More to the Story with Andy Miller III

“Today we are told to be true to ourselves, look within for answers, and follow our hearts. But when we put our own happiness first, we experience record-breaking levels of aimlessness, loneliness, depression, and anxiety. Self-centeredness always fails to deliver on its promises.”

On Today’s podcast, I talk to Thaddeus Williams about his new book ‘Don’t Follow Your Heart,’ which 
“debunks the ‘ten commandments of self-worship,’ calling on a new generation of mavericks and renegades, heretics who refuse to march in unison with the self-obsessed herd.” 

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Find out more about his book and sign the Heretics Manifesto at this link: https://jointheheretics.com/

Planning your church’s small group curriculum? Check out my Contender Course and Heaven Course! Find out more here - courses.andymilleriii.com

And don’t forget about my new book Contender, which is available on Amazon! 

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What is More to the Story with Andy Miller III?

More to the Story with Dr. Andy Miller III is a new podcast exploring theology in the orthodox Wesleyan tradition. Hear engaging interviews and musings from Dr. Miller each week.

Transcript:

Welcome to the more, to the story of podcast. I'm, so glad you have come along for this important episode, and I think this is gonna be something that'll be important for everybody who's kind of taking in some of the popular messages in our culture. And so I think you'll find this author helpful to you. He's been helpful to me. I'm I'm thankful for his book, but I'm gonna introduce him to you in just a second. But first, I want, you know, this podcast comes to you

from Wesley Biblical Seminary, where we are developing trusted leaders for faithful churches, and we've never had more students than we have right now. This is an exciting time in the life of our seminary, particularly with the emergence of the global Methodist Church.

Andy Miller III: And we're privileged to be able to serve so many pastors who are serving in that church. But on top of that, people from all kinds of denominations, independent churches across the country. So we have. Across the country, across the world we have a bachelor's master's doctoral degrees lay initiatives. We'd love for you to check out@wbs.edu.

Andy Miller III: Also, I'm thankful to my friends at Wpo Development. They're a group that comes alongside churches and institutions, organizations, nonprofits, and and they help them come up with a plan that they can actualize, particularly as it relates, like capital campaigns so often. People just want to come in and raise a bunch of money, and they actually don't think about who they are and what it means to present yourself in a community. So I encourage you

Andy Miller III: to check out Wpo development.com, and you'll find some information about them in my show notes. Also, I have several things available to you for you from Andy Miller. third.com. That's Andy Miller. iii.com. If you sign up for my email list. I'll send you this, a tool called 5 steps to deeper teaching and preaching.

Andy Miller III: It's a 45 min teaching session and a document that you can use to prepare your messages, or like just basic Sunday school class presentations that you might have. I'd love to send that to you if you sign up for my email list. In addition to that, I have a couple of forces, small group studies, my books and things that are available at that site. I love you check for you to check that out at Andy Miller, the third

Andy Miller III: dot com. All right. I am glad to welcome in the podcast fad. Williams, who serves as a professor of theology at Biola University, and he's written a new book called Don't Follow your heart fad. Welcome to the podcast hey, it's a joy to be with you, Andy.

Andy Miller III: hey? So that before we get going too far, I just love to hear a little bit about you. I've I've seen some talks that you've done online and appreciate the work that you're doing, and particularly the way it speaks into this cultural moment. But I don't know really anything about you. Besides the fact that you teach at Biola. So just tell us who that is. Sure professional, interpretive dancer world, ranked body builder.

thaddeusw: Well, that's obvious. Obviously, no, I I'm a theologian. Slash apologist. I teach it. Talbot school of theology. Biola University.

thaddeusw: Okay? I've really sort of my bread and butter, the apologetics.

thaddeusw: Christianity and culture.

thaddeusw: I come from the Kiperian tradition. I did my Phd. At the free University of Amsterdam. So, kudos to you for allowing the Calvinist on your show, really driven by the conviction that I'm sure you shared that

thaddeusw: All truth is Christ truth, Jesus is

thaddeusw: Lord over every square inch of reality. So he should be lord over how we think of business and philosophy and psychology, and

thaddeusw: brewing coffee and anything else you could possibly imagine. So that's really the heartbeat of my ministry is turning people onto the lordship of Jesus over every square inch.

Andy Miller III: Amen. I think even Wesley, I'm gonna affirm all those things that's great. My son. My 14 year old son went away to a ski retreat. I have 16 and 14 sons, and they he came back, and he texted me early in the morning, and he said, Dad, I was up till 2 am like, Oh, my goodness, I will worry about! Why were you up till 2 am. And he said I was debating with the Calvinist.

thaddeusw: and that's like, you know, as a somebody works in theology. I was like, you know, you have your first date first dance first kiss from like ha! Sign congratulations.

Andy Miller III: That's right, and and you might say same thing it. It. It's a great moment for him and hit to think about what he believes, and II want him just like I think we all want for our children to like to pursue truth. And I said we we might be wrong. We might. We check this out. Check this out. So.

Andy Miller III: oh, yeah, just for clarity. Yeah, I have a 7 year, old boy, and he came home from baseball practice the other day, and he didn't say you just debated in our Mini, and he said, I just owned a Pelagian. I respect that. You know. What what are they teaching you on that T-ball team? You know

Andy Miller III: theologians children should get together. They have some interesting stories to share, theologians, children debating. I love it. Tell me about your academic research. Tell me your dissertation. Did you do it on Kuiper?

thaddeusw: Not quite so I did the problem of evil, and it was about a 4 year research project for the Dissertation, when all said and done from conception to public defense.

thaddeusw: Pretty much solve the problem of evil, I think congratulations first year. So

thaddeusw: process we we could check that box. It just it's just solved. So it's really zooming in on the

thaddeusw: the free will defense specifically the relational free will defense. God didn't want a universe populated with chatty Cathy dolls and robots who

thaddeusw: just recite a preprogrammed. I love you. He wants authentic love, and as the argument goes, libertarian, free will is a precondition of authentic love.

thaddeusw: And so that is the relational free will defense. You find it in in Cs. Lewis. I find versions of it as far back as as Plato and Aristotle.

thaddeusw: Augustine. Early Augustine gives a version of the argument, and it's a it's wildly popular today. Maybe the most popular

thaddeusw: Christian response to the problem of evil. And so I approached the relational free will defense philosophically. biblically and pastorally, and show that it doesn't work.

thaddeusw: Hello, okay, the way you were explained. There, I thought you were saying, you're going to defend it. And I thought, Well, I thought I thought you said you're a Calvinist. So there you go. Yeah, II think there's there's some better ways to to

thaddeusw: if you push the logic of the relational free will defense.

