in her Bible-belt community are not ignored as the United Methodist Church meets to find a way forward.

    Episode 179 - Scot McKnight: It Takes a Church to Baptize

    Episode 179 - Scot McKnight: It Takes a Church to Baptize
    Scot McKnight joins the show to talk about his latest book, 'It Takes a Church to Baptize'
    https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1587434164

    From the back jacket - The issue of baptism has troubled Protestants for centuries. Should infants be baptized before their faith is conscious, or does God command the baptism of babies whose parents have been baptized?

    Popular New Testament scholar Scot McKnight makes a biblical case for infant baptism, exploring its history, meaning, and practice and showing that infant baptism is the most historic Christian way of forming children into the faith. He explains that the church's practice of infant baptism developed straight from the Bible and argues that it must begin with the family and then extend to the church. Baptism is not just an individual profession of faith: it takes a family and a church community to nurture a child into faith over time. McKnight explains infant baptism for readers coming from a tradition that baptizes adults only, and he counters criticisms that fail to consider the role of families in the formation of faith. The book includes a foreword by Todd Hunter and an afterword by Gerald McDermott.

    Episode 179 - Scot McKnight: It Takes a Church to Baptize

    Episode 179 - Scot McKnight: It Takes a Church to Baptize
    Scot McKnight joins the show to talk about his latest book, 'It Takes a Church to Baptize'
    https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1587434164

    From the back jacket - The issue of baptism has troubled Protestants for centuries. Should infants be baptized before their faith is conscious, or does God command the baptism of babies whose parents have been baptized?

    Popular New Testament scholar Scot McKnight makes a biblical case for infant baptism, exploring its history, meaning, and practice and showing that infant baptism is the most historic Christian way of forming children into the faith. He explains that the church's practice of infant baptism developed straight from the Bible and argues that it must begin with the family and then extend to the church. Baptism is not just an individual profession of faith: it takes a family and a church community to nurture a child into faith over time. McKnight explains infant baptism for readers coming from a tradition that baptizes adults only, and he counters criticisms that fail to consider the role of families in the formation of faith. The book includes a foreword by Todd Hunter and an afterword by Gerald McDermott.