PodcastsChristendomThrough 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: March 21

    21-03-2026 | 9 Min.
    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)
    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 #ChurchHistory #ChristianMartyrs #Augustine #Aquinas
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: March 20

    20-03-2026 | 10 Min.
    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)
    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
    #EarlyChurchFathers #SecondClement #Augustine #ThomasAquinas #ChurchHistory #ChristianTheology #Patristics #Confessions #SummaTheologica #ThroughTheChurchFathers
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Introduction to Foxe's Book of Martyrs

    20-03-2026 | 4 Min.
    Today we cross a necessary bridge—before we hear Christians defend the faith in public, we must first see why they had to defend it at all. We have finished the Apostolic Fathers, those early pastors who shepherded fragile congregations close to the time of the apostles. Now we pause before entering the age of the Apologists—men like Justin Martyr—by turning briefly to John Foxe and his massive work, Actes and Monuments. We are not reading the whole of Foxe’s book, nor are we adopting his 16th-century Protestant lens uncritically. Instead, we are focusing on his opening chapters that recount the Roman persecutions following the apostolic era. This section serves as a hinge in our structure: pastors, then martyrs, then defenders. The early church did not fade quietly into history—it suffered under emperors like Nero and Domitian. Stephen was stoned. James was beheaded. Peter and Paul were executed. Ignatius of Antioch was torn by beasts. Polycarp was burned and stabbed. Without the martyrs, apologetics becomes abstract; with them, it becomes urgent. Christians were accused of atheism, cannibalism, and treason—and they died under those accusations. The Apologists did not write for sport; they wrote because believers were being arrested and executed. Foxe’s early chapters help us feel the historical pressure under which those defenses were forged. This is not a new long-term study. It is a deliberate pause. From pastors to martyrs to defenders—that is the bridge we are crossing.
    Readings: John Foxe — Actes and Monuments (Early Roman Persecutions)
    Augustine — The Confessions
    Thomas Aquinas — 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 #ChurchHistory #EarlyChurch #ChristianMartyrs #Apologists
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: March 19

    19-03-2026 | 11 Min.
    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.
    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: March 18

    18-03-2026 | 10 Min.
    You cannot serve two masters—and that warning echoes across all three of today’s readings.
    In Second Clement (Chapters 6–10), we are confronted with the stark opposition between this present world and the world to come: one urges greed, corruption, and compromise; the other calls us to holiness, endurance, and repentance. The homily presses us with athletic urgency—strive for the incorruptible crown, guard the seal of baptism, repent while the clay is still soft in the Potter’s hands (Matthew 6:24; Matthew 16:26; Isaiah 66:24; Luke 16:10). This is not casual Christianity. The present age is fleeting; eternal life belongs to those who keep the flesh holy and persevere.
    Augustine, in Confessions 5.9 (Section 16), brings that warning into painful autobiography. Struck with fever and near death, he realizes he was on the brink of eternal judgment while still mocking Christ as a phantom and delaying baptism (Ephesians 2:16). His mother prayed, unaware how close he was to destruction, yet God heard her deeper prayer. Augustine sees that had he died then, he would have faced the fire his sins deserved. Even his sickness became mercy—God would not allow him to die a “double death.” The struggle between two worlds was not abstract; it was raging inside his own soul.
    Then Aquinas, in Summa Theologica I.32.1, lifts our eyes higher. The Trinity—the very life of God—is not something reason can discover by examining creation. We can know that God exists and that He is good, but the inner life of Father, Son, and Spirit must be revealed. The world cannot reason its way into the Trinity. God must open the door. And He has. What Clement urges us to live, Augustine nearly lost, and Aquinas carefully explains: salvation is not speculation. It is revealed truth, received by faith, and guarded in obedience.
    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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