thaddeusw: No? Yeah. Yeah. And let's say, I have

thaddeusw: a Buddy, whose marriage is struggling.

thaddeusw: Yeah. And I know that. There's some some anti love patterns and habits that are giving

thaddeusw: him and his wife a hard time

thaddeusw: the way I would pray for them is similar to the way. Paul would pray in, say, first, Thessalonians, 3, 12, when he says, May God

thaddeusw: cause you to increase and abound in love. or if I have a a non-believing neighbor

thaddeusw: who has 0 affection for Jesus doesn't know

thaddeusw: his or her Creator. I would pray for them

thaddeusw: pretty definitively to increase and abound in love for their Creator.

thaddeusw: And so I would argue that God, part of God being God, is, he has a unique and sovereign access to the human heart to reorder our affections

thaddeusw: so that we can love authentically. And he can do that because he's God without reducing us to robots. Hmm, so all all that research is in a book with leximpress called God reforms, hearts.

thaddeusw: God reforms hearts, rethinking free will

thaddeusw: and the problem of evil

Andy Miller III: interesting. I had one of my one of my professors people fostered. I appreciate Jerry Walls, and he wrote,

Andy Miller III: I one of it, he he responded to album planning as a free will argument. And there was a place where you know I think it was. The article would might have been something like, Why, Alvin, planic yeah, hasn't gone far enough, or something with a free Wh. What free will defenses go far enough. Maybe you've seen the article, he, what I read in class this album planet does a response. And it just said. At 1 point he finally said.

thaddeusw: Jerry Walls is right about this of that, and then it says, but he misses. But he just stopped right there. Jerry Walls is right.

thaddeusw: Him and Scott Burson did sort of a biopic on

thaddeusw: Cs. Lewis and Francis Schaefer. Yeah. And then I didn't he write? Why, I'm not a Calvinist or something like that. Yeah. So I interact quite a bit with Jerry walls. I have a lot of respect for him. Yeah.

Andy Miller III: Well, so the tradition I'm in the kind of evangelical Wesley and world. A lot of folks who are connected him through Asbury Theological Seminary, and then also, like Wesley Biblical Seminary, we're kind of in that same

Andy Miller III: kind of lane in Wesleyanism which is in an interesting moment. Now, as there is this break with United Methodism, where most evangelical methods most, I say most are a part of some type of new denomination. So is is thinkers like that who have been really helpful in in somebody like that, with a clear philosophical foundation that's helped even identify some of these

Andy Miller III: realities, particularly like things about the nature of heaven and hell. So anyways, it's it's I'm glad I'm glad that he's his Ryan's main way to to use. It's a rare bird in these debates. Who can? Who's conversant with the underlying

thaddeusw: issues and analytic philosophy and the Biblical acts of Jesus end of it? He's one of those rare birds. So yeah.

Andy Miller III: right? It's great. Well, I'm I know. Tell me real briefly, you mentioned one son playing t-ball. Any other children? Yeah, yeah. So little little Hendrick.

thaddeusw: Hendrik is 7,

thaddeusw: and he's a a giant chiefs fan, so he's really happy. I don't know when this will air, but he's pretty pumped that we. We inched out the the bills just just last night.

So we're going to the division playoffs. He loves the chiefs. He loves monster trucks. He loves

thaddeusw: race cars he's he's sort of an all American boy.

thaddeusw: And he just told my wife about a week ago. said, mommy. I love Jesus so much. I just love Jesus so much. Can Daddy baptize me?

thaddeusw: So that was like one of those highlight moments of of ever so there's little Henry, and then he's got a big sister who just turned 10 like a week ago. That's Harlow

thaddeusw: Carlos, like the little uber genius of the family. When she was 3 years old

thaddeusw: I was putting her to bed.

thaddeusw: and I was praying. You know, Jesus, thank you for making Harlow so beautiful and so smart, and so silly, and so ticklish, and so Smiley. Amen! And 3 year old Harlow looks up at me and says, Dad, you forgot to mention erudite.

thaddeusw: So after I Googled area diet, I was like, Oh, yeah, extremely intelligent. Yeah, that track. So she's she's a little genius. We have

thaddeusw: Holland, who we call Dutch for short. She's actually on the cover of the book, that's her, I would say. That's her

thaddeusw: book cover modeling debut. But I managed to sneak the kids somewhere on the cover of all of my books. So this is her, I guess her fifth

thaddeusw: cover modeling gig

thaddeusw: she is into volleyball and loves Jesus. I got to baptize her on father's day this last June, which is pretty incredible. And then we have a 19 year old Gracie

thaddeusw: Graceland, and she is applying her skills at Barista in right now and hopefully. She'll be at Biola here in the next year.

thaddeusw: studying under her, old man.

Andy Miller III: There you go. That'll be interesting. Well, thanks for sharing. Like to get to know people a little bit before you get. I imagine your kids might even been behind a wine to write a book like this. Now having a 19 year old, every chapters begins with a hashtag. So this this. II really I think this is a pro. I mean, it's a great time for a book like this to come out. Of course, this these ideas have been present for a while. It's called. Don't follow your heart boldly breaking the 10 commandments of self worship.

thaddeusw: So tell tell us, kind of what was the context for you wanting to pursue this project? Yeah, a lot of it was just being a dad, you know, my wife and I looking at the the propaganda coming at our kids from virtually every direction.

thaddeusw: Yeah. Where you have sort of the the traditional

thaddeusw: Disney plotline coming from the classics from the vault like Cinderella.

thaddeusw: There's a way that kindness

thaddeusw: and humility and gentleness, triumph over vanity and cruelty.

thaddeusw: Pinocchio. The way to become a real boy is through courage, Pinocchio sacrificing his life to save Chippeto from the Sea Monster Monstro but

thaddeusw: the more he lies, the less real boy-like he becomes, the more tree-like he becomes right. His nose turns into a tree branch, he goes off to Pleasure Island and makes a literal ass out of himself, sprouting donkey ears and a donkey tail.

thaddeusw: So

thaddeusw: the traditional Disney corpus that we were probably raised on

thaddeusw: these stories unfold within a morally structured universe.

thaddeusw: Where there's a way to flourish and thrive as human being, and a way to be less than a real boy or a real girl. Well, I notice

thaddeusw: I was riding in my backyard. We have this little courtyard. and

thaddeusw: I was working on an article, and I could overhear in our living room. That's right behind me. Here

thaddeusw: the kids were watching. The girls were watching the my little pony movie. and it has a song called Time to be Awesome. and the lyrics are, you know, take this Storm King's rules and toss them. It's time to be you time to be awesome. It's sort of this anthem to

thaddeusw: to self definition, to to asserting be being authentic to your own feelings and emotions. And as that song is playing

thaddeusw: to my right, to my left a car pulls into our little street and is blasting the anthem. The overplayed anthem from frozen. Let it go, let it go

thaddeusw: with the famous line, no right, no wrong, no rules for me. I'm free. And so this this new ideology of self rule.

thaddeusw: autonomy.

thaddeusw: follow your heart. Be true to yourself, you. Do you live your best life, Yolo?

thaddeusw: I saw that this is coming at kids from very tender ages. and so by the time they grow up and end up in the university. It's just

thaddeusw: the the indoctrination has largely occur occurred. And so my job as a university professors often to sort of detox students to inoculate them, to to immunize them to this false gospel of self worship that they've been getting from every direction.

