CR101 Radio - Podcast Network

How the Christian Will Reconquer Through Economics: The Problem and the Very Great Hope (Economics, Money, and Hope) (Remastered)

35 min · 11 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio How the Christian Will Reconquer Through Economics: The Problem and the Very Great Hope (Economics, Money, and Hope) (Remastered)

Descripción

This opening session argues that economic collapse is not accidental but moral, the predictable fruit of a statist, fiat-driven world that has abandoned God’s created order. Using Christ’s parable of the steward, the teaching confronts Christian other-worldliness and insists that faithful stewardship of money is a spiritual requirement, not a worldly distraction. Humanistic economics treats reality as something man can remake by decree—fiat money, fiat law, fiat planning—but Scripture declares a law-governed universe where debt enslaves, inflation punishes thrift, and judgment is built into disobedience itself. The modern debt mountain—personal, corporate, and governmental—is portrayed as borrowing against a future that is now running out, making inflation the false “salvation” of a bankrupt order. Yet this crisis is framed as a salvation-judgment: God clearing the ground for reconstruction. The Christian hope is not political tinkering but recapitalization—material, moral, and spiritual—through hard money, thrift, work, character, and obedience to God’s law, laying the foundation for a renewed Christian social order. #BiblicalEconomics #ChristianReconstruction #DebtAndJudgment #AgainstFiatMoney #Stewardship #GodsLawOrder #EconomicCrisis #HardMoney #ThriftAndWork #FaithAndEconomics #Chalcedon #HopeThroughObedience

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de CR101 Radio - Podcast Network!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

999 episodios

episode The Key to Understanding artwork

The Key to Understanding

Throughout history men have sought a master concept by which to understand all things, yet every key that rests in human reason or material explanation falls short, because it cannot interpret the moral and spiritual meaning of life; Scripture instead provides the true key when it declares, “Evil men understand not judgment: but they that seek the Lord understand all things” (Prov. 28:5). Understanding is inseparably tied to faith, for a man’s moral and spiritual condition determines his capacity to grasp God’s dealings, and rebellion against God inevitably produces confusion, while trust in Him opens the eyes of understanding. What the natural man stumbles over the justice and judgment of God becomes for the believer the very principle that explains life, suffering, and providence, turning what appears a curse into a blessing. Thus faith is not blindness but true sight, and those who surrender human self-confidence and walk by faith are given spiritual knowledge by the Holy Spirit, enabling them to interpret all of life in the light of God’s sovereign purpose. In this way, faith becomes the true master key to understanding, illuminating the heart to know the hope, power, and rule of Christ over all things.

Ayer5 min
episode Appendix: Law in Western Society (Remastered) artwork

Appendix: Law in Western Society (Remastered)

Notes on the Law in Western Society – The early church regarded biblical law as binding on believers, applying Levitical regulations to clergy, observing sabbath and moral law, and enforcing discipline, penance, and restitution (Ancyra, Basil, Gregory Thaumaturgus). Canon law reflected Scripture even while navigating Roman law, bureaucracy, and societal decay. The Theodosian Code and later Justinian’s Corpus Juris Civilis integrated Christianity with Roman law, while common law, medieval codes, and urban law drew heavily on biblical principles. Jewish communities, grounded in Scripture, contributed significantly to commercial, urban, and civic order in Europe, influencing figures like Maimonides and shaping Western legal culture. Puritans and New England colonists codified laws based on biblical precepts (Massachusetts Body of Liberties, New Haven Colony Laws), emphasizing God as Judge, Lawgiver, and King (Isa. 33:22). Humanistic or state-centered law, divorced from God’s law, fails to restore social order; true law is Scripture-based, ensuring moral, social, and civil flourishing. The decline of Roman and humanistic law demonstrates that only obedience to God and His law provides enduring justice, order, and salvation. #BiblicalLaw #CanonLaw #WesternCivilization #PuritanLaw #Maimonides #CommonLaw #DivineJustice #GodsOrder #ScriptureBasedLaw #SocialOrder

Ayer57 min
episode Rationalism and History artwork

Rationalism and History

Rationalism consistently detaches truth from history, treating abstract ideas and human reasoning as ultimate rather than God’s acts in time. This stands in direct opposition to Christianity, which is grounded in real historical events the Fall, the Incarnation, and the Atonement. Scripture proclaims that the Word became flesh, a claim Greek and modern philosophy reject because it unites truth with history. By presupposing man’s mind instead of God, rationalism ends in idolatry: gods made in man’s image and truth judged by human logic. Biblical faith begins with God’s revelation in history and sees human reason as fallen and limited. True knowledge is not autonomous but analogical thinking God’s thoughts after Him. When rationalism ignores history, it ultimately ignores God.

20 de jun de 20269 min