REBEL and REFORMER
Simul Iustus et Nada: The Lutheran Case for John of the Cross What happens when you strip away the worship highs, the moral checklist, and the cozy feeling that God is your personal therapist? You get the "Dark Night of the Soul." This week, Todd and Sean are crossing enemy lines into the 16th-century Counter-Reformation to hang out with John of the Cross—a Carmelite monk who was kidnapped and thrown in a cell by his own religious order for being too radical. While Martin Luther was deconstructing the church's theology from the pulpit, John was deconstructing the religious ego from a literal closet. Join Todd and Sean as they explore why John’s philosophy of absolute emptiness (nada) perfectly mirrors the radical Lutheran reality of total passivity before God. If you’ve ever felt like God has gone completely silent, this one is for you. Turns out, you might just be simul iustus et nada—simultaneously justified and bringing absolutely nothing to the table.
24 episodes
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