Forging Ploughshares

Paul Axton
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Aug 29, 2020 • 32min

The Lie of Radical Evil as Definitive of Sin

In this ongoing talk, Paul Axton demonstrates how radical evil might be equated with reification of the law. The law or the symbolic order may literally be taken as the voice of God, as in bicameral theory, and this explains the sort of perversion put on display by Jerry Falwell Jr. Sin establishes the self (in the law) so that punishment and pleasure are fused for the pervert, who would service the subject behind the law. Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound
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Aug 24, 2020 • 27min

Sermon: Overcoming the Caste of Hostility

Paul describes Christ as breaking down the dividing wall of hostility, but to grasp the significance of this broken wall, it is necessary to understand how hostility constitutes our world in class and caste. Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound
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Aug 22, 2020 • 35min

Salvation from Radical Evil and Privation

Part I In this first lecture Paul Axton, in an examination of the Kantian concept of evil as developed in Lacan and his followers, suggests that their concept of radical evil brings a corrective to theories of evil which can provide the background to understand how the cross addresses evil. Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound  
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Aug 17, 2020 • 27min

Sermon: The Peace of Christ or Mutually Assured Destruction

Paul Axton Preaches - Today, seventy-five years ago, the second atomic bomb was dropped on the city of Nagasaki. The great irony and sadness of this day was that an all Christian bomber crew, from a Christian administration, all from a so called “Christian Nation” dropped the bomb on the center of Christianity in Japan. Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound
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Aug 15, 2020 • 41min

Part 2: Peace After Hiroshima and Nagasaki

In part 2 of their conversation of the dropping of the atomic bomb Matt and Paul describe the gospel alternative to mutually assured destruction. Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound
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Aug 10, 2020 • 34min

Sermon: The End is in the Means

Paul Axton Preaches - In the world the goal or end is through violence, a redemptive violence. The gospel arms us with an alternative means, the way of peace, which contains the end.   Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound
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Aug 8, 2020 • 52min

Part I: Peace After Hiroshima and Nagasaki

In part one of this two part conversation, Matt and Paul discuss the great irony that a "Christian Nation" should choose as ground zero the center of the Japanese Christian population in Nagasaki. The myth it was a necessity, along with the myth of redemptive violence is challenged. Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound
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Aug 3, 2020 • 31min

Sermon: Resisting Evil

Paul Axton Preaches - The Gospel does not teach nonresistance to evil. The New Testament informs us how to resist evil. John Lewis has clearly picked up the point as explained by Paul in Ephesians 6 and Jesus in Matthew 5, in his nonviolent civil disobedience.   Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound  
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Aug 1, 2020 • 39min

The Resolution to Shame

Matt and Paul continue their discussion of shame. In this conversation they discuss how the Gospel and the practice of Christianity, rightly understood, provides a real world resolution to this primary human problem.   Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound
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Jul 27, 2020 • 32min

Sermon: Breaking Down the Wall of Racism

Paul Axton Preaches - We cannot see the world through the lens of our law, our constitution, our borders, our police, our armies, because in doing so we are defining ourselves through that which Paul calls a hostility. This hostility divides us from others, it is the hostility which killed Christ, but it is also the hostility which he defeated.   Become a Patron! If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider donating to support our work. Music: Bensound

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