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Latest podcast episodes about trinity what

Christian Apologetics Research Ministry

The Matt Slick Live -Live Broadcast of 07-08-2024- is a production of the Christian Apologetics Research Ministry -CARM-. Matt answers questions on topics such as- The Bible, Apologetics, Theology, World Religions, Atheism, and other issues- You can also email questions to Matt using- info-carm.org, Put -Radio Show Question- in the Subject line- Answers will be discussed in a future show.-Topics Include--What is The Essence of God-Inseparable Operations of The Trinity-What is Closed Communion-The Significance of The Last Trumpet-Do we Ask or Believe Jesus into Our Heart-July 8, 2024

Christian Apologetics Research Ministry

The Matt Slick Live -Live Broadcast of 07-08-2024- is a production of the Christian Apologetics Research Ministry -CARM-. Matt answers questions on topics such as- The Bible, Apologetics, Theology, World Religions, Atheism, and other issues- You can also email questions to Matt using- info-carm.org, Put -Radio Show Question- in the Subject line- Answers will be discussed in a future show.-Topics Include--What is The Essence of God-Inseparable Operations of The Trinity-What is Closed Communion-The Significance of The Last Trumpet-Do we Ask or Believe Jesus into Our Heart-July 8, 2024

Living Words
The Eighteenth Sunday after Trinity: What do you think about the Messiah?

