Kingdom Polemics

Kingdom Polemics - Your Host: Aldo Leon

Kingdoms Polemics seeks to recapture the comprehensive and optimistic Kingdom theology of the Westminster standards with clarity, conviction, and confrontation. Kingdom Polemics is seeking to advance a spirituality that is gospel, worship, and church-centric and yet creational, institutional, civil and familial connected. Support us: https://buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics

  1. 2 days ago

    Saving Faith and the Free Offer of the Gospel

    Understanding saving faith requires careful theological distinctions that have often been blurred throughout church history. Drawing from theologians such as Francis Turretin, Petrus van Mastricht, and Samuel Rutherford, Pastor Aldo Leon examines how the gospel is to be preached and heard, explaining why confusion over the nature of saving faith has contributed to errors ranging from Arminianism and Roman Catholicism to Antinomianism and the Federal Vision. Highlights The distinction between the direct act and reflex act of faith and why both are necessary for properly understanding saving faith.Why the gospel first calls sinners to believe Christ died for all who repent and believe before assurance becomes personally appropriated.How collapsing the direct and reflex acts of faith leads either to presumption or to legalistic uncertainty.The relationship between knowledge, assent, and trust in saving faith, and why assurance is a fruit of faith rather than its essence.Why the Westminster Confession distinguishes saving faith from the believer's subjective assurance of salvation.The difference between habitual conversion and active conversion, demonstrating God's sovereign work alongside the believer's response.How God's eternal decree must be distinguished from the ordained means by which the gospel is preached and received.The distinction between the preached covenant and the eternal covenant of redemption, and why confusing them fuels Federal Vision theology.How the gospel is sincerely offered to both the elect and the reprobate while accomplishing different purposes according to God's sovereign design.The various categories of God's calling—common, universal, accidental, and effectual—and how each explains the differing responses to the preached gospel.Why properly distinguishing God's revealed will from His secret decree protects both the free offer of the gospel and the doctrines of grace.A pastoral call to hear the gospel through the biblical order established in Scripture, avoiding both works-righteousness and presumptuous faith.Support Us Buy Me A Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics Purchase Christ's Crown: Christianity and the Civil Realm: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm Thank you for listening to Kingdom Polemics. If this episode helped deepen your understanding of Reformed theology, please subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review to help others discover the podcast.

    1hr 19min
  2. 22 Jun

    The Maligned Ministry of Authority

    Pastor Aldo Leon welcomes returning guest Pastor George Sayour to discuss George's article, The Maligned Ministry of Authority. Drawing from Scripture, pastoral experience, and George's current ministry serving government leaders in Florida, the conversation examines why biblical authority has become increasingly suspect in both the culture and the church. They argue that many modern objections to authority stem not from genuine concerns about abuse, but from a deeper resistance to God-ordained structures of leadership and submission. George's article discussed in this episode: https://pcapolity.com/2026/05/21/the-maligned-ministry-of-authority/ Learn more about George Sayour's current ministry: https://www.ministrytostate.org/florida Highlights George explains his work with Ministry to State, serving legislators, government officials, and public servants through pastoral presence, discipleship, and Bible studies.The discussion begins with George's article and its provocative description of a pastor whose conduct sounds abusive—until listeners discover the pastor being described is the Apostle Paul.Biblical authority is defined as a God-given ministry of shepherding, governing, protecting, correcting, and guiding Christ's church for its good.Aldo and George argue that modern culture assumes authority is inherently suspect unless exercised according to the desires of those being led.The conversation contrasts Presbyterian authority with modern congregational assumptions that reduce leadership to advice and consensus-building.The hosts discuss how Scripture consistently portrays faithful leaders—Moses, David, Paul, and even Christ Himself—as frequently opposed by those under their authority.They examine how accusations of "abuse" are sometimes used to dismiss legitimate exercises of biblical authority rather than addressing the actual issues involved.The episode explores how servant leadership has often been redefined to emphasize serving while neglecting the responsibility to actually lead.George and Aldo discuss the danger of measuring leadership by popularity, consensus, or the approval of the loudest voices in a congregation.The hosts argue that many church conflicts ultimately reveal a deeper struggle with submission to lawful authority rather than disagreements over doctrine or morality.Practical application is given to pastors, elders, husbands, fathers, and anyone entrusted with authority under Christ.The episode concludes by reminding leaders that their ultimate accountability is not to public opinion but to Christ, the Chief Shepherd, who will judge every steward of His household.Support Kingdom Polemics: https://buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics Get Aldo Leon's book, Christ's Crown: Christianity and the Civil Realm: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm Listen, subscribe, and share Kingdom Polemics as we seek to recover a robustly biblical, Christ-centered vision for theology, worship, church life, and cultural engagement.

