You’re right — thanks for catching that. Here’s the podcast summary with the hard return spacing exactly as your guide requires:
Love is not just a feeling—it is a force that unites, transforms, and sends. Today Hippolytus shows us how bishops and presbyters were set apart in the early church through prayer and laying on of hands, reminding us that leadership begins in God’s call, not in human ambition. Augustine calls the church a chosen generation, shining as holy lights in a darkened world, burning as “beautiful fires” that run to and fro among the nations (Acts 2:2–4; Matthew 5:14). And Aquinas explains that love never rests—it unites lover and beloved, brings joy in presence and sorrow in absence, drives us out of self into the other, and guards the bond with zeal. Together these readings remind us that Christian life is ordered by worship, marked by witness, and bound by love.
Readings:
Hippolytus, Apostolic Tradition (Ordination of Bishops and Presbyters)
Augustine, The Confessions, Book 13, Chapter 25 (Section 25)
Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, Part 1–2, Question 28, Article (Combined—Of the Effects of Love)
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