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Theology on Mission
Theology on Mission
Author: Theology on Mission
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For those longing to connect theology and mission, we are talking about God and everything else. Broadcasting from NORTHERN SEMINARY, in partnership with Missio Alliance, David Fitch and Mike Moore bring their experiences as pastors and professors to bear on issues of mission and church. Pull up a chair or take them and their guests with you around town.
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How do we make sense of sexuality and discern attraction? Fitch and Moore explore the ways various sexualities have been constructed by cultural forces and how the church should discern a way forward. If you want to study with us and other scholars like Greg Boyd, Nijay Gupta, Beth Jones, visiting professors like Jeannine Brown, Drew Hart, Jonathan Tran, check us out at www.seminary.edu
This year's Theology & Mission lecturer joined Fitch and Moore for a conversation just hours before the public lectures. If you want to study with us and other scholars like Greg Boyd, Nijay Gupta, Beth Jones, visiting professors like Jeannine Brown, Drew Hart, Jonathan Tran, check us out at www.seminary.edu
What happens when a theological tradition outlives the cultural moment that gave it meaning?David Fitch lays out why he no longer identifies as Reformed, not as an attack, but as a contextual theological critique. Joined by Mike Moore, Fitch reflects on how Reformed theology emerged faithfully in medieval Europe, why it made sense there, and why its dominant expressions no longer fit the cultural realities of North America today.This episode is not a takedown of Luther or Calvin. Instead, it is an invitation to take context seriously: how theology travels, how power works, how Scripture is interpreted, and how unintended consequences shape the church long after doctrines are formed. Along the way, Fitch argues for a constructive alternative rooted in neo-Anabaptist, holiness, and Pentecostal streams traditions shaped for life beyond Christendom.🎙️ In This Episode:Why all theology is contextual without being relativisticHow Reformed theology functioned within medieval ChristendomPenal substitutionary atonement: where it made sense—and where it doesn’tHow views of sovereignty, hierarchy, and predestination mirror cultural assumptionsWhy sola scriptura has produced interpretive chaos in modern evangelicalismThe case for neo-Anabaptist, holiness, and Pentecostal theology today📌 Highlights:[00:08:00] Why Protestantism “had nothing to protest” in North America[00:13:00] How Reformed theology was later used to interiorize salvation[00:20:00] Power, sovereignty, and concessions to Christendom[00:26:00] The dangers of unmoored sola scriptura[00:30:00] Why holiness, Pentecostal, and Anabaptist traditions fit our moment📚 Resources Mentioned: “Protestantism Without Reformation” (1939) by Dietrich Bonhoeffer — found in No Rusty Swords, this essay critiques American Protestantism for losing its reforming edge, a theme echoed throughout this episode.Scott Jones (New Persuasive Words) — “Reforming the Reformers? Dave Fitch, Neo-Baptists, and a Misread Reformation” — Scott and Bill respond directly to Fitch’s post and critique his reading of the Reformers. (Episode 390: https://npw.fireside.fm/390) Gustaf Aulén, Christus Victor —
Rather than a “best of” recap, this year-end episode names the deep uncertainties shaping 2026 and asks how followers of Jesus might live faithfully in the midst of them.From artificial intelligence and political instability to education, housing, and the erosion of trust in institutions, the hosts reflect on the pressures facing Gen Z, pastors, and local churches alike. The conversation circles back again and again to one central question: Where should we center our lives when everything else feels unstable?🎙️ In This Episode:Why AI may be more disruptive to human formation than the internetThe growing normalization of political violence and public mistrustThe collapse and reimagining of higher education and theological formationWhy homeownership feels impossible and how churches might respond creativelyWhat it means to center life in the local church amid cultural fragmentation📌 Highlights:[00:08:00] AI, creativity, and resisting a culture of convenience[00:17:00] Political unrest and the call to local faithfulness[00:26:00] Education’s crisis—and why formation still matters[00:31:00] Housing, community, and economic imagination[00:39:00] Centering life in the church rather than institutions or identity markersWhen institutions falter, and the future feels unclear, the church is called to become a visible alternative—not a retreat from the world, but a grounded community of discernment, presence, and hope. The work ahead is not to predict the future, but to faithfully inhabit it together.If 2026 truly is a year of uncertainty, what would it look like to locate your identity not in success, security, or certainty but in a shared life centered on Jesus, practiced in real neighborhoods, with real people?
