The Westminster Podcast

Westminster Media
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34 snips
Mar 30, 2026 • 1h 4min

Has Science Made God Unnecessary? w/ Ransom Poythress

Ransom Poythress, biology professor and author on faith and science, explores how science presupposes mind, order, and a knowable world. He critiques hyper-specialization and the limits of the scientific method. He presents science as a meaningful Christian vocation tied to creation, fall, and redemption, urging humility, wonder, and stewardship.
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21 snips
Mar 23, 2026 • 59min

Song of Songs w/ Dr. Iain Duguid

Iain Duguid, Old Testament scholar and commentator, discusses the Song of Songs. He talks about translating Hebrew poetry and why he made his own translation for preaching. He explains poetry’s imagery, how to avoid literal overreading, and contrasts allegorical excess with responsible exegesis. He explores the poem’s view of marriage, youthful longing, and Christological significance.
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16 snips
Mar 16, 2026 • 48min

St. Patrick: Missionary to Ireland w/ Todd Rester

Todd Rester, professor of Church History and early medieval specialist, guides a lively tour of St. Patrick’s life. He traces Patrick’s capture and slavery in Ireland, his spiritual formation and Trinitarian convictions, and his return as a missionary. The conversation highlights Patrick’s humility, sacrificial zeal, and how later generations remembered and imitated him.
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21 snips
Mar 9, 2026 • 57min

Digital Identity w/ Justin Poythress

Justin Poythress, pastor and theologian focused on digital identity, discusses how online life shapes relationships and ministry. He reflects on unplugging, online-first relationships, the push toward self-promotion, and the tension between curated personas and genuine spiritual formation. Practical advice centers on representing Christ digitally and prioritizing embodied, accountable relationships.
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Mar 2, 2026 • 48min

Daily Grace and Deep Sorrow w/ Jeremy Schmucker

Jeremy Schmucker joins Nate Shannon to recount the Lord’s providential leading through sorrow, theological formation, and vocational redirection. Raised in a Christian home and later shaped by a wide range of evangelical contexts, Jeremy describes a growing conviction that ministry must be ordered not merely around giftedness (including music) but around the shepherding of souls through the Word. That path eventually brought him to Westminster for the MATS and into a deeper appreciation of the gospel’s coherence, especially the already/not yet reality that acknowledges both Christ’s finished victory and the real presence of grief, scars, and longing in this not-yet age. At the heart of the conversation is the loss of Jeremy and Kristen’s daughter, Sophia, who was stillborn in February 2014, and the way the Lord met them with sustaining mercies “daily.” From Kristen’s written reflections on God’s faithfulness in suffering emerged The Daily Grace Co., a ministry that has grown into a global publishing effort marked by a deliberate resistance to “Christian celebrityism” and a determination to keep the focus on Christ rather than personalities. Jeremy reflects on the importance of embodied presence in pastoral care, the need for theological clarity joined to genuine charity, and a vision for serving both individual believers and local churches with resources that are accessible, Christ-centered, and rooted in the church’s historic confession.
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27 snips
Feb 23, 2026 • 50min

Who Am I, Really? The Gospel and the Modern Self w/ Justin Poythress

Justin Poythress, a reverend, pastor, and author exploring identity and the gospel. He discusses modern identity pressures from social media, limitless choices, and hyper-individualism. He contrasts self-creation with the idea of identity as given in relation to God and others. The gospel reframes being and becoming, grounding growth in union with Christ rather than constant self-invention.
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Feb 16, 2026 • 48min

The Shorter Catechism: A Tool for Theological Depth w/ Dr. S.A. Fix

In this episode of the Westminster Podcast, host Nate Shannon engages with Dr. S.A. Fix, an Old Testament scholar, to discuss the significance of John Thompson and his work on the Shorter Catechism. They explore the historical context of American Presbyterianism, the Adopting Act, and the impact of the Great Awakening on the church. Dr. Fix emphasizes the importance of confessionalism and the value of understanding theology as a means to glorify God and deepen one's faith.
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Feb 9, 2026 • 1h 8min

