CR101 Radio - Podcast Network

Standards

2 min · 4. juli 2026
episode Standards cover

Description

Prices, ages, and even fish stories seem to change over time but the real issue is not the thing being measured, it’s the yardstick. Money has shrunk in value, not food; houses haven’t changed, but the standard we measure them by has. The same confusion infects moral and public life: when standards shift, everything looks distorted. Nothing can be judged rightly without a fixed, trustworthy measure. Scripture alone provides that unchanging yardstick when the standard is wrong, every conclusion will be wrong too.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the CR101 Radio - Podcast Network community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

999 episodes

episode Easy Chair No. 151, July 17, 1987 - Laurie Eck & the Christian Conciliation Service artwork

Easy Chair No. 151, July 17, 1987 - Laurie Eck & the Christian Conciliation Service

Laurie Eck discusses the Christian Conciliation Service, a ministry designed to resolve disputes among Christians according to biblical principles rather than secular courts. Inspired by his own marital and professional struggles, Eck emphasizes reconciliation, restoration of relationships, and applying God’s law to conflicts. The service trains local church members—often elders or spiritually mature individuals—to mediate disputes, including marital, business, and property conflicts, fostering accountability, peacemaking, and corporate responsibility within the congregation. Eck highlights the challenge of churches being consumer-oriented and avoiding conflict, stressing that real reconciliation requires submission, servanthood, and adherence to biblical standards. The ministry has spread nationwide, adapting to local contexts while aiming to restore the authority and witness of the church."

4. juli 20261 h 1 min
episode Abortion artwork

Abortion

This passage emphasizes that the primary caregivers for the poor in the U.S. are not government agencies, but private and voluntary institutions. The family remains the most effective welfare system, providing for sick members, elderly parents, and children’s education from kindergarten through college. Churches, both Protestant and Catholic, supplement this care by aiding the homeless and transient populations, often with limited resources and in spite of bureaucratic resistance. Additionally, private organizations like Strategies to Eliminate Poverty (STEP), led by wealthy evangelical businessmen, actively work to alleviate poverty and empower individuals to succeed. The author underscores that understanding and supporting these “free sector” efforts is crucial for maintaining freedom and effective social care. #PovertyAlleviation #FamilyCare #ChurchAid #PrivateInitiatives #FreeSectorImpact

Yesterday17 min