Can the Bible still guide faithful political engagement—or has it been too abused to help? In this timely conversation, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore welcome theologian, author, and Holy Post co-host Kaitlyn Schiess to discuss her book The Ballot and the Bible: How Scripture Has Been Used and Abused in American Politics and Where We Go from Here.Together, they explore how American Christians have wielded (and often weaponized) the Bible in public life. From Romans 13 and the Revolutionary War to slavery, civil rights, and the rise of Christian nationalism. Kaitlyn offers both a critique of misuse and a hopeful invitation: to reclaim Scripture as a source of wisdom, hospitality, and faithful witness in the public square.🎙️ In This Episode:Why the Bible still matters for politics (even after all the misuse)How Romans 13 has been used to justify everything from rebellion to tyrannyThe disturbing history of biblical defenses of slavery and what we can learn from Black interpretersHow the civil rights movement modeled faithful, embodied, Scripture-shaped resistanceWhy pastors and leaders must form people for faithfulness, not just political alignment📌 Highlights:[00:06:00] How Scripture became “weaponized” in the American Revolution[00:13:00] Romans 13 and the danger of using the Bible to win political arguments[00:19:00] How enslaved believers read the Bible differently and more faithfully than their oppressors[00:27:00] MLK and the Black Church as a model for Scripture-shaped activism[00:33:00] Why true political discipleship starts in the church, not the stateThe problem isn’t that the Bible speaks to politics; it’s that we’ve forgotten how to let it form us before we use it. The call today is not to abandon Scripture in public life but to recover its use as an act of love, truth, and hospitality.📚 Resources Mentioned:The Ballot and the Bible by Kaitlyn SchiessThe Liturgy of Politics by Kaitlyn SchiessThe Spirit of Our Politics by Michael WearReckoning with Power by David FitchThe Christian Imagination by Willie James JenningsThe Fire in My Bones by Albert RaboteauResident Aliens by Stanley Hauerwas & William WillimonWhen Scripture is used to defend power instead of form faith, everyone loses. What would it look like to read the Bible not to win debates, but to become the kind of people who can love, listen, and lead in public as followers of Jesus?
What if racism isn’t primarily about ignorance or hate, but about greed? In this episode, Dave Fitch and guest co-host Gino Curcuruto sit down with Dr. Malcolm Foley, pastor, scholar, and author of The Anti-Greed Gospel: Why the Love of Money is the Root of Racism and How the Church Can Create a New Way Forward.Dr. Foley unpacks how economic exploitation lies at the heart of racial injustice—and why Jesus’ warning that “you cannot serve both God and mammon” is as urgent today as ever. Together they explore the demonic cycle of self-interest that perpetuates racism through exploitation, violence, and lies, and they offer a vision for Christian communities shaped by deep economic solidarity, creative nonviolence, and prophetic truth-telling.🎙️ In This Episode:Why greed—not hate—is the true root of racismHow capitalism and racial hierarchy became intertwinedThe role of mammon as a spiritual power deforming the churchWhy anti-racism and reparations often miss the deeper structural sinHow the church can become a visible alternative to exploitation and fear📌 Highlights:[00:09:00] Race as a “demonic cycle” of exploitation, violence, and lies[00:13:00] How greed drives racialized slavery, lynching, and modern inequities[00:18:00] Why the church must flee mammon, not just manage it[00:24:00] The Sermon on the Mount as a blueprint for kingdom economics[00:35:00] How local churches can witness through economic solidarity and love of enemiesWe can’t end racism without confronting greed. The good news: the church already holds the resources to resist mammon and embody a new economy of grace.📚 Resources Mentioned:The Anti-Greed Gospel by Malcolm Foley (Brazos Press)Asian Americans and the Spirit of Racial Capitalism by Jonathan TranGod’s Reign and the End of Empires by Antonio GonzálezReckoning with Power by David FitchMosaic Church WacoMalcolm Foley at Baylor UniversityWhat if a true test of discipleship isn’t how we treat differences but how we handle money? How could your church become a community of economic solidarity, creative peace, and prophetic truth in the face of mammon’s pull?
