• 70 - Two Corrupted Christianities in the Gospel Coalition
    Jan 22 2026

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    A tour is on the calendar, a new book is brewing, and our inbox lit the fuse: what happens to your faith when you step off social media and start searching for unspun news about Gaza, empire, and the stories we’re told? We open the year by taking a hard look at propaganda, grief, and how easy it is to let a nation define “we” for the church.

    Then we head to the movies, where a whodunit surprised us. Wake Up Dead Man puts two versions of Christianity on display: a combative, us-versus-them posture that bleeds people, and a pastoral presence that stops the action to pray, receives confession, and announces forgiveness. We push back on TGC's review of the movie contrasted with their review of the animated movie: David, which stays close to the text yet leans triumphalist and one-noted, raising a bigger question: do we want art to be good, or branded as “ours”?

    Here’s our take: art is not a sermon. Common grace means truth can surface where you don’t expect it, and excellence matters more than labels. If the New Testament church could live under empire and still sing, confess, and forgive, then we can learn to watch and create stories that widen our empathy and sharpen our hope without compromising conviction.

    Articles/Links mentioned:

    Two Corrupted Christianities

    TGC's David Review

    Jake Randolph's Knives Out: Wake Up Deadman Review


    Terrible Tweets:

    "Today is the most humiliating day in the history of the United States of America. At least until tomorrow."

    Trump's Unhinged Letter to Denmark

    If this conversation helps you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Your support helps more people find thoughtful, grounded faith in a loud, fearful world.


    For more information, you can follow us at
    https://www.theologyinpieces.com/
    Theology in Pieces on Instagram - @theologyinpieces

    Email us by emailing hello@theologyinpieces.com

    Malcolm Foley - on twitter @MalcolmBFoley
    Slim Thompson on twitter @wacoslim

    For more information on the church,
    check us out at www.mosaicwaco.org or on instagram.

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    55 mins
  • 69 - BEST IN SHOW '25
    Jan 3 2026

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    The Winner of 2025's best episode this past year was:

    Episode 56 - The Anti-Greed Gospel: A Revolutionary Conversation with Malcolm Foley on the Battle with Mammon.

    No surprise. Malcolm is pretty great. Thank you all for listening, sharing, and reviewing! Keep sharing in 2026. We're working on a few things behind the scenes to make this podcast even better.

    Runner's up from 2025:

    • "t"
    • I Stand with Israel? When Empires Claim His Name...

    If you haven't listened to our back catalog - Start with to today's episode, then check these two out, and let us know what episode has caught your attention!

    Links from this episode:

    • Trump Gaza
    • "I...We are the Law"
    • "He who saves his Country does not violate any Law"
    • Megan Basham's critique of the Black Fellowship Dinner
    • David French's kind response to an "opponent."



    If this conversation helps you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Your support helps more people find thoughtful, grounded faith in a loud, fearful world.


    For more information, you can follow us at
    https://www.theologyinpieces.com/
    Theology in Pieces on Instagram - @theologyinpieces

    Email us by emailing hello@theologyinpieces.com

    Malcolm Foley - on twitter @MalcolmBFoley
    Slim Thompson on twitter @wacoslim

    For more information on the church,
    check us out at www.mosaicwaco.org or on instagram.

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    1 hr and 28 mins
  • 68 - If God Pardons Like a President… Should That Worry Us?
    Dec 19 2025

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    How ought the Christian feel about presidential pardons given our personal dependence on pardons? On today's episode, we dug into the messy intersection of presidential pardons, public trust, and Christian theology to ask a hard question: when a leader can erase consequences with a signature, who bears the cost of the harm?

    We start with a rapid-fire tour through a heavy news cycle filled with violence, a personal reset, and broach the topic of gerrymandering as another “false scale” that skews representation, eroding legitimacy and fueling resentment.

    Then we shift from civics to Scripture. God’s pardon isn’t favoritism; it’s costly love. The cross tells us forgiveness absorbs harm rather than denying it, and real grace aims at transformation: repentance, repair, and a life remade in Christ. That vision challenges cheap mercy in politics while resisting vindictiveness.

    Vote 4 Malcolm! - Readers' Best Awards - Favorite Books of 2025

    A non-violent exemplar

    Rob Reiner on Charlie Kirk in contrast to how he was mourned

    Rand Paul on Gerrymandering

    One of the Founders’ Worst Fears Has Been Realized


    Ezra Klein Episode mentioned

    If this conversation helps you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Your support helps more people find thoughtful, grounded faith in a loud, fearful world.


