2019-11-09T00:00:00
Just swaps his moderator’s chair for being a debater in this week’s live show recorded in front of a student audience at Oxford University.
He engages atheist Stephen Woodford who runs the YouTube channel Rationality Rules on the question ‘Is it rational to be a Christian?
If you are already a Member or have an account with another Premier website, you can SIGN IN now.
Be equipped to confidently defend your Faith, tackle untruths and demonstrate that the Gospel is good news for everyone.
Membership includes unlimited access to the website, a weekly newsletter, bonus content and much more.
To continue reading REGISTER FOR FREE MEMBERSHIP
2022-08-11T17:00:00Z
Should I always tithe 10% to my church? What do you think of signing church covenants? I don’t agree with my church leadership on complementarianism, but I love the members - should I stay? Tom answers listener questions on church practise and rules.
2025-06-08T17:00:00Z
What is the ‘divine council’ in the Bible? Who receives a ‘resurrection body’? And how can Christians be sure of their salvation?
2025-06-06T16:15:00Z
Exploring BPD, NPD and Meaning in Christian and Secular Psychiatry.
2025-05-30T15:00:00Z
Is it more meaningful to choose Christianity as an adult, or to walk away after growing up in it? In this special schools episode, teenagers ask the tough questions as host Sam McKee moderates a gripping debate between Matthew Su, a Christian convert and PhD candidate at Cambridge, and Nathan Ormond, ex-Christian and creator of the Digital Gnosis YouTube channel.
2025-05-23T16:30:00Z
In this episode of Premier Unbelievable? comedian and host Andy Kind welcomes marine biologist and Christian author Rachel G. Jordan, author of If the Ocean has a Soul, and sceptic science-historian Dr Michael Shermer, founder of Skeptic Magazine and author of The Moral Arc, for a dynamic conversation exploring whether nature reveals divine purpose or reflects impersonal forces.
2025-05-16T16:00:00Z
This episode of Unbelievable? dives into the ethical and theological dilemmas of synthetic biology and engineering artificial organisms, as Dr Sam McKee and Prof Keith Fox debate whether humanity’s ability to “play God” challenges or complements religious beliefs and our understanding of human creativity.
Site powered by Webvision Cloud