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cover of Extro & Intro for Breaking up the Ted Weiland interview
Extro & Intro for Breaking up the Ted Weiland interview

Extro & Intro for Breaking up the Ted Weiland interview

00:00-01:17

John, let's use this Extro-Intro to 1) Break off the last 10-15 minutes of that Ted Weiland interview you posted a week ago to create two interviews, and 2) Break up the next long interview with Ted Weiland into 3 shorter, 10 minute interviews

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The speaker thanks Pastor Weiland for their discussion and mentions that they will continue the conversation next time. They invite listeners to visit the website greatbiblereset.com for more information and a free book. The website focuses on examining the teachings of classical authors in relation to the Bible. The speaker introduces Pastor Ted Weiland, who will discuss the era of James Madison, Patrick Henry, and other founding fathers, emphasizing the difference between the secular social contract of the U.S. Constitution and the biblical covenant found in colonial documents. Well, thank you, Pastor Weiland. This discussion has been very enlightening and challenging, but I'm afraid we're out of time, and we're going to have to pick this up again next time if that's okay with you. We'd love to have you back very soon. And in the meantime, please refer, like, visit us at greatbiblereset.com and pick up a free copy of Keys to the Classics, A History of the Decline and Fall of Western Civilization, which explores these themes in even more detail in the light of history. Welcome once again, everybody, to greatbiblereset.com, where we're taking a critical look at a hundred of the classical authors over a two-year period and examining their teaching in light of the Bible. And today we're privileged to have with us again Pastor Ted Weiland to help us understand the era of James Madison, Patrick Henry, John Wintersprung, others of the founding era, the founding fathers that we all hold so dear. He's going to continue to break down the critical distinction between the secular social contract embodied in the U.S. Constitution and the biblical covenant with God that was embodied in many of the earlier colonial documents.

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