Episodios

  • Noah's Ark to Peter's Boat: Typology in the Sistine Ceiling (#387)
    Oct 2 2025

    [DONATE WITH PAYPAL] Building on his episode about Michelangelo's Creation of Adam (#385, "God's Finger"), Greg shifts focus to the nearby Deluge panel on the Sistine Chapel ceiling, where Noah's Ark resembles a Roman basilica, symbolizing the Church as salvation in a perishing world. Contrasting modern views of the Church as a social club or cultural mirror, he unpacks biblical typology from Genesis to Peter’s boat miracles and Jonah’s fish. This episode emphasizes the Catholic Church as the ark of eternal life, inviting seekers to embrace its saving role.

    Donate with PayPal!

    Website: https://www.consideringcatholicism.com/

    Email: consideringcatholicism@gmail.com

    Más Menos
    16 m
  • OCIA: The Catholic Church (#386)
    Sep 30 2025

    [DONATE WITH PAYPAL] Greg continues the series "OCIA: The Bridge to Rome" by exploring the Church as Christ’s living Body and instrument of grace. Discover its nature as the Body of Christ, People of God, and Temple of the Holy Spirit, its threefold mission, hierarchical structure, and four marks, drawing from Scripture, the Catechism, and Lumen Gentium. Greg contrasts the Catholic view of a visible, apostolic Church with evangelical emphases on an invisible fellowship, offering reflections for unity. This episode guides your OCIA journey, revealing the Church as the home for your faith. Visit consideringcatholicism.com for more insights.

    Donate with PayPal!

    Website: https://www.consideringcatholicism.com/

    Email: consideringcatholicism@gmail.com

    Más Menos
    13 m
  • God's Finger: Are We Saved By Our Own Works? (#385)
    Sep 28 2025

    [DONATE WITH PAYPAL] Dive into Michelangelo's iconic Creation of Adam fresco and uncover how it flips the secular view of religion as humanity's quest for the divine. Greg explores the Christian narrative of God reaching down to redeem a fallen world, debunking misconceptions about Catholicism as "works-based" salvation. Using the metaphor of a drowning man grasping a life preserver, he explains grace as God's initiative and our cooperative response. This episode invites curious seekers and rediscovering Catholics to see faith as receiving God's outstretched hand.

    Donate with PayPal!

    Website: https://www.consideringcatholicism.com/

    Email: consideringcatholicism@gmail.com

    Más Menos
    30 m
  • Feminine Genius: Catholic Ideals for Bold Women (#384)
    Sep 25 2025

    [DONATE WITH PAYPAL] Building on the chivalry episode's exploration of masculine ideals, Greg humbly unpacks the complementary feminine genius as by St. John Paul II in four key qualities—receptivity, sensitivity, generosity, and maternity—and integration with bold action through scriptural quotes and teachings. He integrates these concepts with examples of heroic women like Deborah, Judith, Esther, Mary, and saints including Hildegard of Bingen, Catherine of Siena, Joan of Arc, Teresa of Ávila, Frances Xavier Cabrini, Edith Stein, and more, showing how their courage stems from feminine strengths. With disclaimers about his perspective as a man and personal anecdotes, Greg critiques modern challenges to this vision in secular culture and issues calls to action for women to reclaim it through pro-life advocacy, evangelization, and spiritual motherhood. This episode highlights complementarity with masculinity, offering feminine genius as a timeless Catholic alternative for building the Kingdom amid contemporary chaos.

    Donate with PayPal!

    Website: https://www.consideringcatholicism.com/

    Email: consideringcatholicism@gmail.com

    Más Menos
    34 m
  • OCIA: Jesus Christ, the Main Character (#383)
    Sep 23 2025

    [DONATE WITH PAYPAL] "OCIA: The Bridge to Rome" continues by focusing one the main character in the Gospel story: Jesus Christ. Delve into the Incarnation—Jesus as fully divine and human in hypostatic union—and His redemptive mission through life, death, resurrection, and ascension, with insights from Scripture and the Catechism. Greg contrasts Catholic sacramental Christology with evangelical atonement emphases, offering reflection prompts to bridge perspectives. To go deeper, check out these episodes:

    • Snapshot: Christ the King (#156)
    • What is the "Feast of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe?" (#283)

    Donate with PayPal!

