Pastor Writer: Conversations on Reading, Writing, and the Christian Life Titelbild

Pastor Writer: Conversations on Reading, Writing, and the Christian Life

Pastor Writer: Conversations on Reading, Writing, and the Christian Life

Von: Chase Replogle
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The Pastor Writer podcast is a series of conversations and reflections on the Christian life through reading and writing. From interviews with authors to thoughts on scripture and culture, Chase Replogle offers a wide range of topics and explorations. Chase is a church pastor and writer. You can follow more of his work at pastorwriter.com© 2025 Pastor Writer: Conversations on Reading, Writing, and the Christian Life Christentum Philosophie Sozialwissenschaften Spiritualität
  • Chase Replgole — My Favorite Books from 2025
    Dec 29 2025

    Every year at this time, I go back through my Amazon orders, my Audible subscription, and my bookshelf to reflect on everything I’ve read. It is a fantastic exercise to see what has occupied your mind over the past twelve months. Reviewing also helps me form a loose plan for what I want to dive into in the coming year—focusing more on the topics I’d like to explore further.

    This review always helps me curate a list of my favorite reads. I’ll keep the intro short and jump straight into the books with a brief description and a few thoughts on each.

    Biography

    Each year, I try to tackle one long biography. My previous lists have often included works by the poet T.S. Eliot; I keep his Four Quartets on my nightstand. This year, a friend gifted me a two-part biography of Eliot’s life. Since there are no rules for reading, I started with the second volume, which chronicles Eliot’s later life and conversion.

    • Eliot After The Waste Land by Robert Crawford Crawford explores T.S. Eliot’s life and work from the publication of The Waste Land onward. Rather than treating Eliot as a figure frozen in modernist despair (the primary theme of his earliest and most well-known work), Crawford shows a poet continually changing—emotionally, spiritually, and artistically. The book traces Eliot’s conversion to Anglican Christianity, his evolving views on culture and society, and the development of later works such as Ash-Wednesday and Four Quartets. Crawford presents Eliot as a disciplined craftsman seeking order, tradition, and meaning after personal breakdown and cultural fragmentation.
    • Host Note: It’s a long read, but one of my suggestions for reading is to find a writer you like and read absolutely everything they’ve written—and everything written about them. I’ve been on an Eliot binge for a few years now.

    Study on the Theology of the Body

    In 2025, I’ve been working on a new book project that I hope to share more about in early 2026. As part of my research, I have been reading extensively about health, fitness, and a theology of the human body. For such a universal topic, it is surprising how rarely Christians think about it deeply. There is often a subtle "Gnosticism" that imagines the spirit as sacred while the body is just physical material to be replaced by something better. That isn’t actually what Christianity teaches. While I’ve read many books on this topic this year, these four were particularly helpful:

    • The Theology of the Body by Jean-Claude Larchet Larchet presents a distinctly Orthodox account of the human body grounded in patristic theology. He argues that the body is not a temporary shell for the soul but an essential, God-given dimension of the human person. Drawing on Scripture and the Greek Fathers, he explores creation, the fall, illness, ascetic practice, and resurrection.
    • Host Note: It is a very small book, but Larchet makes a concise case for why Christianity should value the physical body more than any other religion.
    • The Body: A Study in Pauline Theology by J. A. T. Robinson This is the most academic book on the list—a monograph from the 1950s. Robinson examines the Apostle Paul’s understanding of the body against common misconceptions of Christian dualism. He argues that Paul does not oppose body and soul but views the human person as an integrated whole. The book traces how sin, redemption, and resurrection are worked out in and through the body.
    • Love Thy Body by Nancy Pearcey Pearcey critiques modern cultural views that separate the "self" from the body. She argues that contemporary debates over sexuality, gender, and bioethics are rooted in a dualistic worldview that treats the body as disposable. As she does so well, Pearcey contrasts this with a Christian
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    21 Min.
  • Doug Basler — Finding Novels for the New Year
    Dec 11 2025

    Doug Basler is married to his wife, Katie, and is the father of Addie, Jackson, and Isaac. He currently serves as pastor of Union Park Presbyterian Church in Des Moines and First Presbyterian Church of Grimes. His pastoral ministry has also taken him to congregations in Aberdeen, Washington, and Cooke City, Montana.

    Doug recently completed a Doctor of Ministry in the Sacred Art of Writing at Western Theological Seminary and holds degrees from Westmont College and Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. He is the author of All Swirling and Weaving: Reflections on Reading Fiction and Growing in Faith, a work that explores how attentive engagement with literature can shape Christian imagination and spiritual formation.

    A lifelong sports fan, Doug roots enthusiastically for the Chicago Cubs, the Chicago Bears, and the Iowa Hawkeyes.

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    45 Min.
  • Tommy Brown — Why the Bible Calls us to a Quiet Life
    Oct 29 2025
    Author Tommy Brown joins me to talk about his new book, The Speed of Soul: Four Rhythms for a Quiet Life. We explore what it means to love deeply, live quietly, mind our own affairs, and work with our hands. We all feel like the speed of life is accelerating, but how does the Bible call us to a different way of living?Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    59 Min.
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