Reasonable Christianity?

I DON'T LIKE THE CHRISTIAN GOD: Evil, Suffering, and Moral Revolt (Series: Responding to Penuel, Episode 1)

37 min · 31 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio I DON'T LIKE THE CHRISTIAN GOD: Evil, Suffering, and Moral Revolt (Series: Responding to Penuel, Episode 1)

Descripción

I Don't Like the Christian God God, Evil, Suffering, and Moral Revolt Penuel the Black Pen recently made a statement that resonated with many modern skeptics: "I don't like that guy. The Christian God is so personified and has some of the worst traits of human beings." It's an honest objection. And it's one that deserves more than a slogan or a dismissive answer. In this first episode of our four-part series Responding to Penuel, we examine the God Penuel rejects and the questions underneath his criticism. Is the God of the Bible morally good? What do we do with Job and suffering? Does free will actually explain evil? What are we supposed to make of Abraham and Isaac? And if God is good, why does He allow a world filled with pain, injustice, and death? Rather than avoiding these questions, we confront them directly. Drawing from philosophy, theology, and Scripture, we explore whether Penuel's moral outrage points away from God—or toward Him. Most importantly, we ask whether the Christian answer to suffering is ultimately found in an argument, or in the cross itself. In this episode: • The moral argument and objective good and evil • Job and the problem of suffering • Free will and moral responsibility • Abraham and Isaac reconsidered • Why moral outrage may point to God • The cross as Christianity's answer to suffering This is Episode 1 of 4 in the Responding to Penuel series. Because the truth matters. And so do you. #ReasonableChristianity #PenuelTheBlackPen #ChristianApologetics #ProblemOfEvil #FaithAndReason #Job #FreeWill #Theology #ChristianPodcast #SouthAfrica Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1881819/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/reasonablechristianity/membership]

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93 episodios

episode CHRISTIANITY, COLONIALISM, AND THE AFRICAN QUESTION (Series: Responding to Penuel the Black Pen, Episode 3) artwork

CHRISTIANITY, COLONIALISM, AND THE AFRICAN QUESTION (Series: Responding to Penuel the Black Pen, Episode 3)

Christianity, Colonialism, and the African Question Crusades, Apartheid, Empire, and Historical Complexity In Episode 3 of our Responding to Penuel the Black Pen series, we tackle one of the most difficult objections to Christianity in Africa: colonialism, apartheid, the Crusades, and the historical abuses committed by people who called themselves Christians. Penuel raises a question that millions of Africans continue to wrestle with: If Christianity was used to justify oppression, can it still be true? Rather than avoiding the painful parts of history, we confront them head-on. We examine the relationship between Christianity and colonialism, the misuse of Scripture during apartheid, the reality of Christian hypocrisy, the African roots of the Christian faith, and the distinction between Christ and those who have claimed His name. Along the way, we explore: • Whether Christian atrocities disprove Christianity • The difference between Christ and Christendom • Africa's foundational role in early Christianity • How apartheid theology distorted Scripture • The historical complexity of the Crusades • Why hypocrisy cannot determine the truth of a worldview • What Christianity actually teaches about human nature and power This is not an attempt to defend colonialism or excuse historical injustice. It is an invitation to think carefully, honestly, and consistently about what follows from the facts of history—and what does not. The question is not whether Christians have failed. The question is whether Christ did. #ReasonableChristianity #PenuelTheBlackPen #ChristianityAndColonialism #Apartheid #AfricanChristianity #Apologetics #ChristianPodcast #FaithAndHistory #SouthAfrica #ReasonableFaith Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1881819/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/reasonablechristianity/membership]

15 de jun de 202636 min
episode Constantine Didn't Invent Christianity: Jesus, Canon, History, and the Myth of Roman Invention artwork

Constantine Didn't Invent Christianity: Jesus, Canon, History, and the Myth of Roman Invention

Did Constantine invent Christianity? Did the Council of Nicaea vote Jesus into being God? Were the "real" gospels suppressed by the early church? In Episode 2 of Responding to Penuel the Black Pen, Roland Albertus examines one of the most persistent claims in modern skepticism: that Christianity was created by the Roman Emperor Constantine and formalized into a political religion centuries after Jesus. Drawing on historical sources, early Christian writings, Roman records, and the development of the New Testament canon, this episode separates popular internet mythology from documented history. From Nero's persecution of Christians in AD 64 to the worship of Jesus by the earliest believers, we follow the evidence wherever it leads. Along the way, we explore: • Whether Constantine invented Christianity • What the Council of Nicaea actually debated • The origins of belief in the divinity of Christ • The truth about the so-called "lost gospels" • How the New Testament canon developed • Why the Constantine narrative remains so persuasive today • The deeper question behind the debate: Is divine revelation possible? This is not a defense of institutional religion or political power. It is an investigation into history, evidence, and the central claim upon which Christianity stands or falls: the resurrection of Jesus Christ. If Christianity existed long before Constantine, then the real question is not who invented the faith. The real question is whether Christ rose from the dead. 🎙️ Reasonable Christianity Responding to Penuel the Black Pen – Episode 2 Constantine Didn't Invent Christianity: Jesus, Canon, History, and the Myth of Roman Invention #ReasonableChristianity #PenuelTheBlackPen #Constantine #CouncilOfNicaea #ChristianHistory #Apologetics #JesusChrist #Resurrection #BibleHistory #ChurchHistory #ChristianPodcast Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1881819/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/reasonablechristianity/membership]

