This is a blog/podcast about New Testament scholar and former Bishop of Durham N.T. Wright. Most of the videos and audio recordings can be found on the internet free of charge. I am just collecting the various bits here and there and creating a podcast to showcase them. Most of the videos I found come from YouTube and the audio recordings I found using ntwrightpage.com, which is an excellent resource for the writings of N.T. Wright.
The podcast The N.T. Wright Podcast is created by [email protected] (Anonymous). The podcast and the artwork on this page are embedded on this page using the public podcast feed (RSS).
Tom Wright is unquestionably one of the most influential NT scholars of our generation. It’s hard to overestimate the influence he has had on the Church’s understanding of Jesus and Paul.
But what makes this great man tick? We asked you what you’d like to know about the man behind the theology. As a result, we ended up asking him everything from what his favourite childhood book was, to how he manages his work/life balance, through to which three people he’d most like to invite to dinner!
Want more Tom? Then you could spend the rest of your life reading his many many books. Or, alternatively, listen to our three previous interviews with him
Tom took some time to talk with Shane Blackshear on his podcast Seminary Dropout in May of 2015.
Some things discussed on the show…
…associating Reformed theology with people like John Piper, Tim Keller, and others with similar theology, and that sometimes causes confusion to know that Wright sees much of his own views in line with reformed tradition, when it seems like his tone is much different that those people just mentioned.
…how do we know that God intended for his authority to be given through scripture. In other words how do we know that some day we’re not going to stand before God with him saying ‘Hey the Bible was just words that were written several thousands years ago by people who were just describing their experiences with me the best they can but it wasn’t suppose to be anything more to you than inspirational and a lose guide’ ?
….in the new introduction The Challenge of Jesus, Wright spent some time talking about the idea that he originally wrote TCoJ on the other side Sept 11, 2001. In what ways Wright thinks that changes our perspective on the words
he wrote in TCoJ?
…what view the reformation brought of Jesus that was a change from the old view.
…what view the enlightenment brought.
…the historicity of Jesus and how the oral tradition worked.
…the parable of the sower in Mark 4:1-20. What we usually miss by not paying attention to Jesus’ Jewish roots.
…how all of this relates to the Christian task and vision today.
So, I have received a few emails concerning people not being able to download the audio files from the iTunes feed. I have switched my computers from running Mac OSX to running Linux because of long term support issues. I haven't had the time to look up a possible solution yet but you should be able to reload the feed if you add it manually from iTunes.
If you scroll down to the bottom of the page and click on the Atom link next to "Subscribe to" it will take you to the feed itself. Hopefully this will resolve the issues for the time being. Sorry again for the inconvenience.
N.T. Wright is back for a third time to talk to the guys over at Nomad Podcast back in October of 2013.
Okay, so perhaps on a popular level a new N. T. Wright book launch doesn’t quite match the razzmatazz of Rob Bell, but for those with a hunger for some meaty theology (written in a pleasingly engaging style), then it doesn’t get much bigger than this.
Tom Wright is a rare breed. He somehow manages to bridge the divide between the academy and the pew (his academic stuff written as N. T. Wright, and his more popular stuff written as Tom Wright). He moves in traditional and emerging circles. And he’s a professional theologian who has a real, living faith.
What a guy!
And I got to talk with him (for the third time)!
As with every time I hear Tom Wright speak, I’m left with a multitude of things to ponder. I was particularly struck this time though by his answer to my question ‘What do you think would be Paul’s message to the church today?’. Now obviously Tom can’t knowthe answer to this question, but he probably knows Paul better than anyone (he’s just finished a 1860 page book on him for goodness sake!). And Tom felt Paul would be deeply concerned with the disunity in the church.
Another interview of N.T. Wright from the Nomad Podcast back in October of 2011.
Tom Wright was in town recently for the British New Testament Conference, so we took the opportunity to drag him away from his lunch (and a heated debate with a colleague) and ask him a few questions about his new job, his new book, and whether God is going to blow this world up.
The belief that God is going to destroy this planet before he makes a new one has been around for a while. It strikes me though that this belief isn’t going to do much to motivate care for the environment (why bother reducing our carbon footprint if God is going to turn every atom of the universe into the mother of all atomic bombs?!).
So as Nomad finds itself increasingly concerned about the environment, we thought we’d better track Tom down and get him to sort this one out once and for all. And I think he did a pretty good job.
This was from an interview N.T. Wright had with the people from the Nomad podcast back in February of 2009.
The inaugural Nomad podcast kicks things off with a chat with arguably the most influential New Testament scholar of our generation, Tom Wright (I know, we don't know how we got him either!). Tom tells us everything we need to know about the Bible and community.
From a lecture given on December 31st, 1996 at Yale University.
Boldly stating that historians can construct a sketch of Jesus that makes sense both historically and subsequently serves as the beginning point of Christian theology, N.T. Wright shapes this talk around 7 points of discussion about Jesus. Wight asserts that Jesus claimed to be a prophet and a messiah, was a teacher of subversive wisdom, and attempted to reconstitute Israel around himself believing that his death would usher in the kingdom of God. From these discussion points and others taken up in the talk, Wright makes a case that those who come to the historical sources about Jesus in a responsible manner will find a clear trajectory between the Jesus of the gospels and the theology of the apostle Paul.
This was the second of two talks that N.T. Wright gave at the 19th Annual Wheaton Theology Conference April 16-17, 2010 Jesus, Paul and the People of God: A Theological Dialogue with N.T. Wright.
This lectures given at this conference are out in book form here.
This was the first of two talks that N.T. Wright gave at the 19th Annual Wheaton Theology Conference April 16-17, 2010 Jesus, Paul and the People of God: A Theological Dialogue with N.T. Wright.
This lectures given at this conference are out in book form here.
This was the chapel address given during the 19th Annual Wheaton Theology Conference April 16-17, 2010 Jesus, Paul and the People of God: A Theological Dialogue with N.T. Wright.
This lectures given at this conference are out in book form here.
Revelation and Christian Hope: Political Implications of the Revelation to John
Bishop N.T. Wright presented a lecture on Oct. 8 titled “Revelation and Christian Hope: Political Implications of the Revelation to John” at Duke Divinity School’s Goodson Chapel as part of the McDonald Agape Foundation’s Conference on Revelation.
From October 2010.
You can watch/download the video of this lecture here.
How do Christians communicate Jesus to a world that doesn’t know Him? N.T. (Tom) Wright, one of the leading Bible scholars of our day, explains how a basic understanding of who Christ is can make Him more relevant to every aspect of our lives.
From November 6, 2011 at Willow Creek Community Church.
"There is just now a fashion for upholding something called 'Nicene' Christianity. But the great creeds of the fourth and fifth centuries were never intended as a complete teaching syllabus, and when used that way they screen out the central theme of the four Gospels: How God Became King (aka The Kingdom of God). Western Christianity has thus lurched between a faith based on incarnation and cross (but without 'kingdom') and a social-gospel 'kingdom'-movement (but without incarnation and cross). How can we put back together what the Gospels were trying to tell us all along?"
From the January Series at Calvin College in 2012.