PodcastsGeschiedenisThrough the Church Fathers

Through the Church Fathers

C. Michael Patton
Through the Church Fathers
Nieuwste aflevering

463 afleveringen

  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: March 14

    14-03-2026 | 9 Min.
    The tower is still being built—so do not delay. Hermas presses the urgency of obedience, repentance, and active mercy. The Shepherd has been entrusted with the ministry of repentance, and those who keep his commandments will live. But purity matters. Good works matter. Rescuing those crushed by hardship matters. The building will not wait forever. Augustine then reflects on his gradual separation from the Manichæans. Faustus impressed him with modesty, yet ignorance exposed the system’s weakness. Eloquence cannot rescue false cosmology, and humility, even in error, is more beautiful than pretended knowledge. Finally, Aquinas asks whether “person” may truly be said of God. His answer protects both divine transcendence and divine perfection: we affirm the word, but strip away creaturely limitation. Across these readings, the message is steady—repent quickly, test teaching carefully, and speak about God precisely. The tower rises. Truth matters. Obedience is life.
    Readings:
    Hermas — The Pastor, Book 3, Similitude 10 (Chapters 1–4)
    Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 5, Chapter 7 (Section 12)
    Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 29, Article 3
    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 #Hermas #Augustine #Aquinas #TrinitarianTheology #EarlyChurch
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: March 13

    13-03-2026 | 9 Min.
    Here is your podcast description formatted exactly according to your established rules:
    Repent while the tower is still being built. Hermas presses urgency into our bones: the Lord gave you a sound spirit—do not return it torn. Clinging to offenses corrodes the soul, and repentance levels the jagged shapes of past sins so they no longer appear. Augustine then exposes the danger of eloquence without substance. Faustus dazzled with speech, but offered no living water. Truth is not proven by polish, nor falsehood by awkwardness; wisdom can be served in simple vessels. Finally, Aquinas clarifies the inner grammar of the Trinity: “person,” “hypostasis,” “subsistence,” and “essence” differ in how we speak, yet in God they are not divided realities. Across these readings, the call is the same—heal your spirit, test your teachers, and think carefully about God. Repentance, discernment, and theological precision belong together.
    Readings:
    Hermas — The Pastor, Book 3, Similitude 9 (Chapters 32–33)
    Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 5, Chapter 6 (Sections 10–11)
    Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 29, Article 2
    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 #Aquinas #Augustine #Hermas #TrinitarianTheology #EarlyChurch
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: March 12

    12-03-2026 | 11 Min.
    Here is your podcast description formatted according to your required structure:
    What kind of faith survives pressure, wealth, leadership, ignorance, and even martyrdom? In today’s readings, Hermas walks us through mountains of believers—hospitable bishops, cheerful martyrs, childlike saints, and compromised servants—and reminds us that fruit differs, repentance is urgent, and shepherds will give an account. Augustine then sharpens our discernment: ignorance about creation is tolerable, but arrogance dressed as piety is deadly. Charity bears weakness, but false authority must be rejected. And Aquinas takes us into the mystery of God Himself, explaining that divine “procession” is not movement or change, but the eternal generation of the Word within the unity of the divine essence. Across all three readings, the theme is clarity: clarity of heart, clarity of doctrine, clarity of leadership. Remain simple. Reject pride. Understand who God is. And endure to the end.
    Readings:
    Hermas — The Pastor, Book 3, Similitude 9 (Chapters 27–31)
    Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 5, Chapter 5 (Section 9)
    Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 27, Article 1
    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 #Aquinas #Augustine #Hermas #EarlyChurch #ChristianTheology
  • Through the Church Fathers

    Through the Church Fathers: March 11

    11-03-2026 | 10 Min.
    Here is your podcast description formatted exactly according to your required structure:
    Aquinas takes us straight into the inner life of God and forces us to ask a daring question: can there be “procession” in a God who never changes? In this article, he carefully untangles the objection that procession must mean movement, separation, or beginning. Instead, he explains that in intellectual beings, a word proceeds from the mind without movement or division. In the same way—but infinitely and eternally—the Word proceeds from the Father as an intelligible origin within the one divine essence. This is not change. It is not motion. It is not composition. It is the eternal generation of the Son. If we misunderstand this, we either deny God’s immutability or collapse the Trinity into something less than real. Aquinas shows us how both divine unity and personal distinction can stand together without contradiction.
    Readings:
    Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 27, Article 1
    Augustine — The Confessions
    Primary Reading — The Pastor of Hermas
    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 10

    10-03-2026 | 14 Min.
    Today we move deeper into The Pastor of Hermas, where the tower, the rock, and the gate are finally explained—and the symbolism becomes unmistakably Christ-centered. The rock is old because the Son of God is older than all creation, a fellow-counselor with the Father in the work of making the world; the gate is new because He was manifested in the last days so that those who receive His holy name might enter the kingdom. No one enters except through Him. The tower is the Church, built of stones that have passed through the gate and been clothed with the strength of the virgins—Faith, Continence, Power, Patience, Simplicity, Innocence, Purity, Cheerfulness, Truth, Understanding, Harmony, and Love. To bear the name of the Son without bearing His power is to stand rejected. Yet there is mercy: those who were seduced by the women in black—Unbelief, Incontinence, Disobedience, Deceit, and their daughters—may return through repentance. The foundation stones are the generations of the righteous, the prophets, the apostles, and teachers, all sealed through water, descending dead and rising alive. Augustine presses the same theme from another angle: knowledge of the heavens without knowledge of God does not bless; to know the Creator and give thanks (Romans 1:21) is true happiness, even if one cannot number the stars (Wisdom 11:20). Aquinas then guards the majesty of that same Son: God cannot make the past not to have been, because contradiction is not a thing; He can do more than He does, though He acts according to eternal wisdom; and He could have created otherwise, though what He has done is not imperfect. Across all three readings, one truth emerges—Christ is the only gate, repentance is real, and blessedness is not found in speculation but in union with Him.
    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

Meer Geschiedenis podcasts

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.
Podcast website

Luister naar Through the Church Fathers, De ontmaskerde vervalsing. Het onwaarschijnlijke levensverhaal van Helene Kröller-Müller en vele andere podcasts van over de hele wereld met de radio.net-app

Ontvang de gratis radio.net app

  • Zenders en podcasts om te bookmarken
  • Streamen via Wi-Fi of Bluetooth
  • Ondersteunt Carplay & Android Auto
  • Veel andere app-functies

Through the Church Fathers: Podcasts in familie