PodcastsGeschiedenisThrough the Church Fathers

Through the Church Fathers

C. Michael Patton
Through the Church Fathers
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  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: February 1

    01-2-2026 | 11 Min.
    Today we pause the forward movement of our readings to gain clarity—clarity that Aquinas assumes, Augustine reflects, and Ignatius embodies. Augustine shows us a young man shaped by ambition, rhetoric, and moral blindness, reminding us that intellectual formation without rightly ordered love can still deform the soul. Ignatius presses the Church toward visible unity, grounded not in personality or power but in faithfulness to Christ through rightly ordered authority and shared worship. Aquinas then becomes our guide for learning how to think about reality itself—through causes, act and potency, substance and accidents—so that when we return to his questions, we are no longer lost in technical language but trained to follow his reasoning. Together, these readings remind us that theology is not merely about conclusions, but about formation: how we learn to see, to judge, and to worship rightly.
    Readings:
    Augustine of Hippo The Confessions Book 3, Chapter 3 (Section 6)
    Ignatius of Antioch The Epistle to the Philadelphians Middle Recension, Chapters 1–6
    Thomas Aquinas Background Reading — The Four Causes, Act and Potency, Substance and Accidents
    Explore the Project:
    Through the Church Fathers https://www.throughthechurchfathers.com
    Patreon https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpatton
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    Credo Ministries https://www.credoministries.org
    #ThroughTheChurchFathers #Augustine #IgnatiusOfAntioch #ThomasAquinas #ChristianTheology #ChurchHistory #PhilosophyAndTheology #Formation #EarlyChurch
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: February 3

    01-2-2026 | 8 Min.
    How do we pursue wisdom without losing Christ, unity without fear, and truth without distortion? Ignatius exhorts the Philadelphians to cling to one Eucharist and one bishop, warning that schism and distorted teaching fracture the Church because they detach believers from Christ’s passion and the concrete unity He established (Ephesians 4:4–6). Augustine deepens this tension by confessing how philosophy ignited his love for wisdom while simultaneously restraining him, since even the most refined truth could not fully claim his heart without the name of Christ—wisdom incarnate, not merely contemplated (Colossians 2:8–9). Aquinas then provides the conceptual clarity that holds these concerns together by rejecting Plato’s detached Forms in favor of Aristotle’s realism, affirming that form and meaning exist in created things, not apart from them—allowing Christians to confess a world that is intelligible, good, and ordered toward God without escaping material reality. Read together, these voices teach us that Christian truth is neither anti-intellectual nor abstract, but embodied, ordered, and anchored in the living Christ who unites wisdom, Church, and creation into one coherent whole.
    Explore the Project:
    Through the Church Fathers – https://www.throughthechurchfathers.com
    Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpatton
    Credo Courses – https://www.credocourses.com
    Credo Ministries – https://www.credoministries.org
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: February 2

    31-1-2026 | 10 Min.
    What happens when the Church forgets that truth has a body, wisdom has a name, and authority has a shape? In today’s readings, Ignatius warns the Smyrnaeans that denying Christ’s flesh is not a harmless mistake but a deadly error that severs believers from the Eucharist, the Church, and the hope of resurrection, insisting that unity with the bishop safeguards both doctrine and love (John 1:14; 1 Corinthians 10:16–17). Augustine then reflects on how Cicero’s Hortensius awakened his longing for wisdom, turning his ambitions away from vanity and toward God, yet leaving him restless because the name of Christ was absent—a reminder that wisdom without Christ cannot fully satisfy the soul (1 Corinthians 1:24). Aquinas helps us see why this matters philosophically by distinguishing essence from existence: created things do not explain their own being, but receive it, whereas God alone is Being itself—ensuring that Christ is not merely a teacher of wisdom, but the living source of all that exists (Exodus 3:14). Together, these readings show that truth is not abstract, wisdom is not neutral, and the Christian faith stands or falls on the incarnate, embodied reality of Jesus Christ.
    Explore the Project:
    Through the Church Fathers – https://www.throughthechurchfathers.com
    Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpatton
    Credo Courses – https://www.credocourses.com
    Credo Ministries – https://www.credoministries.org
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: January 31

    31-1-2026 | 9 Min.
    Here is the podcast paragraph for this reading, formatted to your established rules and ready to paste:
    Today’s reading brings us face to face with the raw cost of discipleship and the careful labor of theological understanding. Ignatius of Antioch walks us toward martyrdom without hesitation, insisting that death for Christ is not loss but true life, a refusal to trade eternity for the whole world (Matthew 16:26). Augustine, looking back on his younger self, confesses that even within the walls of the Church his desires remained disordered—restless, curious, and enslaved—until God’s mercy restrained him (Psalm 119:37). Finally, we pause with Thomas Aquinas before plunging further into the Summa Theologica, stepping back to understand the philosophical grammar that shapes his theology—Plato and Aristotle, form and matter, act and potency—so that we can see how Aquinas seeks not to replace faith with reason, but to show that the faith handed down by the Church is coherent, ordered, and true (Romans 12:2).
    Ignatius of Antioch — The Epistle to the Romans, Chapters 6–10
    Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 3, Chapter 3 (Section 5)
    Thomas Aquinas — Philosophical Orientation before the Summa Theologica

    Explore the Project:
    Through the Church Fathers – https://www.throughthechurchfathers.com
    Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpatton
    Credo Courses – https://www.credocourses.com
    Credo Ministries – https://www.credoministries.org
    #ThroughTheChurchFathers #ChurchFathers #IgnatiusOfAntioch #Augustine #ThomasAquinas #ChristianTheology #EarlyChurch #Patristics #FaithAndReason
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: January 30

    30-1-2026 | 9 Min.
    Ignatius of Antioch writes to the Romans not as a theologian in abstraction but as a man already facing death, insisting that true Christian love must not rescue him from martyrdom but allow him to be united to Christ through suffering, reminding us that Christianity is not mere confession but embodied faith proven when nothing visible remains.
    Augustine, reflecting on his youth, exposes the sickness of loving sorrow for its own sake, confessing how he once delighted in staged grief that never healed but only inflamed the soul, until he learned that true mercy does not enjoy pain—even compassion longs for the end of suffering, not its spectacle.
    Aquinas then clarifies what stands beneath both martyrdom and repentance by distinguishing time, aeviternity, and eternity, showing that God alone possesses life without succession, while all creatures—whether bound to moments or enduring without decay—still receive their being in sequence and therefore cannot share in eternity itself.
    Explore the Project:
    Through the Church Fathers – https://www.throughthechurchfathers.com
    Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpatton
    Credo Courses – https://www.credocourses.com
    Credo Ministries – https://www.credoministries.org

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Over Through the Church Fathers

Join Through the Church Fathers, a year-long journey into the writings of the early Church Fathers, thoughtfully curated by C. Michael Patton. Each episode features daily readings from key figures like Clement, Augustine, and Aquinas, accompanied by insightful commentary to help you engage with the foundational truths of the Christian faith.Join Our Community: Read along and engage with others on this journey through the Church Fathers. Visit our website.Support the Podcast: Help sustain this work and gain access to exclusive content by supporting C. Michael Patton on Patreon at patreon.com/cmichaelpatton.Dive Deeper into Theology: Explore high-quality courses taught by the world’s greatest scholars at Credo Courses. Visit credocourses.com.Let’s journey through the wisdom of the Church Fathers together—daily inspiration to deepen your faith and understanding of the Christian tradition.
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