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. Coaching Works Best When We Stop Trying To Fix People: A Conversation with Author and Coach Vinny Tauriello (Part 2)

    1 ngày trước

    Coaching Works Best When We Stop Trying To Fix People: A Conversation with Author and Coach Vinny Tauriello (Part 2)

    Send us Fan Mail Most of us are trained to give answers fast, especially in ministry and leadership. But what if the better move is to slow down, listen longer, and ask the kind of question that helps someone finally see what is driving them? We sit down with Rev. Vincent Tauriello , pastor, professional coach, and founder of By Design Coaching, to talk about the theological foundations behind sound coaching practice and his new book, Drawing Out the Heart.  We start with Proverbs 20:5 and the image of “deep water,” a reminder that people are not simple problems to solve. Coaching approaches every person as an image bearer of God, worthy of respect, curiosity, and careful attention, even when the heart is conflicted or clouded by sin and “limiting beliefs.” We talk about why coaching is not just for corporate leaders, how it can serve discipleship and sanctification without taking ownership away from the person, and why the goal is discovery before advice.  Vinny also breaks down his practical Four Cs coaching framework: Connect, Clarify, Create, and Close. You’ll hear how open “What” questions can produce real “aha moments,” why awareness needs to come before action steps, and how this style of conversation can lower stress for pastors by helping people take responsibility for their next faithful step. Subscribe, share this with a leader who needs it, and leave a review.  For more information on Vinny's coaching, visit: www.bydesigncoaching.net To purchase Vinny's new book, visit: Drawing out the Heart: Theological Foundations for Sound Coaching Practice: Tauriello, Vincent: 9798253700198: Amazon.com: Books For information on Victa Leadership, visit www.victaleadership.com Support the show

    29 phút
  2. The Danger of the Health and Wealth "Gospel" (Part 1)

    23 thg 6

    The Danger of the Health and Wealth "Gospel" (Part 1)

    Send us Fan Mail Error doesn’t show up wearing a warning label. It shows up dressed in Christian language, quoting Scripture, and promising the one thing our culture already tells us to chase: the life that looks successful. That’s why we’re starting a special multi-episode series on the prosperity gospel, also known as the health and wealth gospel or the Word of Faith movement. We want to name what it teaches, why it feels so convincing, and why we believe it’s not good news at all. We talk through the real-world versions of the message many people hear, from late-night TV appeals that turn giving into a transaction to public “healing” claims that use Isaiah 53 to argue sickness should alweays be healed in the "here and now." We connect those claims to Paul’s blunt warning in Galatians 1: there is “a different gospel,” and the church cannot treat it lightly. Along the way, we make an important distinction between prosperity teachers and many charismatic and Pentecostal Christians who faithfully preach Christ while rejecting Word of Faith extremes. The heart of the problem is a bait-and-switch with definitions. Prosperity preaching keeps Bible words but swaps their meaning, turning faith into a tool for getting what we want and blessing into a synonym for money and perfect health. We push back with Scripture, especially Hebrews 11, and with historic Christian teaching that faith leans on Christ rather than manipulating God. If you’ve been confused by these claims, harmed by them, or just want sharper discernment, walk with us through this series. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. Support the show

    26 phút
  3. Why Christians Believe The Body Matters: Westminster Confession of Faith Chapter 4 (Part 2)

    16 thg 6

    Why Christians Believe The Body Matters: Westminster Confession of Faith Chapter 4 (Part 2)

    Send us Fan Mail Your view of the human body is never “just theology.” It quietly shapes how you treat sex, work, suffering, dignity, and even what you think salvation is. We pick up in Westminster Confession of Faith Chapter 4 on creation and move from the physical side of humanity to the confession’s striking phrase: “reasonable and immortal souls.”  We talk through classic Christian anthropology and why the historic Reformed approach speaks of a unified human person with body and soul, not a prison-body you need to escape. Along the way, we contrast Christian teaching with Greek and gnostic-style dualism that treats matter as inherently evil, and we press into the biblical hope that redemption includes the resurrection of the body and the promise of a new heaven and a new earth. That hope is not abstract. It is why Paul can say the body is a temple of the Holy Spirit and why embodied sins, including sexual immorality, matter in a unique way.  From there we explore what it means to be created “reasonable”: why Christians can value the scientific method, why careful biblical interpretation and hermeneutics matter, and how sin warps the mind as well as the heart. We also dig into the image of God, the cultural mandate, and why human dignity is grounded in God’s design rather than our usefulness or intelligence. Finally, we close with a bracing vision of glorification drawn from classic catechetical theology: a coming state where we will freely choose only the good, obey God fully, and abhor sin forever.  If this helped you love God’s Word and think more clearly about the Westminster Confession of Faith, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review. Support the show