    1hr 28min
  3. 18 May

    Small Things That Ruin the Church

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Pastor Aldo Leon walks through a series of "small" issues that often go unnoticed in Reformed churches until they become spiritually destructive. Drawing from Scripture, pastoral experience, and practical church life, Aldo explains how seemingly minor attitudes, assumptions, and patterns can slowly erode unity, piety, and the integrity of a congregation. This episode focuses less on obvious heresy and more on the subtle cultural and relational problems that destabilize churches over time. Why unresolved tensions between members eventually surface in destructive ways if left unaddressedThe danger of refusing charity toward Christians on plausibly debatable mattersHow personal affinities and partiality often undermine biblical objectivity in church conflictWhy "short-term sanctification" expectations crush believers who are still growing over timeThe importance of dealing with Christians according to their union with Christ rather than defining them by inconsistenciesHow disconnected church relationships weaken unity, hospitality, and mutual careThe danger of assumptions, narrative-driven judgment, and guilt by association in church disputesWhy "implicit faith" and conscience-substitution can quietly produce unhealthy church culturesThe difference between natural personality traits and genuine Spirit-wrought pietyWhy untested leaders and unproven men often create catastrophic damage under pressureThe destructive nature of "hobby horse" Christianity where one doctrine eclipses the whole counsel of GodHow polarity-driven reactions produce imbalance instead of mature biblical parallelismThe necessity of a gospel-reflective culture marked by meekness, burden-bearing, and patienceWhy self-preoccupation with everyone else's sins often hides personal spiritual hypocrisyThe problem of "parrot piety" where traditions and reactions are repeated without biblical examinationSupport Kingdom Polemics: https://buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics Get Aldo Leon's book: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm Kingdom Polemics is dedicated to recovering a robustly biblical, Reformed, and Christ-centered worldview for the church, family, and society.

    55 min
  4. 23 Apr

    More on the FCC Presbytery

    Episode 300 reflects on the Free Church of Scotland Continuing (FCC) Presbytery colloquium in Alabama, highlighting its preaching, theology, worship, and church governance. Aldo Leon and Emmanuel Gonzalez walk through key observations, emphasizing experiential Reformed piety, rigorous preaching critique, and pastoral integrity in church courts. This milestone episode offers a window into a tradition seeking to unite doctrinal precision with heartfelt, Christ-centered ministry. Highlights Preaching exercises stand out as a disciplined practice: ministers and students receive targeted texts and real-time critique to refine both doctrine and deliveryStrong emphasis on evangelical preaching: not mere doctrinal accuracy, but presenting a "felt Christ" and the full scope of salvation in every sermonSermons consistently elevated the congregation to a heavenly-minded focus, avoiding mere moralism and grounding application in eternal realitiesTeaching sessions reinforced core theology, including the necessity of precise doctrine on the atonement and rejection of antinomian and neonomian errorsExperiential religion was central: the real, present work of God in preaching and worship was treated as essential, not assumedChurch culture discussions stressed biblically grounded practices that promote edification, modesty, and reverence without becoming legalisticPresbytery business reflected pastoral care over partisanship, with visible love for congregations, careful discipline, and unity in decision-makingMissions and growth highlighted: expanding work in Mexico and plans toward an indigenous American denomination show outward-facing commitmentSupport us! Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics Buy a Book: Christ's Crown, Christianity, & The Civil Realm by Aldo Leon: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm

    1hr 32min
  5. 8 Apr

    Kuyperianism's Consequences

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Aldo Leon delivers a sustained critique of Kuyperianism and its influence across the Reformed world. Tracing its historical rise and doctrinal developments, he argues that key Kuyperian emphases have contributed to confusion in covenant theology, ecclesiology, and Christian piety. The episode calls listeners to recover a more experiential, historically Reformed framework rooted in Scripture and confessional clarity. Traces the rise of Abraham Kuyper in America through Dutch immigration, Princeton's Stone Lectures, and institutional influenceHighlights the role of Cornelius Van Til in synthesizing Kuyperian thought into Presbyterian circlesCritiques Kuyperian sphere sovereignty for flattening distinctions between church, family, and civil realmsArgues that hyper-covenantalism collapses key distinctions: covenant of redemption vs. grace, nature vs. grace, time vs. eternityIdentifies presumptive regeneration as a major issue, blurring covenant membership with election and conversionConnects Kuyperianism to diminished experiential piety, weak self-examination, and overly intellectualized faithExamines how cultural transformation can displace personal holiness and communion with GodWarns that redefining the church as organism over institution undermines preaching, worship, and disciplineResources Historic Calvinism and Neo-Calvinism, William Young (https://www.westminsterconfession.org/resources/the-doctrines-of-grace/historic-calvinism-and-neo-calvinism/)Experimental Roots: Dutch Calvinistic Preaching, Cornelis Pronk (https://digitalcommons.calvin.edu/hh_av_seminary_events/1700/)Neo-Calvinism, Cornelis Pronk (https://christianreformedink.wordpress.com/bad-theology/neo-calvinism/neo-calvinism/)Support the Show Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemicsGet the Book Christ's Crown, Christianity, & The Civil Realm: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm

    1hr 58min
  6. 16 Mar

    Majoring on the Majors While Holding to Things Minor with Rob McCurley

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Aldo Leon speaks with Rev. Rob McCurley of Greenville Presbyterian Church (https://www.freechurchcontinuing.org/staff-members/rev-robert-d-mccurley) about the crucial distinction between "main things" and secondary matters in the Christian life. The discussion explores how Scripture establishes doctrinal priorities while still requiring faithfulness in all truth. McCurley explains how clarity on these categories fosters spiritual maturity, wise pastoral ministry, and healthier theological discourse. Why distinguishing between heresy and lesser doctrinal error is essential for faithful theological reasoningHow Scripture itself teaches degrees of doctrinal importance (for example, "first and great commandment" and the "weightier matters of the law")Why careless use of the word heresy harms the church and grieves the LordThe difference between pastoral patience with error and doctrinal indifferenceWhy ministers must hold a higher standard of doctrinal clarity than the average church memberHow the first table of the law (God's honor and worship) must have primacy over other concernsHow neglecting the "main things" often flows from spiritual drift rather than intellectual confusionPractical counsel for pastors and young men on cultivating humility, study, prayer, and historical wisdomSupport Kingdom Polemics: Buy Me A Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics Get Aldo Leon's book: Christ's Crown, Christianity, & The Civil Realm (https://berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm) Follow and share the podcast to help spread confessional Reformed theology and thoughtful Christian engagement with the world.