Living Words

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2023


The Eighteenth Sunday after Trinity: What do you think about the Messiah? St. Matthew 22:34-46 by William Klock I used to have a boss who prided himself on finding creative employees who were good at thinking outside the box.  When he interviewed them he'd always ask weird questions like, “How do you put an elephant in a refrigerator?”  (The correct answer is, apparently, “You open the door and put him in,” because no one said how big the refrigerator was.  Or he'd hand the prospective employee a big balloon and a small box and ask them to fit the balloon into the box.  The solution to that one was to let enough air out of the balloon that it would fit in the box.  Extra points if, instead of untying it, which a lot of people with big fingers couldn't manage, you pulled a pin from the bulletin board a few feet away and poked the thick spot just under the knot, where the balloon wouldn't pop.  That might be a good solution in a job interview, but it's also just the kind of the solution a lot of people take when they're confronted with Jesus' question, “Who do you say that I am?”  The full answer doesn't fit in our box, so we let some air out of the balloon.  We leave out Jesus' divinity.  Or we leave out his call to repentance and his demand for holiness.  Or we cut out all the things he said about judgement so that we're just left with the warm-fuzzies.  However we do it, if our solution is to let some of the air out of the balloon, what we're left with isn't the real Jesus—and we inevitably end up with a false gospel to go along with it. In our gospel today Jesus asks this same question of a group of Pharisees.  The Sadducees had just confronted Jesus with what they thought was a “gotcha” question and Jesus turned it back on them, leaving them nothing to say.  And now the Pharisees have their turn.  Look again at Matthew 22:34.  Matthew writes: But when the Pharisees heard that he had silenced the Sadducees, they gathered together.   This will be his last dispute with the Pharisees.  The next chapter, Chapter 23, is a long denunciation of the scribes and Pharisees.  It's the beginning of the end.  They've been shut down by Jesus at every turn and will go off to plot to have him killed.  But first, Matthew tells us: One of them, a lawyer, asked him a question to test him.  “Teacher, which is the great commandment in the Law?”   The Sadducees took issue with Jesus over his teaching about the resurrection of the dead.  The Pharisees took issue with Jesus over his approach to the law.  They'd counted up all of the Lord's commandments to Israel and the total came to 613.  There was some debate about which commandment was the most important, but for the most part, the Pharisees had this one figured out.  Israel's “creed”—her daily prayer, and still her daily prayer as part of her liturgies for morning and evening prayer—was the Shema, Deuteronomy 6:4: “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.”  And it goes on, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might.”  These Pharisees, however, seem to have expected Jesus to say something else.  I'm not sure what they expected.  They just expected that whatever he said about the law would be wrong.  But look at what he says in verses 37-40: And he said to him, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.  This is the great and first commandment.  And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself.  On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.”   And there's nothing here the Pharisees can argue about, and that leaves them frustrated and fuming. Here's why.  Think of it this way.  As Christians, as Jesus' people, we know that when he rose from the dead, Jesus inaugurated a new age and God's new creation.  It isn't consummated or fully here yet, but one day it will be.  In the meantime, we're the royal heralds of the Messiah, the King, called to live out the life and values of the kingdom here and now in the midst of the world's brokenness and to proclaim that he will come again one day to finish what he has started—to call people to repentance and faith in preparation for the Messiah and God's new world.  Consider that the Pharisees thought of themselves in a very similar way.  The Messiah would come to set things to rights and they were the ones heralding his return and calling the people to repentance—to a better and more rigorous observance of the torah—in anticipation of the Messiah's coming.  They were, in so many ways, on the right track.  But their vision of the kingdom and the Messiah was just too small, too narrow.  It only included Israel and it misunderstood the purpose of the torah.  It was like they'd let half the air out of their Messiah balloon. So Jesus and the Pharisees agree on this question.  They agree—at least on the surface—about the law: Love God.  Love your neighbour.  But how they do that is different from how Jesus does that and they know it.  That's why they're so frustrated with him.  The know that they and Jesus can't both be right.  Jesus' answer, in effect, is saying to them: You're not loving God as you should.  And you're not loving your neighbours as you should either.  Jesus' is subtly—or maybe not so subtly—once again asserting his Messiahship, while call the Pharisees to repentance—to get in line with the new thing that Israel's God is doing in their midst.  So they can't argue with Jesus' answer, but they're still convinced he's wrong.  They're left frustrated and fuming. So in this first part of our Gospel, Jesus gives them the answer they dare not question, but then he in turn asks them a question that they dare not answer—at least that's how Bp. Wright rather brilliantly puts it.  With his answer about the law it seems like Jesus has shut up the Pharisees as soundly as he had shut up the Sadducees, but Jesus knew there was one more point that needed to be made.  What they understood of the person and ministry of the Messiah was just as important to the Pharisees as how they understood the law.  And so Jesus goes on to tie the two together.  Look at verses 41 and 42: Now while the Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them a question, saying, “What do you think about the Messiah? Whose son is he?”   If the answer to their question about the law points to the ministry of the Messiah, then it makes sense next to ask just who they think this Messiah is or will be.  So Jesus points them in the right direction with that odd question about whose son they think the Messiah is.  