Episodes

  • Through the Church Fathers: March 27
    Mar 27 2026

    Faithfulness under fire, a mother’s tears in the dark, and the mystery of divine mission—today’s readings move from blood-soaked arenas to a restless heart in Milan, and finally into the inner life of the Trinity. Under Decius, the Church is assaulted from without even as weakness troubles her from within: bishops beheaded, young believers tortured, Agatha burned, Babylas refusing an emperor entry to the assembly. Yet amid persecution, courage and clarity shine. Augustine then brings us into another battlefield—the soul—where his mother follows him across land and sea, trusting that God will raise her son from spiritual death. And Aquinas presses deeper still, asking whether the Father can be sent, guarding the truth that mission implies procession, and that the Father, as the unoriginate source, is not sent though He gives the Son and the Spirit. Martyrdom, maternal prayer, and Trinitarian precision—each reveals a Church purified through suffering, sustained by hope, and anchored in truth.

    Readings: John Foxe — Foxe’s Book of Martyrs, Chapter 2.5 — The Seventh Persecution Under Decius Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 6, Chapter 1 (Section 1) Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 43, Article 4

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    9 mins
  • Through the Church Fathers: March 26
    Mar 26 2026

    Persecution tests the body, doubt tests the mind, and theology guards the truth—and in this session we see all three. In John Foxe’s Foxe’s Book of Martyrs (Chapter 2.4), the fifth persecution under Septimius Severus reveals how quickly imperial favor can turn into fury. Victor I, Leonides, Irenaeus, and many others seal their witness in blood, while even an officer like Basilides is converted at the execution of a Christian woman and then loses his own life for refusing to swear by idols. The Church bleeds, yet, as Tertullian observes, it only grows stronger. Meanwhile, in Augustine’s Confessions (Book 5, Chapter 14), Augustine is not facing lions but ideas. Listening to Ambrose for style rather than truth, he slowly realizes that the Catholic faith he had dismissed can answer its critics. Yet he does not rush to belief; instead, he wavers like the Academics, abandoning Manichaeism but refusing to entrust his soul to philosophers who lack the saving name of Christ. And in Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Theologica (Part 1, Questions 40–42), we move from history and conversion into the inner life of God Himself: the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are subsisting relations—eternal generation and spiration establish order without inequality, distinction without division. The martyrs show that truth is worth dying for; Augustine shows that truth must be wrestled with; Aquinas shows that truth must be spoken with precision. Across persecution, doubt, and doctrine, one thread holds: the faith is not irrational, not defeated, and not confused—it stands firm, whether before emperors, philosophers, or the mystery of the Trinity.

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    8 mins
  • Through the Church Fathers: March 25
    Mar 25 2026

    In this session we witness the paradox of power and weakness—an empire flexing its might, a restless scholar inching toward truth, and a theologian clarifying the mystery of God’s own being. In John Foxe’s Foxe’s Book of Martyrs (Chapter 2.3), the fourth persecution under Marcus Aurelius (A.D. 162) reveals cruelty at its most refined—Polycarp standing immovable in the flames, Blandina strengthening a fifteen-year-old boy as she herself endures repeated torture, Justin the philosopher exchanging Plato for Christ and ultimately his life for the gospel. Yet the blood of the martyrs shines brighter than imperial wrath. In Augustine’s Confessions (Book 5, Chapter 13, Section 23), we see a different kind of battlefield: Augustine arrives in Milan to teach rhetoric, still proud, still skeptical, listening to Ambrose not for truth but for style—yet, as he confesses, he was being led unknowingly by God so that he might knowingly be led to God. And in Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Theologica (Part 1, Question 39), we ascend from persecution and personal struggle into the inner life of the Trinity itself: the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are one divine essence, not confused, not divided, but distinguished by real relations—showing us that Christian confession rests not only on courage under suffering but on clarity about who God is. Martyrs die, skeptics are drawn, and doctrine deepens—because truth is worth suffering for, worth seeking, and worth defining.

