
Show overview
#STRask launched in 2025 and has put out 112 episodes in the time since. That works out to roughly 45 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 22 min and 26 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-US-language Religion & Spirituality show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 2 days ago, with 38 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Stand to Reason.
From the publisher
Stand to Reason’s Greg Koukl and Amy Hall answer questions on ethics, theology, apologetics, and culture from a Christian perspective. Submit your questions on Twitter using the hashtag #STRask.
Latest Episodes
View all 112 episodesEveryone Deserves Love and Happiness
What Is a Biblical Case for Submitting to God’s Good Design for Our Bodies?
Is the Despair Portrayed in Psalms and Job Descriptive or Prescriptive?
What Is the Difference Between Believing and Knowing?
What Is Your Best Answer When Asked to Prove God Exists?
Why Did the Sadducees and Pharisees Want to Kill Jesus?
Can a Person Be Saved but Have Nothing to Show for It?
What Questions Do We Need to Answer to Help Keep Our Youth in the Faith?
How Do We Love Those Who Hate Us?
Is Fasting Food Specific?
How Do I Respond to a Confused Four-Year-Old?
What Evidence in Scripture Identifies the Holy Spirit as a Person?
Doesn’t Perfect Justice Require That the Penalty Be Paid By the Offender?
Questions about whether perfect justice requires that the penalty be paid by the offender rather than someone else, and whether the references in Scripture to sharing in the sufferings of Christ are only about persecution for one’s faith or include things like sickness and financial hardship. For “perfect justice” to be accomplished, doesn’t the penalty have to actually be paid by the offender rather than someone else? Are the references in Scripture to ”sharing in the sufferings of Christ” only about persecution for one’s faith in Christ, or are they also about sickness, financial hardship, emotional pain, etc.?
Should I Attend the Wedding of Someone Who Is into New Thought and Against Christianity?
Questions about whether to attend the wedding of someone who is into the New Thought movement and will have New Age items at the wedding location, whether one should not listen to hymns sung by Latter-day Saints, and how to respond to the Buddhist “Walk for Peace.” Should I attend the wedding of my sister, who is into the New Thought movement and will have a meditation yurt, a drum circle, and other New Age items at the wedding location and is very outspoken against Christianity? I’ve found that Latter-day Saint singers sing hymns that I like, and I get disturbed by that. Should I not listen? How should Christians respond to the Buddhist “Walk for Peace” and the people and churches excited to see and support it?
Which Translation Would You Recommend for an Adult Who’s New to the Bible?
Questions about which Bible translation to recommend to an adult who’s new to the Bible, and what resources to recommend to an unbeliever who’s interested in reading the Bible with her son. Which Bible translation would you recommend to an adult who’s new to the Bible? What resources would you recommend to an unbeliever who’s interested in reading the Bible with her son?
Is Christianity Narrow-Minded and Dangerous?
Questions about how to respond to the criticism that Christianity is narrow-minded and dangerous, and what to say to someone who thinks Christianity is a cult. How would you respond to the criticism that Christianity is narrow-minded and dangerous? What would you say to someone who thinks Christianity is a cult?
Would You Say God’s Primary Object Is to Not Be Found?
Questions about whether God’s primary object is to not be found, how one can say God doesn’t make mistakes if the percentage of Christians in the world is so low, and whether the fact that not everyone will be in Heaven is proof that God doesn’t win every battle. Would you say God’s primary object is to not be found? If God doesn’t make mistakes, how do you explain the fact that Christians have reached an all-time low percentage of the world’s population? If the common belief that God wins every battle were true, then no one would be in Hell.
Is This an Argument for Relativism?
Questions about whether the fact that the truth about one’s age changes over time is an argument for relativism, and how to ground virtues like courage in objective reality without relying on circular definitions. I’ve heard truth doesn’t change and doesn’t contradict itself, but how does yearly change fit into that—e.g., I’m 38 one year and 39 the next. Does this create an argument for relativism? If “cowardice” is defined as failing to do what’s right, then calling it “wrong” is just a tautology. How do we ground virtues like courage in objective reality without relying on circular definitions?
Isn’t the Covenant in Scripture Explicitly with Israel and Not the Gentile Nations?
Questions about what gives modern Christians confidence that they’ve inherited the Jews’ covenant with God if Scripture explicitly says it was with Israel and not the Gentile nations, and why the Jews were chosen. The covenant in Scripture is explicitly with Israel and not the Gentile nations, so what gives modern Christians confidence that they’ve inherited that covenant? Why were the Jews chosen?
Why Is There No Effort Towards a Neutral Interpretation of Scripture?
Questions about why there is no effort towards a neutral interpretation of Scripture that doesn’t take denominational preferences into account, and how so many people in different denominations that believe different things can all claim to be followers of Christ. Why is there no effort towards a neutral exegesis—i.e., without taking denominational preferences into account—in light of the fact that there are so many denominations divided over hundreds of topics? Which inspiration theory and which explanatory system do you use? Considering there are so many denominations that all believe different things, how can they all claim to be followers of Christ?