He knew very well what their answer would be if he put the question to them that way.  Everyone knew that the Messiah was—or would be—the son of David.  In fact, that was one of the Messianic titles.  And the Pharisees answer just as we'd expect. They said to him, “The son of David.”   And it's the right answer.  Jesus has a way of showing everyone that they're on familiar ground, and then using that to show how they're looking at things through the wrong lens.  “Son of David” is the right answer, but now Jesus has to show them that this doesn't mean what they think it means—or, at least, that how they understand it isn't the whole picture. So Jesus replies in verses 43-45: “How is it then that David, in the Spirit, calls him Lord, saying,          “‘The Lord said to my Lord,          “Sit at my right hand,                   until I put your enemies under your feet”'? If then David calls him Lord, how is he his son?”   That “The Lord said to my Lord” bit can be confusing.  It helps if we know that Jesus is quoting from Psalm 110.  It's the most oft-quoted Psalm in the New Testament.  And if we go back to it you'll see that in our English Bibles the first “Lord” is in small capitals.  That means that this is the “Lord” that refers to God.  It's the title the Jews used instead of saying the divine name that was given to Moses: Yahweh, “I am”.  This important distinction between Lord and Lord is lost in the Greek version, which is what Matthew quotes from.  But if we understand this, then the passage starts to make more sense.  Instead of “The Lord said to my Lord,” we can read it, “Yahweh said to my Lord”.  It's not just any two “lords” here; it's Yahweh, the God of Israel addressing someone.  But who is that someone?  Who is “my Lord” referring to? At this point, let's just look at the whole psalm.  Again, this is Psalm 110.  Go ahead and turn there.  It's titled “A Psalm of (or to or for) David”. Yahweh says to my Lord:          “Sit at my right hand, until I make your enemies your footstool.” Yahweh sends forth from Zion          your mighty scepter.          Rule in the midst of your enemies! Your people will offer themselves freely          on the day of your power,          in holy garments; from the womb of the morning,          the dew of your youth will be yours. Yahweh has sworn          and will not change his mind, “You are a priest forever          after the order of Melchizedek.” Yahweh is at your right hand;          he will shatter kings on the day of his wrath. He will execute judgment among the nations,          filling them with corpses; he will shatter chiefs          over the wide earth. He will drink from the brook by the way;          therefore he will lift up his head.   So, first, “my Lord” is David.  The psalm is addressed to David, maybe written by a court musician or possibly a prophet like Nathan.  David is his Lord, his King, and he sings of what the Lord, Yahweh, the God of Israel, has promised to King David.  There's no reason to think that this was intended to be a messianic psalm when it was written.  It speaks of God's promises to David.  Yahweh, the Lord, seats him in a place of honour and gives him his sceptre—think of Samuel going out to anoint the lowly shepherd son of Jesse.  The Lord will give him victory over his enemies.  David was not of the priestly tribe of Levi, but the Lord, in making him King in Jerusalem (Zion), gives him the priesthood of Melchizedek, the priest-king of Jerusalem in the days of Abraham—and that kingly authority will be forever.  But then things are reversed.  As Yahweh has seated David at his right hand, now Yahweh places himself at David's right hand to give him victory, to make him the instrument of his judgement and wrath on the nations. It's not hard to see how, many years later, this psalm came to embody the messianic hopes of Israel.  In a time when no son of David was on the throne and Israel was governed by fake Jews like Herod and foreign pagans like the Romans, the people looked to the promises of this psalm for hope.  The people longed for the son of David to return.  David's throne—his kingly line—as the psalm implies, was to stand forever and the people knew that the Lord is faithful to his promises.  The people longed for the day when their God would judge the nations and so they sang this psalm in hopeful longing, sure of God's faithfulness and looking for the day when the son of David would come with might to take up his throne.  The Pharisees sang this psalm, too, and longed for the Messiah.  This was their hope.  When they spoke of the Messiah as the son of David, they were looking forward to the great king who would come to bring God's judgement and to defeat the nations. But this gets back to Jesus' answer to their question in the first part of the passage—the answer that pointed to the ministry of the Messiah that would finally set right the hearts of the people, that would finally enable them to truly love God and neighbour.  If the son of David is just a king who comes to crush the nations, what does that do to solve the heart problem of God's people?  How does it solve the problem of sin and Israel's inability to keep the law?  This should have been on the Pharisees' radar.  They, of all people, knew how Israel struggled to be faithful.  They of all people knew how desperately Israel needed a change of heart. So Jesus plays off the way in which this psalm had come to embody messianic hopes and that it was commonly attributed to David.  They understood the psalm to be about the son of David—the Messiah—and Jesus says, “Well, okay, that's all well and good, but there's more, because if in composing the psalm David refers to the central figure—the one you identify as his son—but calls him “my Lord”, how can that be?  How can the Messiah be David's son and David's lord (his master) at the same time?” Jesus is, in fact, the son of David, but here he draws in another identification that we see throughout Matthew's gospel.  Again, think back to Matthew 16 and Jesus' question to Peter, “Who do you say that I am?”  And Peter responded, “You are the Messiah, the son of the living God”.  That was another option the Pharisees could have given in answer to Jesus' question.  There was more than one facet to the Messiah, but hardly anyone was putting them all together. The son of David is the great king, the one who will come in judgement to set all to rights by crushing the enemies of the people.  But there's also the son of the living God.  