Andy Miller III: Yes.

Andy Miller III: it I was a at A, with a research group at the University of Manchester this past summer, and there was a a colleague of mine who is there who, grown up in a similar tradition as mine and

Andy Miller III: but I but had, since it were not recently kind of liberalized on all of the key points of of culture at this point, from same-sex marriage to the existence of truth and all I mean. It just is all there and and this is describing for me his journey, and then next day we are going to an event together, and he had a shirt on.

Andy Miller III: and the shirt was a pitcher, a silhouette of himself

thaddeusw: smoking a cigar.

Andy Miller III: and then I didn't know it was actually of him, and below it it had his last name, Ology. So like for me, Miller, like Miller Ology. So I said to us, so what's what's up with your shirt, I mean is that you? What's the deal? He said. No, no, this is my, this is my new perspective, you know, like we both grew up in the holiness movement. Holiness, tradition, he's like can't be all that stuff is like. Now, like, this is my.

Andy Miller III: this is the way I approach life now, like it is. That's exactly it. So so I mean, like doing. Realize, like what you're taking. And now it doesn't have to be. Theology could be biology. It could be any other thing. But what is it? That's what is it that's being exalted? It's the self. It's like the individual. And

Andy Miller III: yeah.

thaddeusw: which which? Let me let me sort of frame your your buddy's shirt theologically.

thaddeusw: gk, Chesterton, you know the great Roman Catholic humorist and

thaddeusw: novelist crime novel author and just theologian extraordinaire, he said. Christianity came into the world. Firstly, in order to assert with violence that a man had not only to look inwards, but to look outwards.

thaddeusw: to behold with astonishment and enthusiasm, a divine company, and a divine captain. The only fun of being a Christian was that a man was not left alone with their inner light, but definitely recognized. An outer light fares the sun.

thaddeusw: Umhm, and so II love the way Cheshire and sets it up right out of the gate is, Look, Christian is the antithesis of this

thaddeusw: Millerology or Williams Ology, where, if I'm looking within for answers which I document in the book, over 90% of Americans

thaddeusw: said. If you want answers, look within.

thaddeusw: If you look within, you don't find answers, you. You end up with a bad case of claustrophobia. You're trapped in your own head. Right? You

thaddeusw: David Foster Wallace, the great post modern novelist, said that we become kings and queens of our tiny skull sized kingdoms. We're we're trapped in our own little skull sized kingdoms. And I'm arguing that.

thaddeusw: you know, I just this.

thaddeusw: A week ago today, actually, I was in Minnesota.

thaddeusw: speaking for Martin Luther, King, Junior Day Event, and an Eb free Conference out there.

thaddeusw: and it was minus 7 degrees, which is a Southern California boy, I'm not so used to wind chill. Put it at minus 30 degrees. So

thaddeusw: once I thought out with God's frozen chosen up there. Can you say? Frozen chosen. So anyway, I had the there's about a hundred 50

thaddeusw: church leaders and pastors there, and I talked for a little bit about expressive individualism, this cult of self worship that's all around us. And that's really sort of the context we find ourselves in.

thaddeusw: And I said, You know. Turn to your neighbor and say, you're awesome.

thaddeusw: Umhm. And they all had a blast of that. Turning to each other. You're awesome. And I'm like, Yeah, theologically. You're sitting next to an image bearer of God. Cs. Lewis famously said you you never have met a mere mortal right ever every image bearer of God you're you're interacting with awesomely eternal beings.

Andy Miller III: Now, I said.

thaddeusw: Turn to your neighbor and say you're nowhere near as awesome as God, and they had a blast with that telling each other you're nowhere near as awesome as God. And so that's really one of the the driving arguments of the book is that self worship and the final analysis robs us of awe.

thaddeusw: were designed to be awestruck by something, or rather someone infinitely more interesting

thaddeusw: than we are.

thaddeusw: And if I'm swept up with Williams ology, or you know, a devotee to millerology or your buddies, you know self-obsession.

thaddeusw: it it sounds it. It markets itself as cool and edgy and trendy. It's really just robbing us of off, or literally the most awesome being in existence.

Andy Miller III: Yeah, I love how at 1 point in the book you end up saying, like not to look in, but to look up. Not that it has to be kind of like a spatially driven type of thing as if God is up or down. But just one thing I love about the book that you do

thaddeusw: is there's a chapter where you work through the details, philosophical assumptions, theological sums, and then you have a testimony in each chapter of somebody who has walked beyond that particular lie, or that particular guy should call like the the you know, the 1010 Commandments of the but then II love. I'll I forget what's called heretics something like a heretics guy.

Andy Miller III: Yeah, here's yeah. It's you get, you get out of it. And 1 one of those is just like to go and just be in all like to go and look up. You know, to seeing how great thou art, seeing holy, holy, holy is. Are those type of practices antidotes to this problem.

thaddeusw: Yeah, that in many ways there's there's a lot of, there's a growing field of positive psychology. Studying awe. What are the effects of being awestruck by something bigger than yourself

thaddeusw: on the Human Psyche.

thaddeusw: And so out of Arizona State University, there's a researcher named Michelle Shiota.

thaddeusw: and she documents that you know, 35,000 people a year

thaddeusw: make the inconvenient trek to Nepal, to to gaze upon the majesty of Mount Everest. 35,000 threefive 1 million a year. Go to Yosemite to marvel at, say, Half Dome.

thaddeusw: 4.5 1 million. Go to the Grand Canyon.

thaddeusw: and and nobody goes to the Grand Canyon, or Half Dome, or Mount Everest to feel big about themselves right. Nobody stands on on the edge of the Grand Canyon. Behold me and all of my you go to feel small.

