In May, 2026, Greg launched his own podcast titled, “The Unintentional Heretic”, and had this to say about it:

“The name is intentionally provocative, because throughout Christian history, many of the most important movements of growth and renewal were first dismissed as dangerous, suspect, or even heretical. Theology is rarely as fixed and tidy as we imagine. What one generation condemns, another may come to see as faithful, necessary, and deeply reflective of the Gospel.

This podcast lives in that tension.

It’s a space to explore the edges of faith—where certainty loosens, inherited beliefs are examined, and deeper truth has a way of emerging. Through short-form reflections and long-form conversations with everyone from bishops and authors to theologians, mystics, and academics, we’ll wrestle with theology, spirituality, Scripture, doubt, and what it means to follow Jesus in a rapidly changing world.

This is not a podcast about abandoning faith. It’s about refusing to settle for a version of faith that cannot survive honest inquiry. It’s about trusting that God is not threatened by our questions—and that sometimes the path to deeper faith runs straight through the things we were told never to question.

Because if history teaches us anything, it’s this:

Sometimes heresy is just tomorrow’s orthodoxy.”

Find The Unintentional Heretic on platforms like Spotify.