In Matthew's gospel the son of the living God is the representative of Israel.  This title, too, is drawn from the Old Testament Prophets.  This son will fulfil the Lord's purposes for Israel where Israel has consistently failed.  This is the son who was called out of Egypt—remember how Joseph and Mary fled Herod?  This is the beloved son, the anointed servant of God—remember Jesus' baptism and the descent of the Spirit on him?  This is the Israel who is obedient in the wilderness, who is consistently faithful to the Lord and to his commands—remember Jesus tempted by the devil?  This is the son of God who acts to make peace—remember the sermon on the mount and Jesus' statement, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be sons of God”?  This is the son of God who is tempted to abandon his servanthood, first in the wilderness, then at the cross, but is faithful both times. Eventually, a few chapters later, Matthew brings the son of the living God and the son of David together as Jesus stands before the high priest, Caiaphas.  “I adjure you by the living God, tell us if you are the Christ, the Son of God,” the high priest demands.  And Jesus responds, “You have said so. But I tell you, from now on you will see the Son of Man seated at the right hand of power and coming on the clouds of heaven.”  Jesus brings together both of these “sons” in his answer.  He brings together the son of the living God story about the one who will stand as Israel's representative, as the servant who will suffer for the sake of his people, and the story we see in Psalm 110 of the son of David, the great king who will rule over the nations with the authority of the God of Israel.  When we put these stories together we see Jesus as the Lord's anointed servant, the son who humbles himself to represent the people, and who, because he has suffered and died, will be raised to God's right hand where he will reign as both king and judge.  Jesus will be the King, because he was first the servant, and as King he will judge his people by that servant standard.  That's what upset the high priest—Jesus' claim that he would sit as judge over the leaders of Israel with the authority of the God of Israel.  The Pharisees—and so many other people in Israel—they wanted the King, but the servant wasn't on their radar—and without grasping that Israel was called and created to be a servant people, they could never really understand—not really—what it meant to love God and to love neighbour. But our Gospel lesson today, this final dispute with the Pharisees, is part of the story that gets us from Peter's confession that Jesus is the son of the living God to Jesus' claim before the high priest.  Who is Jesus?  Jesus himself draws on the narrative of the people of God.  He is the son of God who will represent the people in his suffering and death and he is the son of David, not just by birth, but because it will be on account of his suffering and death that he will be raised to rule at the right hand of God. And, of course, this also redirects the people to the real source of their problems.  When they limited the identity of the Messiah to the son of David, they saw the gentiles, the nations, people like the Romans as their enemies—people the king could put to death with his sword and his army.  But when we bring in the son of God, the suffering servant, who dies and rises again, we see that what he's really come to defeat are enemies common to Jew and gentile alike: sin and death.  The Romans, the Babylonians, the Assyrians, the Edomites, the Egyptians—the nations—were never really the real problem and destroying them was never really the solution.  Sin and death are the enemies—and they're the common enemy of all humanity.  And so it's then through this dual identity—both son of God and son of David—that Jesus opens the way for the salvation not only of Israel, but of the nations. Matthew ends the passage in verse 46: And no one was able to answer him a word, nor from that day did anyone dare to ask him any more questions.   Jesus shut down the Pharisees once and for all.  The next we see of them, they're plotting to have him killed.  And, of course, if they'd really understood what Jesus was getting at here, maybe they'd have thought twice.  Instead they help Jesus to fulfil his role as suffering servant.  They didn't really understand.  Neither did the disciples.  Not at that point, anyway.  But that would change once Jesus has been raised from death and had ascended to the right hand of his Father.  Ten days later the Spirit descended on his disciples, just as he'd promised—not just as Jesus had promised, but just as the Lord had promised through the Prophets centuries before—and then they understood.  David died and was buried, but Jesus rose from death and is seated at the right hand of God.  Let me close with what Peter preached that day: “Brothers, I may say to you with confidence about the patriarch David that he both died and was buried, and his tomb is with us to this day.  Being therefore a prophet, and knowing that God had sworn with an oath to him that he would set one of his descendants on his throne, he foresaw and spoke about the resurrection of the [Messiah], that he was not abandoned to Hades, nor did his flesh see corruption.  This Jesus God raised up, and of that we all are witnesses.  Being therefore exalted at the right hand of God, and having received from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, he has poured out this that you yourselves are seeing and hearing.  For David did not ascend into the heavens, but he himself says,          “‘The Lord said to my Lord,          “Sit at my right hand,          until I make your enemies your footstool.”'   Let all the house of Israel therefore know for certain that God has made him both Lord and [Messiah], this Jesus whom you crucified.”  (Acts 2:29-36) Let's pray: Almighty God, gracious Father, we give you thank for your promises and for your faithfulness to them.  We think today especially of your promises to David and the Prophets that gave them a hope for your Messiah.  He is both David's son and your own son, the true Israel, and in him we have forgiveness of sins and the life of your kingdom.  We pray that as we live the life he gives, we would also live in hope, knowing your faithfulness and trusting in your promises, and joyfully expecting—and participating in—the work of your Church, empowered by Jesus and the Spirit as we look forward to your renewal of all things.  Amen.