thaddeusw: to be so

thaddeusw: again, awestruck at something bigger than yourself. There's something really, really freeing in the self forgetfulness that comes from being awestruck. And so in in Sheoda's research she found that in a mental state of awe

thaddeusw: people are

thaddeusw: Their cognitive faculties

thaddeusw: function way. Better so. She would have her study subjects read of

thaddeusw: an article or something just riddled with fallacies and falsehoods and then she would subject them to what she called elicitors of awe. and people were harder to dupe.

thaddeusw: People could think more clearly. They could spot bad arguments. There's a researcher in positive psychology studying all out here where I am in Southern California. At Uci a guy named Paul Piff, and he's found that

thaddeusw: by subjecting people to elicitors of awe, they become more what he calls prosocial. They love their neighbors better, they care more about the environment or God's creation. Just the

thaddeusw: the science is slowly catching up to the Scriptures. Right Scriptures have been telling us

thaddeusw: for millennia that we are designed for in Hebrew. Yerah! Yerah! Is reverence. Aw

thaddeusw: the fear of the Lord.

thaddeusw: And so it seems like the the Bible's had it right all along.

thaddeusw: That's really an antidote to. And there's documentation on this, that if you are depressed, if you're trapped in your skull, size, kingdom, if you're suffering panic, anxiety, things like that.

thaddeusw: one of the most basic remedies is getting out into nature, getting out into God's creation.

thaddeusw: stopping to smell the flowers, you know, watching the the cloud formations float across the sky.

thaddeusw: Watching the the blue sky turned dark purple, and the clouds turned

thaddeusw: dark orange and pink, and then the stars come out that has a demonstrable, measurable effect in reducing rates of depression and anxiety. So yeah, every chapter ends with here's some some tips that today you could go out and

thaddeusw: live with more reverence for God and be more countercultural in the book. I say, be a heretic against the cult of self worship. And so the book has probably 50

thaddeusw: sort of daily liturgies you can practice to to

thaddeusw: help resist the draw of narcissism.

Andy Miller III: Yeah, I love how you have a a heretics prayer, too, in that. And it's all this kind of turning things just in in the opposite direction. I think that helps me in your book. Help me think through that a little better. II also. I enjoyed thinking of this skull, sized reality that we can experience.

Andy Miller III: I I'm a fan of Rich Mullins, and I had as biographer. James Brian Smith on my, on my Podcast last year. So but I had. II can't remember the song that you quote here at the beginning of the follow your heart. Chapter

Andy Miller III: but it's a similar idea. They they said, boy, you must follow your heart. but my heart just led me into my chest.

Andy Miller III: But the Father of Hearts, he is the one I've chosen, and I will follow him.

thaddeusw: I love that like it just leads us leads us inward, and that's gonna happen. And and, as you said, my, my favorite part of the book personally is the end of every chapter. As you pointed out, I have

thaddeusw: sort of a heretics confession.

thaddeusw: Ii recruited some of my favorite heretics who are rebelling against the cult of self worship. So you're Gonna hear stories from the great apologist Josh. Mcdowell.

thaddeusw: and how he he found freedom from following his heart.

thaddeusw: My personal mentor, dear friend JP. Morland.

thaddeusw: My colleague at Talbot, talking about how he found freedom from the burden of self.

thaddeusw: You have, Johnny Eric Sentata, who's just a brilliant, brilliant theologian, Christian mind, author and artist. How Jesus set her free from the cult of self worship. Carl Truman adds his voice to the list.

thaddeusw: So yeah, I was. I was pretty honored at some of the voices willing to step up and and share their their own sort of heretic stories. And then it all sort of culminates in the end.

thaddeusw: The final chapter is what I call the heretics manifesto.

Andy Miller III: which has gotten

thaddeusw: somewhere around a thousand signatures, but if and it's

thaddeusw: it's growing by the day. But if listeners want to check it out and sort of get a sneak peek at, you can read the whole manifesto. You can watch, some videos, some podcast. Read some articles, some supplementary material to the book. If you just go to join the hereticscom. Join theherticscom. It's got all the resources there at your fingertips. And you can read the manifesto and add your name to the growing list so

Andy Miller III: awesome.

thaddeusw: Join the heretics. Let's do it. Jp. More. I had Jp. Morgan last year. I talked about his book on miracles, and so I'll just turn you over to his hands, as it relates to human freedom. So have a 20 year long

Andy Miller III: running feud over the free will question. We have a lot of fun together. I'm sure you do. Oh, I so appreciate. And I you know his recent stuff to my human constitution. I you know he's just been such a gifted church. So what a what a blessing for you to be able work with him! We're good pals!

thaddeusw: I want to. II love. Okay, before I want to get into a few of the actual hashtag chapters. Let me just interject real quick cause it. It ties in Jp. Morland with what we were just talking.

thaddeusw: his. His office is about a first down away from mine, you know, about 1010 yards apart, and so I just saw him. I bumped into him last Wednesday.

thaddeusw: and the typical greeting

thaddeusw: from him will be something like Good morning, idiot, or how you doing moron? And you know, here's Jp. Morland, one of the top 50, according to Time Magazine, one of the top 50 living thinkers and philosophers.

thaddeusw: and here he is, you know, calling me an idiot, fairly, regularly. And

thaddeusw: before listeners think. Oh, well, Jp. Belongs on.

thaddeusw: you know, Time magazine's top 50 living and sensitive jerks. List, let me explain what he means.

thaddeusw: it's actually a blessing. JP. Understands. And this is part of what I'm arguing in the book

thaddeusw: that when you take God seriously, it frees you up from having to take yourself that seriously right? And it's what GK. Chesterton.

thaddeusw: Excuse me what GK. Chesterton was after when he said, angels can fly because they take themselves so lightly. Angels can fly because they take themselves so lightly and so so Jp. Is a

thaddeusw: healthy weekly reminder. Hey, Williams, don't take yourself so seriously like you're an idiot. Then, compared to the infinite

thaddeusw: omniscience, all powerful sovereign Creator and Sustainer of the universe. You're an idiot. And so it's okay to laugh at yourself. And that's

thaddeusw: part of what I'm up to in the book is trying to pass on that freedom from the burden of self. When you take God more seriously when you follow God's heart instead of your heart.

thaddeusw: yeah, life gets exponentially easier because you're not center stage trying to prove anything

Andy Miller III: right. Amen. You, my dad said this line

Andy Miller III: long before I heard Dave Ramsey say it on a radio show, but when people ask him how he's doing, he he always responds. I'm doing better than I deserve.

thaddeusw: And so there's like this sense, that of putting yourself in the in a proper position. Even when you answer a question like that that's great.

