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Faith Lab

Faith Lab

Von: Nate Hanson & Shelby Hanson
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What if Christianity could handle your toughest questions? Scholars. Evidence. Honest questions. A podcast for people who want faith they can trust with both heart and mind. Faith Lab brings serious biblical scholarship out of academic conferences and dense books and into conversations you can actually follow. Every episode, world-class historians, biblical scholars, and researchers explain what they've spent their careers studying about Jesus, the Bible, and the origins of Christianity. What they share will surprise you. Most Christians have never heard the depth of evidence that exists for the faith they already hold. Nate and Shelby Hanson ask the questions real people are actually wondering and press every guest to make their work clear, honest, and accessible. Guests include N.T. Wright, Tim Mackie, and more. Whether you've believed your whole life and want to understand why, or you've been carrying doubts you've never said out loud, Faith Lab is for you.© 2026 Faith Lab Christentum Philosophie Sozialwissenschaften Spiritualität Welt
  • The genealogies don't match. That might be the point.
    Feb 25 2026
    Matthew and Luke don't give us the same family tree, and the census in Luke has been called a historical invention. So why would anyone still trust the birth narratives? New Testament scholar Caleb Friedeman compared them against 95 other ancient biographies, and what he found about Matthew and Luke's sources changes how you'd evaluate every supposed contradiction. 🔓 Members get the full unedited interview with Caleb, including his breakdown of how ancient Jewish genealogies actually worked. ⁠faithlabshow.com/support Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    19 Min.
  • He read the ancient sources. They don't say what you think.
    Feb 18 2026
    A claim has circulated in scholarship for decades: ancient birth narratives were never meant to be taken as history. If true, the Christmas stories in Matthew and Luke would be beautiful legends, nothing more. New Testament scholar Caleb Friedeman didn't just accept that claim. He went back to the actual ancient biographers -- Plutarch, Suetonius, Philo, Cornelius Nepos -- and tested it. What he found changes the way we should evaluate the opening chapters of the Gospels. Caleb walks us through what ancient authors were actually doing when they wrote birth stories, and why Luke's birth narrative may have stronger historical markers than almost any other section of his Gospel. Want the full, unedited conversation? Members get the complete interview with Caleb Friedeman, usually 15-20 extra minutes of material that didn't make the final cut. faithlabshow.com/support Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    26 Min.
  • Tim Mackie: The Bible Isn't What You Think (Part 2)
    Feb 11 2026
    Want the full, unedited conversation? Parts 1 and 2 combined with some bonus parts, over 80 minutes with Tim Mackie. Available exclusively for premium members at faithlabshow.com/support This is Part 2 of our conversation with Tim Mackie, co-founder of The Bible Project. Listen to Part 1. Tim walks through one of the most disturbing stories in Genesis (what actually happened between Noah and Ham) and uses it to reveal how biblical authors embedded narrative riddles that only unlock as you read further. He explains why the Bible isn't a rulebook but an epic narrative pointing to a person, how Jesus himself engaged Scripture when asked about hot-button issues, why head-on theological debates almost never change anyone's mind, and what he means when he says "faithfulness" is a better word than "inerrancy." If Part 1 introduced design patterns, Part 2 shows what happens when you let them reshape how you read everything. In this episode: The Noah and Ham story, what actually happened and why the Bible leaves it ambiguous on purpose. How narrative riddles work across Genesis, Leviticus, and Samuel. Tim's Yoda analogy for how we misread the Bible. Why the Bible is a narrative pointing to Jesus, not a rulebook. How Jesus handled marriage and divorce by going back to Genesis 1–2. Why head-on theological debates almost never work. Inerrancy vs. faithfulness and why Tim prefers the Bible's own vocabulary. Bible translations as a bag of golf clubs. Tim's personal experience of encounter through Scripture. Thoughts, questions, stories? faithlabshow.com/contact⁠ Become a member and get: 1. Full, unedited ad-free interviews 2. Early release episodes 3. Access to the private Faith Lab community Become a member: ⁠faithlabshow.com/support⁠ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    22 Min.
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