What happens when church leadership shifts from pulpits to platforms? In this episode, Dave Fitch and guest co-host Gino Curcuruto unpack Carl Trueman’s article, “Goodbye Big Eva, Hello Gig Eva,” exploring how evangelical culture has moved from the conference stage to the influencer feed, and what that means for the church.Together, they trace the shift from “Big Eva” (celebrity pastors and large conferences) to “Gig Eva” (independent online influencers shaping faith outside accountability or community). The conversation wrestles with how this new ecosystem forms pastors, congregations, and the public imagination of what “church” even is and calls for a recovery of embodied, local, presence-based ministry.🎙️ In This Episode:The difference between Big Eva and Gig Eva—and why both shape the church’s imaginationHow digital influence redefines leadership, authority, and credibilityThe danger of disembodied discipleship and social media “theology”Why pastors must resist measuring faithfulness by metrics or clicksHow to reclaim embodied church in an age of platform-driven ministry📌 Highlights:[00:07:00] “Big Eva” as the era of celebrity pastors and conference platforms[00:10:00] “Gig Eva” as the rise of influencers without local accountability[00:17:00] How online perception replaces real discipleship[00:24:00] The lure of success, self-promotion, and burnout in ministry[00:33:00] Embodied church as the faithful alternative to the gig economyThe future of the church isn’t in virality, it’s in presence. Faithful ministry grows from local soil, not from algorithms. The way forward is slow, small, and deeply relational.📖 Resources Mentioned:“Goodbye Big Eva, Hello Gig Eva” by Carl Trueman (First Things)The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self by Carl R. TruemanReckoning with Power: Why the Church Fails When It’s on the Wrong Side of Power by David FitchThe Strategically Small Church by Brandon O’BrienThe Glass Church and The Church Must Grow or Perish by Gerardo Marti & Mark MulderTable Philly ChurchFitch’s Provocations (Substack)What does it mean to lead faithfully when “success” is measured by followers, not fruit? How can your church move from digital performance to embodied presence?
What’s really driving America’s political chaos, and what does it mean for the church? In this episode, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore dig beneath partisan headlines to uncover the deeper philosophical divide shaping our cultural and theological conflicts. Fitch traces the roots of our polarization to two competing political visions: liberal democracy (centered on individual freedom) and national conservatism (centered on shared cultural values).From there, they explore how both sides fall short and why neither has room for the church. The conversation turns toward what it means for Christians to embody a third way: a politic of the kingdom rooted in community, discipleship, and the lordship of Christ.🎙️ In This Episode:The deep ideological divide behind America’s political warsLiberal democracy vs. national conservatism—what each gets right (and wrong)How both sides sideline the churchWhy coercion and individualism can never produce kingdom lifeWhat pastors can do to lead faithfully in a polarized world📌 Highlights:[00:05:00] The individual vs. the collective—two visions of society[00:10:00] Why Christian nationalism fails in a multicultural world[00:15:00] Hauerwas, Rawls, and the politics of virtue[00:21:00] The church as an alternative politic[00:24:00] “Start with five people”: how pastors can build kingdom communities amid chaosBoth liberal democracy and national conservatism promise freedom, but only the church can form people to live free in Christ. When Christians embody the politics of Jesus together, they become the living alternative our polarized world desperately needs.