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    12 mins
  • Through the Church Fathers: March 24
    Mar 24 2026

    Empire, corruption, and divine procession—today’s readings move from Roman brutality to personal honesty to Trinitarian precision. In Foxe’s Book of Martyrs, Chapter 2.2, we stand under the third great persecution beginning in 108 under Trajan, where Christians were not to be hunted, yet punished when accused—a policy that institutionalized fear while pretending restraint. We hear of Symphorosa and her 7 sons, of Ignatius of Antioch torn by beasts, of countless others whose deaths only strengthened the Church’s witness. Yet even in the midst of cruelty, apologetic voices like Quadratus and Aristides rose to defend the faith, and persecution eventually paused under Antoninus Pius. Augustine then brings the struggle inward in The Confessions, Book 5, Chapter 12, where he discovers the dishonesty of his Roman students and confronts his own mixed motives—hating injustice more because it harmed him than because it offended God. His confession exposes how easily self-interest disguises itself as righteousness. Finally, Thomas Aquinas in Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 36, Article 4, clarifies that the Father and the Son are one principle of the Holy Spirit—not two competing sources, but one divine origin in the unity of essence and power. From martyrdom to moral self-examination to theological clarity, today’s readings remind us that the Church is refined by suffering, corrected by confession, and stabilized by truth.

    Readings: John Foxe — Foxe’s Book of Martyrs, Chapter 2.2—The Ten Primitive Persecutions Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 5, Chapter 12 (Section 22) Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 36, Article 4

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    #ThroughTheChurchFathers #ChurchHistory #Foxe #Augustine #Aquinas #EarlyChurch #Trinity

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    9 mins
  • Through the Church Fathers: March 23
    Mar 23 2026

    Persecution, confusion, and clarity—today’s readings trace the Church from flames in Rome to doctrinal precision in the Trinity. In Foxe’s Book of Martyrs, we witness the first two great imperial assaults on Christianity: Nero’s calculated cruelty after the fire of Rome in 67, when believers were sewn into skins, burned as torches, and blamed for a catastrophe they did not cause, and Domitian’s more systemic oppression beginning in 81, marked by legal coercion, confiscations, and the execution of both leaders and ordinary saints. Yet Foxe reminds us that persecution did not extinguish the faith; it refined it, even as Peter, Paul, Timothy, and many others sealed their testimony in blood. Augustine then brings the struggle inward in The Confessions (Book 5, Chapter 11), recounting how Helpidius’s public defense of the New Testament unsettled the Manichaean claim that Scripture had been corrupted. Augustine stands caught between skepticism and longing, intellectually entangled yet gasping for the “breath” of God’s truth. Finally, Thomas Aquinas in Summa Theologica (Part 1, Question 36, Article 2) addresses a question born of centuries of reflection: whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Son. With careful reasoning, he affirms that the Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son as from one principle—Love proceeding from the Word—showing how doctrinal clarity emerges from a Church that has survived both fire and error.

    Readings: John Foxe — Foxe’s Book of Martyrs, Chapter 2.1—The Ten Primitive Persecutions Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 5, Chapter 11 (Section 21) Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 36, Article 2

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    #ThroughTheChurchFathers #ChurchHistory #Foxe #Augustine #Aquinas #EarlyChurch #ChristianDoctrine

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    9 mins
  • Through the Church Fathers: March 21
    Mar 21 2026

    Before the church could defend the faith, it first had to bleed for it. Today we step into that sobering transition as we read from John Foxe and his Book of Martyrs, opening with the early persecutions that shaped the church’s identity. Foxe reminds us that Christian history is not merely a story of theology, but of suffering—beginning with John the Baptist, continuing through the crucifixion of Christ, and unfolding in the stoning of Stephen and the execution of James under Herod Agrippa. The gospel, which breathes peace and love, did not fail; rather, it exposed the darkness of the human heart. The resurrection transformed frightened apostles into bold witnesses, and that boldness provoked fury. Stephen preached and was stoned. James was beheaded. Thousands scattered. Christianity did not spread because it was politically convenient, but because believers would not deny Christ. Then we turn inward with Augustine of Hippo in The Confessions, where the battle is no longer external but intellectual. Augustine, weary of Manichaean error, drifts toward Academic skepticism, nearly persuading himself that truth may not be knowable at all. Yet his struggle reveals something deeper: he cannot conceive of God except as material substance. His bondage is philosophical before it is moral. Finally, with Thomas Aquinas in the Summa Theologica, we see clarity restored. In Question 34, Aquinas asks whether “Person” is properly said of the Son. He answers that the Son is not a separate substance but a subsisting relation—God from God, distinguished by eternal filiation, not divided in essence. The Word is not an accident but the living, eternal self-expression of the Father. Today’s readings move from blood, to doubt, to doctrinal precision. The church suffers. The soul wrestles. Theology clarifies. And through it all, Christ remains confessed.

