
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


coreyjmahler.com
@CoreyJMahler
aka Eschatologuy
@treblewoe
The Reformation was not the beginning of the problems in the Western Church, nor in the Church more generally. Over the centuries before the beginning of the Reformation, generally accepted as 31 October 1517, the Church faced a number of heresies, divisions, and other problems. Yet God has always seen her through these tumultuous waters.
Today, we find ourselves yet again in need of reformation, for the existing church bodies are corrupt — virtually all from the top down. This does not mean that there are no faithful churches, that there are no faithful congregations, but we do, indeed, find ourselves virtually bereft of faithful, ‘official’ leadership.
To address these challenges and to restore Christendom, we will have to work together. Not as Lutherans or Reformed or Baptists or Romans or whatever other tradition or denomination we may call our own, but as Christians. This is not a call to abandon our distinctives or our doctrinal convictions; rather, it is a call to work together across these lines in the kingdom of the left hand of Christ.
God willing, our grandchildren will see a Christendom we have known only in history books.
Subscribe to the podcast here.
None.
The transcript for this episode can be found here
Other transcripts can be found here
Join the discussion on Telegram, visit the feedback form or comment below.
By Stone Choir4.6
586586 ratings
coreyjmahler.com
@CoreyJMahler
aka Eschatologuy
@treblewoe
The Reformation was not the beginning of the problems in the Western Church, nor in the Church more generally. Over the centuries before the beginning of the Reformation, generally accepted as 31 October 1517, the Church faced a number of heresies, divisions, and other problems. Yet God has always seen her through these tumultuous waters.
Today, we find ourselves yet again in need of reformation, for the existing church bodies are corrupt — virtually all from the top down. This does not mean that there are no faithful churches, that there are no faithful congregations, but we do, indeed, find ourselves virtually bereft of faithful, ‘official’ leadership.
To address these challenges and to restore Christendom, we will have to work together. Not as Lutherans or Reformed or Baptists or Romans or whatever other tradition or denomination we may call our own, but as Christians. This is not a call to abandon our distinctives or our doctrinal convictions; rather, it is a call to work together across these lines in the kingdom of the left hand of Christ.
God willing, our grandchildren will see a Christendom we have known only in history books.
Subscribe to the podcast here.
None.
The transcript for this episode can be found here
Other transcripts can be found here
Join the discussion on Telegram, visit the feedback form or comment below.

5,549 Listeners

843 Listeners

1,146 Listeners

38 Listeners

1,092 Listeners

472 Listeners

46 Listeners

1,394 Listeners

1,067 Listeners

983 Listeners

1,190 Listeners

512 Listeners

3,818 Listeners

168 Listeners

544 Listeners