Two weeks after the assassination of Charlie Kirk, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore process the grief, confusion, and cultural fallout surrounding his death. Beyond the tragedy, they explore what Charlie Kirk symbolized in American Christianity—and what his influence reveals about the modern church’s failures in discipleship, community, and cultural engagement.Fitch argues that Kirk’s rise, and the polarization surrounding him, exposes an empty ecclesiology: a Christianity shaped more by individualism and ideology than by the life of the local church. Together, the hosts ask hard questions about power, influence, and the role of the church in a politically divided age.Charlie Kirk as a Cultural Symbol (Part 1): https://substack.com/home/post/p-173936722 Charlie Kirk is a Cultural Symbol (Part 2): https://davidfitch.substack.com/p/charlie-kirk-is-a-cultural-symbol 🎙️ In This Episode:The difference between Charlie Kirk the person and Charlie Kirk the cultural symbolHow antagonism replaces real conversation in our political and religious discourseThe church’s failure to disciple young people and engage complex moral questionsWhy “influencers” are filling the space the church has vacatedHow individualistic faith leads to political idolatry📌 Highlights:[00:05:00] Why Charlie Kirk became a master signifier of political identity[00:10:00] How antagonism keeps us from addressing real issues on the ground[00:15:00] The influencer as a substitute for the church[00:22:00] The hunger of young men for direction and discipleship[00:27:00] From personal faith to political power: how individualism fuels Christian nationalismCharlie Kirk’s rise and death reveal both the brokenness of our political moment and the vacuum left by the church’s retreat from public discipleship. Until the church reclaims its call to embody the presence and power of Jesus in community, political idols will keep filling the gap.
What happens when we read the Bible faithfully but miss the culture we’re speaking into? In this episode, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore dig into why biblical studies and cultural studies must go hand in hand for pastors, leaders, and everyday Christians. From sexuality to money, from language to power, interpretation always happens inside a culture. Ignore that, and our preaching either falls flat or feels dictatorial.🎙️ In This Episode:Why evangelicals and post-evangelicals default to biblical studies but often ignore cultural dynamicsHow terms like “gay” or even “marriage” carry radically different meanings in different communitiesWhy listening to culture is essential before speaking the gospel into itPractical stories from Hyde Park, Wheaton, and Boystown on how cultural contexts shape identity and desireWhat pastors and parents can learn about engaging teens and younger generations📌 Highlights:[00:05:00] Why evangelicals are blind to cultural dynamics[00:09:00] Romans 1 and the problem of assuming “gay” means the same thing across times and places[00:16:00] Learning cultural dynamics by listening in coffee shops, not just reading books[00:21:00] Why assumptions about money, power, and sexuality can shut people off from the gospel[00:24:00] The call to humility and presence in our cultural engagementPastors don’t just need to read their Bibles; they need to read their neighborhoods. Without cultural awareness, even the most faithful biblical interpretation can miss the mark.
Russell Moore kicks off Season 11 with an honest and wide-ranging conversation about the fractured state of American evangelicalism. From his own departure from the SBC to his reflections on revival, integrity, and biblical authority, Moore offers both critique and hope. Dave and Mike push into what needs preserving, what needs reimagining, and where we might see life again in the dry bones of evangelical witness.Whether you’re nostalgic for the church you grew up in, disillusioned by it, or daring to believe something new is possible—this episode offers wisdom, challenge, and a reminder of the gospel’s power to revive.🎧 In This Episode:The danger of using Christianity as a means to an endWhy “personal” doesn’t have to mean “individualistic”Scripture as encounter vs. informationWhat real revival might look like todayRecovering wonder, hope, and moral credibility in the church🛠 Resources Mentioned:Losing Our Religion: An Altar Call for Evangelical America by Russell MooreThe Russell Moore Show – podcast from Christianity TodayReckoning with Power: Why the Church Fails When It's on the Wrong Side of Power by David FitchCenter for Public Theology at Christianity Today
Is it time to refresh the old church planting playbook?
In this forward-thinking episode, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore sit down with Dr. Eun K. Strawser to explore how church planting must evolve in a post-COVID world. Drawing on her work with the IWA Collaborative, her leadership at Ma Ke Alo o, and insights from her upcoming book You Were Never Meant to Lead Alone, Eun outlines a vision for leadership that is local, diverse, co-vocational, and built on discipleship, not metrics.
🎙️ In This Episode:
Why the old church planting model no longer fits post-pandemic realities
The rise of co-vocational, prophetically bent leaders—especially Black, Brown, and women leaders
Redefining success: from attendance metrics to neighborhood presence
A vision of shared leadership rooted in communal discipleship
The emerging partnership between Northern Seminary and IWA Collaborative
📌 Highlights:
[00:08:00] What the Eva bird teaches us about leadership and local nesting
[00:13:00] Co-vocational leadership and the shift away from big-budget, parachute church plants
[00:22:00] How prophetic, local leaders are already planting churches—whether they call it that or not
[00:29:00] Eun’s forthcoming book: You Were Never Meant to Lead Alone (pre-order available soon)
[00:33:00] Five pillars of the new church planting initiative:
Centering Discipleship (book link)
Intercultural Dynamics
Sharing Leadership
Pastoring Co-Vocationally
Exegeting Neighborhoods
💡 Takeaway:
Church planting isn’t dead—it’s just waking up to a new imagination. The future belongs to grounded leaders who know their neighborhood, share power, center discipleship, and stop disqualifying themselves from God’s call.