Andy Miller III: III love this little section that you have. It caught me by surprise, and I forget which chapters in. But you have a imaginary dialogue with Foo Co. And this is a big part of what you're doing in the book and

thaddeusw: of of interacting with these kind of key players, key thinkers and finding their contemporary voices as well. But you went right. You kind of imagine going back in 1,984. Tell tell me a little bit about that, and maybe even describe what you're trying to do in that conversation is.

thaddeusw: you know, if if let's take a hypothetical teenager. Let's call him. I don't know. Chaz and Chaz is a

thaddeusw: you know. He's washed his his fair share of follow your heart propaganda. and he finds himself

thaddeusw: with a desire.

thaddeusw: But let's say Chaz is growing up in North Ireland.

thaddeusw: near Belfast.

thaddeusw: and Chaz finds within himself a desire to

thaddeusw: to fight

thaddeusw: and somebody comes along and says, Follow your heart.

thaddeusw: He may think he's being true to himself.

thaddeusw: because he finds within himself emotions for for aggression and courage, and

thaddeusw: the the will to fight. But if you pick little Chaz up by the scruff scruff of his neck and you drop him in

thaddeusw: I don't know. The gender studies department at Berkeley.

thaddeusw: and now he finds within himself this desire to explore his inner interpretive dancer.

thaddeusw: Or explore. You know his gender identity. Maybe he needs to. You know, Rebrand himself is is Chasalina or something, and and and change his pronouns. And

thaddeusw: now he's gonna zoom in on wait. There's these certain classically feminine emotions that I'm experiencing.

thaddeusw: So so in both scenarios. little Chas will be convinced he's following his heart. In reality

thaddeusw: he's actually doing the bidding of ideologues, in whatever plausibility structure he finds himself within.

thaddeusw: Who are who have turned him into a good little obedient cow to borrow Nietzsche's terminology. He's just joined the herd, whatever's around him all the while. Duped into thinking he's being ubermotch he's being the superman. He's charting his own path. He's really just just moving in in obedience to wherever he finds himself. And so

thaddeusw: folks who are following their hearts. Hashtag, following their hearts.

thaddeusw: tend to be doing the bidding

thaddeusw: oftentimes of ideal logs. They've never even heard of right? Right? Right? Right? And so, you know, maybe they've never heard of Jean-paul Sart, in his existential philosophy, saying, you just exist.

thaddeusw: Now it's on you to create your essence through an act of will power, you create your own reality. They might have never read being and nothingness, but they are marching like good little cows, in obedience to to the ideology of Saint Sart.

thaddeusw: Maybe they couldn't quote the spake. They'reathustra. They they don't know how to

thaddeusw: properly, pronounced Frederick Nietzsche

Andy Miller III: right, but they are

thaddeusw: buying into his ideology that you need to devour traditional morality, and you need to assert your will to power and be your authentic self.

thaddeusw: Foucault is one of the big ones. Foucault sort of sexualizes Nietzsche

thaddeusw: for Nietzsche, you know, by by spitting on the contemptible type of well-being dreamed up by shopkeepers cows democrats and other Christians. That's a Nietzschi quote.

thaddeusw: Foucault says, well, the way to spit at that contemptible, outdated morality

thaddeusw: is by

thaddeusw: spitting on traditional sexual morality, and so through acts that culture would consider sexually deviant. you are enacting this kind of Nietzschian revolution, and you are.

thaddeusw: Foucault says, flat out that sex is worth dying for. So sexual expression becomes now the way to follow your heart. So if you have a desire.

thaddeusw: let's say somebody's watching. I don't know fight club, and they see Brad Pitt with no shirt on.

thaddeusw: 20 years ago. Maybe if you're a dude watching that, you'd think there's an attractive dude.

thaddeusw: and you sort of go on with your life

thaddeusw: now under Foucault's and the other gender theorists like Judith Butler and John Money and Wilhelm Reich and Harry Benjamin and Alfred Kinsey. These these thinkers who have shaped our moment

thaddeusw: now it's like Whoa!

thaddeusw: I just thought Brad Pitt look good with the shirt off. I need to really press into that feeling, and I have. I have to be as obedient to my emotions as the Muslim is to the Quran or the Christian is to the Scriptures. So what does this mean about? So now, it's not just a fleeting

thaddeusw: moment of attraction. Now, this is my identity, and to be authentic. I need to obey

thaddeusw: that version of myself, or I'm living a lie and, man. I could just tell you, once people start thinking about everything in terms of this is my identity. This emotion defines me, you know they they have never heard of Michel Foucault for the most part, but they are good, faithful devotees

thaddeusw: to this ideologue. And if you look at

thaddeusw: the architects of this expressive individualism and the sexualized version of that. you could scarcely find a more miserable bunch.

thaddeusw: Luco was suicidal throughout his adult life.

He was sado masochist.

thaddeusw: He, after he knew he had contracted aids sadly in the early 80 S. He was one of the first sort of public figures to get. HIV. He continued

thaddeusw: to indulge his to live out his false gospel of sexual indulgence. And who knows how many people? He ended up killing in the process. If you look at

thaddeusw: Jean-paul sart

thaddeusw: he was a pill popper. Where? He said, towards the end of his life, you know he would. He would hide vodka behind his books in his library, and he would you know, pop dozens of pills every day? He was a miserable man, with a long trail of carnage behind him, of women that he would he was a sexual predator. If you look at at John money, if you look at Jacques Derrida, if if you look at the actual

thaddeusw: people who thought up what is now being

thaddeusw: put to catchy tunes in Disney films, you will again. It's hard to find a more miserable bunch, and the folks who are following in their footsteps are inheriting the the same misery.

thaddeusw: There's a reason that that anxiety and depression and suicidality are those rates are breaking records, and it has a lot to do with. I mean, there's not a single explanation. But one of the factors, I would argue, is, we bought into this

thaddeusw: age old lie of the serpent in Genesis? 3. That you can define your own reality, that you could be the center point of your own existence.

Andy Miller III: Right? That I thank you for apple laying that out. And it was really I just encourage people to find this book, and then to find that that chapter, particularly where you lay out this conversation of you just going back and forth

Andy Miller III: with Foucault. And also just I appreciate you. Highlighting like this is what's going to come from all that. And sadly, we're probably about the same age kids, similar age. Anticipating that my children and and me in my older years I'll be dealing with us as somebody else has identified the the refugees of the sexual.

