Episodes

  • Experimental Preaching
    Jul 21 2025

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Pastor Aldo Leon takes listeners into the heart of what has long shaped robust Reformed preaching but has recently become neglected: experimental preaching. Drawing from historic Reformed tradition, Aldo and his guest, Gavin Beers, outline how true preaching is not just doctrinal or exegetical—it is experiential, applicatory, and deeply concerned with the spiritual condition of the hearers. This episode is a call to return to preaching that engages both the conscience and the affections, helping God's people not only hear the truth but also live it.

    Pastor Gavin Beers is currently the minister of Cornerstone Presbyterian Church, the first North Carolina congregation of the US Presbytery of the Free Church of Scotland (Continuing). https://cornerstone-presbyterian.com/

    Discussion Highlights

    • The difference between informational preaching and experimental (experiential) preaching
    • How Reformed orthodoxy historically emphasized preaching to the whole person—mind, heart, and will
    • The preacher's role in pressing the implications of doctrine into the lives of the hearers
    • How experimental preaching resists both hyper-intellectualism and shallow emotionalism
    • The biblical mandate for preaching that convicts, comforts, warns, and directs
    • Insights from 17th-century Presbyterian tradition on distinguishing the true believer from the hypocrite
    • Why pastors must be soul physicians, not mere lecturers or motivational speakers
    • The dangers of pulpit minimalism and the retreat from serious, pointed application
    • Encouragement for ministers to reclaim the depth, force, and pastoral heart of Reformed proclamation

    If you found this episode stirring or helpful, please consider supporting Kingdom Polemics by buying us a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics.

    Check out Aldo Leon's book In Christ's Crown, Christianity, & The Civil Realm, which makes a compelling biblical case for the Reformed doctrine of the civil magistrate under Christ's mediatorial rule. Available now at Berith Press: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm.

    You can also be part of the conversation by commenting on our YouTube page and subscribing to future episodes: https://youtube.com/@kingdompolemics,

    Help us continue to sharpen, strengthen, and challenge the church with truth-centered, Christ-exalting content.

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    1 hr and 13 mins
  • PCA GA Reflections
    Jul 12 2025

    In this unfiltered, detailed, and thoughtful reflection, Aldo Leon offers his personal account and theological evaluation of the 2025 PCA General Assembly. Unlike curated recaps or safe institutional summaries, this episode brings a pastor's-eye view of what actually went down—from overtures to worship debates, controversial speeches, and questions of identity within the PCA. If you're seeking clarity on where the PCA stands and where it might be heading, this is the episode to hear.

    Discussion Highlights

    • Thoughts on the retirement of the former Stated Clerk and the need for depoliticized clerking in the PCA
    • Encouragement over PCA growth: more baptisms, professions of faith, and members
    • Celebration of the PCA's continued break from unbiblical affiliations, especially on sexual ethics
    • Worship reflections: critique of theatrical liturgies and appreciation for Psalm singing and acapella moments
    • The overture on Christian Nationalism: why Aldo believes a study committee is misguided, and how it reflects broader PCA discomfort with historic Reformed political theology
    • Race and representation: deep dive into the Irwyn Ince and Timothy Brindle controversy, including a critique of the tone, assumptions, and imbalance in handling racial rhetoric
    • Worship and polity: conversations around the Directory of Worship, weekly communion, and who should administer the sacraments
    • The PCA's ongoing identity crisis: Are we confessional? Broad evangelical? Bureaucratic?
    • Encouragements: approval of important overtures related to the Sabbath, paedocommunion, elder/deacon subscription, and local church accountability
    • Concerns: increasing bureaucratic consolidation, fear of clear confrontation, and discomfort with biblical authority applied plainly
    • A call for serious, courageous, and convictional leadership—especially in the face of cultural pressure and denominational ambiguity

    If this episode gave you insight, clarity, or challenge, consider supporting Kingdom Polemics. Your contributions help us continue producing bold, thoughtful, and biblically grounded content. Visit: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics

    Check out Aldo Leon's book In Christ's Crown, Christianity, & The Civil Realm, which makes a compelling biblical case for the Reformed doctrine of the civil magistrate under Christ's mediatorial rule. Available now at Berith Press: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm.

    Also, join the conversation and leave your feedback in the comments section of our YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@kingdompolemics.

    We value your engagement as we contend for a faithful, confessional future for the church.

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    1 hr and 20 mins
  • Antinomianism and Apostasy
    Jun 30 2025

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Aldo Leon offers a direct response to a recent episode of the Theocast podcast titled "Did John Piper Get Perseverance Wrong?" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUcqFgIieZ0). Using that conversation as a launch point, Aldo examines the biblical, theological, and confessional categories of perseverance, assurance, and apostasy. He critiques what he sees as a growing antinomian drift in some Reformed circles—where warning passages are either dismissed or misapplied—and argues for a more faithful confessional approach to sanctification and spiritual vigilance.