📖 Resources Mentioned:
Centering Discipleship by Eun K. Strawser (IVP)
Eun’s upcoming book You Were Never Meant to Lead Alone (Fall 2024 – Preorder link coming soon)
Northern Seminary Church Planting Initiative
IWA Collaborative
Lawndale Christian Community Church
Christian Community Development Association (CCDA)
What happens when expository preaching meets jazz improvisation?
In this musical and moving conversation, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore welcome Mark Glanville, pastor, jazz pianist, and author of Preaching in a New Key, to explore how preaching can meet the needs of post-Christian communities. From shifting cultural landscapes to the crisis of plausibility in faith, this episode unpacks how the preacher’s voice, imagination, and presence can open up space for beauty, belonging, and belief.
🎙️ In This Episode:
Why a 1970s preaching manual is still #1 on Amazon—and why that’s a problem
What a “crisis of plausibility” means for modern preaching
Why Scripture must be heard as a communal word, not just an individual one
How preaching can surprise people into faith through beauty and truth
What jazz, blues, and the Psalms can teach us about crafting sermons today
📌 Highlights:
[00:07:00] Faith in a post-Christian city: what’s changed since the Bible-under-the-arm days
[00:13:00] The power of preaching to restore trust in Scripture
[00:22:00] From “you” to “we”: how preaching shapes the beloved community
[00:36:00] Why preaching from your humanity is not optional—it’s essential
[00:39:00] Blues as a metaphor for the church: grief, joy, and solidarity
💡 Takeaway:
Preaching today is less about having the right answers and more about being fully present—bringing Scripture to life with the imagination, lyricism, and beauty that awakens faith. In a culture suspicious of authority, the ironic authority of wisdom is what opens hearts.
What does real resistance to an unjust state look like—and can the church still embody it today? In this episode, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore sit down with Bonhoeffer scholar Michael DeJonge to explore the famed theologian’s approach to resisting authoritarian power. Drawing from his article How to Resist an Unjust State and his books on Bonhoeffer's theology, DeJonge unpacks the Lutheran roots of Bonhoeffer’s political vision and why his legacy resists easy appropriation in today’s culture wars.📖 Suggested Resources:
How to resist an unjust state? Dietrich Bonhoeffer and his theology of political resistance
Bonhoeffer on Resistance: The Word Against the Wheel
Bonhoeffer's Theological Formation: Berlin, Barth, and Protestant Theology
🎙️ In This Episode:
The historical truth behind Bonhoeffer’s involvement in plots to resist Hitler
Why Bonhoeffer’s theology of resistance goes far beyond assassination debates
A deep dive into Lutheran two-kingdom theology—and how Bonhoeffer revised it
How the church can speak into state injustice without being co-opted by political power
Lessons for resisting both passivity and polarization in today’s divided landscape
📌 Highlights:
[00:08:00] Did Bonhoeffer support violence? His participation in anti-Nazi plots clarified
[00:14:00] Bonhoeffer’s “authentically Lutheran” resistance—and why it still matters
[00:27:00] Evangelicals, Trump, and the preservation/redemption split—dangerous echoes
[00:38:00] The meaning behind “jamming a spoke in the wheel”
[00:44:00] From preaching to presence: Why Bonhoeffer built community to resist
💡 Takeaway:Bonhoeffer’s legacy isn’t about mimicking the past but learning how to discern our moment. Resistance begins not with outrage but with the church being the church—formed, faithful, and ready to speak a word against injustice when the time demands it.