Into The Red Zone
Safe Fitness Spaces for the Queer Community (Ft Trinity Joy)

Into The Red Zone

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2023 61:16


We welcome Trinity Joy, the owner of Chin Up Training, to the Red Zone today to discuss creating safer spaces for the LGBTQIA+/Queer community within health and fitness environments.In this episode, we explore the following questions with Trinity:What does it mean to be Queer and what does that mean to all of us?What does the concept of 'safe spaces' entail?What steps are necessary to ensure accessibility for the queer community in these spaces?How can trainers and practitioners make their rented spaces more inclusive?What aspects do you think are lacking, and how can we collectively address them?To connect with Trinity, reach out to them on Instagram via DMs @chinuptraining

The Word Without Walls Podcast
Bible Study--John 14:25-31

The Word Without Walls Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2023 10:23


The account of Maundy Thursday evening continues.  Here are some items of note: In verse 26, see the clear reference to to the Trinity What is the peace of which Jesus speaks? Who is the "ruler of this world" mentioned in verse 30?

Bible Thinker
20 Questions with Pastor Mike (Episode 64)

Bible Thinker

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2022 94:03


Your questions can get answered live during my next stream by doing the following:1- Wait until after the stream begins. 2- Post a clear, concise question in the live chat with a "Q" at the beginning. How to understand the Old Testament law (Part 1):https://youtu.be/qoGKJEENngc How to understand the Old Testament law (Part 2):https://youtu.be/Qdbg5Yj8040 "How correct is Kenneth Copeland?" (This is the teaching on prayer in faith that is answered with a “no” and how to reconcile that with Jesus saying that if we believed we would have what we asked.) https://youtu.be/VvA5ZWDSdmo This is the “Battle for the Next Generation” apologetics conference I’m speaking at in Palm Springs, CA on February 25-26 of 2022. You can watch the livestream with half off with this promo code: "WINGER10" (only $10) http://desertapologetics.com Here's my website with a new clip search feature for finding exactly where in a video a particular issue is addressed. https://BibleThinker.org 1. 0:33 {About “Binding and Loosing”} In Matthew 16: 19, what does the Bible mean in terms of "binding" and "loosing," and how do we rightly understand and apply that concept today?2. 25:28 {Giving to Different Ministries} If I don't feel edified by the watered-down milk preaching at my local church, it is wrong to give less money to the local church and more money to online ministries that I spend hours listening to? 3. 28:50 {Should we “Cut Someone Off” in Life?} How do I know if I am doing the right thing by cutting off a very toxic family member? I still pray for him, but I think he is dangerous and unbalanced and he refuses to get help.4. 31:32 {Defending the Trinity} What are your thoughts on the argument against the Trinity that points out the lack of a Trinitarian controversy (like that of Nicaea) in the time of Acts and the writing of the New Testament?5. 33:36 {About False Prophets} How should we interpret Deuteronomy 13:6-9? Part of chapter is often used on Mormons for Joseph Smith being a false prophet...but if rejecting a false prophet is required, would it follow that this is required, too? This chapter - all or nothing?6. 38:38 {“Being the Light” in Difficult Situations} As a new believer, I feel I won’t be able to go to my sister-in-law’s house again because they smoke weed at every gathering. How do I find balance between being the light & not being in certain situations?7. 41:19 {Leading with Confidence, Not Cockiness} I just came into a lead role in a local ministry where many of the other adults are older than I. I want to be confident, but not cocky; Firm, but able to learn. Any tips?8. 44:52 {About Cult Shunning/Shaming} How can we differentiate the instructions given by Paul in 1 Corinthians 5: 11 & by Jesus in Matthew 18: 15-17 with the shunning/shaming practices of certain cults like Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormons, etc.?9. 49:01 {About Jesus’ Suffering} Did Jesus need to have suffered the most pain ever for Him to be worthy to save us? How should we answer the objection that some people have supposedly suffered worse pain, i.e. from torture or the Holocaust?10. 52:29 {Praying for and Trusting in God’s Will} How should I pray? I prayed for my husband's health, and shortly thereafter, he died suddenly & unexpectedly. Oftentimes, I feel that my will is out of sync with Yahweh's. It hurts.11. 55:36 {Do Modern Translations Hide Mythology?} Why do modern translations hide so much mythology? Leviathan and Behemoth are animals. Isaiah 34: 14, Lillith is an owl. Psalm 96: 5, Gods are idols and not demons. I fear this leads to materialism.12. 59:46 {Witnessing Well at Work} I've had some really good conversations with friends at work about being a Christian. Wha

Bible Thinker
20 Questions with Pastor Mike (Episode 64)