    Highlights & Discussion Points

    • A critique of biblicism vs. confessionalism in the handling of warning passages like those in Hebrews
    • The confessions (Westminster Confession of Faith and Catechisms) rightly interpret apostasy passages as real threats, even for the visible church
    • Why the law/gospel framework used by some modern Reformed thinkers is incomplete and unconfessional
    • Assurance is strengthened by good works, love, and obedience—not undermined by examining one's spiritual fruit
    • The difference between apostasy and temporary sin; how real apostasy often flows from practical neglect and not just doctrinal error
    • How Hebrews uses the example of the wilderness generation to warn professing believers of spiritual complacency
    • The necessity of fearing God's warnings and persevering through both faith and holiness
    • A call to recover a balanced view of sanctification and warning—grounded in grace, but not shy about divine threat or discipline

    If this episode challenged or clarified your view of perseverance, assurance, or apostasy, please consider supporting the Kingdom Polemics podcast. You can help fund our continued work by visiting: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics.

    We also invite you to leave your feedback and join the discussion on our YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@kingdompolemics.

    Your voice and support are essential as we contend for a robust and faithful expression of Reformed theology in the church today.

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    1 hr and 24 mins
  • PCA GA Overtures
    Jun 20 2025

    As the PCA's 2025 General Assembly approaches, Pastor Aldo Leon and guest George Sayour walk through many of the most discussed and debated overtures on the docket. From Christian Nationalism to church governance and from weekly communion to worship standards, this episode of Kingdom Polemics offers a sharp, theologically grounded, and at times humorous look at where the denomination stands—and where it could go. This is a must-listen for anyone wanting to understand what's really at stake at this year's Assembly.

    Discussion Highlights

    • An overview of the multiple overtures related to Christian Nationalism, including why some are vague, unnecessary, or potentially overreaching
    • Reflections on the ethno-nationalist elements influencing certain Christian Nationalist circles, and why that's a real pastoral concern
    • The AI Study Committee overture: Is it needed or just a waste of time and resources?
    • The continuing conversation around the Directory for Worship—why we need more unity and clarity in PCA worship
    • Strong critiques of ByFaith's editorial direction and calls to make it a press-only outlet
    • The problem with non-elected members having voting rights in key PCA committees
    • A breakdown of the overture requiring sessions to report who is serving as deacons and why that matters for church integrity
    • Evaluating the proposal for fixed-term assistant pastors and the implications for accountability and biblical ecclesiology
    • Concerns around MNA's past publication encouraging illegal immigration—repentance vs. overreach
    • Why uniformity in worship and presbyterian governance is not optional but essential to our denominational identity

    If you appreciate the detailed, unfiltered, and biblically driven content from Kingdom Polemics, support our work by buying us a coffee at: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics

    Check out Aldo Leon's book In Christ's Crown, Christianity, & The Civil Realm, which makes a compelling biblical case for the Reformed doctrine of the civil magistrate under Christ's mediatorial rule. Available now at Berith Press: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm.

    And don't forget to leave your comments and engage in the conversation on our YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@kingdompolemics

    Your voice and support help us build a stronger, more faithful confessional church.

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    2 hrs and 4 mins
  • Against Weekly Communion
    Jun 16 2025

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Pastor Aldo Leon addresses the increasingly popular practice of weekly communion in Reformed churches. While acknowledging the well-intentioned arguments for it—such as its status as a means of grace, its connection to covenant renewal, and its symbolic richness—Aldo offers a careful, biblically grounded, and confessional critique of this practice. He explores not only the scriptural and theological problems with weekly observance, but also the unintended consequences it can produce when detached from meaningful preparation and pastoral application.

    Highlights:

    • Why the means of grace argument fails to make all acts of worship identical in function or frequency
    • A breakdown of popular proof texts (Acts 2, Acts 20, 1 Corinthians 11) and why they do not mandate weekly observance
    • The difference between sacramental presence and the Lord's broader presence through all means of grace
    • Why the Word does not need the Sacrament, but the Sacrament must always depend on the Word
    • How weekly communion often results in truncated preparation, rushed administration, and minimal fencing
    • The danger of sacerdotal or Romanizing tendencies creeping into Reformed practice through sacrament-over-word emphasis
    • A practical case for less frequent but more theologically rich administration—such as bi-monthly communion with preparation and follow-up
    • How an overemphasis on frequency can correlate with theological looseness and moral laxity in progressive circles

    If this episode sharpened your thinking or encouraged you to dig deeper into biblical and Reformed worship, support Kingdom Polemics by contributing at: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics.

    Check out Aldo Leon's book In Christ's Crown, Christianity, & The Civil Realm, which makes a compelling biblical case for the Reformed doctrine of the civil magistrate under Christ's mediatorial rule. Available now at Berith Press: https://www.berithpress.com/bookstore/p/christs-crown-christianity-the-civil-realm.

    Also, share your thoughts in the comments on our YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@kingdompolemics.

    Your support and feedback help us continue producing bold, confessional content that serves Christ's church.

