First, Petey

First, Petey

#34 The True Church Part 4: The Great Apostasy

42 min · 8 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio #34 The True Church Part 4: The Great Apostasy

Descripción

If Jesus Christ founded one true Church, what happened to it? In this episode, we take the biblical, historical, and logical criteria established in Parts 1–3 and apply them to the major alternatives: Restorationist movements (Mormonism, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Seventh-day Adventists, and Stone-Campbell churches) and Protestantism as a whole. We examine key questions surrounding the Great Apostasy, apostolic succession, Church authority, and Christian unity: * Did the early Church fall away and need to be restored? * Can the Church be the “pillar and foundation of truth” (1 Timothy 3:15) and still lead believers into error? * Does “Bible alone” (sola scriptura) provide a sufficient basis for unity? * Can the Church Christ founded be invisible, fragmented, or subject to private interpretation? By testing each model against Scripture, early Church history, and reason, this episode works through a process of elimination. By the end, the question shifts: Not whether the true Church is apostolic… but which apostolic Church is the true continuation.

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37 episodios

episode #37 The True Church, Part 7: The Papacy, According to Scripture (2/2) artwork

#37 The True Church, Part 7: The Papacy, According to Scripture (2/2)

Is the Papacy actually found in Scripture, or is it something read back into the text later? In Part 7 of this series on the True Church, we move from objections to evidence, examining whether the New Testament itself presents Peter in a uniquely structured role among the apostles. Using four key biblical “litmus tests,” this episode explores: * Whether Peter is singled out in a meaningful way * Whether he is given identifiable symbols of authority * Whether he functions as a source of unity in moments of dispute * Whether his commission appears temporary—or office-based and enduring From Matthew 16 and the “keys of the kingdom,” to Luke 22, Acts 15, and John 21, we trace the full scope of the biblical data and ask a central question: Are these isolated details… or part of a coherent pattern? This essay doesn’t merely assume the conclusion, it follows the evidence and asks which interpretation best explains the whole.

29 de may de 202625 min
episode #34 The True Church Part 4: The Great Apostasy artwork

#34 The True Church Part 4: The Great Apostasy

If Jesus Christ founded one true Church, what happened to it? In this episode, we take the biblical, historical, and logical criteria established in Parts 1–3 and apply them to the major alternatives: Restorationist movements (Mormonism, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Seventh-day Adventists, and Stone-Campbell churches) and Protestantism as a whole. We examine key questions surrounding the Great Apostasy, apostolic succession, Church authority, and Christian unity: * Did the early Church fall away and need to be restored? * Can the Church be the “pillar and foundation of truth” (1 Timothy 3:15) and still lead believers into error? * Does “Bible alone” (sola scriptura) provide a sufficient basis for unity? * Can the Church Christ founded be invisible, fragmented, or subject to private interpretation? By testing each model against Scripture, early Church history, and reason, this episode works through a process of elimination. By the end, the question shifts: Not whether the true Church is apostolic… but which apostolic Church is the true continuation.

8 de may de 202642 min
episode #33 The True Church, Part 3: According to History artwork

#33 The True Church, Part 3: According to History

If Christ truly founded a Church, what happened to it after the apostles died? In Part 1, we defined the biblical blueprint: twelve scriptural marks of the True Church. In Part 2, we followed the logic wherever it led and saw that this Church must be visible, authoritative, unified, and sacramental. Now in Part 3, we test that conclusion against history. Turning to the earliest Christian witnesses, the Didache, First Epistle of Clement, and the letters of Ignatius of Antioch, we examine the first 100 years of Christianity to see what the Church actually looked like in the generation immediately following the apostles. This is the handoff moment. Before councils, before creeds, before a finalized canon, what did the earliest Christians believe about authority, unity, and the sacraments? And does that match what we see today?

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