The Narthex

When You Don't Feel Saved: The Only Anchor That Holds

32 min · Eilen
jakson When You Don't Feel Saved: The Only Anchor That Holds kansikuva

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The episode argues that modern society faces a “famine of trust,” illustrated through Sebastian Junger’s TED Talk about soldiers missing the brotherhood and certainty of war compared with alienation at home, and supported by declining institutional trust (including churches). The speaker connects this pervasive uncertainty to the search for something reliable and contrasts distrust in institutions with God’s “fail-safe” promise in baptism from Acts 2 (“the promise is for you”), emphasizing Luther’s view that baptism is entirely external—done to you by God through water and Word—rather than an inward commitment. Citing Oswald Bayer’s Promissio and Luther’s catechism, it presents baptism as delivering forgiveness, grace, the Holy Spirit, and “the entire Christ,” and critiques re-baptism and inward-focused “enthusiasm” as producing anxiety and “faith in faith,” concluding that comfort comes from saying, “But I am baptized.”00:00 Famine of Trust00:52 Brotherhood in War02:48 Too Many Voices05:38 Institutions and Betrayal08:22 Something to Believe In09:28 Baptism as Promise12:28 External Not Internal16:37 Rebaptism Clip Breakdown25:02 Uncertainty and Self-Reliance28:27 Enthusiasm and Assurance30:29 But I Am Baptized31:29 Closing and Invitation

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jakson When You Don't Feel Saved: The Only Anchor That Holds kansikuva

When You Don't Feel Saved: The Only Anchor That Holds

The episode argues that modern society faces a “famine of trust,” illustrated through Sebastian Junger’s TED Talk about soldiers missing the brotherhood and certainty of war compared with alienation at home, and supported by declining institutional trust (including churches). The speaker connects this pervasive uncertainty to the search for something reliable and contrasts distrust in institutions with God’s “fail-safe” promise in baptism from Acts 2 (“the promise is for you”), emphasizing Luther’s view that baptism is entirely external—done to you by God through water and Word—rather than an inward commitment. Citing Oswald Bayer’s Promissio and Luther’s catechism, it presents baptism as delivering forgiveness, grace, the Holy Spirit, and “the entire Christ,” and critiques re-baptism and inward-focused “enthusiasm” as producing anxiety and “faith in faith,” concluding that comfort comes from saying, “But I am baptized.”00:00 Famine of Trust00:52 Brotherhood in War02:48 Too Many Voices05:38 Institutions and Betrayal08:22 Something to Believe In09:28 Baptism as Promise12:28 External Not Internal16:37 Rebaptism Clip Breakdown25:02 Uncertainty and Self-Reliance28:27 Enthusiasm and Assurance30:29 But I Am Baptized31:29 Closing and Invitation

Eilen32 min
jakson Baptism: Why We Need to Return to the Pentecost Promise kansikuva

Baptism: Why We Need to Return to the Pentecost Promise

Baptism as God’s Promise: Forgiveness, the Holy Spirit, and Acts 2The episode argues that because God is almighty (Pantokrator), humans can only know Him through His self-revelation, seen in Genesis where God creates ex nihilo through performative speech; Satan cannot oppose God’s power but twists God’s word for deception, as in Eden. This framework is applied to contemporary “churchianity,” where institutional self-interest can distort God’s word, prompting a reexamination of baptism. Using Acts 2 at Pentecost, the speaker emphasizes the gospel’s public, universal proclamation and Peter’s call to “repent and be baptized” for forgiveness of sins, the gift of the Holy Spirit, and a promise “for you and your children and all who are far off.” Baptism is presented as God’s future-oriented promise and assurance, not a human achievement, urging Christians to return to their baptism and leading into the next episode on Romans 6.00:00 Can We Know God01:12 Revelation and Genesis02:26 God Creates by Word04:34 Twisting the Word06:49 Church Deception and Baptism09:37 Pentecost and Preaching12:37 Baptism Gives Gifts14:51 Baptism as Promise17:19 Return to Baptism21:05 New Heart by Grace26:52 Assurance Not Achievement29:02 Closing and Next Episode

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jakson Is This Why People Leave Christianity? kansikuva

Is This Why People Leave Christianity?

Why does church so often feel fake — like just another business?Performance, corporate tactics, self-preservation, and the slow replacement of Word and Sacrament with image and numbers have left many people disillusioned and walking away. In this video, Dan Shaw speaks directly about the real reasons behind that feeling.From seminary church hopping and painful exits, to honest self-reckoning and the difference between the City of God and the City of Man — this is a clear diagnosis of what’s gone wrong in the visible church, and a return to what the Church actually is for.The visible church is full of sinners. It will disappoint. But Christ still builds His Church through His Word and Sacraments, not through branding or manipulation.00:00 Seminary Church Hopping00:58 The Drab Church That Worked02:10 City of God vs Man04:23 Sean Ryan’s Church Exit07:53 Pastor’s Self Reckoning10:43 What Church Is For12:49 Seminary Warning Story15:45 Sir We Wish To See Jesus19:29 Can’t Be Bought Or Bullied23:53 Witness To Truth Costs26:51 Courage Repentance Reform30:53 Invitation To Respond32:29 Closing Blessing

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