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Podcast from 2021

 

Religion and Work

by Joe Boot

December 29, 2021

From the creation of the very first people in the garden of Eden, human beings were called to develop the earth to create all kinds of wealth and riches that lay hidden and undeveloped in creation. This development was not and is not easy. There are three ways by which wealth can be built: hard work, inheritance, or theft.

 

Tim Keller, Power, and the Incarnation

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

December 22, 2021

For this Christmas week episode, we examine a recent tweet from Tim Keller submitted by a listener on the nature of the cross and of power. To understand what Christ was accomplishing and demonstrating on the cross, we need to consider why He came to earth as a baby in the first place, and what He has called His people to in the time before His incarnation as well as after His ascension to the Father.

 

And Such Were Some of You

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

December 15, 2021

This week’s episode deals with the recent hustle of Bill C4 through the Canadian senate, to become law early in the new year, describing how Christian counselling has effectively and explicitly been made a criminal offense. We also get a chance to respond to some listener questions on the relationship between law and gospel.

 

No Liberty without Law

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

December 8, 2021

Today Canada passed Bill C4, asserting that the basis of human dignity consists in radical autonomy from any tradition or authority. Such legislation should leave no doubt whether politics is a moral issue – it is something that Scripture speaks about, and something that ministers ought to speak on both in public and in the pulpit.

 

Answering Listener Questions on Theonomy

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

November 24, 2021

The issue of theonomy has been a perennial question – how do we understand, interpret, and apply the law of God in its original context, as well as the present day? Beginning with the basics, Joe Boot examines the origins and assumptions of the theonomic perspective, explaining that at its root, theonomy is a view of Christian ethics that seeks to take the whole Word of God seriously.

 

The Church, the Magistrate, and the Law

by Andre Schutten and Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras and Tim Stephens

November 17, 2021

Pastor Tim Stephens of Fairview Baptist Church, Calgary, joins us to talk about his experience with Alberta Health Services and the reason he persisted in gathering his church together. Andre Schutten considers some of the legal implications and precedents surrounding Tim’s case, and the nature of the relationship between the church and the civil magistrate.

 

Climate, COVID, CRT, and the new Counter-Reformation

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

November 10, 2021

Tracking the development of Western thought from the Reformation and forward into today, we notice that several contemporary dominant ideas that have their root in self-conscious opposition to God and His Word, and to the idea of man as the image-bearer of God. Chief among these in our own time is the modern green movement. What does a biblical approach to climate stewardship look like?

 

The Social Impact of the Reformation

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

November 3, 2021

As we reflect on the anniversary of the Protestant Reformation, Joe Boot addresses the common perception that the Reformation was a movement limited to the church. Rather, the recovery of biblical authority had and continues to have implications to every area of our life and work.

 

Sphere Sovereignty and Naming the World

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

October 27, 2021

We revisit two of our favourite themes – Sphere Sovereignty and Modal Aspects – and explore how these two models emerged from the Reformation and how they identify and give expression to the way the world is necessarily organized.

 

God’s Revelation in Nature

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

October 20, 2021

The biblical starting point for all human activity – including academic reflection – is the character of God as revealed in the Bible, the incarnate Son, and the created world. For man to begin with anything else is necessarily to respond in an idolatrous fashion.

 

How Do We Encounter Reality?

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

October 13, 2021

Contrary to unbelieving philosophy which places some aspect of human experience on the throne of the universe, and contrary to earlier Christian philosophy which seeks to elevate theology above all other spheres of science, is the Reformational view. On this view, the self-attesting revealed Word of God is the basis for every subsequent theory about the universe.

 

How Does the World Hold Together?

by Joe Boot and Nathan Oblak and Ryan Eras

October 6, 2021

This episode introduces the idea that aspects of reality hang together like pearls on a thread, and explains how philosophical assumptions inform and direct our everyday activities.