
Anabaptist Theological Perspectives
Jerry Eicher
Show overview
Anabaptist Theological Perspectives has been publishing since 2024, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 103 episodes. That works out to roughly 55 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 24 min and 41 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language History show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 6 days ago, with 23 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 58 episodes published. Published by Jerry Eicher.
From the publisher
Theology from an Anabaptist perspective.
Latest Episodes
View all 103 episodesStatues Smashed, Faiths Fractured: Israel, Catholics, and Rising Religious Tensions
When Hearts Break: An Amish Story of Abuse, Love, and Healing
Bringing the Shadow to Light: Faith, Freud, and the Dark Side
Against the Machine: Reclaiming Humanity Through Faith
Hidden Desires: Women and Submission in Fiction Literature
S1 Ep 1Covering the Glory: Anabaptist Reflections on 1 Corinthians 11
Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives examines a focused subset of the head-covering debate, centering on 1 Corinthians 11:15 and the idea that a womans long hair is her given "glory." He critiques readings that claim hair itself is the sole covering and argues instead that the covering must hide the hairs glory, which is the textually identifiable concern. Eicher explores the biblical logic and historical practice behind veiling, how the hairs longness creates the glory that must be covered, and how this practice functions as representation—linking the woman to the church and mankind in humility before God. He addresses common objections, practical questions about how much hair to cover, and the consequences of diluting the practice. The episode also considers the Apostle Pauls reference to angels and the promise of spiritual authority for those who live out the covering in worship and public life, emphasizing humility, fear of God, and the representational power of the practice.
S1 Ep 1Anabaptist Responses to Sexual Abuse and Feminism
Host Jerry Eicher explores the intersection of feminism, sexual abuse, and conservative Anabaptist practice, centering recent news about an Amish men’s retreat leader and broader debates within Mennonite and Amish communities. Guests and voices referenced include testimony from Jason Stoll about men’s retreats and spiritual healing, quotes from dating coach Pat Stedman, and discussion of the Sam Shetler arrest; the episode critiques retreat-based suppression of sin, considers the power of Christ for real freedom, and assesses how feminist movements use abuse narratives. Key points: the limits and risks of conservative counseling retreats, the spiritual and cultural roots of sexual ethics in Anabaptist life, tensions between empowerment and tradition, and a call to speak truth and pursue lasting solutions grounded in faith.
S1 Ep 1Resurrection in Shadows: A Poetic Easter Reflection
Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives offers a reflective poetic meditation on Christ’s life, suffering, and resurrection. Drawing from the Wednesday crucifixion timeline, the episode explores the fulfillment of prophetic shadows, the humility of Christ’s birth, the depth of his suffering for humanity’s sins, and the transformative joy of resurrection. The episode blends theology and poetic narration, touching on themes of prophecy, incarnation, vicarious suffering, and redemption. Listeners can expect a contemplative tone centered on scripture and devotion, suitable for Holy Week and Easter reflection.
S1 Ep 1Was Jesus Crucified on Wednesday? Reexamining Holy Week's Timeline
Host Jerry Eicher walks listeners through an alternative Holy Week timeline that places the crucifixion on Wednesday. Drawing primarily on details from John’s Gospel and selected early church writings, he explores how a Wednesday crucifixion can resolve puzzles around “three days and three nights,” the timing of the women buying and preparing spices, and the occurrence of back-to-back high Sabbaths. Eicher outlines the chronology from Palm Sunday through the arrest, trials, Wednesday crucifixion and burial, the intervening high day(s), and the discovery of the empty tomb on Sunday morning. He notes scriptural supports, implications for traditional Friday crucifixion views, and personal reflections on the significance of the timing.
S1 Ep 1A Child's Spiritual Awakening
In this candid episode, Jerry Eicher shares his personal testimony at Oakhill Mennonite spanning Amish childhood, missionary years in Central America, and the lifelong impact of faith. He recounts family dynamics, cultural contrasts within Amish communities, and vivid childhood moments—from snowy errands for kerosene to a haunting experience that led his mother to deep prayer. The episode covers struggles with speech impediment and hyperactivity, episodes of rebellion and guilt, and a profound conversion experience marked by overwhelming love and acceptance. Jerry discusses how faith reshaped his life, his efforts to overcome stuttering, encounters with spiritual darkness, and a search for identity and purpose in later years. Expect honest reflections, spiritual insights, and encouragement for anyone wrestling with shame, redemption, and the longing to serve.