    2hr 1min
  7. 6 Mar

    OPC Pastor Against Exclusive Psalmody

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Aldo Leon is joined by Emmanuel Gonzalez to respond to an article by OPC minister D. Patrick Ramsey titled "On Singing Hymns." The discussion evaluates Ramsey's arguments against exclusive psalmody and examines the biblical, historical, and confessional foundations of congregational singing in public worship. Aldo and Emmanuel argue that the inspired Psalms remain the church's divinely given songbook for worship and that many modern defenses of hymn singing rely on weak hermeneutics and selective appeals to history. Highlights & Key Discussion Points: The context of Ramsey's article and why the debate over exclusive psalmody continues within confessional Presbyterian circles.Old Testament songs outside the Psalter (Exodus 15, Judges 5, Deuteronomy 32) and why narrative examples do not establish prescriptions for regular public worship.Redemptive-historical development of worship and the formal institution of psalm singing under David and the Levitical order.Claims about New Testament "hymns" and why poetic passages like Philippians 2 or 1 Timothy 3:16 do not justify uninspired hymnody.Interpreting "psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs" in Colossians 3:16 and Ephesians 5:19 in light of the Septuagint titles of the Psalms.Calvin's Geneva Psalter and the role of psalm singing in the Reformation churches.Early church testimony showing the central place of the Psalter in Christian worship.The influence of Isaac Watts and how modern hymnody departed from the historic psalm-singing tradition.Referenced Article: D. Patrick Ramsey, "On Singing Hymns" https://patrickspensees.blogspot.com/2025/02/on-singing-hymns.html If this episode sharpened your thinking, subscribe to Kingdom Polemics and share the episode with a friend. Join the discussion on our YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@kingdompolemics You can also support Kingdom Polemics through Buy Me A Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics And don't forget Aldo Leon's book *Christ's Crown, Christianity, & The Civil Realm*, available at Berith Press: https://berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm

    1hr 52min
  8. 20 Feb

    Reformed Political Theology with Pastor James Baird, PCA

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Aldo Leon sits down with Pastor James Baird (PCA) for a wide-ranging and candid discussion on Reformed political theology, the American founding, the spirituality of the church, and the ongoing debate surrounding Christian nationalism. Drawing deeply from the Westminster Standards, American Presbyterian history, and classic Protestant political thought, they explore what it actually means to say that "government must promote true religion"—and whether that claim is truly un-American. This conversation engages contemporary critiques (including Kevin DeYoung's five questions), the PCA study committee on Christian Nationalism, and the historical record of early America. Throughout, Aldo and James challenge the assumption of neutrality in civil government and argue that classic Protestant political theology is far more robust—and far more American—than many assume. Highlights & Key Discussion Points: Why James Baird wrote his book to "his former self" and how wrestling through objections shaped his convictions about civil government and true religion. The core thesis: government must promote true religion—and why this is not a departure from confessional Presbyterianism but a recovery of it.The myth of neutrality: Van Til, covenant theology, and the rejection of R2K frameworks that divide life into "neutral" and "religious" spheres.Was the American founding anti-Christian? A historical look at state establishments, blasphemy laws, Sabbath laws, and the role of the First Amendment.The distinction between the First Amendment (1791) and its 20th-century "incorporation" through Supreme Court decisions like Everson v. Board of Education.Can a nation act as a corporate moral person? Biblical, covenantal, and political arguments for national moral agency.The purpose of civil government according to the Westminster Confession of Faith and Reformed tradition: promoting piety, justice, and peace.What it actually means to "promote true religion"—and why affirming the principle does not require endorsing every imprudent policy proposal.The spirituality of the church: what it does and does not mean. Distinguishing between pastoral overreach and faithfully applying the moral law of God to all of life.American revisions of the Standards (1788) and whether they prohibit a tolerant Christian establishment (they do not).The PCA study committee on Christian Nationalism—mixed motivations, broad scope, and questions about focus and clarity.Pastoral reflections on young men drawn to ethnocentric ideologies, and why shepherding requires both clarity and care—not merely condemnation.You can also support Kingdom Polemics directly through Buy Me A Coffee at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics. Your support helps us continue producing substantive, confessional conversations that engage the pressing issues of our day And don't forget to check out Aldo Leon's book, Christ's Crown, Christianity, & The Civil Realm, which makes a compelling biblical case for the Reformed doctrine of the civil magistrate under Christ's mediatorial rule. Available now at Berith Press: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm.

    1hr 42min

About

Kingdoms Polemics seeks to recapture the comprehensive and optimistic Kingdom theology of the Westminster standards with clarity, conviction, and confrontation. Kingdom Polemics is seeking to advance a spirituality that is gospel, worship, and church-centric and yet creational, institutional, civil and familial connected. Support us: https://buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics

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