Andy Miller III: We're dealing with the reality that that people will have destroyed their bodies

Andy Miller III: because of listening to these voices and listening to these leaders, even if they're not the one even they don't read it themselves. Even. They just picked up on it from Elsa and any other Disney character along the way. This is this is a wild time, and there's a sense

Andy Miller III: they this, this, your book is helping us just identify these lies at the front. So especially for parents, for parents who are raising kids in this cultural moment.

thaddeusw: I think they will particularly find helpful. The the habits through routines, the the liturgies that I recommend at the end of every chapter. So something I do literally on the dinner table right behind me. We do some basic liturgies where em every Monday

thaddeusw: we call it magnificent Monday, and we go around the dinner table. What's something magnificent about God? You know what? What's something that makes God awesome now we do terrible Tuesdays. What's something terrible in the world or in in your life, or in your friend's life, or somebody's life that we can pray for. And then we do wicked Wednesdays, wicked Wednesdays. It's not the kids favorite. But it's pretty central, because it's a time for family confession. We go around. And here's

thaddeusw: here's something I really messed up this week. Here was a sin that I gave into this week. And so they're learning that they are not the moral authority in the universe. They're learning that

thaddeusw: that God is the moral authority, and that we fail to follow his heart. And so we we can confess and take that to the cross together. Then we do thankful Thursdays.

thaddeusw: Where do you know what's something? We're grateful to God for this week. It could be, you know, the taste of this burrito right now. It could be you know

thaddeusw: the sunrise this morning, whatever it might be, and then we do. Freaked out Fridays freaked out. Friday. What's something freaking you out? What's something that's got you anxious and nervous, and that way they learn. Because.

thaddeusw: man, follow your heart. If you look at the anxiety

thaddeusw: rates and how they've skyrocketed, you know John Height and Greg Lukanov document as well in the book coddling in the American mind. anxiety rates have hit historic high. So if you're telling somebody follow your heart and they look within. It's just this tangled mess of anxiety. What? What terrible advice! It's just mean. And and the final analysis is just mean, because people buckle under the impossible weight

thaddeusw: of constructing and then sustaining their own identity. That's a God sized task. God's much better at authoring our lives than we are so freaked out Fridays were able to say, Look, here's what's actually in our hearts. We got all these irrational fears. Let's bring them before the sovereignty of God.

thaddeusw: And so just basic day in, day out, liturgies that remind us that

thaddeusw: we aren't. The center point of existence is how you raise the next generation of heretics.

Andy Miller III: I love it. The. I appreciate one of the disciplines that you had at the end of the chapter for the chapter on II have it here. The answers are within hashtag. The answers are within is to just go through that list

Andy Miller III: from height, and Lukanoff to just look at those 9 things and say which one of these, which which which which are these happy day in my life, so like emotional reasoning, catastrophicizing over generalizing. Thank you for

Andy Miller III: Mindy, labeling, negative filtering, the discounting positives, blaming, going through these. I think it it's a helpful thing because these are tendencies that we have, and in our in the Wessex Introduction. One thing to like to emphasize through band meetings and class meetings that John Wesley put in a place, and I'm part of one of these that meets every Thursday at 7 Am.

Andy Miller III: One of the we asked, like the the guys in the group in a band meetings like 3 to 5 people, and you you all of the same gender.

Andy Miller III: And so you come and you ask 5 questions of each other, and one of them is, where have I send this week? And then, are there any secrets that I'm with holding right to to trying to give an opportunity for this to come out at some point. So,

thaddeusw: you know, I like that. You have an opportunity to go ahead and call these things out. Where? Where am I? And allowing this culture to come in and and allowing myself to seek to find answers within myself. Yeah, exactly. And it's important to see, too, Andy, that it's not

thaddeusw: The the book isn't just a polemic against self worship

thaddeusw: or an apologetic for god worship. It's it's in in traditional theological categories. It would be called an a lanc. It's not a word we use much anymore. But Francis Turretton wrote the Institutes of a Lancet Theology and a Lanc is simultaneously a polemic against something and an apologetic for something. So you're doing both at the same time. And so I'm arguing both against self worship and for God worship

thaddeusw: in a way that's

thaddeusw: That isn't. That doesn't leave the reader just sort of floating in abstraction.

thaddeusw: But here's we aren't in outer space here. How does this re-enter the atmosphere and come down to the real world where we live and breathe. And so, yeah, I think it's it's a helpful resources, I know, for

thaddeusw: I got a message from a dear friend of mine up in Minnesota.

thaddeusw: who said, his daughter's 13 year old daughter is going through, and she says she's she's eating it up. She's loving it. So it's it's written in a way that a 13 year old could could it just be a page, Turner, and also for for parents to to strike a a wide wide range of folks out there who can.

thaddeusw: I mean? And let's face it. What's the alternative? In the culture

thaddeusw: as people are buckling under the impossible weight of self worship.

thaddeusw: Where? Where else do you go? Some folks would say, Okay, well, I'm going to turn from the self. If myself is inadequate. History has taught us that oftentimes in seasons of

thaddeusw: radical autonomy and self-definition.

thaddeusw: they're frequently followed by Syrians. By by seasons of looking to the State as the ultimate meaning maker. So there's this pendulum swing. You can see it in ancient Greece.

thaddeusw: You can see it in 1930. S. Germany?

thaddeusw: You could see it in Mao's China installing Soviet Union, where an over emphasis on self leads to this pendulum swing, where, as Chesterton said, once, you abolish God, the government becomes God right? So there is this sort of totalitarian swing, and II dive into that in the sort of companion book we were talking before the show confronting injustice without compromising truth.

thaddeusw: it's sort of written in tandem with this one where that one dives into the social justice questions of the age and this one really zooms in on what's underneath a lot of the social justice ideology is

thaddeusw: this bad theology that puts the self-centered stage

Andy Miller III: interesting? I wonder, too, about a hermeneutical

Andy Miller III: foundation for this, too, with with reference to Scripture. So I bet. I think I think by Ola Talbot has, like a statement on Aaron C. As does Seminary, and that's not actually common within the Wesleyan tradition to have that perspective. But it should be if if we were following we Wesley as a whole. But do you think that there is a connection with affirming Scriptures authority with this direction? II have an idea. And and

and I'm just curious to flesh that out here with you a little bit. Do you see see a connection between us affirming

thaddeusw: a source of truth outside of ourselves.

thaddeusw: friends who, once they budge on an errand. See, one of the first steps is they find passages that that rub them the wrong way.

thaddeusw: Yeah, passages they they don't like. And and so that reveals an underlying

thaddeusw: epistemology that their final authority in the last analysis is, does this jive with my emotions, and so they'll say, you know. Well.

thaddeusw: you know, I'll be a partial inherentist, you know. Some of it's inspired, but but not all of it. Okay, well.

