1. I’ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm In this episode, we discuss how pre-modern church history, the Industrial Revolution, therapeutics, language, corporate culture, and the flight of heretics from Europe in the 17th-18th century affected contemporary Western churches.
  2. This week, Dr. Paulson outlines Erasmus' bold claim that the existence of the law necessitates human free will.
  3. Lutherans started the Protestant Reformation. However, they shy away from the term today.
  4. Come Together, Right Now… In this episode, we read from Tim Keller’s sermon, which asks, “What is the Church?” We discuss the relationship between churches and culture, what the church is and isn’t, where we locate faith, whether Christian faith changes one’s values, and much more.
  5. This episode begins an examination of the Apostle Paul's proclamation that where there is no law, there is no sin.
  6. Burning Down The House. In this episode, we continue our discussion of election, addressing the certainty of election, how we are chosen, the human limits of perseverance in faith, why the pope is a bad example of Christian piety, and how old Adam tries to invert election by burying it in our sacrifices and pious moralism.
  7. Jared C. Wilson joins Kelsi to chat about his latest book, ⁠Lest We Drift: Five Departure Dangers from the One True Gospel⁠.
  8. Dr. Paulson continues to characterize the dialogue between Luther and Erasmus.
  9. Today on the Christian History Almanac, we remember the Huguenots and their disastrous American colonies.
  10. Is the Gospel just a feeling of relief?
  11. Sunday Bloody Sunday In this episode, we read Martin Luther’s sermon for Maundy Thursday (1534), discussing the Lord’s Supper, polity, sacramental piety, fellowship, election and all the rabbit trails we follow…