S1 Ep 1An Anabaptist Take on Technology, AI, and the Self
Host Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives reflects on Paul Kingsnorth’s Against the Machine and explores how our technologically driven, AI-dominated world undermines human flourishing and spiritual authority. Eicher examines Kingsnorth’s critique of the Reformation’s role in empowering the autonomous self and warns that unchecked technological and social trends threaten the very freedom they promise. The episode covers contemporary examples (including media confusion around the Iran–Israel conflict), the limits and abuses of parental, church, and governmental authority, and practical Anabaptist responses: cultivating non-negotiable places of submission, relearning how to yield the will to God, and restoring basic institutions that teach restraint. No external guests are featured; this is a focused theological and practical reflection from Eicher. Key points: the machine’s spiritual danger, why piecemeal tech critiques fail, the need for formative authority structures in personal life, and how Scripture and disciplined community practice can reorient individuals to God’s will amid accelerating technological change.
S1 Ep 1Anabaptist Choir Sings Jewish Song: “Taddy My King” Goes Viral
Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives highlights a viral performance by a small Calvary Bible School choir in Calico Rock, Arkansas: a layered, high-quality rendition of Dovid Edel’s 2018 song "Taddy My King." He praises the choir’s excellence and unusual choice to sing a Jewish song in English, and invites listeners to watch and appreciate the music. Using the performance as a springboard, Jerry discusses broader themes: the historic separation of church and state, how some modern governments have assumed moral and charitable roles traditionally held by the church, and the cultural consequences of that shift. He shares anecdotes from Anabaptist communities (including COVID-era responses and a custody case involving an Amish minister) to illustrate a growing reluctance within some conservative churches to openly engage with controversial or cross-cultural expressions. Key points: the surprising and beautiful musical crossover, concern about the state’s growing moral authority, and encouragement to listen to the choir’s rendition while reflecting on what this moment reveals about Anabaptist identity and cultural pressures.
S1 Ep 1When Goodness Disappears: Obedience, Sacrifice, and the Anabaptist Crisis
This episode features Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives reflecting on the theological roots of obedience and sacrifice and why those virtues are eroding in both church and culture. Drawing on the Genesis creation scene, Jerry argues that obedience—our obligation to surround ourselves with Scripture and offer options to God—and sacrificial self-giving are foundational to Christian life. He also identifies three major destructive forces facing the Anabaptist community today: the rise of Calvinism (which he says undermines personal responsibility and obedience), the influence of feminism (which he critiques for attacking male authority and reshaping marital roles), and the secular institutionalization of Christian love (where the left has politicized and redefined love and church authority). The episode is a concise, practical call to recognize these threats, reclaim obedience and sacrifice, and encourage courageous leadership within the Anabaptist movement.
S1 Ep 1The Void, Choice, and the Luciferian Mind
Host Jerry Eicher explores Jonathan Pageau's “Reflections on the Void” and conversations with Jordan Peterson and John Lennox to ask why doing good can be misunderstood and why sacrifice remains central. Guests and references include Jonathan Pageau's (podcast), Peterson and Lennox (conversation), and a critique of themes in King’s North’s Against the Machine. The episode unpacks Genesis 1’s “without form and void,” the Spirit hovering over the waters, and the idea that creation presents multiple options to God. Key philosophical anchors include Plato, Aristotle, Heidegger, and a quantum-analogy for the void; core themes are performative contradiction, the Luciferian mind (autonomous will), God’s will vs. reason, and why sacrifice—God breaking open to display himself—defines true goodness. Practical takeaways: live by presenting real options to God, avoid claiming credit for good works, and embrace the New Testament call to offer ourselves as a living sacrifice. The episode weaves theology, scripture (Genesis and Romans 12), cultural critique, and concrete church examples (ordination) to help listeners think differently about goodness, choice, and worship.
S1 Ep 1Adapting the Heidelberg Catechism for Anabaptist Practice
Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives announces an adapted version of the Heidelberg Catechism tailored for Anabaptist readers. He explains the history and structure of the 1563 catechism—its pastoral tone, 52 weekly themes, and focus on guilt, grace, and gratitude—and describes how he revised key points to reflect Anabaptist convictions. The episode covers why there is a need for a catechism-style resource in Anabaptist circles, what changes were made in the adaptation, and how listeners can access the draft as a free PDF at jerryeicher.com under the Nonfiction section. Jerry invites feedback from readers and users to refine the draft and considers producing a booklet if interest grows.
