GOD: An Autobiography, As Told to a Philosopher - The Podcast
GOD: An Autobiography, As Told to a Philosopher - The Podcast
93. NEW Series | Special Episode: Introducing The Life Wisdom Project
NEW SERIES | PODCAST NEWS UPDATE
God: An Autobiography, The Podcast is excited to bring you a special episode introducing the BRAND NEW SERIES- The Life Wisdom Project.
The Life Wisdom Project series unites Dr. Jerry L. Martin with unique and special guests as they share a conversation about the life wisdom and reflections of the takeaways from each chapter of God: An Autobiography, As Told To A Philosopher, and episodes of the Dramatic Adaptation.
What is God actually saying about how we can live our lives better?
The first episode of the Life Wisdom Project airs next Thursday with special guest Dr. Jeanine Diller- a Philosophy and Religious Studies professor at the University of Toledo.
This week, we revisit I Pray To A God I Don't Believe In to celebrate and prepare for the first Life Wisdom Project’s episode.
Join us next week for Jerry and Jeanine's insightful conversation on the voice of God coming to Jerry and genuine prayer.
Read God: An Autobiography, As Told To A Philosopher.
Begin the dramatic adaptation of God: An Autobiography, As Told To A Philosopher
Related Episodes: [Dramatic Adaptation] I Pray To A God I Don't Believe In; [Interviews] Marriage, Philosophy, And Revelations; [The Life Wisdom Project] Tuning In To God | Special Guest: Dr. Jeanine Diller
Related Content [Video] Is God Trying to Get Your Attention?; God Centered Prayer
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Scott Langdon [00:00:17] This is God: An Autobiography, The Podcast. A dramatic adaptation and continuing discussion of the book God: An Autobiography, As Told To A Philosopher by Jerry L. Martin. He was a lifelong agnostic, but one day he had an occasion to pray. To his vast surprise, God answered- in words. Being a philosopher, he had a lot of questions, and God had a lot to tell him. Episode 93.
Scott Langdon [00:01:02] Hello and welcome to God: Autobiography, The Podcast. I'm Scott Langdon and I'm very excited to bring you a very special episode of the podcast this week. Today, I'd like to introduce you to a brand new series we're bringing into the podcast format fold, which we're calling the Life Wisdom Project. The purpose of the Life Wisdom Project is to explore what Jerry's conversations with God imply about how we can live our lives better. In each episode of the Life Wisdom Project Jerry is joined by a special guest, and together, they break down an episode of the podcast and the corresponding chapters of the book God: An Autobiography, As Told To A Philosopher from which it was adapted. In doing so, they offer some insight and ideas about what God told Jerry when he was asked to tell God's story. The first episode of the Life Wisdom Project kicks off next week when Dr. Jerry Martin talks with Dr. Jeanine Diller, associate professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at the University of Toledo. They discuss her thoughts and reflections on episode one of our podcast and offer some takeaways for all of us in our daily lives. So, in expectation of next week's debut of our new series, The Life Wisdom Project, I thought it would be the perfect time to revisit where it all begins- with episode one: I Pray To A God I Don't Believe In.
Scott Langdon [00:02:31] Remember, you can hear the complete audio adaptation of the book any time by beginning with episode one of our podcast and listening through episode 44. And join us next week for episode one in our new series, The Life Wisdom Project. I hope you enjoy the episode.
Scott Langdon [00:03:03] Episode one.
Jerry Martin voiced by Scott Langdon [00:03:06] The first time God spoke to me I didn't believe He existed. I remember psychologist Thomas Szasz's comment: "If somebody talks to God, that's praying. If God talks to them, that's schizophrenia." I had been raised in a Christian home, but those beliefs did not survive Philosophy 101, where arguments for the existence of God were shot down like clay pigeons. Since that time, I had been what one of my professors, Philip Wheelwright, called himself: a "pious agnostic"--respectful of belief in a higher reality but, when it came right down to it, staying eye-level with the natural world, the world of experience as I then knew it. It is said you do not have to believe in God in order to pray. That is what happened to me. I had been divorced for many years. I always thought I would be happier married, but as the decades rolled on without Miss Right showing up, I began to think she never would. Then one day, the phone rang. It was Abigail Rosenthal. She was a professor at Brooklyn College, a school with an outstanding liberal arts curriculum. The new college president had decided to replace core courses that opened students to the whole world of learning with--telescope from wide vista to keyhole view--a focus on the borough of Brooklyn, the one thing the students knew already, in fact, knew better than their professors. Rosenthal and a colleague in the history department were fighting the change. They had succeeded in rallying most of the faculty, but the administration was driving a steamroller. She called the higher education organization I ran in Washington, D.C. Could we help? "Yes, that is what we do," I said.