Bible Thinker

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2022 94:03


Your questions can get answered live during my next stream by doing the following:1- Wait until after the stream begins. 2- Post a clear, concise question in the live chat with a "Q" at the beginning. How to understand the Old Testament law (Part 1):https://youtu.be/qoGKJEENngc How to understand the Old Testament law (Part 2):https://youtu.be/Qdbg5Yj8040 "How correct is Kenneth Copeland?" (This is the teaching on prayer in faith that is answered with a “no” and how to reconcile that with Jesus saying that if we believed we would have what we asked.) https://youtu.be/VvA5ZWDSdmo This is the “Battle for the Next Generation” apologetics conference I’m speaking at in Palm Springs, CA on February 25-26 of 2022. You can watch the livestream with half off with this promo code: "WINGER10" (only $10) http://desertapologetics.com Here's my website with a new clip search feature for finding exactly where in a video a particular issue is addressed. https://BibleThinker.org 1. 0:33 {About “Binding and Loosing”} In Matthew 16: 19, what does the Bible mean in terms of "binding" and "loosing," and how do we rightly understand and apply that concept today?2. 25:28 {Giving to Different Ministries} If I don't feel edified by the watered-down milk preaching at my local church, it is wrong to give less money to the local church and more money to online ministries that I spend hours listening to? 3. 28:50 {Should we “Cut Someone Off” in Life?} How do I know if I am doing the right thing by cutting off a very toxic family member? I still pray for him, but I think he is dangerous and unbalanced and he refuses to get help.4. 31:32 {Defending the Trinity} What are your thoughts on the argument against the Trinity that points out the lack of a Trinitarian controversy (like that of Nicaea) in the time of Acts and the writing of the New Testament?5. 33:36 {About False Prophets} How should we interpret Deuteronomy 13:6-9? Part of chapter is often used on Mormons for Joseph Smith being a false prophet...but if rejecting a false prophet is required, would it follow that this is required, too? This chapter - all or nothing?6. 38:38 {“Being the Light” in Difficult Situations} As a new believer, I feel I won’t be able to go to my sister-in-law’s house again because they smoke weed at every gathering. How do I find balance between being the light & not being in certain situations?7. 41:19 {Leading with Confidence, Not Cockiness} I just came into a lead role in a local ministry where many of the other adults are older than I. I want to be confident, but not cocky; Firm, but able to learn. Any tips?8. 44:52 {About Cult Shunning/Shaming} How can we differentiate the instructions given by Paul in 1 Corinthians 5: 11 & by Jesus in Matthew 18: 15-17 with the shunning/shaming practices of certain cults like Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormons, etc.?9. 49:01 {About Jesus’ Suffering} Did Jesus need to have suffered the most pain ever for Him to be worthy to save us? How should we answer the objection that some people have supposedly suffered worse pain, i.e. from torture or the Holocaust?10. 52:29 {Praying for and Trusting in God’s Will} How should I pray? I prayed for my husband's health, and shortly thereafter, he died suddenly & unexpectedly. Oftentimes, I feel that my will is out of sync with Yahweh's. It hurts.11. 55:36 {Do Modern Translations Hide Mythology?} Why do modern translations hide so much mythology? Leviathan and Behemoth are animals. Isaiah 34: 14, Lillith is an owl. Psalm 96: 5, Gods are idols and not demons. I fear this leads to materialism.12. 59:46 {Witnessing Well at Work} I've had some really good conversations with friends at work about being a Christian. Wha

Dangerous R&R Show Podcast
HGRNJ DR&R Show #102 Betty Jean to Bartenders

Dangerous R&R Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2021 55:37


- Opening segment- Willie DeVille - Come to papa [East West 1992] LP - Backstreets of Desire* Bed - Rolling Stones - 2120 S. Michigan AveSet 1       Shoe Salesmen DT's- Brian Auger & the Trinity - What you gonna do? [Marmalade 1969] 45 rpm* Repo man - Harry Dean Stanton-Prince Buster - Open up bartender [Blue Beat 1963] 45 rpm- Alice Cooper - Shoe salesman [Reprise / Straight 1970] LP - Easy Action- Adam & the Ants - Beat my guest [CBS 1981] 12" Single / 45 rpm* Bed - see aboveSet 2       Harolds, Harlem, Keith, Chad, & Campbells

Classical Theism Podcast
BONUS | St. Thomas on the Trinity w/ Ryan Hurd

Classical Theism Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2020 49:55


Where does St. Thomas teach about the Trinity? What is the distinction between dogmatics and systematics when it comes to theology? Why is the so-called psychological analogy the highest analogy for St. Thomas? What Scripture does St. Thomas cite in his discussions of the Trinity? Ryan Hurd joins us to answer these questions and more in a bonus episode. The Classical Theism Podcast aims to defend Catholic Christian ideas in conversation. With the help of various guests, I defend three pillars of the Catholic Christian worldview: (1) the God of classical theism exists, (2) Jesus is our Messiah and Lord, and (3) He founded the Catholic Church. We place a strong emphasis on the first pillar, defending classical theism, drawing upon the work of Thomistic philosopher Dr. Edward Feser and many others. John DeRosa www.classicaltheism.com/support

