The Isaiah 43 Podcast

Clayton

 The Isaiah 43 Podcast invites you to behold the God who says, “Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name, you are Mine” (Isa. 43:1). Each week, we walk slowly through the Scriptures, combining careful exegesis with the rich truths of Reformed theology. These reflections on the Holy Scriptures aim to ground your faith, comfort your heart, and lift your eyes to Christ—our great Redeemer, Shepherd, and Friend. Whether you come weary, searching, or eager to grow, you’ll find a steady place to rest in the promises of God. 

  1. 5d ago

    Are You Good Enough to Please God?

    Send us Fan Mail Is your goodness enough to please God? It’s a simple question, but it carries an eternal weight. Most of us default to the same comfortable instinct: we assume that if we are generally kind, treat others with respect, and avoid the "major" sins, we are standing on solid ground. We treat our relationship with the Creator like a collaborative project—assuming we have to work in conjunction with Christ to earn our way into heaven. But the Apostle Paul shatters this American mentality of self-reliance. In a special archive broadcast from 2024, Clayton steps into Galatians 2:16–21 to dismantle the exhaustion of performance-based religion. We explore the legal reality of justification, why trying to mix our flawed works with Christ's perfect righteousness actually insults the Cross, and how the moral image of God is restored not by the flesh, but by the Spirit. Join us for a foundational look at why the King had to do it all for the slave, and why your standing before a holy God rests on 100% of Christ’s work and 0% of your own. In this episode, we explore: The Myth of the "Good Person": Why even the smallest lie exposes our absolute bankruptcy before a perfect standard.Dikaio: The legal, courtroom reality of what it actually means to be justified by God.The Poached Egg Dilemma: How adding our works to salvation reduces Christ's sacrifice to the level of a madman’s delusion.Slaves of Righteousness: Navigating the internal warfare between the desires of the flesh and the reality of faith.

    35 min
  2. LD22: What Happens When We Die?

    May 31

    LD22: What Happens When We Die?

    Send us Fan Mail What actually happens to your body when you die? For many Christians, the cultural image of eternity has been subtly hijacked by a modern form of Gnosticism—the idea that our physical bodies are an inherently bad, disposable shell and that salvation means escaping reality to become floating spirits in the clouds. But the historic Christian faith proclaims a far more spectacular truth. Christianity is not anti-body. God created the flesh, Christ redeemed the flesh, and the ultimate hope of the Gospel is not the abandonment of our physical nature, but its glorious restoration. In this episode, Clayton walks through Lord's Day 22 of the Heidelberg Catechism, focusing on Questions and Answers 57 and 58. We explore the massive distinction between justification, sanctification, and glorification—the moment when our lifelong war with sin is finally over, and sin can no longer touch our lives. Pulling from 1 Corinthians 15 and Romans 8, we unpack the incredible comfort of knowing that your final breath triggers immediate communion with Christ, guaranteed by the very same Holy Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead. Join us for a deeply encouraging study on why our eternal hope is anchored in a physical, literal resurrection where every tear is wiped away, and all things are made completely new. Special Family Update: Clayton shares a quick personal note regarding a brief scheduled break as he and his wife prepare to welcome their daughter into the world!In this episode, we explore: The Gnostic Body Myth: Dismantling the ancient and modern heresy that views the physical world as inherently evil and the soul as a trapped spark.Immediate Comfort: The staggering assurance that the soul of the believer is taken immediately to Christ the moment this life ends.The Guarantee of the Spirit: How the indwelling Holy Spirit serves as the active agent and absolute certainty of your future bodily resurrection.Perfect Blessedness: Shifting our focus away from pop-culture caricatures of heaven and onto the true joy of unhindered, eternal fellowship with God.

    24 min
  3. May 29

    Week 175: Swamp Thing and the Christ Who Holds All Things Together

    Send us Fan Mail What happens when the secular world tries to handle the Passion of Christ? ​In 1989, DC Comics famously locked away a completed issue of Swamp Thing in their vault for nearly forty years, terrified of the public backlash. The story? A humanoid plant creature traveling back in time to the Garden of Gethsemane to witness the suffering of Jesus. When secular media attempts to capture the grand majesty of the Gospel, it almost always defaults to an ancient heresy: turning the Sovereign Creator into a mere "cosmic magician" or an elite master of quantum energy. ​In this episode, Clayton dives into Colossians 1:15–23 to expose the roots of the "Colossian Heresy"—an early form of Gnosticism that claimed Jesus wasn't enough and that salvation required a secret, mystical knowledge. By examining the dramatic narrative shortcuts of Swamp Thing, we contrast a pale comic book mythology with the breathtaking biblical reality of synistēmi—the truth that Christ is the active, moment-by-moment Sustainer of all existence. Join us as we explore why real hope doesn't rely on hidden cosmic secrets, but on the historical reality of the Incarnation, where the Lord of Glory took on a physical body of flesh to render you completely blameless before the Father. ​In this episode, we explore: ​The Locked Vault of 1989: The bizarre history behind Rick Veitch’s unreleased Swamp Thing script and its journey to the Garden of Gethsemane.​The Gnostic Trap: How modern pop culture continuously revives ancient heresies by reducing Christ's substitutionary atonement to "cosmic magic."​Synistēmi: A deep dive into the Greek text of Colossians 1:17 and what it means for Christ to actively hold the fabric of reality together.​The Body of Flesh: Why the physical reality of the Incarnation matters for your salvation, directly refuting the dualism of Docetism.

    28 min
  4. LD20: More Than the Force

    May 17

    LD20: More Than the Force

    Send us Fan Mail The Holy Spirit is not an impersonal energy field. ​When we think about the Holy Spirit, it is easy to default to the imagery of pop culture. We treat Him like "the Force" from Star Wars—a vague, mystical energy that surrounds us, penetrates us, and binds the galaxy together. But this week on The Heidelberg Catechism in a Year Podcast, we expose the massive danger in that view. ​Walking through Lord’s Day 20, we uncover a deeply personal reality: the Holy Spirit isn't a cold, cosmic power source to be tapped into; He is the eternal God who knows your name. We dive into the historic confession of the church, tracing the Spirit's work from hovering over the dark waters of Genesis to making His permanent home inside your weak, weary body.  Join us as we discuss why Christianity never starts with our feelings, how the Spirit acts as our ultimate Covenant Guarantee, and the profound relief of knowing that when you don't even have the words to pray, God Himself is interceding on your behalf. ​In this episode, we explore: ​The Star Wars Counterfeit: Why equating the Holy Spirit with an impersonal "Force" strips away the comfort of the Gospel.​"Given Also to Me": Moving from abstract theology to the staggering reality of personal union with Christ.​The Permanent Resident: The crucial distinction between the temporary empowerment of the Old Covenant and the permanent seal of the New Covenant.​Groans Too Deep for Words: How the Holy Spirit actively helps us in our deepest moments of anxiety and weakness.

    20 min

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About

 The Isaiah 43 Podcast invites you to behold the God who says, “Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name, you are Mine” (Isa. 43:1). Each week, we walk slowly through the Scriptures, combining careful exegesis with the rich truths of Reformed theology. These reflections on the Holy Scriptures aim to ground your faith, comfort your heart, and lift your eyes to Christ—our great Redeemer, Shepherd, and Friend. Whether you come weary, searching, or eager to grow, you’ll find a steady place to rest in the promises of God.