• Christianity an Embodied Faith. (John 1: 1-14)
    Feb 7 2026

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    Episode Notes:

    The centre of the Christian faith is not an idea, a philosophy, or a spiritual technique. It is a person. A person with skin and bones. A person who ate, wept, touched, and was touched. A God who became a person who lived a fully embodied human life.... God did not save us by lifting us out of our humanity. God saved us by entering it.

    From the opening chapters of Scripture, we see that God cares about the whole of life. In Leviticus, even the smallest details—how we eat, how we rest, how we treat the sick, how we honour the land—are woven into worship. Nothing is too small or too physical to matter to God.

    In a digital age, this truth feels more urgent than ever. We live more online than in person. We argue without seeing faces. We curate images of ourselves that hide our real bodies. We fear touch because of past harm, and we fear presence because of illness. We are becoming a generation unsure of how to inhabit our own skin.

    But Scripture calls us back to something deeper: You do not have a body—you are a body. You are a whole person, made in the image of God. Your physical presence is part of your spiritual calling.

    The resurrection of Jesus shows us that our future hope is not disembodied escape but renewed, restored, embodied life. Jesus rises with his scars, the marks of his suffering. He eats. He breaks bread. He is changed, yet still recognisably human. Our hope is not to leave our bodies behind, but to have them made whole.

    References:

    Scripture:

    John 1:1–14

    Leviticus 11:44 – “Be holy, for I am holy.”

    Genesis 2:7, 23 – “Flesh of my flesh.”

    Matthew 6:10 – “Your kingdom come…”

    Romans 12:1 – “Present your bodies as a living sacrifice…”

    Luke 3:6 – “All flesh shall see the salvation of God.”

    Church Fathers & Classical Theologians.

    Athanasius of Alexandria. “He became what we are, that He might make us what He is.” (On the Incarnation, §54.)

    Gregory of Nazianzus. “What is not assumed is not healed.” (Epistle 101 to Cledonius).

    Irenaeus of Lyons. “The glory of God is a human being fully alive.” (Against Heresies, Book 4, Chapter 20.)

    Modern Theologians & Thinkers.

    Abraham Joshua Heschel. “The Bible is not man’s theology but God’s anthropology.” (God in Search for Man.)

    N.T. Wright. “God will put the whole world right, and in the meantime, He puts people right so that they can be part of His putting‑right project.” ( Surprised by Hope.)

    C.S. Lewis. “We are promised resurrection, not instruction in biology.” (Miracles and Letters to Malcolm.)

    Support the show

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    Jeremy McCandless | Creating Podcasts and Bible Study Resources | Patreon

    Check out my other Podcasts.

    The Bible Project: https://thebibleproject.buzzsprout.com

    History of the Christian Church: https://thehistoryofthechristianchurch.buzzsprout.com

    History of the Christian Church: https://thehistoryofthechristianchurch.buzzsprout.com

    The Renewed Mind Podcast. My Psychology and Mental Health Podcast:

    https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568891

    The L.I.F.E. Podcast: (Philosophy and current trends in the Arts and Entertainment Podcast).

    https://the-living-in-faith-everyday-podcast.buzzsprout.com

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    35 mins
  • Aristotle- Wisdom, Habit, and the Call of Christ.
    Feb 1 2026

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    "The heart of man plans his way, but the Lord establishes his steps.” — Proverbs 16:9

    This week, I found myself lingering in the company of a man who lived three centuries before the birth of Christ: Aristotle. This is a special double-length episode in which I explore "A Christian History of Aristotle." It is a long conversation, and one I recorded and offered as ‘Patreon-only’ content back in 2024. However, I believe it is a discussion that is vital for anyone wanting to understand the "spiritual architecture" of the world we live in today.

    Aristotle famously said that "an unplanned life is not worth examining." He believed that to truly "live well" and to achieve what he called Eudaimonia (happiness or flourishing), a person must live with intentionality. He argued that we are not born virtuous; rather, we become what we repeatedly do. Excellence, in his eyes, was not an act, but a habit.

    As I sat with his writings, I couldn't help but feel a sense of thankfulness for what Christian theologians call "Common Grace." He saw that we are creatures of habit. He saw that we have "real goods" (the things we truly need, like truth and friendship) and "apparent goods" (the things we think we want, but which often leave us empty). When Jesus said in John 10:10, "I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full," He was addressing that same deep human ache for flourishing—but He provided the only source that can satisfy it.

    The Bible takes this even further in 2 Corinthians 13:5, urging us to "examine yourselves to see whether you are in the faith." In the podcast, I look at how the Christian process of sanctification takes Aristotle’s idea of "virtuous habits" and breathes supernatural life into them. We aren't just trying to be "better versions of ourselves"; Christians believe we are being transformed into the image of Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit.

    Of course, Aristotle was a man of his time, and as Christians, we must hold his wisdom with a discerning hand. That's why, in the episode, I don't shy away from his controversial views on slavery and women—views that fall when placed alongside the radical equality of Galatians 3:28, where we learn that we are all "one in Christ Jesus."

    Support the show

    Follow Me on Patreon.

    Jeremy McCandless | Creating Podcasts and Bible Study Resources | Patreon

    Check out my other Podcasts.

