The Perspectivalist

Season 7, Episode 2: Christ Over Every Crown: Sphere Sovereignty and the Limits of the State

16 min · 19. feb. 2026
episode Season 7, Episode 2: Christ Over Every Crown: Sphere Sovereignty and the Limits of the State cover

Beskrivelse

Perspectivalist Podcast — Season 7, Episode 2 In this episode, Uri Brito speaks with Pastor Levi Secord about the modern crisis of authority and why Christians instinctively sense that something is wrong when the state claims jurisdiction over education, family, morality, and worship. Drawing from the historic doctrine of sphere sovereignty, Secord argues that God has established distinct spheres — family, church, and civil government — each with delegated authority under the lordship of Christ. When those boundaries collapse, the state becomes a functional god and citizens become its subjects. The conversation explores: • why statism grows when societies reject God • how Scripture limits civil authority (Rom. 13; Matt. 22:21) • lessons learned from COVID-era overreach • why healthy families and churches restrain tyranny • and what cultural renewal would look like if Christians recovered a biblical doctrine of authority At stake is a basic question: Is the state our savior — or God’s servant? Levi Secord — Article Christ Over Every Crown (Kuyperian Commentary) https://kuyperian.com [https://kuyperian.com] Book Servant Not Savior: An Introduction to the Bible’s Teaching About Civil Government Biblical texts discussed Matthew 22:21 Romans 13 Genesis 1 Deuteronomy 6 1 Corinthians 10:31

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episode Season 7, Episode 6: Children at the Table cover

Season 7, Episode 6: Children at the Table

In this episode of The Perspectivalist, we enter a long-standing and often contested conversation within the church: the nature of the sacraments and, more specifically, the place of children at the Lord’s Table. Amid ongoing movements between Protestantism, Roman Catholicism, and Orthodoxy, sacramental theology has once again taken center stage. Pastor Uri Brito offers a robust defense of paedocommunion, not as a novelty or reaction, but as a faithful reading of the biblical witness. At the heart of the discussion is Paul’s exhortation in 1 Corinthians 11 to “discern the body.” Rather than interpreting this as a demand for advanced intellectual or theological comprehension, Brito reframes Paul’s concern as one of relational integrity. The problem in Corinth was not ignorance, but division. The table had become a site of fragmentation, where status and exclusion replaced unity and fellowship. To “discern the body,” then, is to act in a way that promotes the unity of Christ’s people. It is not about mastering doctrinal precision, but about embodying covenantal faithfulness. In this light, children are not disqualified participants. On the contrary, they often exemplify the very posture required at the table: openness, receptivity, and a natural inclination toward unity rather than division. Drawing from biblical patterns and theological insights, including reflections from James B. Jordan, the episode situates faith within the life of the household. Scripture consistently presents covenant life as something nurtured within relationships, not constructed in isolation. From John the Baptist leaping in the womb to David’s early trust in God, the Bible affirms that faith begins long before intellectual maturity. The Lord’s Supper, therefore, is not a private or individualistic act, but a family meal. To exclude baptized children from this meal is to misunderstand the nature of the church as a household. When children are welcomed, the church bears witness to a gospel that gathers, nourishes, and unites a people across generations. This episode calls the church to recover a vision of the table not as a test of intellectual attainment, but as a feast of covenant belonging, where Christ feeds His people and forms them into one body.

21. april 202611 min
episode Season 7, Episode 4: Heavenly Lights and Earthly Rule (Review of "Through New Eyes") cover

Season 7, Episode 4: Heavenly Lights and Earthly Rule (Review of "Through New Eyes")

In this episode of The Perspectivalist, we explore how the Bible teaches us to see the world rightly by beginning with Scripture rather than modern assumptions. While modern man looks at the heavens and sees only physics and expanding galaxies, the Bible invites us to see purpose, meaning, and authority. Drawing from Genesis 1 and insights from James Jordan’s Through New Eyes, we consider how the sun, moon, and stars are not merely physical objects but covenantal signs. They are given to rule, to mark time, and to reflect God’s authority over creation. Throughout Scripture, heavenly bodies symbolize governance, kingship, and divine order, shaping how we understand both worship and politics. We also examine how prophetic language about darkened suns and falling stars is not about the collapse of the physical universe, but about God’s judgment on earthly kingdoms. From Babylon to Israel, this symbolic language reveals how God raises up and tears down rulers according to His purposes. Finally, we reflect on what this means for us as Christians. We are called to recover a biblical vision of the world, one that sees creation not as mere mechanism, but as a theological reality filled with meaning. The heavens declare not only light, but glory. And when we learn to see this way, we begin to understand all of life under the lordship of Christ.

24. mars 202610 min
episode Season 7, Episode 3: Bitcoin, Ethics, and the Theology of Money with Jordan Bush cover

Season 7, Episode 3: Bitcoin, Ethics, and the Theology of Money with Jordan Bush

In this episode of The Perspectivalist, Uri Brito sits down with Jordan Bush to explore a deeper question behind today’s financial debates: What should money be? This conversation moves beyond investing strategy and into theology, ethics, and anthropology. Money, they argue, is not neutral. It shapes trust, power, authority, and social structures. Throughout Scripture, honest scales, just weights, and protection of the vulnerable reveal that how a society structures its money affects how it treats its people. Jordan shares how his time ministering in Uruguay among Venezuelan immigrants exposed him to the devastating effects of currency collapse and hyperinflation. Churches, families, and businesses saw years of savings erased through monetary debasement. That experience led him to study the ethics of money production and eventually Bitcoin. The discussion traces the history of money—from gold and silver to fiat currency—and considers Bitcoin as a digital form of scarcity designed to resist inflation and centralized control. Gold and silver historically functioned as stable money because of their durability, scarcity, and trustworthiness. Fiat currency, by contrast, can be expanded at will, often benefiting governments and financial elites at the expense of ordinary people. Bitcoin attempts to combine the scarcity of precious metals with the portability and digital nature of modern currency. With a fixed supply of 21 million coins, it operates outside direct governmental control, raising important questions for Christians about limits, authority, stewardship, and economic justice. The episode also addresses Bitcoin’s volatility. Jordan explains that price swings are normal in emerging technologies and compares Bitcoin’s market cycles to seasons in agriculture or stages of human maturity. For long-term holders, volatility is not necessarily a sign of failure but part of a developing monetary network. The episode concludes with a brief discussion of Jordan’s children’s book, The Orange Umbrella—a story that introduces the themes behind Bitcoin without ever mentioning it directly. This is not merely a conversation about cryptocurrency. It is a theological reflection on money, trust, power, and the kind of economic systems that best reflect biblical principles.

2. mars 202630 min