
Reasonable Christianity?
Reasonable Christianity is a weekly podcast where ordinary people have thought-provoking conversations about an extraordinary God. Each week we take a look at the truth claims of Christianity, the teachings of the bible as well as the practices of the saints in order to evaluate and affirm the truthfulness of our faith and ultimately preserve the power of the gospel. Hosted by Roland Albertus
Reasonable Christianity?
Truth and Treason: The murder of Charlie Kirk and the Cost of Christian Conviction (Part 1)
When Charlie Kirk was assassinated for what he believed, the world didn’t just lose a political commentator — it exposed the growing hostility toward biblical truth itself. In this episode of Reasonable Christianity, we take a hard look at why truth has become treason in a culture that worships tolerance but hates conviction.
We’ll explore what Charlie stood for — not partisan politics, but the timeless truths of Scripture. From his stand for biological reality and the sanctity of the family, to his call for Christians to engage the public square with courage and clarity — these weren’t “far-right” opinions; they were foundational Christian convictions rooted in God’s Word.
You’ll discover how Faith in the Public Square is not about merging church and state, but about living as faithful citizens of heaven within earthly nations — praying for leaders, promoting righteousness, and standing firm when culture bows to chaos. We’ll also tackle Gender, Sexuality, and Family through the lens of Genesis and the teachings of Jesus, exposing how love without truth becomes cruelty disguised as compassion.
This episode is both a defense and a wake-up call — a defense of biblical Christianity against cultural compromise, and a call for men and women of God to stand firm, speak truth in love, and live with the kind of courage Charlie modeled. Because silence in the face of evil isn’t love — it’s betrayal.
🔥 Listen and be equipped to think biblically, speak boldly, and live faithfully — even when truth costs everything.