8 de jun de 202633 min
episode I DON'T LIKE THE CHRISTIAN GOD: Evil, Suffering, and Moral Revolt (Series: Responding to Penuel, Episode 1) artwork

I DON'T LIKE THE CHRISTIAN GOD: Evil, Suffering, and Moral Revolt (Series: Responding to Penuel, Episode 1)

I Don't Like the Christian God God, Evil, Suffering, and Moral Revolt Penuel the Black Pen recently made a statement that resonated with many modern skeptics: "I don't like that guy. The Christian God is so personified and has some of the worst traits of human beings." It's an honest objection. And it's one that deserves more than a slogan or a dismissive answer. In this first episode of our four-part series Responding to Penuel, we examine the God Penuel rejects and the questions underneath his criticism. Is the God of the Bible morally good? What do we do with Job and suffering? Does free will actually explain evil? What are we supposed to make of Abraham and Isaac? And if God is good, why does He allow a world filled with pain, injustice, and death? Rather than avoiding these questions, we confront them directly. Drawing from philosophy, theology, and Scripture, we explore whether Penuel's moral outrage points away from God—or toward Him. Most importantly, we ask whether the Christian answer to suffering is ultimately found in an argument, or in the cross itself. In this episode: • The moral argument and objective good and evil • Job and the problem of suffering • Free will and moral responsibility • Abraham and Isaac reconsidered • Why moral outrage may point to God • The cross as Christianity's answer to suffering This is Episode 1 of 4 in the Responding to Penuel series. Because the truth matters. And so do you. #ReasonableChristianity #PenuelTheBlackPen #ChristianApologetics #ProblemOfEvil #FaithAndReason #Job #FreeWill #Theology #ChristianPodcast #SouthAfrica Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1881819/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/reasonablechristianity/membership]

31 de may de 202637 min
episode THE FLOOD AND PENTECOST: Reflections on the Western Cape Floods and the Meaning of Pentecost artwork

THE FLOOD AND PENTECOST: Reflections on the Western Cape Floods and the Meaning of Pentecost

What do the Western Cape floods and Pentecost have to do with one another? In this special devotional episode of Reasonable Christianity, we reflect on the striking symbolic contrast between the recent floods in the Western Cape and the meaning of Pentecost. Pentecost is the celebration of first fruits, fire, divine presence, and life. The flood confronted us with opposite imagery: coldness, displacement, instability, ruined fields, and a creation that still groans under corruption. This is not a typical apologetics episode. It’s a theological meditation on: • chaos and creation • floodwaters and fire • harvest and loss • the Spirit and restoration • and what it means to live between a groaning world and the promise of renewal. Through Genesis, Noah, Acts 2, and Romans 8, we explore how Pentecost points toward God’s commitment not to abandon creation, but to restore it. A reflective and hope-filled episode shaped by the realities many in the Western Cape have recently experienced. 🎙️ Episode Title: The Flood and Pentecost Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1881819/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/reasonablechristianity/membership]

25 de may de 202630 min
episode WHEN THE FLOOD CAME: Providence, Suffering, and the God Who Was Already There artwork

WHEN THE FLOOD CAME: Providence, Suffering, and the God Who Was Already There

What do you do when the waters rise and God does not stop the storm? In this deeply personal episode, Roland reflects on the recent floods that devastated parts of Wolseley and the Western Cape, including the night floodwater entered his own home. But this is not merely a story about disaster. It is a theological meditation on suffering, providence, fear, sovereignty, and the God who was already present before the crisis began. Why does suffering destabilise so many believers today? What does Scripture actually teach about God’s relationship to calamity, hardship, and human pain? And how should Christians interpret storms without collapsing into either despair or shallow optimism? Drawing from Psalm 29, Job, Romans 8, Mark 4, and the cross itself, this episode explores a difficult but deeply comforting truth: Providence is not only visible in what God prevents. Sometimes providence becomes visible in what God sustains you through. This episode also reflects on the quiet beauty of ordinary believers serving one another in the aftermath of tragedy, revealing how the people of God often become most visible not through platforms and performances, but through simple acts of love, presence, and care. If you are walking through suffering, uncertainty, exhaustion, grief, or confusion, this conversation is for you. Because the God above the flood was already there before the water rose. Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1881819/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/reasonablechristianity/membership]

21 de may de 202635 min