Ken Myers on Culture
November 1, 2009
Ken Myers is the host of the amazingly helpful Mars Hill Audio Journal and our guest this month as we talk culture, the ordinary means of grace, and how we direct the former to the latter. This podcast offers some ear-worthy insight on recovering a vital link between spirituality and life. Enjoy.
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Trackbacks
- Ken Myers on “Ordinary Means” : Calvin Presbyterian Church PCA
- An Interview with Ken Myers – Justin Taylor
- The bluehavens » Ken Myers on Culture on Ordinary Means
- In Light of the Gospel » Blog Archive » Ken Myers Interview on Culture
- In Light of the Gospel » Blog Archive » Ken Myers on the “Two-Kingdom” Social Theory
- The Counter-Cultural Church » Evangel | A First Things Blog
- Ken Myers on Two-Kingdom Social Theory – Justin Taylor
- Ken Myers on the “Two-Kingdom” Social Theory » Evangel | A First Things Blog
- In Light of the Gospel » Blog Archive » The Counter-Cultural Church
- More Audio: Myers and Willimon « Heidelblog
- On Transformationalists, Participators, and Withdrawalism « Ordinary Means
Really enjoyed the interview guys. I have a question. One of you mentioned listening to something related to the Slow Food Movement. Can you specify what that was? And when Myer’s mentioned Colin Gunton’s work on the trinity, I am assuming that he was talking about _The Promise of Trinitarian Theology_. Can you see if that is correct?
James,
See this link: http://www.marshillaudio.org/resources/topic_detail.asp?ID=570 for Ken Myers interviewing Corby Kummer (known to coffee fiends as the author of “The Joy of Coffee”) regarding the Slow Food Movement.
I’m not positive of the which Colin Gunton book Myers referred to on the podcast. On his website I found a quote from this book: Colin Gunton, The One, the Three and the Many: God, Creation and the Culture of Modernity (Cambridge University Press, 1993).
Happy reading and listening to one of our most valuable thinkers.
Thanks Matt.
Thanks for doing this guys. I listened twice (as I did with Mark Dever’s interview of Myers). Keep up the good work.
You are welcome, Tim.