Homebrewed Christianity Podcast
Since March 13, 2008, Homebrewed Christianity Podcast is hand-crafted by Tripp Fuller and Chad Crawford. These two friends talk to each other, interview other ecclesial brewers, and hopefully encourage those who listen to journey towards a more beautiful life with God and the world.
Previous guests have included Rob Bell, N.T. Wright, Marcus Borg, Brian McLaren, John Dominic Crossan, Walter Brueggemann, Bart Ehrman, Tony Jones, Doug Pagitt, Phyllis Tickle, Elizabeth Johnson, Diana Butler Bass, John Caputo, Richard Rohr and many other influential and emerging Christian thinkers.
Tripp Fuller
Tripp is married to an awesome lady Alecia and has a handsome little baby boy named Elgin Thomas (aka E.T.) and Pebbles, the Schnoodle. He and Alecia are both graduates of Campbell University (where they met), the Divinity School of Wake Forest University and ordained ministers. He is working on his PhD in Philosophy of Religion and Theology at Claremont Graduate University. A few other things he digs are books, cigars, pipes, Shaq, guitar, pirates, fishing, the Counting Crows, and good conversations about Religion and Politics. The podcast is the most time consuming hobby he has ever had besides reading and blogging through Wolfhart Pannenberg’s 3 volume systematic theology.

Chad Crawford
Chad is a graduate of the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor and Wake Forest University Divinity School. He is originally from Austin, Texas and now lives in San Francisco, where he is the online communications manager for Interfaith Power & Light, a nonprofit organization mobilizing a religious response to global warming. He’s a former youth minister and long distance hiker sharing thoughts on ecology, politics, culture, and faith.
Bo Sanders
Bo is a pastor, coffee shop theologian, tattoo evangelist, and a soccer fan. He is also a PhD Student at Claremont School of Theology in Practical Theology: Religious Education.
You can connect with Bo through his blog at http://bosanders.wordpress.com/ where he tries to navigate between the everyday and theology.