    The Bible Project: https://thebibleproject.buzzsprout.com

    History of the Christian Church: https://thehistoryofthechristianchurch.buzzsprout.com

    History of the Christian Church: https://thehistoryofthechristianchurch.buzzsprout.com

    The Renewed Mind Podcast. My Psychology and Mental Health Podcast:

    https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568891

    The L.I.F.E. Podcast: (Philosophy and current trends in the Arts and Entertainment Podcast).

    https://the-living-in-faith-everyday-podcast.buzzsprout.com

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    1 hr and 20 mins
  • Finding the Logos in the ‘Gloaming’: Hamnet Film Review.
    Jan 24 2026

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    A Meditation on Hamnet – A film by Chloé Zhao.

    "For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible... and in him all things hold together." (Colossians 1:16-17)

    This week, my imagination has been caught in the mossy, tactile world of the new film Hamnet. As many of you know, I spent much of this past month immersing myself again in Genesis "The Book of Beginnings," as a re-edited my work both for placing my entire back catalogue of sermons and audio podcast as a playlist on Patreon whilst at the same time adapting it into a daily devotional that should be available on Amazon in book form within the next few weeks.

    See what I have to say about this brilliant film, artistically but spiritually a miss-step.

    Support the show

    Follow Me on Patreon.

    Jeremy McCandless | Creating Podcasts and Bible Study Resources | Patreon

    Check out my other Podcasts.

    The Bible Project: https://thebibleproject.buzzsprout.com

    History of the Christian Church: https://thehistoryofthechristianchurch.buzzsprout.com

    History of the Christian Church: https://thehistoryofthechristianchurch.buzzsprout.com

    The Renewed Mind Podcast. My Psychology and Mental Health Podcast:

    https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568891

    The L.I.F.E. Podcast: (Philosophy and current trends in the Arts and Entertainment Podcast).

    https://the-living-in-faith-everyday-podcast.buzzsprout.com

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    31 mins
  • Launch Episode. Welcome. + "Crito". A Dialogue by Plato
    Jan 6 2026

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    Welcome to the Re-Launch of The L.I.F.E. Podcast

    Hello and welcome. I’m Jeremy McCandless, and this is "The L.I.F.E. Podcast" reimagined, renewed, and ready to engage with the world of ideas.

    This podcast began during the lockdown—a time of isolation, uncertainty, and longing for connection. Back then, it was a lifeline. A weekly rhythm of reflection, encouragement, and spiritual grounding for those unable to gather in person. It was about building community in the everyday. And it still is.

    But in 2026, the world has changed. And so has the conversation.

    Today, we relaunch the L.I.F.E. Podcast as a bi-monthly space for philosophical engagement. A place where we respond to the shifting tides of thought in philosophy, art, entertainment, and culture—not with fear or retreat, but with clarity, curiosity, and grace.

    🧠 Why Philosophy? Why Now?

    Because ideas matter.

    Philosophy is not just for ivory towers or academic libraries. It’s the architecture of belief. The scaffolding behind every cultural movement, every artistic expression, every political debate. And I believe we are all called to understand the questions that shape the world around us.

    This podcast will explore those questions. We’ll look at current trends in thinking—from the rise of expressive individualism to the ethics of AI, from postmodern aesthetics to the spiritual hunger behind today’s storytelling. We’ll ask: What’s being said? What’s being assumed? And how does the Christian philosophical worldview speak into this moment?

    📚 What to Expect

    Each episode will offer either:

    • A thoughtful response to a current philosophical or cultural theme
    • Occasional deep dives into classic philosophical texts—from Plato to Kierkegaard, Augustine to Simone Weil
    • Reflections on how current ideas intersect with Scripture, theology, and the lived Christian experience
    • And always, a call to live wisely, faithfully, and creatively in the world God has made

    🎧 Episode One: Plato’s Crito

    We begin with Crito, a short but important dialogue by Plato. Socrates, his mentor, is imprisoned and awaiting execution, but is offered a chance to escape. His friend Crito urges him to flee—to preserve his life, his legacy, his voice.

    But Socrates refuses.

    Why? Because he believes in the moral order. In the integrity of law. In the soul’s responsibility to truth—even when it costs everything.

    In this first episode, we’ll ask: What does it mean to obey conscience over convenience? How do we balance justice and mercy, law and grace? And what can Socrates teach us about the courage to stand firm in a world of compromise?

    📬 Subscribe and Join the Conversation

    If you’re hungry for thoughtful engagement—if you want to explore the world of ideas without losing your spiritual footing—this podcast is for you

    Support the show

    Follow Me on Patreon.

    Jeremy McCandless | Creating Podcasts and Bible Study Resources | Patreon

    Check out my other Podcasts.

    The Bible Project: https://thebibleproject.buzzsprout.com

    History of the Christian Church: https://thehistoryofthechristianchurch.buzzsprout.com

    History of the Christian Church: https://thehistoryofthechristianchurch.buzzsprout.com

    The Renewed Mind Podcast. My Psychology and Mental Health Podcast:

    https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568891

    The L.I.F.E. Podcast: (Philosophy and current trends in the Arts and Entertainment Podcast).

    https://the-living-in-faith-everyday-podcast.buzzsprout.com

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    40 mins