Altars and Ashes Podcast

The Communion We Share, The Ordinances We Keep

1 h 7 min · 9. mai 2026
episode The Communion We Share, The Ordinances We Keep cover

Beskrivelse

In this episode of Altars & Ashes Podcast, we continue through the 1689 London Baptist Confession, focusing on the communion of saints, baptism, and the Lord’s Supper (Chapters 27–30). Today, we answer a foundational question: What does life together in Christ actually look like? Scripture teaches that Christians are not isolated individuals, but a people united to Christ and therefore united to one another. The church is meant to be visible, sacrificial, worshipful, and deeply connected. We also discuss the ordinances Christ gave His church: baptism as a public identification with Christ in His death and resurrection, and the Lord’s Supper as covenant remembrance and spiritual nourishment for believers. Key takeaway:The Christian life is not meant to be lived alone. Christ calls His people into communion, marks them in baptism, and nourishes them at His Table. 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 episoder

48 Episoder

episode The Myth of Neutrality and the Suburban Church cover

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. juni 20261 h 17 min
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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. juni 202658 min
episode The West Was Not Lost by Accident cover

The West Was Not Lost by Accident

Before Christians can build again, we must understand what happened to the world we inherited. In this episode of Altars & Ashes, we perform an autopsy on the West. Christendom did not vanish by accident. It was surrendered through a long assault on ideas, institutions, households, churches, and law. The collapse was not merely political. It was spiritual. It was cultural. It was institutional. We discuss what Christendom actually was, why modern Christians often recoil from the word, how the myth of neutrality helped disarm the church, and why individual resistance is not enough. A single family cannot rebuild a civilization alone. We need households, churches, schools, businesses, and local Christian communities ordered under the reign of Christ. This episode is not about despair. It is about clarity. Builders must understand the ruins they inherited. Christendom was not lost by accident. It was surrendered. And if it was surrendered, then perhaps it can be rebuilt. Get full access to Dust & Glory Media at dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe [https://dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

12. juni 20261 h 21 min
episode The Age of Ambient Christianity is Over cover

The Age of Ambient Christianity is Over

For generations, Christians could rely on cultural momentum, borrowed capital, and institutions that still retained traces of a Christian worldview. Those days are gone. We now find ourselves in a world increasingly hostile to Christian conviction, Christian families, and Christian institutions. The question before us is no longer whether Christians should build. The question is whether we will build intentionally or whether we will be built upon by the forces shaping the age. In this opening episode of our 4th season focus B.D. Flemings book, Strongholds of the Kingdom, we introduce the vision of the Christian borough. We explore why faithful Christians must think beyond individual piety and recover the work of building households, churches, schools, businesses, and communities that can endure for generations. We discuss Aaron Renn’s concept of the “Negative World,” the temptation of nostalgia, the example of Nehemiah rebuilding Jerusalem’s walls, and the growing fragmentation that marks modern life. More importantly, we cast a positive vision for what faithful Christian life can look like in an age of cultural collapse. The choice before us is stark: Borough or abyss. Over the next season, we’ll explore the practical mechanics of rebuilding Christian civilization from the ground up, one household, one church, one institution at a time. Because the borough is the seed and Christendom is the harvest. And, every harvest begins with builders. “And they that shall be of thee shall build the old waste places: thou shalt raise up the foundations of many generations.” - Isaiah 58:12 #AltarsAndAshesPodcast #ChristianBoroughs #StrongholdsOfTheKingdom #BDFleming #Postmillennialism #ChristianCulture #FamilyDiscipleship #ChurchLife #ChristianEducation #KingdomBuilding #ReformedTheology Get full access to Dust & Glory Media at dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe [https://dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

5. juni 202656 min
episode Why A Positive Eschatology Matters cover

Why A Positive Eschatology Matters

In this casual conversation, we talk about why eschatology is not just a chart at the back of a study Bible. What we believe about the future shapes how we live in the present. A negative view of history often produces retreat, fear, and short-term thinking. But a positive eschatology teaches us to labor with confidence, build with generations in mind, and believe that Christ is reigning now—and His kingdom will not fail. We discuss how hope changes households, churches, culture, mission, and courage. The Church is not called to hide in the corner until things collapse. We are called to faithfulness, dominion under Christ, and joyful confidence that “the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the LORD, as the waters cover the sea.” Until all Christ’s enemies are His footstool. #AltarsAndAshes #Eschatology #Postmillennialism #ReformedTheology #ChristianHope #KingdomOfGod Get full access to Dust & Glory Media at dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe [https://dustandglorymedia.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

30. mai 202649 min