    28 phút
  4. Created Male And Female: Westminster Confession Chapter 4

    2 thg 6

    Created Male And Female: Westminster Confession Chapter 4

    Send us Fan Mail If someone told you your body is just optional hardware and the “real you” is whatever you feel inside, would you have the words to answer back with clarity and compassion? We open Westminster Confession of Faith Chapter 4 and take up a deceptively simple claim with massive consequences: God created the world, and after making all other creatures, he created mankind male and female with body and soul. That confession is not a dusty line from church history. It is a direct challenge to the modern scramble over identity, gender, and what it means to be human.  We talk about creation in the space of six days and why the Westminster divines focused on what Scripture emphasizes: God’s deliberate work and the verdict that creation is very good. Then we move into the pressure points Christians feel right now, where the debate has shifted from timing to anthropology. We contrast Genesis 1:27 with rival stories, including Plato’s myth of the androgyne and its modern echoes in arguments that sexual difference is merely constructed, oppressive, or endlessly flexible.  From there we tackle transhumanism, the vision of the body as rearrangeable “meat Lego,” and why that logic shows up everywhere from life extension fantasies to everyday tech habits. Finally, we re-center on a biblical theology of the body: the incarnation as God’s ultimate endorsement of embodied life, the resurrection of the body, and a real new heaven and new earth. Along the way we touch practical ethics, mercy ministry, and why Christians care about physical suffering without reducing the mission of the church to social work. Subscribe, share this with a friend who is asking hard questions about identity.  Support the show

    41 phút
  5. Drawing Out The Heart: A Conversation with Author and Coach Vinny Tauriello

    26 thg 5

    Drawing Out The Heart: A Conversation with Author and Coach Vinny Tauriello

    Send us Fan Mail Leadership can feel like carrying everyone else’s weight while having nowhere safe to set down your own. That is why we sat down with Reverend Vincent Torriello, pastor, professional coach, and founder of By Design Coaching, to talk about  coaching that is both practical and  rooted in theology. His new book Drawing Out the Heart: Theological Foundations for Sound Coaching Practice makes a clear case that coaching is not a trendy add-on, but a way of helping leaders grow through wise questions and genuine listening.  We dig into what coaching is and what it is not. Coaching is not preaching, teaching, mentoring, consulting, or counseling, even though it can complement all of them. Instead of “downloading” answers, coaching draws out what God has already formed in a person made in His image and, for believers, what the Holy Spirit is already stirring. We talk about Proverbs 20:5 and why that picture of “deep waters” captures the heart of the coaching relationship, especially for pastors and ministry leaders who are expected to be strong but are rarely developed after ordination.  One of the most striking parts of the conversation is the biblical pattern of God asking questions and listening intently. From Genesis to the Gospels, God’s questions create clarity, ownership, and movement, and Vinny argues that this posture shapes sound coaching practice. We also explore why leaders need a confidential thinking partner, why a coach focuses on the person rather than merely fixing problems, and how coaching skills can strengthen discipleship, staff leadership, and church culture. If you care about pastoral health, leadership development, and practical ministry wisdom, listen through and then share it with a leader who needs it. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: what is one area where you wish someone would help you think instead of telling you what to do? For more information on Vinny's coaching, visit: www.bydesigncoaching.net To purchase Vinny's new book, visit: Drawing out the Heart: Theological Foundations for Sound Coaching Practice: Tauriello, Vincent: 9798253700198: Amazon.com: Books For information on Victa Leadership, visit www.victaleadership.com Support the show

    31 phút
  6. 19 thg 5

    Let's Talk About Predestination! (Westminster Confession of Faith Chap. 3) Part 2

    Send us Fan Mail Predestination can feel like the doctrine that turns God into a math problem or a monster, depending on who’s talking. We refuse both options. Walking carefully through Westminster Confession of Faith Chapter 3, we wrestle with God’s eternal decree, why Scripture speaks so plainly about election and reprobation, and why the confession insists this “high mystery” must be handled with special prudence and care. We define terms, then tackle the big objections: Is this unfair? Does it make God the author of sin? What do we do with passages like Romans 9 alongside 1 Timothy 2:4 and 2 Peter 3:9? Along the way we lean on the wider biblical witness, explain why Reformed theology rejects “equal ultimacy,” and clarify preterition: God effectually saves the elect, while those who are condemned are judged for their sins, not for lacking a label. We also bring in R.C. Sproul’s framework on justice and mercy to show why mercy, by definition, is never owed and why that matters for how we talk about grace. This isn’t abstract theology for armchair debate. We keep asking what the doctrine is for: assurance of salvation, humility before God, courage to preach the gospel to all, and consolation for believers who want to rest in Christ’s promise that no one will snatch His sheep from His hand. If you’ve struggled with Calvinism, free will, the problem of evil, or the fear that predestination destroys evangelism, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves hard questions, and leave a review with your toughest objection or your most honest question. Support the show

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

    5 thg 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 phút
  8. Why the Westminster Confession Still Matters: A Conversation with Dr. Chad Van Dixhoorn

    25 thg 4

    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 phút

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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.