Out of the Question Podcast

A podcast which uncovers the real question behind many common questions and offers Biblical solutions.

  1. 5d ago

    Are We Treating Sin Like a Symptom?

    Job's three friends were eloquent, well-intentioned, and theologically active — and God was angry with every word they spoke. Their error was not ignorance of true facts but the misuse of true facts: they assembled correct observations into false conclusions, diagnosed their sufferer through a theology too small to contain the real God, and offered comfort that the text calls worthless. Job named them physicians of no value. This episode begins there and asks whether the same diagnosis applies to the counselors — personal, ecclesiastical, and civil — that surround us today. Chalcedon Vice President Martin Selbrede joins host Andrea Schwartz to discuss his essay "Physicians of No Value," published in the May 2026 Chalcedon Foundation newsletter. The conversation moves from the personal dynamics of biblical counsel to the sweeping failure of civil and economic institutions to diagnose and treat man's actual condition. The error in both cases is identical: defining man's problems as metaphysical rather than moral. When the root cause is misidentified as structural, racial, political, or systemic rather than as sin, every proposed remedy worsens the patient. Price controls, psychological reductionism, the doctrine of selective depravity — these are all band-aids on compound fractures. R.J. Rushdoony stands in this episode as the model of what a physician of value looks like: one who correctly identifies sin as the diagnosis, traces it to its moral root, and prescribes the return to God's law as the only course of treatment with any historical precedent of success. For those weary of watching institutions and churches reach for the wrong remedies, this conversation names the problem at the level where it actually lives.

    52 min
  2. 5d ago

    Is Christ's Ascencion a Neglected Doctrine?

    The Ascension of Christ is observed on the church calendar forty days after Easter, yet for most evangelicals it passes with barely a mention. What does it mean that the risen Christ ascended to the right hand of the Father — and why does it matter whether we believe he rules from there now or only after some future return? This episode, recorded on Ascension Day 2026, takes up a doctrine that has been quietly evacuated of its meaning in much of modern Christianity, leaving behind an impoverished understanding of Christ's authority, the church's mission, and the future of the world. Host Andrea Schwartz and Pastor Charles Roberts argue that the neglect of the Ascension is not an innocent oversight. When Christ declared "all authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me," he was not describing a future state — he was announcing a present fact. The Ascension is the installment of the King: his session at the Father's right hand is active, continuous, and comprehensive. The eschatology of defeat so common in popular evangelicalism — the expectation that the church should shrink rather than advance, that things must get worse before a rescue — is directly traceable to a loss of this doctrine and its implications. For those who understand Christian Reconstruction, the Ascension is the theological foundation of everything: there are no crown rights to proclaim, no Great Commission to obey, no civilization to build — without a reigning King. This episode calls Christians to recover what earlier generations knew: that Christ ascended not to escape the world but to rule it, and that his church has been commissioned to make that rule visible in every area of life.

    41 min

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A podcast which uncovers the real question behind many common questions and offers Biblical solutions.

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