thaddeusw: what's the part that these would say isn't the authoritative word of God? And lo and behold, it's all the parts they don't like. And so you end up now, epistemologically, what's in the driver's seat? It's the fallen emotion emotional states of

thaddeusw: of the interpreter. And so absolutely understand. You know, the biggest shifts in the history of culture.

thaddeusw: before their artistic shifts, before their architectural shifts, before their economic shifts. They tend to be

originally

thaddeusw: epistemological shifts, how shifts in how we know what we know. And so the Reformation. There's a reason of the 5 solas that solos Scriptura's put first.

thaddeusw: You have to start with the epistemology. Where do I go for truth? For ultimate truth and final authoritative answers solo. Scripture is Scripture alone.

thaddeusw: That that is a clean epistemological break from the epistemology of well Scripture plus tradition.

thaddeusw: right when when Descartes comes around with his famous Kajito. I think, therefore, I am

Andy Miller III: right. He's ushering in an epistemological shift, where the autonomous self is the starting point of knowledge. Right when the postmoderns come along and

thaddeusw: and destroy or deconstruct all Meta narratives

thaddeusw: and say that really you're you're trapped in your skull, size, kingdom, the the self, the the emotion becomes

thaddeusw: the the final word on reality.

thaddeusw: And so yes, all of these shifts are epistemologically rooted. and so to affirm, a good

thaddeusw: safeguard against the expressive individualism is a strong, ringing affirmation of inerrancy and not just on paper. I'm all for

thaddeusw: statements and and and creeds and and declarations. Those are great.

thaddeusw: but on a deeper level. An epistemology isn't just how you would answer a question on a philosophy

thaddeusw: exam. But your epistemology is what you live out day in and day out.

thaddeusw: Am I trusting my emotions and what they say about me? Or am am I going to the word and preaching to my emotions, and setting my emotions straight in light of the word. So let me give just one quick example. Here.

thaddeusw: Ii give a list on a

thaddeusw: on page 42, I say, you know, go through this list and tell me any of these feelings that maybe you had today. So I felt pretty much nothing like an emotionally dead fish. I felt deeply secure in who I am in my life mission.

thaddeusw: I felt panicky and unsure of myself. I felt angry at myself. I felt confused, jumbled up inside. I felt confident, optimistic, overwhelmed, drained fun, attractive, isolated, lonesome. I go through these emotions and I say, okay, on any given day you're going to have

thaddeusw: these vacillating.

thaddeusw: self referential emotions, ways you feel about yourself that are

thaddeusw: in flux.

Andy Miller III: Yeah.

thaddeusw: And so let's say, you wake up one day and you just feel

thaddeusw: terrible like a big waste of space or something an ho! Hum! Nobody loves me. I'm just

thaddeusw: big waste of space. And then

thaddeusw: talking about, you know, a lived epistemology. You go to the Scripture.

thaddeusw: and you say you know what I'm going to distrust my emotions because they are not infallible. They are not inerrant.

thaddeusw: And let's say you open up, John 17

thaddeusw: in your reading along. And here's we get to eavesdrop on this intra Trinitarian conversation right? It's the son addressing the Father the night before his execution, and John 17. And Jesus says, You know I'm not just praying for my apostles. I'm praying for everyone through the echelons of time. Who will believe in me through their word? That's us. He's praying for us.

thaddeusw: and he prays for our oneness that we would be in him as he is in the Father, and the Father's in Him. And then in John 17, Jesus makes a staggering claim where he says.

thaddeusw: Father, you loved them. Yeah, referring to us.

thaddeusw: and it's a little Greek

thaddeusw: phrase, Cathos. You love them, Cathos, you loved me, you love them even as to the same extent that equivalent to how you love me.

thaddeusw: And so now I'm living my epistemology. I'm saying, Ok, I'm going to push back on my emotions here. I'm going to meditate on what God is saying here, and take God's Word more seriously than I take my fallen emotions.

thaddeusw: How does God love the son? If I'm loved, even as the father loves a son

thaddeusw: well, the father loves a son infinitely, and he loves a son irreversibly and unapologetically, and with the full weight of his divine perfections. And and now I'm pondering that I'm letting Scripture be the ultimate authority. And so I start thinking, Okay, if I'm loved

thaddeusw: even as the father loves a son. How am I loved! I am loved

thaddeusw: infinitely. I am loved unapologetically, irreversibly. I am loved with the full weight of divine perfections. And now I'm at a crossroads. Who do I take more seriously my fallen ho! Hum emotions?

thaddeusw: Do I follow my heart

thaddeusw: and and let that define me? Or do I follow God's heart? And what God says is authoritatively true about me. To to sum it up, what God says is true about you is infinitely more trustworthy than anything you're falling emotionally. Say about you, Amen.

Andy Miller III: And that exists outside of us, you know, like it's not something. It's not something that we create. And when the interpretive process begins with us and our experience as opposed to a reality that's found in the. And you know, when we're talking about Scripture, what W. What we know about God. Things like in the text, like the text, becomes a foundation outside of any of our any of our projections, you know. Even

Andy Miller III: god identifies himself to Moses. II am that I am. I will be, I will be. I exist outside. This isn't dependent whether you feel it or not. Yes.

Andy Miller III: I love II this the privileges.

thaddeusw: Go ahead. Go ahead. Sorry you cut out on me. There you're talking, I was just gonna say, and all all the privileges, all the privileges of our salvation. You know our adoption, our our new identity, is adopted. Cherish sons and daughters of God. That is objectively true of us, as the Word of God declares it, whether you feel like a cherished, adopted son or daughter or not.

thaddeusw: Your your justification, your forever not guilty sentence. The fact that the righteousness of Christ is credited to your account, and all of your unrighteousness

thaddeusw: was credited to his account, and that great substitution on the cross. That is true, price imputed righteousness is yours, whether you feel it or not. And so isn't that freeing to not limit my scope of reality to what I can emotionally access in the moment?

thaddeusw: And again, I think a strong affirmation of the authority and trustworthiness of Scripture helps

thaddeusw: break us out of that skull-sized prison.

Andy Miller III: Yes, I love it, that this book is so helpful. As we've talked about it, and I hope, as my listeners are, you know, just being in on this conversation, that we're having those of you with children. I think this would be a great thing to do to take to your dinner table like our day, or take to your family prayer times just to go over there. I'm gonna just read that this the names of all the chapters. So people can get a feel for things you cover, and these the 10 Commandments that need to be boldly broken. Live your best life

Andy Miller III: thou shalt always act in accordance with your chief end, to glorify, enjoy yourself forever. Nice play there. Okay, Boomer, thou shalt never be outdated, but always be on the edge of the new hashtag. Follow your heart.