    For more information, you can follow us at
    https://www.theologyinpieces.com/
    Theology in Pieces on Instagram - @theologyinpieces

    Email us by emailing hello@theologyinpieces.com

    Malcolm Foley - on twitter @MalcolmBFoley
    Slim Thompson on twitter @wacoslim

    For more information on the church,
    check us out at www.mosaicwaco.org or on instagram.

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • 67 - Why Can't We Be Friends? - With Rev. Dr. Erin Moniz
    Dec 4 2025

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    On this episode of Theology in Pieces, Slim and Malcolm are back with a full plate—and not just because Thanksgiving is still lingering in our arteries. We kick things off with National Signing Day and why college football used to be great but is actually terrible. Then we wade into the typical swamp of terrible tweets, biblical misquotes, and the unsettling ease with which Christians can justify killing people unlawfully… all before asking, Why can’t we actually be friends?

    That question brings us to our guest, Rev. Dr. Erin Moniz, whose new book Knowing and Being Known invites us to rethink intimacy. She recounts the quote, “I can live without sex, but I cannot live without intimacy.” Why intimacy is the enemy of Shame, and helps us explore why we’re so bad at friendship and genuine connection. We lament the loss of good friendship stories in the culture and Erin acts as a friendship coach for Malcolm and Slim.

    If you’ve ever wondered why Christian “community” doesn’t always feel communal—this conversation is for you.

    Listen in, laugh a bit, wince a bit, and maybe learn how to be a better friend.

    Learn more about Erin here: https://www.erinfmoniz.com/

    https://x.com/erinfmoniz

    https://www.instagram.com/erinfmoniz/

    https://www.threads.com/@erinfmoniz

    If this conversation helps you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Your support helps more people find thoughtful, grounded faith in a loud, fearful world.


    For more information, you can follow us at
    https://www.theologyinpieces.com/
    Theology in Pieces on Instagram - @theologyinpieces

    Email us by emailing hello@theologyinpieces.com

    Malcolm Foley - on twitter @MalcolmBFoley
    Slim Thompson on twitter @wacoslim

    For more information on the church,
    check us out at www.mosaicwaco.org or on instagram.

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    1 hr and 21 mins
  • 66 - DON’T FOCUS ON THE FAMILY : Emily McGowin on Building Households of Faith
    Nov 5 2025

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    Today we sit down with Rev. Dr. Emily McGowin to ask why so many of us feel trapped between “family first” slogans and the weight of church, work, and politics pressing on our homes. Emily’s vision is both bracing and kind: stop chasing a biblical blueprint that doesn’t exist, and start practicing love in households that actually look like ours—single, married, multigenerational, adoptive, blended, roommates, and everyone in between.

    We dig into how Jesus relativizes cultural gender norms and invites women as disciples, how early Christian communities disrupted hierarchy, and why mutuality—rather than rigid roles—better reflects the kingdom.

    We'll discuss the loss of SNAP benefits and that misuse of Scripture while ignoring real families who are working, caregiving, or simply hungry.

    Households of Faith: Practicing Family in the Kingdom of God

    You don't eat, you don't work.

    "Nobody gets to heaven without a letter of reference from the poor." - James Forbes


    If this episode challenged or encouraged you, tap follow, share it with a friend who cares about church and home, and leave a quick review so more listeners can find it. Got a question or pushback? Email hello@theologypieces.com and join the conversation.

    If this conversation helps you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Your support helps more people find thoughtful, grounded faith in a loud, fearful world.


    For more information, you can follow us at
    https://www.theologyinpieces.com/
    Theology in Pieces on Instagram - @theologyinpieces

    Email us by emailing hello@theologyinpieces.com

    Malcolm Foley - on twitter @MalcolmBFoley
    Slim Thompson on twitter @wacoslim

    For more information on the church,
    check us out at www.mosaicwaco.org or on instagram.

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • 65 - No Kings, No Thrones, No Plan & HOW to Rediscover the Beauty of the Word.
    Oct 23 2025

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    What if the most radical thing you could do this week isn’t another hot take, but a habit that holds? We open with the “No Kings” rallies and ask a tough question: are we organizing for change or outsourcing our hope to cathartic moments? Drawing on Martin Luther King Jr.’s four steps of nonviolent direct action, 1) collection of the facts to determine whether injustices are alive; 2) negotiation; 3) self-purification; and 4) direct action.

