680 Episodio

  1. Why Believing the Election Was a Fraud Can Be Key to Your Future Prayer Life

    Pubblicato: 16/12/2020
  2. Reflections on a Pig’s Breakfast Presidential Maneuver

    Pubblicato: 14/12/2020
  3. The Exhilaration of Disobedience

    Pubblicato: 09/12/2020
  4. On the Lookout for a Sane Lesser Magistrate

    Pubblicato: 07/12/2020
  5. Some November 2020 Game Film

    Pubblicato: 02/12/2020
  6. A Grease Spot on the Garage Floor

    Pubblicato: 01/12/2020
  7. The Enneascam

    Pubblicato: 30/11/2020
  8. The Coming Classical Christian Downgrade

    Pubblicato: 28/11/2020
  9. Thanksgiving No Matter What

    Pubblicato: 27/11/2020
  10. Singleness as Affliction

    Pubblicato: 25/11/2020
  11. Little Orange Genetically Modified Seedless Jobs

    Pubblicato: 23/11/2020
  12. Scorn Proof

    Pubblicato: 19/11/2020
  13. Like Dew Off a Melon in August

    Pubblicato: 18/11/2020
  14. Women’s Ministries as Pestilence

    Pubblicato: 17/11/2020
  15. These Vast Reservoirs of Guilt

    Pubblicato: 16/11/2020
  16. Ecochondriacs [3]

    Pubblicato: 12/11/2020
  17. Ecochondriacs [2]

    Pubblicato: 11/11/2020
  18. 7 Reasons Why the President Would Be Out of His Mind to Concede Anything Right Now

    Pubblicato: 11/11/2020
  19. Ecochondriacs [1]

    Pubblicato: 11/11/2020
  20. The High Price of Forgetting God

    Pubblicato: 09/11/2020

26 / 34

The point of this podcast is pretty broad — “All of Christ for all of life.” In order to make that happen, we need “theology that bites back.” I want to advance what you might call a Chestertonian Calvinism, and to bring that attitude to bear on education, sex and culture, theology, politics, book reviews, postmodernism, expository studies, along with other random tidbits that come into my head. My perspective is usually not hard to discern. In theology I am an evangelical, postmill, Calvinist, Reformed, and Presbyterian, pretty much in that order. In politics, I am slightly to the right of Jeb Stuart. In my cultural sympathies, if we were comparing the blight of postmodernism to a vast but shallow goo pond, I would observe that I have spent many years on these stilts and have barely gotten any of it on me.

Visit the podcast's native language site