If you tuned in to Radio Rhema at 11:00am (NZ time) on 3 May 2012 you would have heard this blog’s Matthew Flannagan and Tear Fund’s David Slack talk the stigmas surrounding the evolution take on creation and why many don’t want it talked about on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden morning. You can listen online here.
Entries Tagged as 'MandM in the Media'
Matt on the Evolution Debate on the “Theological Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings – with Craig Heilman
May 16th, 2012 Comments Off on Matt on the Evolution Debate on the “Theological Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings – with Craig Heilman
Tags: Creation · Evolution · Pat Brittenden · Radio Rhema · The Panel
Matt on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings on Euthanasia
May 15th, 2012 Comments Off on Matt on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings on Euthanasia
If you tuned in to Radio Rhema at 11:00am (NZ time) on 26 April 2012 you would have heard this blog’s Matthew Flannagan discussing Euthanasia, on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden morning. You can listen online here.
Tags: Euthanasia · Pat Brittenden · Radio Rhema · The Panel
Matt on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings – with David Slack
April 10th, 2012 1 Comment
If you tuned in to Radio Rhema at 11:00am (NZ time) on 10 April 2012 you would have heard this blog’s Matthew Flannagan and Tear Fund’s David Slack discuss topical issues such as talk about the Paid Parental Leave Bill, which proposes extending the leave for parents from 14 weeks to 26 weeks, Easter Trading, among […]
Tags: David Slack · Easter Trading Law · Paid Parental Leave · Pat Brittenden · Radio Rhema · The Panel
Matt on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings – with Frank Ritchie
April 9th, 2012 Comments Off on Matt on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings – with Frank Ritchie
If you tuned in to Radio Rhema at 11:00am (NZ time) on 2 April 2012 you would have heard this blog’s Matthew Flannagan and Tear Fund’s Frank Ritchie discuss topical issues, such as talk the politcal polls and how Prime Minister John Key is still leading in them despite recent scandals, on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden […]
Tags: Frank Ritchie · Pat Brittenden · Radio Rhema · The Panel
Matt on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings – with Cameron Slater
April 7th, 2012 Comments Off on Matt on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings – with Cameron Slater
If you tuned in to Radio Rhema at 11:00am (NZ time) on 15 March you would have heard this blog’s Matthew Flannagan and Whale Oil’s Cameron Slater discuss topical issues such as, the All Black name that been suppressed in relation to assult, and the also the Ports of Auckland dispute, on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden […]
Tags: All Blacks · Cameron Slater · Pat Brittenden · Ports of Auckland · Radio Rhema · The Panel
Francesca Minerva and Matthew Flannagan on “After-birth abortion: why should the baby live?” on Radio
February 29th, 2012 41 Comments
Francesca Minerva and Alberto Giubilini‘s article “After-birth abortion: why should the baby live?” published in the Journal of Law, Ethics and Medicine is creating waves the world over. In a few hours, on the morning of Thursday 1 March, around 10:00am New Zealand time, Dr Minerva will be interviewed on this article on Radio Rhema’s Pat Brittenden […]
Tags: Abortion · Alberto Giubilini · Feticide · Francesca Minerva · Infanticide · Michael Tooley · Pat Brittenden · Peter Singer · Radio Rhema
Matt on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden Mornings – with David Slack
February 21st, 2012 2 Comments
Tune in to Radio Rhema at 11:40am (NZ time) today to hear this blog’s Matthew Flannagan and David Slack discuss topical issues on “The Panel” on Pat Brittenden morning. You can download the MP3 here or listen online here.
Tags: David Slack · Pat Brittenden · Radio Rhema

A common objection to belief in the God of the Bible is that a good, kind, and loving deity would never command the wholesale slaughter of nations. In the tradition of his popular Is God a Moral Monster?, Paul Copan teams up with Matthew Flannagan to tackle some of the most confusing and uncomfortable passages of Scripture. Together they help the Christian and nonbeliever alike understand the biblical, theological, philosophical, and ethical implications of Old Testament warfare passages.