    King Went on to say, "Nonviolent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and establish such creative tension that a community which has constantly refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issue." Did the #NoKings protests miss this opportunity?

    From there we pivot to reclaiming Scripture by reading it to meet Jesus. We challenge the empty badge of “Bible-believing” when it turns the text into an idol or a weapon. Jesus says the Scriptures testify about him; life is found in Christ, not in mastering pages. So we offer a clear, practical path to rediscover beauty.

    We also push back on “revival by metrics.” Bible sales, app downloads, and playlist counts aren’t the fruit the Spirit promises. Renewal smells like repentance, reconciliation, generosity, and enemy love. If you’re exhausted by outrage and spectacle, consider a counter-liturgy: prayer, fasting, silence, and small acts of obedience. Those practices don’t weaken you; they open space for God’s strength. Over time, beauty forms us—reordering our fears, reshaping our loves, and making us the kind of people who can bear goodness in a fractured world.

    Terrible Tweet brought to you by "Saving God/Saving Christianity"

    Don’t Let the Beasts from Revelation Distract You from Your Expense Reports


    If this episode helps you breathe a little deeper and walk a little steadier, share it with a friend and leave a review. Subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next, and tell us: what passage are you wrestling with—and how is Jesus meeting you there?

    If this conversation helps you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Your support helps more people find thoughtful, grounded faith in a loud, fearful world.


    For more information, you can follow us at
    https://www.theologyinpieces.com/
    Theology in Pieces on Instagram - @theologyinpieces

    Email us by emailing hello@theologyinpieces.com

    Malcolm Foley - on twitter @MalcolmBFoley
    Slim Thompson on twitter @wacoslim

    For more information on the church,
    check us out at www.mosaicwaco.org or on instagram.

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    1 hr and 17 mins
  • 64 - Talking Politics & Christian Nationalism with Caleb Campbell
    Oct 1 2025

    Send us a Question!

    What if loving your Christian nationalist neighbor is the most political thing you’ll do this year?

    Can a stadium memorial where “forgive your enemies” and “hate your enemies” share the same stage?"

    Today we invited pastor and author Caleb Campbell (Disarming Leviathan) to help us name the powers discipling our age—and offer a way back to love with a spine.

    We trace Caleb’s decade pastoring in Phoenix as culture-war catechisms flood the church, Turning Point rallies fill calendars, and neighbors learn to see each other as threats. Caleb names Leviathan—the biblical image of predatory, chaos power that dresses itself in righteousness—and shows how anxiety, not policy alone, is the engine of Christian nationalism.

    We also talk about grief and honesty around public tragedy, why militarizing the Lord’s Prayer profanes God’s name, and how to practice discernment without getting trapped in bad‑faith quarrels.

    If this conversation helps you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Your support helps more people find thoughtful, grounded faith in a loud, fearful world.


    For more information, you can follow us at
    https://www.theologyinpieces.com/
    Theology in Pieces on Instagram - @theologyinpieces

    Email us by emailing hello@theologyinpieces.com

    Malcolm Foley - on twitter @MalcolmBFoley
    Slim Thompson on twitter @wacoslim

    For more information on the church,
    check us out at www.mosaicwaco.org or on instagram.

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    1 hr and 37 mins
  • 63 - Dissertations and Denominations w/ Rev. Dr. Mika Edmondson
    Sep 10 2025

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    Dr. Mika Edmondson, pastor of Koinonia Church in Nashville, joins us for a profound conversation about redemptive suffering and denominational identity. What can Job, MLK, and the african spirituals teach us about redemption and hope amidst incredibly dark times?

    "It's not the suffering in and of itself that is redemptive, it is actually our engagement with it," Mika explains. Instead of fight-or-flight as a response to evil—there's a 3rd way, a way exemplified by Jesus himself.

    Then, the 3 debated the benefits and costs of denominations. There has been no declared winner, so we need you dear listener to write in and make your case or let us know who won! (hello@theologyinpieces.com)

    Also go read James Cone's The Cross and the Lynching Tree.

    If this conversation helps you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Your support helps more people find thoughtful, grounded faith in a loud, fearful world.


    For more information, you can follow us at
    https://www.theologyinpieces.com/
    Theology in Pieces on Instagram - @theologyinpieces

    Email us by emailing hello@theologyinpieces.com

    Malcolm Foley - on twitter @MalcolmBFoley
    Slim Thompson on twitter @wacoslim

    For more information on the church,
    check us out at www.mosaicwaco.org or on instagram.

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    1 hr and 21 mins