    Website: https://www.consideringcatholicism.com/

    Email: consideringcatholicism@gmail.com

    Más Menos
    12 m
  • Steel and Sanctity: The Medieval Ideal of Christian Manhood (#382)
    Sep 22 2025

    [DONATE WITH PAYPAL] Greg explores the medieval Catholic ideal of chivalry—a powerful blend of manly courage, martial skill, and Christian virtue aimed at defending the vulnerable and imitating Christ. He defines the term's origins and meaning, drawing on etymology and historical context. Featuring quotations from sources like Ramon Llull's "Book of the Order of Chivalry," St. Bernard of Clairvaux's writings on the Templars, and Thomas Aquinas on fortitude, Greg unpacks how this vision integrated faith and action. Through examples of saints like St. George, St. Michael, St. Joseph, St. Martin of Tours, Godfrey of Bouillon, and St. Louis IX, plus chivalric figures in Arthurian legends and Dante's Divine Comedy, he reflects on chivalry's role in a holistic Catholic worldview. He also critiques the modern shift away from robust manly virtues toward emotive expressions in Christianity, including the erosion via standing armies and the longing among Protestants and evangelicals for godly masculinity, calling for a reclaiming of this timeless ideal.

    You also might like these episodes on similar topics:

    • Warrior Monks (#198)
    • Those Who Work, Those Who Fight, and Those Who Pray (#197)
    • The Crusades (#157)

    Donate with PayPal!

    Website: https://www.consideringcatholicism.com/

    Email: consideringcatholicism@gmail.com

    Más Menos
    35 m
  • OCIA: The Gospel Story (#381)
    Sep 18 2025

    [DONATE WITH PAYPAL] "OCIA: The Bridge to Rome" continues by describing the Gospel story of creation, fall, redemption, and restoration. Greg unpacks the grand narrative of salvation history as the foundation of the Catholic faith. Explore how the Bible's story—from Genesis' perfect creation through the Fall, God's redemptive covenants, and Jesus' Paschal Mystery to Revelation's ultimate restoration—invites you personally into God's plan. Want to dig deeper? Check out episode #187: What is the Bible About?

    Donate with PayPal!

    Website: https://www.consideringcatholicism.com/

    Email: consideringcatholicism@gmail.com

    Más Menos
    20 m
  • Dying in Grace: Sacraments, Prayers, and the Catholic Art of a Happy Death (#380)
    Sep 17 2025

    [DONATE WITH PAYPAL] In this sequel to “The Art of Dying, Then and Now” (#379), Greg delves deeply into the Catholic concept of a "good death," drawing from the Catechism and tradition. He explains how death is transformed by Christ, details the essential sacraments like reconciliation, anointing, and viaticum, and covers practices such as prayers to St. Joseph and communal commendations. Extending to funeral rites, Greg contrasts the resurrection-focused Catholic liturgy with secular or evangelical "celebrations of life" that emphasize personal legacy over Christ's victory. This conversational monologue invites listeners to reflect on how Catholic teachings offer profound hope amid mortality, perfect for those considering or rediscovering the faith.

    Donate with PayPal!

    Website: https://www.consideringcatholicism.com/

    Email: consideringcatholicism@gmail.com

    Suggested Episodes:

    • What Happens When We Die (#69)
    • A Good Death (#85)
    • Will I Be Judged? (#86)
    • Snapshot: Taking Death Seriously (#149)
    • What is Heaven? Part 2: The Moment of Death (#339)
    • The Art of Dying, Then and Now (#379)
    Más Menos
    31 m