Altars and Ashes Podcast

The Words That Bind, The Authority God Ordains

52 min · 24 apr 2026
aflevering The Words That Bind, The Authority God Ordains artwork

Beschrijving

In this episode of Altars & Ashes Podcast, we continue through the 1689 London Baptist Confession, focusing on lawful oaths and vows and the civil magistrate (Chapters 23 & 24). We address two often-overlooked areas of the Christian life: How seriously should we take our words?And how should we relate to governing authority? Scripture is clear, our words are not casual. When we speak, we speak before God. Oaths and vows are not empty religious language; they are weighty acts that call on God Himself as witness. And careless, manipulative, or dishonest speech is not a small issue because it reflects a deeper disregard for the God who hears every word. At the same time, authority is not random or merely human. Civil magistrates are ordained by God for the preservation of justice and the restraint of evil. Christians are called to live under authority with honor and conscience, without surrendering ultimate allegiance to God. This episode presses into the tension: speaking truthfully in a culture of loose words,and living faithfully in a world of imperfect authority. Key takeaway:Speak truthfully before God, and live faithfully under the authorities He has established. Thanks for reading Dust & Glory Media! This post is public so feel free to share it. Get full access to Dust & Glory Media at dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe [https://dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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Alle afleveringen

51 afleveringen

aflevering Walls and Gates artwork

Walls and Gates

You cannot build something faithful if you refuse to protect it. Christian homes, churches, and communities need more than good intentions. They need clear standards that hold and wise discernment that protects. Walls establish what we believe, what we value, and who we are. Gates determine what, and whom, we allow to shape our households, influence our children, teach our churches, and enter the communities we are building. In this episode of Altars & Ashes, Austin Tucker, B.D. Fleming, and Robbie Stringer discuss the biblical responsibility to fortify what God has entrusted to us. We examine household standards, doctrinal boundaries, church membership, discipline, education, friendships, courtship, media, hospitality, and the cost of guarding the gate in an age that treats every boundary as unloving. The goal is not paranoia, isolation, or a long list of petty rules. The goal is a recognizable Christian culture a household, church, and community shaped deliberately by Scripture rather than accidentally by the world. True mercy is never separated from truth. Jesus welcomed sinners, but He called them to repentance. Shepherds seek wandering sheep, but they do not invite wolves into the flock. Fathers must be patient with weakness without becoming passive toward corruption. Mercy without discernment is cruelty in disguise. Fortification will cost us approval. We may be called harsh, narrow, judgmental, or legalistic. But the cost of walls is temporary discomfort; the cost of having no walls may be generational destruction. Love does not merely build. Love protects what it cherishes. Build the walls. Man the gates. Guard the household, the church, and the future. Get full access to Dust & Glory Media at dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe [https://dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

19 jul 202646 min
aflevering Worship, Work, & Dominion Around the Table artwork

Worship, Work, & Dominion Around the Table

Christians will not rebuild the world while neglecting the place where worship, work, discipleship, and future faithfulness are first formed: the home. Modern culture treats the household as little more than a place to sleep, consume, stream, and recover before returning to “real life.” Scripture presents something far greater. The household is a God-ordained institution of worship, government, education, production, hospitality, and mission. In this episode of Altars & Ashes, Austin Tucker, B.D. Fleming, and Robbie Stringer discuss what it means to make the home the headquarters of Christian life. They examine the family as the first society, the danger of passive fatherhood, the discipleship taking place around the dinner table, the myth of neutral education, and the need for Christian households to become productive rather than merely consumptive. A strong Christian home limits the power of the state, resists the fragmentation of modern life, and forms people who know who they are, where they belong, and whom they serve. This is not a retreat from the world. It is where the faithful rebuilding of the world begins. The reformation we desire will not begin with a political campaign, viral post, conference, or platform. It begins with fathers who shepherd, mothers who nurture, children who are trained, tables where Christ is honored, and households that produce more than they consume. The household that serves as headquarters today shapes the battalion of tomorrow. Build accordingly. Get full access to Dust & Glory Media at dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe [https://dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

13 jul 20261 h 2 min
aflevering The Architecture of the Kingdom artwork

The Architecture of the Kingdom

Every man is building something. Every habit is a stone. Every choice is mortar. Every household is being shaped toward one kingdom or another. The question is not whether we will build. The question is what our hands are helping to raise. In this episode of Altars & Ashes, we move from the doctrine of dominion to its practical architecture. What does Christ’s Kingship look like inside the home? How does household faithfulness become communal strength? And how can scattered Christian families become a people capable of building institutions that endure? We discuss the household as the first Christian zone—the ground a man must faithfully secure through worship, biblical order, disciplined habits, honest work, hospitality, stewardship, and church faithfulness. But dominion cannot remain isolated. A borough emerges when faithful households, churches, schools, businesses, and ministries bind themselves together around a shared loyalty to Christ and a common mission in a particular place. A neighborhood merely shares geography. A borough shares purpose. We also examine the difference between dominion and domination, confront the spiritual excuses Christians use to justify passivity, and consider the three kinds of men produced by the present age: Builders carry weight.Consumers live from the sacrifices of others.Cowards explain why nothing should be built at all. The trowel is already in your hand. Secure your zone. Find your brigade. Build the borough. Raise children capable of carrying weight. Create institutions that will outlive you. Christ rules. Build accordingly. Get full access to Dust & Glory Media at dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe [https://dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

4 jul 20261 h 6 min
aflevering The Myth of Neutrality and the Suburban Church artwork

The Myth of Neutrality and the Suburban Church

The modern world insists that neutrality is possible: neutral schools, neutral government, neutral media, neutral law, and neutral public spaces. But neutrality does not exist. Every institution rests upon a vision of truth, authority, justice, and the good life. Every school disciples. Every law teaches. Every society serves a god. The only question is which god will sit at the center. In this episode of Altars & Ashes, we examine how the suburban church accepted the myth of neutrality and slowly withdrew from education, politics, business, media, and public life. Instead of building institutions, churches built programs. Instead of forming strong households, they marketed experiences. Instead of producing builders, they produced attenders. But institutional vacuums never remain empty. When Christians retreat from education, someone else educates. When Christians retreat from government, someone else governs. When Christians retreat from culture, someone else tells the story. Neutrality is surrender in slow motion. The answer is not panic, outrage, or better online arguments. The answer is to build: faithful households, strong churches, Christian schools, businesses, apprenticeships, ministries, local economies, and networks of mutual aid. Secularism owns institutions. Christians mostly own podcasts. It is time for that to change. Christendom was not built by commentators. It was built by builders. And if a Christian future is going to be recovered, it will begin in households, churches, and boroughs where Christ is openly acknowledged as King. Get full access to Dust & Glory Media at dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe [https://dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

26 jun 20261 h 17 min
aflevering Join A Church, and Serve artwork

Join A Church, and Serve

What does it actually mean to belong to a local church? In this special episode of Altars & Ashes, Austin Tucker, Robbie Stringer, and former co-host Bryan Furlong discuss the biblical importance of church membership. They explore why membership is more than placing your name on a church roll, how it creates real accountability and responsibility, and why Christians are not meant to live disconnected from a local body. After losing the video recording of our recent discussion, we recovered this conversation from an older episode because the subject was simply too important to leave behind. Church membership is a commitment to be known, shepherded, corrected, equipped, and joined to other believers in the worship and service of Christ. Get full access to Dust & Glory Media at dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe [https://dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

19 jun 202658 min