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    1 hr
  • The Wickedness of Paedocommunion
    May 19 2025

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Pastor Aldo Leon tackles the growing trend of paedocommunion—granting the Lord's Supper to infants and very young children simply because they are baptized members of the covenant community. Aldo lays out a comprehensive biblical, confessional, and theological critique of the practice, calling it not only unwise but spiritually dangerous. This extended, detailed polemic is intended to provide clarity, correction, and pastoral guidance to Reformed churches facing pressure to normalize or tolerate paedocommunion.

    Discussion Highlights

    • A biblical and confessional explanation of why the Lord's Supper is a sign of covenant renewal—not initiation—and is reserved for true believers.
    • The essential role of the Holy Spirit in the efficacy of sacraments, and why participation without faith, repentance, and self-examination is both meaningless and dangerous.
    • A deep dive into the Westminster Confession and Catechisms on the qualifications for partaking of the Lord's Supper.
    • Refutation of the common arguments for paedocommunion from Old Testament Passover and household language.
    • The dangers of collapsing the visible and invisible church, leading to presumptive regeneration and sacramentalism.
    • How paedocommunion reflects deeper theological errors: confusion between sacrament and salvation, family-centered over Christ-centered theology, and Romanizing tendencies toward sacramental grace.
    • A pastoral call to reformation in worship, preaching, and catechesis to foster true conversion in covenant children rather than administering sacraments presumptively.

    If you've been sharpened by this episode and support the mission of Kingdom Polemics, help us keep producing thoughtful, biblical content by contributing at: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics. Also, engage with us and join the conversation by commenting on our YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@kingdompolemics. We value your feedback and dialogue as we seek truth and reform in the church.

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    1 hr and 31 mins
  • Ministers Alone Lead Worship
    May 13 2025

    In this episode of Kingdom Polemics, Pastor Aldo Leon makes a strong biblical, confessional, and historical case for why only ministers—specifically teaching elders—are called and qualified to lead public worship. Drawing from both Scripture and the Westminster standards, Aldo contends that all elements of public worship, from the call to worship to the benediction, should be conducted exclusively by those who are ordained and have given themselves wholly to the ministry of the Word.

    Episode Highlights

    • A biblical defense for why only ministers (not ruling elders or laypersons) are to lead public worship, referencing both Old and New Testament principles.
    • A distinction between ruling elders and teaching elders, with the latter being called to give themselves fully to reading, preaching, prayer, and exhortation.
    • Reflections on how the Reformed tradition has historically upheld this principle through the writings of figures like George Gillespie and James Guthrie.
    • An examination of the Westminster Larger Catechism, Directory for Public Worship, and Directory for Church Government, showing clear guidelines for ministerial leadership in worship.
    • A critique of modern practices like "worship leaders" and lay-led services, showing how these innovations depart from historic Reformed orthodoxy.
    • Encouragement for teaching elders to fully embrace their role as worship leaders and for ruling elders to focus on governance rather than public worship leadership.

    If you've been sharpened by this episode and value the ministry of Kingdom Polemics, consider supporting our work at Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics. You can also engage further by leaving your comments on our YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@kingdompolemics. We welcome your thoughts and dialogue.

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    53 mins
  • Disqualified Pastors
    Apr 26 2025

    In this thought-provoking episode of Kingdom Polemics, Pastor Aldo Leon addresses a challenging and often neglected topic: pastoral disqualification. Using recent high-profile examples like Joel Webbon, Mark Driscoll, and Steve Lawson, Aldo brings biblical clarity to how the church should process the serious sins of pastors—especially when those sins occur in the context of their ministerial office. With a firm commitment to scripture and reformation principles, this episode calls listeners to consider the weightiness of spiritual leadership, accountability, and the long-term consequences of unchecked sin in the church.

    Episode Highlights

    • The Greater Accountability of Christians and Pastors: Christians, and particularly pastors, are held to a higher standard before God. Pastoral leadership carries intensified responsibility and consequences.
    • Sins Committed in Ministerial Capacity: Sin that occurs in the formal exercise of ministry (e.g., overseeing others) bears a heightened seriousness, illustrated through scriptural examples such as Eli's sons and Uzzah.
    • Severity of Repetitive and Fully Engaged Sin: Prolonged and committed sinful behavior, especially sexual immorality, results in permanent disqualification from pastoral ministry.
    • Accountability Despite Informal Settings: Even in informal or non-traditional ministry arrangements, those acting as spiritual leaders remain fully accountable before God.
    • Time Does Not Sanctify Sin: Sin left unjudged or unaddressed over time does not diminish in God's eyes; proper justice and restitution are still required.
    • Judgment Regardless of the Character of Accusers: The legitimacy of accusations stands independently of whether the accusers themselves are righteous or unrighteous.
    • The Danger of Congregationalism and Independent Polity: Aldo critiques ecclesiastical structures that lack true accountability, warning that independent systems often foster unaddressed sin and instability.

    If you appreciate the work of Kingdom Polemics and want to support its mission to promote reformation, accountability, and biblical clarity in the church, consider buying us a coffee at Buy Me A Coffee (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/kingdompolemics). Also, leave your thoughts, feedback, and questions in the comments section on our YouTube page (https://youtube.com/@kingdompolemics). We love hearing from you and engaging in these important conversations.

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    1 hr