Christian Apologetics Research Ministry
Matt Slick Live 07-16-2020

Christian Apologetics Research Ministry

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2020 47:00


Open calls, questions, and discussion with Matt Slick LIVE in the studio. Questions include---1- Are we in the tribulation now---2- Can you explain Genesis 18- How did Abraham speak with the Lord if no one can see God---3- Since the moon reflects the sun, how does Genesis 1-18 say there are two lights---4- Is it ok when praying, to switch between persons of the Trinity- What about praying to angels---5- Where did Cain's wife come from---6- How do you know when you're ready to witness to someone-

The Bible Geek Show
The Bible Geek Podcast 20-010

The Bible Geek Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2020


Do the Pseudo-Clementines anticipate Pascal’s Wager? Do you find that in Catholicism the Eucharist and the rosary take on more importance than the Bible? Why do we call the coming return of Jesus to judge the living and the dead the Second Coming? Why not count his birth #1, his resurrection as # 2, his return from harrowing Hell as # 3, and the Parousia as # 4? Might the story in John 1:41-50ff be thinly veiling “Simon” (Magus) and Dositheus (equivalent in meaning to “Nathaniel”), whom the Pseudo-Clementines number among disciples of the Baptist? What if when the basic gospel was "discovered" in the Jewish Scriptures through pesher readings, perhaps some of the readers figured that it was something that had actually happened right under everyone's noses, but that nobody had noticed due to the secrecy of the mission.  Under this assumption, Mark's Messianic Secret makes a lot of sense.  It serves not just to explain why the readers never heard of it, but why nobody at all had. Margaret Barker proposed (quite convincingly, to me) that First Temple Royal Cult beliefs survived the Deuteronomic Reform and had a strong influence on Christianity.  Part of her idea is that Wisdom was supplanted by The Law that was introduced by the Deuteronomists.  Wouldn't this mean that the keepers of the Old Time Religion would have a distaste for the Law?   Would they have obeyed the Law begrudgingly, while secretly being "Keepers" (nasar) of the old ways? Is there a viable alternative to modalism and tritheism that explains the Trinity? What are the major arguments for and against Lukan authorship of Acts? Pliny tells Trajan that Christians congregate on fixed dates before sunrise and sing hymns to Christ as if to a god. So did early Christians worship the sun as a manifestation of Christ? Should higher criticism of the bible be taught in schools as an elective subject? Does the bible in fact say that the Earth is flat? 

Wholistic Hearts: A Mother’s Wholehearted Christian Approach to Spiritual Growth and Transformational Healing

We are starting a new series today asking a simple yet important question- do you KNOW Him? Who is each part of the Trinity? What do each one exhibit? How do we develop a relationship to each part as one.  We can certainly know a lot ABOUT God- do Bible Study, have a theological degree, study and memorize verses- which are all valuable.  But the essence of our being longs to be known and to know.  When we know more of God in a relational way, we are able to be known. On this episode, we ask the question of "Who is the Holy Spirit?" with my good friend Jenny Luning.  Jenny shares her testimony of experiencing the Holy Spirit in a tangible way and encourages us to ask and to see with our awakening eyes the way Holy Spirit communicates with us.  Jenny is a psychotherapist here in Colorado Springs and is accepting new clients at www.intofreedom.com.  

Creation Article Podcast
Jesus Christ Our Creator

Creation Article Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2020 13:11


The doctrine of the Trinity states that in the unity of the Godhead there are three eternal and co-equal Persons: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, the same in essence but distinct in role — three Persons (or three centres of consciousness) and one Being. The doctrine of the Trinity is difficult for some people to understand, but this is what God has revealed in Scripture about His own Being, so we should believe it. By Dr Jonathan Sarfati Originally published Mid 1996 Helpful resources Creation Answers Book Does God Exist? Who Made God? Can There be an Uncreated Creator? Why Does a Good God Allow Bad Things? Links and show notes Original article: Jesus Christ Our Creator Trinity: analogies and countering critics Our Triune God The gospel of the Triune God: our prime concern Is Jesus Christ the Creator God? The Incarnation: Why did God become Man? Hypostatic Union: Did Jesus know when he was coming back? Does the Old Testament reveal the Trinity? What was God doing before creation? Follow us (if you want) ► Facebook https://facebook.com/creationministries ► Twitter https://twitter.com/creationnews ► Instagram https://instagram.com/creationministries Support Creation.com https://creation.com/donate

TrinityCypher
Episode 1 who is Trinity?