Our only hope was to take the issue to the public, and we did. The battle raged in the press through the spring and into the summer. Abigail and I talked almost daily, strategizing, and getting the story out. None of the talk was personal, and we never met, yet I found myself thinking, "This is a very remarkable woman." In fact, I fell in love with her over the phone. Oh, and we won the fight. I was not just in love; I was completely overwhelmed. I had never really believed in love, not romantic love. Being in love was a delusion, based on projection--even the poets call it a from of madness--the kind of thing you expect to outgrow as you get older. I was only looking for compatibility. Instead, I found myself so totally, deeply in love that it did seem like a form of madness. “If you knew how much I love you, you would think I was crazy," I told her. I was a pretty buttoned-down, levelheaded guy, but on one occasion I said, "I feel as if I have always loved you. "I am not sure what that meant, but I know it is how I felt. I would have been in sad shape had Abigail not had similar feelings, but she too responded to what she called "the summons of love."
Abigail Rosenthal [00:07:02] Dinner last night was disturbingly interesting.
Jerry Martin voiced by Scott Langdon [00:07:07] That was, according to Abigail, her diary entry the day after a lovely New York dinner we had following our victorious campaign against the administration of Brooklyn College. Thinking to maintain her feminine elusiveness, she nevertheless warned, in a stream of modals…
Abigail Rosenthal [00:07:25] If there may be or might be or possibly could be something personal, at some point perhaps, between us, we should make sure it doesn't interfere with our efforts for Brooklyn College..
Jerry Martin voiced by Scott Langdon [00:07:45] My lips said, "Of course, the college comes first," but my heart said, "She loves me!” Being in love was not only a profound experience; it shook my worldview. My whole life took on a new meaning. No, that is not quite right. My life went from a collection of purposes to having a meaning. It went from black and white to Technicolor. No, more radical than that. It went from a two-dimensional to a three-dimensional--or as it turned out, n-dimensional--universe. I felt surprise and joy and gratitude. I did not know whom to thank, but an extraordinary gift had come into my life. One summer morning I felt an urge to express my thanks, to pray--to Whomever. I did not see any reason not to express what I genuinely felt. So, I fell to my knees, as I had been taught as a child, and thanked "the Lord." I now believed in love but not much else. I did not know if I was praying to the God of Israel, to Jesus of Nazareth, or, for all I knew, to the Lord Krishna worshiped by Hindus. Or simply to a benign universe. I didn't worry about that. I just poured out my heart in prayer. A few weeks later, I felt this same urge and said another prayer of thanks, still addressed to a Lord I did not actually believe in. This time, to my surprise, I offered to be of service. To a God I didn't believe existed. Inconsistent of course, but not insincere. Toward the end of a long summer day, Abigail and I were sitting on a park bench along the Potomac, across from the Lincoln Memorial. She was writing in her journal, and I was pondering the challenge of making a future together. Without thinking much about it, much less expecting an answer, I prayed again, this time asking for guidance. Immediately a visual image appeared, like a hologram, a few feet in front of me--a rising, sparkling, multi-colored fountain. It radiated vitality and promise, an answer to my prayer. But there was more. A voice spoke...
Voice of God voiced by Dr. Jerry L. Martin [00:10:48] Listen.
Jerry Martin voiced by Scott Langdon [00:10:50] The voice did not sound particularly different from my own inner voice, but it wasn't me talking. I looked at Abigail to see if she heard it, but she continued writing, undisturbed. I asked, not out loud: What is this voice? Who are you?
Voice of God voiced by Dr. Jerry L. Martin [00:11:11] I am God.
Jerry Martin voiced by Scott Langdon The God of Israel?
Voice of God voiced by Dr. Jerry L. Martin I am the God of all.
Jerry Martin voiced by Scott Langdon [00:11:20] The questions that led me to pray evaporated. The encounter was over. For the moment.
Scott Langdon [00:11:45] Thank you for listening. To God: An Autobiography, The Podcast. Subscribe for free today wherever you listen to your podcasts and hear a new episode every week. You can hear the complete dramatic adaptation of God: An Autobiography, As Told To A Philosopher by Jerry L. Martin, by beginning with episode one of our podcast and listening through its conclusion with Episode 44. You can read the original true story in the book from which this podcast is adapted. God: An Autobiography, As Told To A Philosopher, available now at Amazon.com, and always at godanautobiography.com. Pick up your own copy today. If you have any questions about this or any other episode, please email us at questions@godanautobiography.com and experience the world from God's perspective as it was told to a philosopher. This is Scott Langdon. I'll see you next time.