Is leaving evangelicalism really a departure—or just a shift within the same framework? In this provocative episode, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore wrestle with the deep similarities between evangelical and post-evangelical spaces. Are we just switching teams while playing the same game? From the role of the self in faith to justice work and power structures, they explore what truly changes (and what doesn’t) when people move from white evangelicalism to progressive or mainline Protestant spaces.🎙️ In This Episode:
Why leaving evangelicalism doesn’t necessarily mean leaving evangelical ways of thinking.
The modern self: how both fundamentalist and progressive Christianity center personal identity.
Justice as something we do vs. justice as something Jesus is doing.
The trap of power: why both evangelicals and progressives wield authority in similar ways.
How a neo-Anabaptist vision could reshape discipleship and engagement with culture.
📌 Highlights:
[00:05:00] Does moving from evangelical to post-evangelical really change anything?
[00:13:00] How both camps center faith around the individual self.
[00:21:00] Justice work: Are we doing it for people or with people?
[00:32:00] Power dynamics: Why both evangelicals and progressives assume an expert posture.
[00:37:00] A vision beyond the binaries: toward a new way of being the church.
💡 Takeaway:Shifting theological or political stances doesn’t automatically transform the way we engage culture, power, and justice. Without rethinking the self, mission, and power dynamics, we risk reinforcing the very systems we hoped to escape.
Is our understanding of salvation too small? In this thought-provoking episode, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore sit down with Matthew Bates, professor of New Testament at Northern Seminary and author of Beyond the Salvation Wars, to challenge long-held assumptions about the gospel. From the pitfalls of individualistic salvation to the deeper call of allegiance to King Jesus, they explore what it truly means to be saved—and why both Protestants and Catholics need to rethink their approach.🎙️ In This Episode:
Why reducing the gospel to “justification by faith” misses the bigger picture.
How allegiance to Jesus reshapes our understanding of salvation.
The problem with both evangelical and progressive approaches to discipleship.
Why the Gospel Coalition and the Catholic Church might have more in common than we think.
How pastors can cultivate a Gospel Allegiance Culture in their churches.
📌 Highlights:
[00:04:00] The problem with how Protestants and Catholics frame salvation.
[00:12:00] Justification as a benefit of the gospel, not the gospel itself.
[00:19:00] Rethinking righteousness: Imputed, imparted, or incorporated?
[00:27:00] Why spiritual disciplines should be allegiance opportunities.
[00:32:00] The danger of reducing faith to “try harder and do better.”
💡 Takeaway: The gospel isn’t just about avoiding hell or doing justice—it’s about swearing allegiance to King Jesus and being swept up in his mission for the world. When we move beyond an individualistic, works-based mindset, we discover a deeper, more holistic understanding of salvation.📖 Additional Reflection: What would change in your life if you saw faith not as belief or effort, but as allegiance to Jesus? Let us know your thoughts!
What if the way forward in our polarized world begins at the table? In this compelling episode, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore sit down with Dan White Jr., author of Love Over Fear, to discuss the art of engaging in difficult conversations. They explore how compassion, curiosity, and a theology of the table can heal divisions in our churches, neighborhoods, and beyond.🎙️ In This Episode:
Dan White Jr. shares how the Kineo Center equips weary leaders to find healing.
The four transformative practices for depolarized conversations.
Stories of profound breakthroughs during “depolarization dinners.”
How Jesus’ table practices challenge the powers of polarization and invite kingdom living.
📌 Highlights:
[00:05:00] Dan introduces the Kineo Center as a space for healing weary leaders.
[00:12:34] The Power of Conversation in Polarized Times
[00:17:00] The origins of Love Over Fear: lessons from a politically divided church.
[00:29:00] Four practices for depolarized conversations, including compassionate curiosity and subversive stories.
[00:29:33] Techniques for Depolarization
[00:41:00] A theology of the table: how Jesus confounds the powers of polarization.
💡 Takeaway:The practice of kingdom living starts at the table, where power shifts from winning arguments to mutual transformation. In a polarized world, Christians are called to disrupt division and embody Christ's love through listening, storytelling, and trust in God’s presence.📖 Additional Reflection:How can you use the table as a space for transformation and reconciliation in your community?
