Anabaptist Theological Perspectives

Are UFOs Demons? Catholic Exorcist Removed After Controversial Claim

16 min · Gisteren
aflevering Are UFOs Demons? Catholic Exorcist Removed After Controversial Claim artwork

Beschrijving

Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives addresses a current controversy: Catholic exorcist Stephen Rossetti was removed from his post after asserting that many UFO phenomena are demonic deceptions. Eicher summarizes the Archdiocese of Washington and Cardinal Robert McElroy's response, and notes recent papal remarks about the James Webb Telescope and the possibility of life beyond Earth. The episode explores theological perspectives—drawing on C.S. Lewis, Old Testament imagery (Elijah, Enoch, the two witnesses), and the idea of a divine “quarantine” that would bar contact between fallen humanity and unfallen extraterrestrial life. Eicher argues that Christ’s atoning work and the risk of spiritual contamination provide strong reasons why direct contact would be disallowed. He also examines parallels to Genesis and the book of Enoch (the Nephilim), contemporary reports of abductions and attempted inseminations, and cultural conditioning via films like E.T. as potential softening of public perception. Listeners should expect a reflective, theologically grounded commentary urging caution about UFO encounters and a critical look at how modern culture frames these phenomena.

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Alle afleveringen

98 afleveringen

aflevering Are UFOs Demons? Catholic Exorcist Removed After Controversial Claim artwork

Are UFOs Demons? Catholic Exorcist Removed After Controversial Claim

Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives addresses a current controversy: Catholic exorcist Stephen Rossetti was removed from his post after asserting that many UFO phenomena are demonic deceptions. Eicher summarizes the Archdiocese of Washington and Cardinal Robert McElroy's response, and notes recent papal remarks about the James Webb Telescope and the possibility of life beyond Earth. The episode explores theological perspectives—drawing on C.S. Lewis, Old Testament imagery (Elijah, Enoch, the two witnesses), and the idea of a divine “quarantine” that would bar contact between fallen humanity and unfallen extraterrestrial life. Eicher argues that Christ’s atoning work and the risk of spiritual contamination provide strong reasons why direct contact would be disallowed. He also examines parallels to Genesis and the book of Enoch (the Nephilim), contemporary reports of abductions and attempted inseminations, and cultural conditioning via films like E.T. as potential softening of public perception. Listeners should expect a reflective, theologically grounded commentary urging caution about UFO encounters and a critical look at how modern culture frames these phenomena.

Gisteren16 min
aflevering Holding the Line: Men, Marriage, and the Feminist Tide in the Church artwork

Holding the Line: Men, Marriage, and the Feminist Tide in the Church

Jerry Eicher, retired Mennonite minister and author (65), host of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives, reflects on the cultural and theological challenges facing conservative churches today. He draws on decades of pastoral experience and writings. See jerryeicher.com. Feminist influence is reshaping congregational life, marriage, and male spiritual leadership. The episode traces Bible-based arguments about pastoral roles and public ministry (citing passages such as 1 Corinthians and 1 Peter), offers candid stories from Jerry’s own congregation — including a recent church division and a gifted Sunday school teacher working through 1 Peter 3 — and explores why many men cede moral authority in home and church to the detriment of family and community health. Key takeaways include practical counsel for men about reclaiming God‑given authority, a critique of cultural niceness that substitutes for true manhood, and a discussion of how churches respond (or fail to respond) when women publicly contradict ordained ministers. Jerry also cites Pat Stedman’s insight that men who cede moral framing cannot effectively lead or mend relationships. In the news this week: Jerry comments on the Southern Baptist Convention’s recent struggle to hold a biblical position on women in pastoral office and praises conservative leaders such as Albert Moller Jr. for standing their ground. He also critiques the Episcopal Church’s installation of Reverend Sarah Fisher as the first openly lesbian woman bishop, viewing such moves as symbolic virtue signaling amid declining membership. Expect a frank, pastoral, and reflective conversation about authority, submission, and spiritual responsibility — for men, families, and congregations seeking to navigate cultural change without surrendering core convictions.

30 mei 202630 min
aflevering The Unbearable Catastrophe of Being: Suffering, Faith, and Meaning artwork

The Unbearable Catastrophe of Being: Suffering, Faith, and Meaning

Host Jerry Eicher (Anaphaptist) explores the theological landscape of suffering, inspired by Jordan Peterson’s phrase “the unbearable catastrophe of being.” In this episode he contrasts modern Christian responses, Eastern religious views, and Reformed thinking while probing why suffering exists and how it can point toward meaning. Eicher examines Christ’s participation in suffering—from Genesis and the creation of being to Gethsemane and the cross—arguing that suffering is not valuable in itself but gains weight from the destination of joy. He also discusses the Anabaptist and Amish emphasis on suffering, the psychological and communal role of hardship, and cautions against seeking suffering for its own sake. Listeners can expect reflections on scripture (including Hebrews and Paul), the role of unjust suffering, practical implications for modern life and technology, and a pastoral invitation to trust the path Christ has walked as the source of hope and meaning.

30 mei 202629 min
aflevering God of the Whole House: From Basement Shadows to Eternal Hope artwork

God of the Whole House: From Basement Shadows to Eternal Hope

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fTyXdyIACrg&t=20s [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fTyXdyIACrg&t=20s] Copy and paste for video on Youtube.   In this episode the speaker (a pastor) preaches on "God of the Whole House," using a three-level house image (basement, main floor, upstairs) to explain how God redeems the whole person. He reads and reflects on Isaiah 63, Malachi 3, John, and 1 John, emphasizing God’s plans to refine and restore us—messy, painful, and purposeful. Topics include confession and honesty before God, the danger of stuffing dark parts of ourselves into the “basement,” a critique of modern Christian counseling and Freudian influences, testimonies of spiritual struggle, and the distinction between penal substitution and soul-healing. The sermon urges listeners to bring their real, unpolished selves to Christ for true integration and healing. Guests: none. Key points: God owns and redeems the whole person; true healing requires presenting darkness to God (not hiding it or outsourcing it to counselors alone); God refines and can transform what we surrender to Him.

17 mei 202650 min
aflevering Israel, Catholics, and Rising Religious Tensions artwork

Israel, Catholics, and Rising Religious Tensions

Host Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives walks listeners through the week’s hottest religious controversies, offering an Anabaptist lens on tensions between faith and politics. Topics include viral videos from southern Lebanon showing an Israeli soldier desecrating statues of the Virgin Mary and Jesus, the historical and contemporary contours of Jewish–Christian animosity, and why outrage must be acknowledged but tempered in political relationships. He examines the “Christ is King” debate (using Pilate’s inscription and recent political commentary from figures like Senator Ted Cruz) to argue for clear boundaries between religious proclamation and political action. Jerry also responds to a Georgia pastor urging prayer for Donald Trump, explaining the Anabaptist approach to praying for rulers—praying for their right guidance rather than approval of evil—and warns against religious leaders aligning uncritically with political power. Finally, he explores renewed interest in UFOs/aliens, reflecting on C.S. Lewis, biblical examples, and the possibility that such phenomena are spiritual/demonic rather than extraterrestrial. Key takeaways: admit realities, keep church and state distinct, pray for leaders rightly, and approach extraordinary claims with theological caution.

9 mei 202630 min