TrinityCypher

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2019 4:50


Who the heck is Trinity? What is she talking about? Why should I listen to her? Well just tune in and I’ll tell you! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/TrinityCypher/support

trinity what
Project Zion Podcast
Episode 130: The Nature of God

Project Zion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2018 64:14


How does the Feminine Divine fit into the Trinity? What place in our theological and daily lives can the Feminine Divine hold? Listen to Katie, Brittany, and Robin talk about these questions and much more in this episode of the Project Zion Podcast.

Mazan Movie Club
MMC #18 "The Matrix"

Mazan Movie Club

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2018 63:20


Cornelius Burroughs is back and discussing a Live Action film for the first time from the IMDb list.  Steve Mazan and Denise talk all about 1999's "The Matrix" with him.  How trendsetting is this film? Is it rated to high OR too low? How hot was Trinity? What the hell is Keanu's deal? Is there something biblical going on here? Should this now get credit as a female directed movie? All these questions and a whole lot more get answered on this week's episode. "The Matrix" on IMDb Cornelius Burroughs on Facebook Steve Mazan on Facebook/Home of the Mazan Movie Club Steve's Comedy Home

All Souls Anglican Church | Portland, Ore
The Beauty of Holiness: Life in the Trinity (What is worship?) | Fr. Stephen Hall | Hebrews 12.22-29

All Souls Anglican Church | Portland, Ore

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2017 19:59


The Beauty of Holiness: Life in the Trinity (What is worship?) | Fr. Stephen Hall | Hebrews 12.22-29 by All Souls Anglican

GotQuestions.org Audio Pages - Archive 2015-2016

What is the economic Trinity? What are the unique relationships among the Three Persons of the Trinity?

St. Josemaria Institute Podcast
The Most Holy Trinity

St. Josemaria Institute Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2015 34:12


On the Feast of the Most Holy Trinity, Fr. Javier del Castillo reflects on what we know (by Faith), and what we cannot comprehend, about the three divine Persons of the blessed Trinity. What you’ll hear: - Why God created us - How the three Persons of the Trinity are distinguished from one another and how they are not - Our desire (and inability) to comprehend the great mystery of the Holy Trinity - How St. Athanasius fought to keep the mystery of the Trinity whole - The heresy that Arius taught about the Trinity - What the First Council of Nicaea and the First Council of Constantinople reaffirmed about the Trinity - How Jesus Christ is the “gateway” to the Holy Trinity - How St. Josemaria used the number 103 to explain the Trinity - Why studying the Trinity takes intellectual humility Quotes: “The Trinity is eternal love. The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit have been in love from all eternity, before the foundation of the world. That is all there was, there was love.” “Because love is seeking always to share the great happiness and joy that it possesses, the Holy Trinity has freely, without any need, chosen to create us, to have creatures with which they can share this great happiness that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit have had from all eternity.” “It is God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit who create. It is God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit who save, who redeem and forgive our sins. It is God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit who sanctify us…. Because anything that God does ‘outside of God’ is done by all three persons.” “We cannot understand what the Blessed Trinity is, and how this mystery of love has decided to create us in His image. Our heart cannot understand that, and it is too big to fit in our minds. And yet, through Faith, is has been revealed to us that [The Trinity] exists, and that it is truly the end [goal] of our existence.” “Instead of thinking of our relationship to God as spousal, St. Josemaria liked to think of it as filial. We are children of God, in the Son.” A GUIDE FOR MEDITATION: We encourage you to write down moments from the meditations that strike you, as well as the thoughts, inspirations and resolutions that arise from your prayer and reflection with our Meditation Journal Sheet. Download it here: http://www.stjosemaria.org/meditations ST. JOSEMARIA INSTITUTE PODCAST: Don't miss new podcasts and additional resources for your spiritual life from the St. Josemaria Institute. Subscribe today at: http://www.stjosemaria.org/subscribe

Oak Pointe Church Podcast
Foundations (Part 4) - 10.5.14 Video

Oak Pointe Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2014 50:39


Who is the Trinity? What are the individual roles of the Father, the Son and the Spirit?

Oak Pointe Church Podcast
Foundations (Part 4) - 10.5.14 Audio

Oak Pointe Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2014 50:38


Who is the Trinity? What are the individual roles of the Father, the Son and the Spirit?