Through the Church Fathers: March 21 episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 21, 2026 · 9 MIN

Through the Church Fathers: March 21

from Through the Church Fathers

Before the church could defend the faith, it first had to bleed for it. Today we step into that sobering transition as we read from John Foxe and his Book of Martyrs, opening with the early persecutions that shaped the church’s identity. Foxe reminds us that Christian history is not merely a story of theology, but of suffering—beginning with John the Baptist, continuing through the crucifixion of Christ, and unfolding in the stoning of Stephen and the execution of James under Herod Agrippa. The gospel, which breathes peace and love, did not fail; rather, it exposed the darkness of the human heart. The resurrection transformed frightened apostles into bold witnesses, and that boldness provoked fury. Stephen preached and was stoned. James was beheaded. Thousands scattered. Christianity did not spread because it was politically convenient, but because believers would not deny Christ. Then we turn inward with Augustine of Hippo in The Confessions, where the battle is no longer external but intellectual. Augustine, weary of Manichaean error, drifts toward Academic skepticism, nearly persuading himself that truth may not be knowable at all. Yet his struggle reveals something deeper: he cannot conceive of God except as material substance. His bondage is philosophical before it is moral. Finally, with Thomas Aquinas in the Summa Theologica, we see clarity restored. In Question 34, Aquinas asks whether “Person” is properly said of the Son. He answers that the Son is not a separate substance but a subsisting relation—God from God, distinguished by eternal filiation, not divided in essence. The Word is not an accident but the living, eternal self-expression of the Father. Today’s readings move from blood, to doubt, to doctrinal precision. The church suffers. The soul wrestles. Theology clarifies. And through it all, Christ remains confessed.Readings:John Foxe — Book of Martyrs, Chapter 1 (Early Roman Persecutions)Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 5, Chapter 10 (Section 19)Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 34 (Articles 1–3 Combined)Explore the Project:Through the Church Fathers – https://www.throughthechurchfathers.comPatreon – https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpattonCredo Courses – https://www.credocourses.comCredo Ministries – https://www.credoministries.org#ThroughTheChurchFathers #ChurchHistory #ChristianMartyrs #Augustine #Aquinas

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Through the Church Fathers: March 21

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This episode was published on March 21, 2026.

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Before the church could defend the faith, it first had to bleed for it. Today we step into that sobering transition as we read from John Foxe and his Book of Martyrs, opening with the early persecutions that shaped the church’s identity. Foxe...

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