Afleveringen
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In this episode, T.A. explores one of humanity's deepest blind spots — our inability to step outside our own subjective reality and see the bigger picture. Drawing on the Bible, science, and the concept of civilizational levels, T.A. examines why humans remain ruled by animal instinct, what God originally intended for mankind, and what it will take for us to finally break the fourth wall of our own perceptual existence.
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As America approaches its 250th year of independence, T.A. examines the spiritual foundations that inspired the nation's founders and asks how far have we drifted from that original vision. Drawing connections between biblical history, modern events, and humanity's ongoing struggle between animal instincts and spiritual responsibility, this episode invites listeners to rethink what freedom is truly for and how direction matters more than power.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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What did our founders actually believe, and why does it matter now? T.A. draws a direct line from Jeremiah 18's potter-and-clay warning to the three branches of American government, arguing that the Constitution was never meant to be a political document alone — it was a blueprint modeled on divine instruction. And with America approaching its 250th year, the question of whether we'll heed or ignore that blueprint has never been more urgent.
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Your Central Nervous System was changed so that you could perceive the depth of Reality. Why aren't you using that ability? Most humans only look at the here-and-now, our animal instincts focus.
God told us this was our last chance, we need to take it now!
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In Episode 93, host T.A. follows up on last week's eye-opening conversation with a young man who couldn't separate God from religion — and discovers the confusion runs far deeper than expected. Tracing the deliberate withholding of scripture from the Levite priests all the way to the 22 books quietly dropped from the Bible in the 1500s, T.A. makes the case that most of Western society has only ever been given part of the story.
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Host T.A. walks a skeptical young man through one of the most provocative distinctions in theology — that religion and God are not the same thing. Using football as a metaphor, T.A. explores how humanity's belief-based decision-making has shaped our understanding of scripture, and why getting back to God's original instructions may be the key to humanity's survival.
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T.A. explores the idea that the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights weren't just political documents — they were a deliberate attempt by the founders to follow God's instructions and directions for civilization. Drawing on King Josiah, Thomas Jefferson, and the Federalist Papers, T.A. asks why so many people — religious and secular alike — settle for the assurances of other humans rather than measuring themselves against what God has actually instructed.
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T.A. challenges listeners to set aside religion, tribal thinking, and animal instinct in favor of the logic, reason, and wisdom God designed for us — arguing that the salvation the Bible promises has nothing to do with church and everything to do with how we make decisions together as one human body.
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We've been given the blueprint. We keep ignoring it. This week, T.A. breaks down why every great civilization — including ours — has failed for the exact same reason, and why the United States is closer to that tipping point than most people want to admit. Science, scripture, and human nature collide in a conversation that's equal parts warning and road map. The clock is ticking. Are we ready to grow up?
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From ancient Jerusalem to modern-day Iran, TA connects the fall of a civilization to the choices that made it inevitable. Using Lamentations as a lens, this episode examines what happens when personal desire overrides instruction — in kings, in students, in societies — and why blaming God for the consequences might be the most human thing we do. Also on the table: logic, reason, wisdom, and why Jesus couldn't get his most important message across in his own lifetime.
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Why are civilizations collapsing? T.A. says the answer is 2,600 years old. Drawing on Daniel, Jesus, and the original intent of America's founders, this episode challenges listeners to stop outsourcing their relationship with God to religious institutions — and start reading God's words for themselves.
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This episode serves as a reflective wrap-up on a central idea that has been building throughout the series: the limitation of human expectations. TA explores the concept of being a “non-religious Christian,” arguing that while religion helped spread the message, it also created a sense of complacency by suggesting that things were already under control.
At the core of the discussion is the danger of measuring life through human standards alone. When people meet or exceed those expectations, they tend to stop growing. But those expectations, as presented here, are rooted in the physical and “animal” side of human nature — inherently limited and earthbound. The episode challenges listeners to move beyond that framework and instead pursue a spiritual perspective, one that requires continuous growth, awareness, and resistance to complacency. -
There’s a difference between knowing what’s right and actually living it. In this episode, we explore the gap between understanding truth and applying it — and why so many people remain stuck despite having the knowledge they need.
Through the lens of spiritual discipline and consistency, we examine how growth requires more than intention. It demands action, accountability, and a willingness to rise above instinct-driven behavior. History shows us that when individuals and societies drift from foundational truths, the same patterns repeat. The question is not whether we know better — it’s whether we’re willing to do better.
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Long before modern politics, think tanks, or social theory, the prophet Daniel outlined a pattern for how societies rise, drift, and ultimately collapse. In this episode, we explore how ancient biblical structure offers more than theology — it presents a framework for civilization itself.
From the idea of a covenant between God and humanity to the role of personal responsibility at the household level, we examine how moral order creates stability — and what happens when that structure erodes. The cause-and-effect relationship between obedience and consequence isn’t just spiritual; it’s societal. What was written 2,700 years ago may explain more about today than we’re willing to admit.
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The American "experiment" was never meant to run on autopilot! This episode explores the original expectations behind our constitutional system — not just rights and representation, but the moral and educational guardrails the Founders believed future generations would need to install and maintain. Those safeguards were never established and today’s wild political divisions and the instability they cause are the result.
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How much of what we understand as divine instruction has been shaped by human interpretation? This episode dives into the rediscovery of ancient law, the rewriting of prophetic warnings, and the evolving role of language in transmitting spiritual truth. We explore how translation, authority, and context influence the way sacred teachings are understood — from the ancient world to today’s digital age.
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What happens when institutions begin multiplying authority without contributing to the health of the whole? Using the biological analogy of cancer, this episode explores how political systems can replace productive civic structures with self-replicating power networks. From debates over Socialism to the rise of centralized control models, TA examines how civilizations weaken when immune systems—checks, balances, and standards—fail to function. The question is not left vs. right, but health vs. dysfunction.
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TA examines the Founders’ expectation that society would evolve standards of behavior for elected officials that the Chief Executive would codify (with the advice and consent of the Judicial Branch) clearly separating protected private speech from regulated (secondary) public speech. He explains how the failure to establish minimum standards for those elected to serve ensures that political parties select candidates who advance party agendas rather than represent the needs of the electorate.
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Drawing on the intent of the Founding Fathers, TA explains how separating protected private speech from regulated public speech is a necessary precursor for elected officials. The people who wish to "stand" for election must demonstrate the ability to use "structurally sound civilizational building blocks within the American system of Government" which is the job they wish to be elected for.
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Humanity didn’t arrive by accident.
Earth is a nursery — a place of development, choice, consequence, and growth.Why Are We Here on Earth? explores Scripture, history, science, and civilization through a Christian lens — not as religion, but as instruction. Each episode examines why societies rise or fall, how human beings mature (or fail to), and what God has been calling us toward since the beginning.
This is a podcast about responsibility, alignment, truth, and the long arc of human purpose.
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