Catechizing Conversations

Cisco Victa

Podcast Description A ministry of Victa Leadership and Lebanon Valley PCA Catechizing Conversations is a podcast devoted to teaching the historic Reformed confessions—Westminster, Heidelberg, Belgic, and more—helping believers understand and live out the deep truths of confessional Christianity. Rooted in Scripture and the rich theological tradition of the Reformation, each episode offers accessible teaching and meaningful discussion. We also feature interviews with local ministry leaders throughout Lebanon County, highlighting the work Christ is doing in our community and encouraging connection within the broader body of Christ.

  1. Let's Talk About Predestination! (Westminster Confession of Faith Chap. 3) Part 1

    MAY 5

    Let's Talk About Predestination! (Westminster Confession of Faith Chap. 3) Part 1

    Send us Fan Mail “God ordains whatsoever comes to pass” can sound like a wrecking ball to your sense of freedom and fairness. We sit down with Westminster Confession Chapter 3 and take the doctrine of God’s eternal decree seriously, without turning people into puppets or turning God into a distant spectator. We walk line by line through the confession’s careful claims: God’s decree is wise, holy, free, and unchangeable, and yet God is not the author of sin. From there we open the Bible and follow the thread through Proverbs 16, Ephesians 1, Acts 2:23, and Joseph’s words in Genesis 50:20. You’ll hear why Reformed theology rejects the idea that election is based on foreseen faith, why “salvation is of the Lord” is more than a slogan, and how God can use even sinful human actions for righteous ends without sharing in the guilt of those actions. We also tackle the practical fears: Does this lead to fatalism? Does it kill mission? Acts 27 gives a surprising answer, showing that God ordains the end and the means, so real choices truly matter. We close with pastoral comfort and a story of gospel ministry where predestination becomes hope for the ashamed and the weary, not a weapon for arguments. If you want deeper assurance, steadier worship, and a more biblical view of God’s sovereignty and human responsibility, listen now. Subscribe, share this with a friend who wrestles with predestination, and leave a review with the question you still want answered. Support the show

    44 min
  2. Why the Westminster Confession Still Matters: A Conversation with Dr. Chad Van Dixhoorn

    APR 25

    Why the Westminster Confession Still Matters: A Conversation with Dr. Chad Van Dixhoorn

    Send us Fan Mail We’re joined by Dr. Chad Van Dixhoorn, professor of church history and theology at Reformed Theological Seminary and one of today’s leading Westminster Assembly scholars. Few men in our day have devoted more careful, sustained work to the Westminster Standards, studying both their historical setting and their theological substance. In this conversation, he offers a gracious and accessible presentation of the Confession and catechisms, while also pressing the importance of confessionalism for the life and health of the church today. Together, we explore why the Westminster Confession of Faith and the Larger and Shorter Catechisms still belong in the hands of ordinary Christians. For more information on Dr. Chad Van Dixhoorn’s work, please see the following: Confessing the Faith by Chad Van Dixhoorn, available through Banner of Truth. Dr. Van Dixhoorn is Professor of Church History and Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, and he is widely recognized as one of the leading experts on the Westminster Assembly. He has completed a five volume edition of The Minutes and Papers of the Westminster Assembly, 1643 to 1652, giving the church an unprecedented window into the work and debates of the divines. He is also currently working on a major monograph on the Assembly and serves as the editor of John Arrowsmith’s Plans for Holy War, as well as general editor of the Works of Samuel Rutherford. Ordained in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, Dr. Van Dixhoorn has also served pastorally both in the United Kingdom and here in the United States. Support the show

    31 min
  3. Behind the Politics: Gospel Ministry at the Capitol — Interview with Rev. Ron Zeigler, Ministry to State (Harrisburg, PA)

    APR 21

    Behind the Politics: Gospel Ministry at the Capitol — Interview with Rev. Ron Zeigler, Ministry to State (Harrisburg, PA)