What happens when revivalist faith meets political power? In this episode of Theology on Mission, Dave Fitch and Mike Moore sit down with scholar Matthew D. Taylor to uncover the startling rise of the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR)—a movement reshaping the landscape of evangelical Christianity and American politics.Taylor reveals how this influential network of apostles and prophets has grown from obscure beginnings to a force wielding colossal sway, intertwining charismatic zeal with far-right rhetoric. From the Seven Mountains Mandate to the dramatic spiritual warfare on January 6, this conversation peels back the layers on how NAR’s vision of Christian supremacy is impacting both the church and democracy.Brace yourself for a deep dive into the movement's roots, its rapid ascent, and what it means for the future of faith and public life.Timestamps: 01:49 Introducing Northern Seminary's New President04:17 Meet Our Esteemed Guest: Dr. Matthew Taylor05:49 The Violent Take It By Force: Book Overview07:50 The New Apostolic Reformation and January 6th09:24 C. Peter Wagner: The Man Behind the Movement12:23 Signs, Wonders, and Church Growth17:51 Strategic Level Spiritual Warfare20:19 Theological Implications and Controversies23:11 The Rise of Pragmatic Theology24:11 From Fringe to Mainstream: The Evolution of NAR26:16 The Seven Mountain Mandate27:32 Sarah Palin and the NAR's Political Ambitions28:10 Donald Trump: The Anointed One30:57 The Theology of Christian Trumpism32:02 The January 6th Insurrection34:35 Theological Reflections and Critiques38:11 Christian Supremacy vs. Democracy44:44 Cultural Resentment and Conservative Christians48:54 Final Thoughts and Future Directions
What is the deepest emphasis of the prophets in the Bible? Prophets beyond Activism insightfully challenges the common progressive narrative that the prophets of ancient Israel were primarily concerned with social justice. Instead it daringly offers more life-giving ways of engaging the prophetic books for the causes of justice.The assumption that the prophets of ancient Israel were primarily concerned with social justice so permeates the thinking and the discourse of progressive Christianity that it might be considered an interpretive orthodoxy. For example, progressives characterize prophets as those who speak truth to power and “prophetic preaching” as social critique. Yet, they often do so without explanation or consideration of alternative views.Timestamps: 01:54 Introducing Dr. Julia O'Brien03:05 Prophets as Activists Orthodoxy09:06 Biblical Ventriloquism and Social Justice13:46 Challenges of Interpreting Prophetic Texts20:14 The Role of Prophets in Modern Social Justice45:37 Concluding Thoughts and Final Remarks
Mike Moore and David Fitch, discuss the post-election landscape following Donald Trump's victory in the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election. They delve into their reactions to the election outcome, explore the broader implications for the church, politics, and society, and consider how the church should engage in politics moving forward. The conversation includes reflections on the failure of the church to address key societal issues, the challenges faced under the new administration, and calls for the church to become a space of reconciliation and healing. They emphasize the importance of community engagement and the role of the church in addressing cultural and political divides.Timestamps: 00:47 Initial Reactions to the 2024 Election01:39 Personal Reflections and Context04:21 Theological and Sociological Implications05:44 Church's Role in Politics18:01 Cultural Resentment and Antagonism25:51 Call to Action for the Church32:18 Practical Steps for Community Engagement33:09 Addressing Critiques of Local Church Efforts34:01 The Role of the Church in Politics35:36 Post-Christendom Reflections36:59 The Church's Alignment with Political Power38:20 Fragmented Christendom in the U.S.40:57 The Church's Role in Social Movements49:28 Post-Election Reflections and Challenges55:20 Final Thoughts and Call to Action




Relevant discussion, I am a simple practitioner and not fit for terms like "Political Theology." I’ll leave that to those of you with a Dr. in front of your name. I prefer simple discipleship. The strength of our foundation is in practicing the ways of the Kingdom. God is forming our faith community (a.k.a. church) in many of the ways you mention Luke Bretherton suggests, at least in our local context. We have found leading people to see their role as stewards is not the only challenge. Leading others to not abuse the grace and generosity of the body is an equal challenge. Gospel living is not clean, easy, or formulaic, but it is rewarding. I will give the book a read. Continue the good work, Dr. Fitch and Dr. Moore. It IS a glorious day in Florida!