#103 Why Christian Media Softens Hard Scriptures On Women And Church Authority

The quickest way to empty the gospel of its power is to make it sound safe. We dig into a viral kind of Christian content that says the right words about Scripture while quietly sanding down anything that might offend donors, audiences, or platforms and we ask whether that’s exactly what Paul warns about when he talks about avoiding persecution for the cross of Christ.

We start with Ali Beth Stuckey’s take on women pastors and then slow down to read what the text actually says. That means sitting with Genesis and creation order, then walking through 1 Timothy 2 beyond the single proof-text verse. We talk about quiet learning, full submission, authority in the local church, and why “context” can sometimes become a way to dodge the plain meaning rather than submit to it. If you care about complementarian theology, church leadership, or biblical authority, this is the kind of close read that forces clarity.

Then we pivot to discernment and Christian media. We use 2 John 9–11 to ask what it means to welcome voices who “run ahead” of the teaching of Christ, and we connect that to Mormonism and the way prominent figures like Glenn Beck are received in Christian spaces. We close with 1 Corinthians 11 and the debated issue of head coverings, focusing on the phrase “because of the angels” and the idea of a visible sign of authority in worship.

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Duration: 01:16:55

Video tags: Full Show Podcasts

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