Seeing Christ in Lamentations w/ Jeremy Menicucci

In this episode of the Westminster Podcast, Nate Shannon is joined again by Jeremy Manacuchi for a searching exploration of the Book of Lamentations, one of Scripture’s most haunting and least-studied books. Beginning with the stark poetry of Jerusalem’s fall, they situate Lamentations within its historical context: the Babylonian siege, exile, and the covenantal judgment foretold in Deuteronomy. The discussion traces why the book is so emotionally and theologically difficult: its graphic imagery, its honest depiction of divine wrath, and its profound sense of abandonment, while also arguing for its enduring pastoral value. Far from being marginal, Lamentations confronts suffering head-on as the just response to sin, spoken from within the lived experience of God’s people. At the heart of the conversation is Lamentations 3, the structural and theological center of the book. Jeremy presents a compelling Christological reading in which “the man who has seen affliction” bears the full weight of God’s wrath, descends into the pit, and yet emerges with renewed hope grounded in the steadfast love of the Lord. Read as a carefully crafted whole, Lamentations moves from darkness to a single, blazing moment of hope, one that ultimately points beyond Jerusalem’s ruin to Christ himself. In that light, Lamentations is not merely a book of grief, but a profound witness to God’s covenant faithfulness, offering hope to sinners and sufferers alike through the one who was forsaken so that God might once again say to his people, “Do not fear.”
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Feb 2, 2026 • 44min

John Murray and the Westminster Tradition w/ Paul Woo

In this episode, Paul Woo recounts how his academic path converged with his personal theological journey. Though initially trained in seventeenth-century theology, his long-standing passion for Presbyterian history led him to accept an unexpected invitation to pursue doctoral research on John Murray. Murray’s influence, was first felt in reading Murray on Romans 6. Definitive sanctification gave him new categories for understanding the Christian struggle against sin as a battle fought from union with Christ, where Scripture’s imperatives rest on real spiritual power rather than desperation. That spiritual and theological foundation made the doctoral opportunity compelling. Surveying Murray’s lecture notes on the Westminster Standards revealed a meticulous historical theologian, overturning the common assumption that Murray was only a precise biblical exegete rather than a scholar deeply engaged with primary historical sources. Paul then outlines his emerging dissertation project, provisionally titled John Murray the Westminsterian, which will explore how Murray’s Scottish Presbyterian heritage and confessional commitments shaped his theology, and how in turn he helped shape Westminster Seminary and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church through his work on the denomination’s confession. The conversation widens to his recent research on Trinitarian doctrine at the Westminster Assembly, particularly debates over the Son’s aseity and Calvin’s doctrine of autotheos, showing how historical dogmatics and confessional theology intersect in his work. He also discusses his editorial research for P&R Publishing’s Warfield reprints, describing the painstaking but rewarding labor of tracing Warfield’s vast multilingual sources, and reflecting on how modern digital access has transformed historical scholarship. The episode closes with reflections on Murray’s enduring legacy as both scholar and pastor, his reputation for prayer and piety, and recommendations for readers approaching Murray for the first time (especially his sermons and Redemption Accomplished and Applied) as an entry point into a theology where rigorous exegesis, historical consciousness, and lived communion with Christ remain inseparable. If you enjoy this episode, you can access tons of content just like this at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠wm.wts.edu⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. If you would like to join us in our mission to train specialists in the bible to proclaim the whole counsel of God for Christ and his global church, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠wts.edu/donate⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Thanks for listening!
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Jan 26, 2026 • 40min

Scripture and Creed: How Mark's Gospel Leads Us to Nicaea w/ Dr. Brandon Crowe

In this episode of the Westminster Podcast, host Nate Shannon welcomes Dr. Brandon Crowe to discuss the relationship between Scripture and the Nicene Creed in the 1700th anniversary year of the Council of Nicaea. Drawing from his recent paper, Christology: Mark on the Road to Nicaea, Crowe explains how creeds arise from Scripture rather than being imposed upon it, functioning as faithful summaries and syntheses of the Bible’s teaching. He explores how extra-biblical theological language—such as homoousios and the doctrine of the Trinity—serves to clarify Scripture’s meaning when purely biblical phrasing proves vulnerable to misinterpretation. The conversation highlights the “hermeneutical spiral” between creed and Scripture: the creed guides faithful reading of the Bible, while Scripture remains the final authority that continually tests the creed. Crowe then turns to the Gospel of Mark to demonstrate how Nicene Christology emerges from the biblical text itself. Challenging historical-critical approaches that fragment the Gospel or diminish its theology, he argues for reading Mark as a coherent narrative shaped by Old Testament imagery. He outlines four key ways Mark presents Christ’s divine identity: the Father-Son relationship, theophanies, divine saving works, and divine claims made by Jesus. Particular attention is given to episodes such as Jesus walking on the water, interpreted as an Old Testament-shaped theophany revealing God’s presence in Christ. The episode concludes by emphasizing that classical creedal Christology does not restrict careful exegesis but provides theological guardrails that enable deeper, more faithful reading of Scripture. If you enjoy this episode, you can access tons of content just like this at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠wm.wts.edu⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. If you would like to join us in our mission to train specialists in the bible to proclaim the whole counsel of God for Christ and his global church, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠wts.edu/donate⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Thanks for listening!

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