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Examples of Apostasy (Enemies in the Church)

24 min · 14. juli 2026
episode Examples of Apostasy (Enemies in the Church) cover

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Jude 4–7 warns the church to earnestly contend for the faith once delivered by setting before us three stark examples of apostasy: Israel after the Exodus, the fallen angels, and Sodom and Gomorrah, all of whom were richly privileged yet judged for unbelief, rebellion, and moral corruption. Jude makes clear that apostasy is not an intellectual failure but a moral revolt, a refusal to live gratefully and obediently under God’s authority, a temptation heightened when false teachers cloak unbelief in the prestige of philosophy, science, or cultural sophistication, as the Gnostics did then and as modern ideologies do now. Israel presumed upon grace, the angels abandoned their appointed calling in pursuit of autonomy, and Sodom turned prosperity into arrogance and sexual perversion, each illustrating that privilege increases responsibility rather than excuses disobedience. Jude’s message is therefore timeless: the church must not reinterpret God’s revelation to fit the “wisdom” of the age but must defend its priority against every rival worldview, recognizing that the city of man always exalts its own word above God’s Word. The call is not to accommodation but to faithfulness, gratitude, and holy resistance, lest the church repeat the sins of those who believed themselves advanced yet fell under judgment. #Jude #ContendForTheFaith #Apostasy #BiblicalWarning #FaithOnceDelivered #CityOfMan #WorldlyWisdom #MoralRebellion #FalseTeaching #AuthorityOfScripture

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episode Examples of Apostasy (Enemies in the Church) artwork

Examples of Apostasy (Enemies in the Church)

Jude 4–7 warns the church to earnestly contend for the faith once delivered by setting before us three stark examples of apostasy: Israel after the Exodus, the fallen angels, and Sodom and Gomorrah, all of whom were richly privileged yet judged for unbelief, rebellion, and moral corruption. Jude makes clear that apostasy is not an intellectual failure but a moral revolt, a refusal to live gratefully and obediently under God’s authority, a temptation heightened when false teachers cloak unbelief in the prestige of philosophy, science, or cultural sophistication, as the Gnostics did then and as modern ideologies do now. Israel presumed upon grace, the angels abandoned their appointed calling in pursuit of autonomy, and Sodom turned prosperity into arrogance and sexual perversion, each illustrating that privilege increases responsibility rather than excuses disobedience. Jude’s message is therefore timeless: the church must not reinterpret God’s revelation to fit the “wisdom” of the age but must defend its priority against every rival worldview, recognizing that the city of man always exalts its own word above God’s Word. The call is not to accommodation but to faithfulness, gratitude, and holy resistance, lest the church repeat the sins of those who believed themselves advanced yet fell under judgment. #Jude #ContendForTheFaith #Apostasy #BiblicalWarning #FaithOnceDelivered #CityOfMan #WorldlyWisdom #MoralRebellion #FalseTeaching #AuthorityOfScripture

14. juli 202624 min
episode The Changed Meaning of Liberty artwork

The Changed Meaning of Liberty

Historically, liberty meant a religious privilege or immunity freedom from state control because God alone is Lord. Churches, families, and professions possessed protected spheres of life grounded in Christian faith, where the state had no jurisdiction. This understanding survived into early American constitutional thought as “privileges and immunities.” With the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, liberty was redefined. It no longer meant immunity under God’s law, but autonomous self-expression: the right to do whatever one pleases so long as others are not “hurt.” Once God was removed as the definer of man and morality, man and ultimately the state became the new authority deciding what liberty means, who counts as a person, and whose freedoms matter. This new, humanistic liberty led not to freedom but to tyranny. When liberty is detached from God’s law, it becomes license, violence, and finally state control. True liberty, Scripture teaches, comes only from Christ and is grounded in God’s sovereignty, law, and order not in autonomous human will.

14. juli 202616 min
episode Can Local Communities Save America? artwork

Can Local Communities Save America?

What happens to a civilization when its people no longer have roots? When families relocate for career advancement, when high-density housing developments replace forests and familiar neighborhoods, and when the very concept of "home" is reduced to wherever the next paycheck takes you — something essential to human society is being lost. In this episode of Out of the Question, Andrea Schwartz and Charles Roberts explore the accelerating destruction of localism and what it means for Christians who take seriously the biblical structure of family, community, and civil government. The conversation traces a sobering historical pattern: from the Roman and Babylonian practice of uprooting conquered peoples to break their loyalties, to the post-Civil War centralization that transformed a voluntary union of sovereign states into a consolidated national identity, to today's globalist agenda that seeks to erase distinct peoples, cultures, and — above all — any vestige of biblically grounded Christian civilization. Roberts and Schwartz argue that this isn't accidental. The erosion of local identity serves both ideological ends (the replacement of God's law with statist authority) and financial ones (developers and planners who profit from population churn without regard for the communities they displace). The biblical model, by contrast, emphasizes rootedness: God gave Abraham a promised land as a permanent home, organized Israel in layers of local self-government, and commissioned His people to disciple distinct nations — not to dissolve them into a managed global monoculture. The episode is a call to re-engage with the local — to know your mayor, attend your city council meetings, strengthen your family as the foundational institution of society, and resist the comfortable assumption that centralized authority is inevitable. Drawing on R.J. Rushdoony's works *The Nature of the American System* and *This Independent Republic*, Schwartz and Roberts offer both a historical framework and a practical challenge: if Christians won't build and defend local community under the lordship of Christ, someone else will gladly fill the vacuum. Listen and consider what faithfulness looks like where you actually live.

Yesterday41 min