    Readings:

    John Foxe — Book of Martyrs, Chapter 1 (Early Roman Persecutions)

    Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 5, Chapter 10 (Section 19)

    Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 34 (Articles 1–3 Combined)

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    #ThroughTheChurchFathers #ChurchHistory #ChristianMartyrs #Augustine #Aquinas

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    10 mins
  • Through the Church Fathers: March 20
    Mar 20 2026

    Judgment, repentance, and the Fatherhood of God—today’s readings hold these together with striking clarity. In Second Clement (Chapters 16–20), we are reminded that the day of the Lord comes like a burning oven (Malachi 4:1). Hidden works will be revealed, and present delay is not indifference but mercy. Almsgiving, love, and repentance are not small matters; they prepare us for resurrection and glory. Augustine, in Confessions 5.10 (18), exposes the deeper danger: sin becomes most incurable when we deny that it is ours. His pride preferred blaming another “nature” rather than confessing, “I have sinned against You” (Psalm 41:4). True healing begins where self-excuse ends. Aquinas, in Summa Theologica I, Question 33 (Articles 1–4), lifts our eyes to the eternal mystery behind our salvation. “Father” is not sentimental language but a real relation of origin—the one who eternally begets the Son. Distinction without division; relation without fragmentation. The God who judges is the Father who eternally gives. Repentance, endurance, and reverent clarity belong together.

    Second Clement, Chapters 16–20

    Augustine, Confessions 5.10 (18)

    Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica I, Question 33 (Articles 1–4)

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    #EarlyChurchFathers #SecondClement #Augustine #ThomasAquinas #ChurchHistory #ChristianTheology #Patristics #Confessions #SummaTheologica #ThroughTheChurchFathers

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    11 mins
  • Through the Church Fathers: March 19
    Mar 19 2026

    Here is the podcast formatted according to your Early Church Fathers track rule—one single paragraph covering all three readings, followed by the required closing section:

    Today’s readings confront us with a sobering truth: belief that does not endure, love that does not act, and theology that is not rooted in reverence all collapse under pressure. In Second Clement (Chapters 11–15), Pseudo-Clement warns against double-mindedness, urging believers to trust God’s promises even when fulfillment seems delayed, reminding us that the kingdom comes through perseverance, purity of heart, visible righteousness, and lives that prevent God’s name from being blasphemed among the nations (Isaiah 66:24; Luke 16:10; Matthew 12:50). He presses us to examine whether our works match our words, whether we love our enemies as Christ commands, and whether we truly belong to the living Church—the spiritual body manifested in Christ—by keeping the flesh undefiled so as to partake of the Spirit. Augustine, in Confessions 5.9 (17), turns our attention to the power of a praying mother, reflecting on Monica’s tears and unwavering petitions, trusting that God would not despise a “contrite and humble heart” (Psalm 51:17), and marveling that the Lord, whose “mercy endures forever” (Psalm 136:1), answers prayers not always by immediate rescue but by providential design. Aquinas, in Summa Theologica I, Question 32 (Articles 2–4), clarifies how we speak rightly of the divine persons, explaining that in God there are five “notions”—grounded in real relations of origin—by which Father, Son, and Spirit are distinguished without dividing the one simple divine essence. Together these readings call us to faith that waits, repentance that acts, prayer that trusts, and doctrine that guards the mystery of the Trinity with precision and humility.

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    11 mins