S1 Ep 1Sacrifice, Obedience, Mercy — The Three-Tier Way of Faith
In this sermon-style episode the host continues a deep study on sacrifice, obedience, and mercy as a three-tier pattern running through the Old Testament and into the New. Topics include the tension between faith and works (Paul’s teachings vs. Old Testament practice), the Book of Job and Satan’s challenge about merit, moralism, and how God trains us to love goodness for its own sake. Listeners can expect a close reading of Micah 6:8, reflections on Abraham, Job, and Saul, practical applications about expectations, humility, and living sacrificially, and an argument for harmonizing faith and obedience. No external guests — the episode is a solo sermon/lecture by the host.
S1 Ep 1Dismantling the Age of Reason: Paul Kingsnorth and the Machine
Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives returns for a third conversation on Paul Kingsnorth's Against the Machine: On the Unmaking of Humanity. He examines Kingsnorth’s critique of the Age of Reason and how the rise of modern technologies—has reshaped Western faith, society, and the self. Topics include the Reformation and Martin Luther, the Anabaptist response (Schleitheim), the limits of reason and autonomous interpretation of Scripture, the machine metaphor (surveillance, networks, commodification), and historical examples from revolution and totalitarianism. Eicher emphasizes communal submission to Scripture, spiritual humility, and the hidden dangers of unchecked technological progress.
S1 Ep 1When Works Meet Faith: Anabaptist Roots and Paul’s Puzzle
Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives explores the tension between Anabaptist practice and Reformed theology, tracing how early Anabaptists returned to Jesus and the Gospels instead of prioritizing Paul. The episode examines Paul’s claim in Titus 3:5, the seeming paradox of “no works” and commands to “work out your salvation,” and how misunderstanding Paul often stems from missing his Old Testament context. Eicher walks listeners through biblical examples (Cain and Abel, King Saul, Pharisees), Jesus’ parables (seed and soil), and the three Old Testament stages—sacrifice, obedience, and mercy—as the soil we prepare for God’s transformative work. He argues that Christians do contribute (preparing the ground) but not as a contractual, result-guaranteeing work; rather, we act without assurance and leave the fruit to God’s sovereign action.
S1 Ep 1When Christ Is Dethroned: Paul Kingsnorth on the Machine
Host Jerry Eicher (Baptist Theological Perspectives) discusses Paul Kingsnorth’s Against the Machine: On the Unmaking of Humanity in the second session of the "Venture Into" series. Beginning around page 11, Eicher and the episode track Kingsnorth’s core argument about what happens when Christ is removed from the center of Western culture and the sacred order collapses. The episode covers Kingsnorth’s claim that the dethroning of Christ opened a vacuum that was filled by consumer capitalism and the power of money, examines the historical consequences (from the French Revolution through totalitarian regimes), and critiques modern projects that promise perfection—liberty, democracy, progress—yet often produce dehumanizing, technocratic outcomes. Key points include the rise of the “machine,” the loss of rootedness, the impossibility of a perfect society, and the need to recognize how methods and movements can displace God even in religious renewal. Eicher adds practical reflections and examples from contemporary Anabaptist/BMA conversations—warning against theological perfectionism and method-driven revival—and emphasizes humility, self-denial, and re-centering God as essential responses. The conversation is sober and challenging, framing Kingsnorth’s book as a pivotal, provocative diagnosis of our cultural crisis.
S1 Ep 1Against the Machine: Reclaiming Humanity in a Mechanized Age
Host Jerry Eicher opens a possible series on Paul Kingsnorth’s Against the Machine: On the Unmaking of Humanity, offering a close, reflective reading of the book’s major arguments. Eicher frames Kingsnorth’s diagnosis of modern malaise—how reason, technology, and the loss of shared narrative have hollowed out human life—and situates the work within religious and literary contexts. The episode covers Kingsnorth’s key claims: the machine as a growing, impersonal force that flattens human frailty into straight-line efficiency; the historical shift from narrative-driven cultures to a reason-centered modernity; the collapse of Christianity’s cultural role; and Nietzsche’s insight that removing meaning produces nihilism. Eicher traces how those shifts produced our technological achievements and, simultaneously, a shadow—what Kingsnorth calls the machine—that threatens to unmake humanity. Eicher uses concrete examples from everyday life (people absorbed by screens in cafés, the rise of algorithmic systems, and debates over identity and medicalization) to show the book’s practical implications. He reflects on the spiritual dimensions of Kingsnorth’s argument, the danger of transferring trust wholly to human reason, and the cultural consequences of educating toward knowledge without shared narrative. Listeners can expect a thoughtful, faith-informed analysis rather than a purely academic summary: close readings of Genesis and Revelation motifs in Kingsnorth’s work, references to Nietzsche, and a call to recognize and resist the dehumanizing tendencies of modern technology and ideology. This episode is a primer for anyone wanting to understand Kingsnorth’s critique and its implications for faith, culture, and the future of human life.