Ep50.7 Seven Last Words: "Father, into your hands..." with W. Travis McMaken

Ep50.7 Seven Last Words: "Father, into your hands..." with W. Travis McMaken

To celebrate 50 episodes of the Love Rinse Repeat podcast, Liam Miller interviewed seven guests about Jesus' seven last words from the cross.

Here, Travis McMaken discusses the final words, "Father, into your hands I commend my spirit". This commendation signifies the climax of the relationship between the Spirit and Jesus throughout Luke, and the shift to the ongoing role of the Spirit in the lives of those who follow after.

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Ep50.6 Seven Last Words: "It is finished" with Lauren R.E. Larkin

Ep50.6 Seven Last Words: "It is finished" with Lauren R.E. Larkin

To celebrate 50 episodes of the Love Rinse Repeat podcast, Liam Miller interviewed seven guests about Jesus' seven last words from the cross.

Here, Lauren Larkin discusses, with care and passion, Jesus declarative words "it is finished" and its relation to what has past, what is, and what is possible - both cosmically and personally. A decisive shift has occurred and we should think carefully before trying to go back to before - which has potent implications for a post-COVID society.

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Ep50.5 Seven Last Words: "I thirst" with Sean Winter

Ep50.5 Seven Last Words: "I thirst" with Sean Winter

To celebrate 50 episodes of the Love Rinse Repeat podcast, Liam interviewed seven guests about Jesus' seven last words from the cross.

Here, Sean Winter reflects on the words "I thirst", and both their simplicity, as a basic human need for a small mercy in the midst of trauma, and their powerful symbolic and theological overtones. We explore what the words teach us about presence, absence, and the completion of Christ's work. And how Jesus' own thirst shapes how we read the many other times thirst is employed in the Gospel of John.

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Ep50.4 Seven Last Words: "My God, my God..." with David W. Congdon

Ep50.4 Seven Last Words: "My God, my God..." with David W. Congdon

To celebrate 50 episodes of the Love Rinse Repeat podcast, Liam Miller interviewed seven guests about Jesus' seven last words from the cross.

Here, David Congdon discusses the scandal of the words "my God, my God, why have you foresaken me?" Why there is hope in allowing these words to ring out a true disruption, resisting the urge to incorporate them neatly into our theology, piety, or liturgy.

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Ep50.3 Seven Last Words: "Woman, behold, thy son..." with Tau'alofa Anga'aelangi

Ep50.3 Seven Last Words: "Woman, behold, thy son..." with Tau'alofa Anga'aelangi

To celebrate 50 episodes of the Love Rinse Repeat podcast, Liam interviewed seven guests about Jesus' seven last words from the cross.

Here, Tau'alofa Anga'aelangi discusses the third words "Woman, here is your son... here is your mother". We talk about different cultural experiences of family, how these words shape the way the churches engage intergenerational and intercultural encounters, and resisting obligation with a view to seeing people as gift.

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Ep50.2 Seven Last Words: "Today, you will be with me..." with Laura Jean Truman

Ep50.2 Seven Last Words: "Today, you will be with me..." with Laura Jean Truman

To celebrate 50 episodes of the Love Rinse Repeat podcast, Liam interviewed seven guests about Jesus' seven last words from the cross.

Here, Laura Jean Truman discusses Jesus' words to the man next to him on the cross, "today, you will be with me in paradise" and importantly the words of the two criminals preceding this promise. Repentance, solidarity, welcome, and a strange kind of presence are all concepts illuminated and provoked in this most powerful scene.

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Ep50! Seven Last Words with Seven Great Guests

Ep50! Seven Last Words with Seven Great Guests

To celebrate 50 episodes of the Love Rinse Repeat podcast, I interviewed seven guests about Jesus' seven last words from the cross. We discuss what we hear in these words, and how Christ’s final words might speak to a church distanced, isolated, and disrupted.

Guests: Grace Ji-Sun Kim, Laura Jean Truman, Tau'alofa Anga'aelangi, David W. Congdon, Sean Winter, Lauren R.E. Larkin, and W. Travis McMaken.

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Ep43. Discipleship, Michael Mawson

Ep43. Discipleship, Michael Mawson

I sat down with Michael Mawson to talk discipleship, suffering, weakness, and the way of the cross. I start by asking if discipleship is inextricably tied to concepts such as these and if so, is being a disciple of Christ something we should wish on anyone... from there we range through a number of related topics and interesting thinkers from M. Shawn Copeland, to Julian of Norwich, Martin Luther to Dietrich Bonhoeffer. And we end with a helpful discussion on how this focus on the weakness of God as the locus of our salvation and basis of our faith shapes how we approach Christian mission and evangelism.

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Ep40. The Stations of the Cross, Katherine Sonderegger and Margaret Adams Parker

Ep40. The Stations of the Cross, Katherine Sonderegger and Margaret Adams Parker

“The Stations speak to us in the political, social, and economic conflicts and dilemmas that descend on us all. And to a culture, to individuals, and, sadly, even to a church that scrupulously turn away from the reality of death, the Stations speak an important word about that final frontier.”

I sat down with Mary Adams Parker and Katherine Sonderegger to talk about their book, Praying the Stations of the Cross: Finding Hope in a Weary Land (Eerdmans, 2019). We talk about their own approaches to the Stations as visual artist and preacher respectively, what we learn about the contact of the body of Jesus with the body of others across the Stations, what the Stations reveal about Mary, the power of the Stations in times such as these, finding ways to hold the together the suffering and glory of Christ, preparing art for ecclesial settings, why preaching should be invitation rather than exhortation, and why we should attend to beauty, to the sublime, when writing theology or creating artworks to the glory of God and guidance of a Christian community.

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