Andy Miller III: We already talked about. That one hashtag. Be true to yourself now shall be courageous enough to defy other people's expectations.

Andy Miller III: Hashtag you, do you? Thou shalt live your truth, and let others live theirs.

Andy Miller III: Hashtag. Yolo, thou shalt pursue the rush of boundary. Free experience hashtag the answers are within, thou shalt trust yourself. Never let in anyone oppress you with the antiquated notion of being a quote sinner.

Andy Miller III: hashtag authentic, thou shalt invent and advertise thine own identity. Hashtag live the dream, thou shalt force the universe to bend to your desires. Hashtag love, Islove, thou shalt celebrate all lifestyles and love lot, and love lives as equally valid.

Andy Miller III: So just to give people a flavor that maybe we have time. Is there one of those that you wanna just like drop a little line about, or something? Your interest. I was planning to go through a few more invite or run out of time. But II love that. You're tackling all these ideas.

thaddeusw: Yeah. Just the the live, the dream, I think, is

thaddeusw: This concept that I argue in chapter 2, that

thaddeusw: this idea of creating your own reality is through an act of will power. It. It loves to market itself as cutting edge and

thaddeusw: and and trendy. And so avant garde. And I argue, look, man. This is the literally the oldest lie in the book, and Genesis 3,

thaddeusw: verse 5. The serpent is, you know, coaxing Eve to eat the fruit, and he makes us promise you'll be like God, knowing good and evil. And I unpack some of the

thaddeusw: the Hebrew of what's going on there, that it's basically Hebrew shorthand for hey, Eve? By eating the fruit you can become godlike in

thaddeusw: in becoming the sovereign meaning maker of all of reality. You can define the meaning of biology. You can define the meaning of your body, you can define the meaning of marriage, you can find the meaning of life. It's all on you. Now you get to to

thaddeusw: take the mantle, take the the sovereign scepter over existence.

thaddeusw: and so I argue in a

thaddeusw: in the chapter about bending the universe around your desires

thaddeusw: to live, the dream that when you, when you break reality, when you break the structure of reality, when you transgress the givenness of things as set up and determined by the God who's actually sovereign

thaddeusw: reality has a way of breaking us back. So so

thaddeusw: II give a few. The whole book is sort of peppered with with Pop culture references and and songs and movies and whatnot and if if you think of

thaddeusw: the movie break or the the show, I should say the 5 season series breaking bad.

thaddeusw: you know. Spoiler alerts any listeners but you get this sort of beta mail high school chemistry teacher, who's sort of an underachiever, and he gets a terrible terminal cancer diagnosis, and so he decides to support his family. He's gonna break the structure of moral reality by cooking meth.

thaddeusw: and he rises to become

thaddeusw: sort of the the king of his little meth Empire in in New Mexico. And it's a fascinating story. It's very, very well written.

thaddeusw: and

thaddeusw: the the plot line of those 5 seasons tells the truth moral truth, that as Walt Whites breaks the moral structure of reality, reality breaks him back.

thaddeusw: and so by the end, again, spoiler, alert, he ends up miserable. He's completely alienated from his family. He's alienated the only friend he ever had.

thaddeusw: and and that just is a deep Biblical theme that the more you break reality as set up by God, the more reality breaks you back. And so

thaddeusw: there's something to real joy and real meaning and real purpose that we tap into when, instead of trying to author our own reality and and running against the flow of the universe? We step into a position of obedience, and and really letting God

thaddeusw: be God living in within what philosophers they have a phrase

thaddeusw: Carving the universe up at the joints is something philosophers have talked about for a long time. It's the idea of your life actually aligns with the contours and structure of reality.

thaddeusw: and when we live in honesty, authenticity before the fact that God is God and we are not

thaddeusw: There's nothing else like it, man. There's just nothing better in the universe than to live the Creator, creature distinction. God is infinitely better at being God than we are.

Andy Miller III: Yeah. Amen. Did it. One of my favorite authors older authors is a man who's missionary to India named East Stanley Jones. And he he had this saying, it said like, if sin were natural.

Andy Miller III: it would feed us.

Andy Miller III: he says, but the opposite is true. It will bleed us, will will be broken. It will break with the the moral reality of the universe. When you, when you move against it, no matter where you are, it will break. Yeah, that's really helpful.

That it's been so helpful. I have you on the podcast and encouraging to me, even though this is like hard things to talk about. One of the things about my podcast is that it's called more to the story, and I have a theological reason for that, in the sense that it, our seminary we emphasize sanctifying grace is more than just getting your sense, forgiven. But also I love to hear about more story of other people. Is there is there more this story and fad? You, you've probably been on a lot of podcasts on things. There's something you don't talk about.

A hobby you have, or something like that.

thaddeusw: Sure? Yeah, I, the publisher, came to me and said.

thaddeusw: Hey, we're we're trying to have some incentives

thaddeusw: for pre orders.

thaddeusw: and you got any ideas, and I thought you know it'd be kind of fun to release an album

thaddeusw: with the Book

thaddeusw: of Original Songs, and that that tap into the themes of the book. So if if listeners go to join theherticscom.

thaddeusw: I think they can click on on offers or bonuses, or something like that. And there's a way there that they can access. Or you know frankly, you can hop on spotify or Amazon music wherever music is streamed and just type in my name, Thaddeus Williams, there's an album called heretics.

thaddeusw: That is all original tombs that's encourage people to follow God's heart instead of theirs. Is this your music? Yeah.

thaddeusw: Awesome. Yeah. Songs recorded it in my in my own garage.

Andy Miller III: Awesome. Well, interesting. You talk about heretics. You've you quoted like 4 or 5 times, Chesterton here, and my version of orthoxy also has heretics at the front of it. So, and that that's both both books so helpful to me. I hadn't even thought about that connection of like dealing with with heresies. Did you have that in mind? A little bit, too, for sure.

thaddeusw: Awesome thanks. So much. I hope I hope we get to be in the same room some time. Get shake your hand, have a cup of coffee. But yeah, I love this conversation and appreciate when we have the ultimate Calvinism versus Westlandism showdown like the. There's been enough books and

thaddeusw: conversations and debates. I say, just straight up cage match

Andy Miller III: Fred Sanders, and just one or 2 elbow drops, and Sanders is out.

Andy Miller III: Okay, get him on the the top rope, doing the turn buckle, fly, and and we'll settle this thing, man. Oh, man, this would be fun looking forward, looking forward to that day.

thaddeusw: That's so good. Thanks so much