• The Pope and the President
    May 1 2026

    "The Pope and the President" — is a remarkable piece of public intellectual work. It takes the tools of serious historical scholarship and applies them to a current crisis without either reducing the past to a simple lesson or losing the concrete urgency of the present. Professor Chen and Bishop Lewter model the kind of conversation that is all too rare in contemporary discourse: one in which the questions are genuinely more important than the answers, in which complexity is honored rather than flattened, and in which the weight of the past is brought to bear not to tell us what to think but to deepen our capacity to see. In an era of rapid-fire takes and shallow historical analogies, this episode stands as an example of what careful, courageous thinking about power, conscience, and faith actually looks like.

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    21 mins
  • Bishops During the Protestant Reformation
    Apr 7 2026


    Introduction: The Inheritance We Have Not Claimed

    Every Protestant minister stands in a lineage they may not fully see. The congregation they serve, the title they carry, the Bible open on the pulpit, the very notion that they answer first to Scripture and not to a bishop in Rome — none of these things arrived without a fight. They were won across centuries of conflict, reform, and reinvention, beginning with a single German monk who nailed a sheet of paper to a church door in 1517 and changed the world.

    Reformation Roots is written for those who lead in the Protestant tradition — pastors, elders, ordained ministers, bishops, deacons, and church administrators — who sense that something important lies behind their practice of ministry but have never had the opportunity to trace it to its source. Bishop Andy Lewter, drawing on fifty years of pastoral ministry and academic formation at three distinguished institutions, argues that the single greatest gap in the formation of Protestant church leaders is not theological knowledge or spiritual discipline. It is historical memory.

    The book's central conviction is this: to be Protestant is to be, in the most literal sense, a child of the Reformation — whether or not we have ever acknowledged the inheritance. Understanding that inheritance is not an academic exercise. It is the foundation of faithful, accountable leadership.

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    31 mins