    Send us Fan Mail Politics is everywhere, but it rarely feels personal. From cable news panels to social media takes, it’s easy to talk about “politicians” like they’re a single faceless group instead of neighbors made in the image of God. We sit down with Rev Ron Zeigler, a pastor serving full-time through Ministry to State at the Pennsylvania State Capitol in Harrisburg, to talk about what it looks like to bring pastoral care into one of the most pressurized workplaces in the Commonwealth. Ron shares how this Presbyterian Church in America ministry (under Mission to North America) focuses on prayer, presence, and genuine relationship with lawmakers, staffers, and even the police forces and custodial teams that keep the Capitol running. You’ll hear why legislators can feel overlooked and isolated, how caucus pressure and leadership demands shape real moral tension, and why Christians are called to intercede for civil government leaders according to 1 Timothy 2. He also tells remarkable stories from the halls and the Capitol cafe: prayer cards saved for years, moments of encouragement after difficult debates, and people from different parties and backgrounds praying together in public. Along the way we wrestle with a question many believers feel but rarely say out loud: how do we care more about the person than the person’s policy while still taking truth and conscience seriously? If you care about Christian political engagement, praying for government leaders, and a faithful public witness that doesn’t borrow the world’s contempt, this conversation offers a grounded path forward. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: which leader will you start praying for this week? For more info on Ron's ministry, visit: PENNSYLVANIA | Ministry to State Support the show

    50 min
  4. From John’s Gospel To Nicaea: How Christians Confessed One God In Three Persons (WCF 2)

    APR 7

    From John’s Gospel To Nicaea: How Christians Confessed One God In Three Persons (WCF 2)

    Send us Fan Mail The fastest way to misunderstand Christianity is to treat the Trinity like a math puzzle or a dusty debate from the fourth century. We pick up Westminster Confession of Faith chapter two and follow the doctrine of the Trinity where it actually comes from: the Bible’s own speech about the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, with the Gospel of John front and center. Drew Brackbill helps us connect Scripture, church history, and the real-world stakes of orthodox Christian doctrine. From the apostle John’s insistence on the Word’s full divinity to the Anti-Nicene Fathers like Ignatius, we trace how Trinitarian theology shows up early and clearly before any ecumenical council meets. Then we explain why the word “Trinity” appears later than the belief, how terms like “one substance” (consubstantiality) help the church speak precisely, and why that precision is meant to protect biblical faith rather than replace it. We also walk through the major Trinitarian controversies that shaped the early church: modalism (Sabelianism) and Arianism, why they sounded persuasive, and why the Council of Nicaea and Athanasius mattered. Finally, we bring it into the present with modern examples and the ongoing question of creeds, confessions, and “no creed but the Bible.” If you care about the atonement, salvation, and faithful worship, this conversation lands close to home. Support the show

    37 min
  5. Campus Discipleship In A Secular Age: An Interview with Micah Natal of Disciple Makers

    FEB 10

    Campus Discipleship In A Secular Age: An Interview with Micah Natal of Disciple Makers

    Send us Fan Mail What happens when a former atheist returns to the college campus with the Gospel? We sit down with Micah Natal of DiscipleMakers to unpack how clear doctrine and real community take root in a place often defined by slogans, polarization, and noise. Micah traces his story from hearing a professor call the Bible “half myth,” to Micah's preaching in a house church, to the providential leading that led him into full-time campus work. Along the way, he learned the practices that now shape his work with students: slow, careful Bible study; resisting “what does this mean to me” shortcuts; and letting the Word master you before you teach it. He also spotlights a surprising tension: while many campuses broadcast their ideologies, faithful witness can still win respect. At Lebanon Valley College, Disciplemakers is widely praised for hospitality, proving that conviction and kindness can coexist. We also talk about the hunger rising among freshmen students for depth—questions about the Lord’s Supper, assurance, and Reformed theology—and why tools like the Westminster Confession and Heidelberg Catechism clarify complex truths without dumbing them down. Then we tackle an emerging challange: Artifical Intelligence. Micah names the real harms—lack of critical thinking, engineered “companions,” and dehumanizing misuse—and explains how embodied community, shared meals, small talk, and confession counter loneliness. The thread running through it all is the local church. Campus nights aren’t a substitute for membership, elders, and the one-anothering of the local church; students who plant roots in the local church now become contributors later. If you care about evangelism, discipleship, and the next generation’s formation, this conversation offers practical guidance and hopeful stories. Listen, share with a friend who mentors college students, and if it helps you, leave a review and subscribe so others can find it. Support the show

    55 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Podcast Description A ministry of Victa Leadership and Lebanon Valley PCA Catechizing Conversations is a podcast devoted to teaching the historic Reformed confessions—Westminster, Heidelberg, Belgic, and more—helping believers understand and live out the deep truths of confessional Christianity. Rooted in Scripture and the rich theological tradition of the Reformation, each episode offers accessible teaching and meaningful discussion. We also feature interviews with local ministry leaders throughout Lebanon County, highlighting the work Christ is doing in our community and encouraging connection within the broader body of Christ.

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