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History as a Theological Science (Educational Christian Faith) (Remastered)

53 min · 25. juni 2026
episode History as a Theological Science (Educational Christian Faith) (Remastered) cover

Description

This session argues that faith reshapes every area of life, so education cannot be neutral: Christianity produces “history” (meaningful, ordered, God-governed events), while humanism produces “social science” (man’s attempt to control and predestine society without God). True history assumes God’s sovereign acts—Creation, Incarnation, and the Second Coming—as the frame and direction of all events, so providence turns even man’s wrath to God’s praise and all things to good for God’s people; humanism, denying that order, treats events as chance and therefore demands total state planning, making “freedom obsolete” because an experiment requires control. History must therefore be taught as a theological science with Scripture as its basic framework, including its essential chronology, and even terms like “Renaissance” and “Enlightenment” are shown as humanistic propaganda describing a long revolution “from Christ to Adam,” i.e., from supernatural man to natural man. The lecture contrasts Isis’s veil-over-the-future with Christ as Alpha and Omega, insists that God and His Word judge all things (not the other way around), and frames the conflict as total war between God-as-absolute and man-as-absolute, with Psalm 2 as the biblical philosophy of history: nations conspire, God laughs, the Son reigns, and rulers are commanded to submit. In Q&A, Lincoln is described as a Deist reshaped by reading systematic theology but not clearly converted; the Reformation is presented as largely anti-Renaissance because the Renaissance papacy was openly humanistic; modern humanism is linked strongly to Plato and Aristotle’s state-centered ethics; and both Franklin and Jefferson are sharply criticized as overrated Deists, while Patrick Henry is held up as a decisive, openly Christian statesman whose faith and strategic action secured America’s westward future. #HistoryAsTheologicalScience #NoNeutralEducation #BiblicalWorldview #Providence #Predestination #AgainstHumanism #Psalm2 #ChristianEducation #SocialScienceVsHistory #ChristIsLord

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episode The Biblical Approach to Economics (Remastered) artwork

The Biblical Approach to Economics (Remastered)

This lecture presents economics as inherently religious, showing that humanism begins in Genesis 3:5 with man’s desire to be his own god and expresses itself today through fiat law, fiat money, and fiat economics, all of which create inflation, disorder, and false wealth. In contrast, biblical economics flows from the dominion mandate of Genesis 1:26–28 and rests on four foundations: faithful obedience and godly character, knowledge as an aspect of the image of God, productive labor as a blessing rather than a curse, and capital built through patience, saving, and intergenerational stewardship. Economic decline follows when faith collapses, envy replaces discipline, and productivity is destroyed, while humanistic systems substitute political power and “works of law” for real work, producing unemployment and social decay and demanding state control of education and knowledge. Christians are therefore not called to pursue wealth as an end in itself, but to use wealth as a tool of stewardship, bringing every area of economic life into submission to God rather than to man-made authority. #BiblicalEconomics #DominionMandate #NoFiatMoney #FaithAndWork #ChristianWorldview #Stewardship #AgainstHumanism #GodsLaw #EconomicsAndFaith #BiblicalAuthority

30. juni 202647 min
episode Rationalism and God artwork

Rationalism and God

Rationalism treats human reason as the judge of reality and therefore reshapes God to fit man’s standards. By ignoring Scripture’s teaching that all people already know God and suppress that truth because of sin (Ps. 14:1; Rom. 1:18–22), rationalism misdefines atheism as an intellectual problem rather than moral rebellion. It assumes reason is autonomous, neutral, and capable of judging God, instead of recognizing that reason itself is fallen and dependent on God’s revelation. Biblically, God’s existence is not something to be “proved” by reason; He is the ground of all proof and all reason. When man begins with autonomous reason, he inevitably replaces the living God with an imaginary, weakened god who answers to human judgment. Rationalism thus repeats the original temptation man seeking to be his own god (Gen. 3:5) and substitutes human authority for God’s self-revelation, preferring to judge God rather than be judged by Him.

30. juni 20267 min