678 Episodes

  1. From Babel to Pentecost

    Published: 4/10/2023
  2. A Round-Up On Race, Ethnicity, and Antisemitism

    Published: 3/10/2023
  3. What a Father Could Have Taught

    Published: 27/09/2023
  4. The Case of Owen and the Memorials

    Published: 25/09/2023
  5. Sexual Shenanigans in High Places

    Published: 18/09/2023
  6. Young, Restless, and Red-Pilled

    Published: 13/09/2023
  7. Isker, Dreher, and Me

    Published: 11/09/2023
  8. So Can Demons Be Uploaded Onto Silicon?

    Published: 6/09/2023
  9. Live Not By Lies . . . At Least Not Lots of Them

    Published: 5/09/2023
  10. Let’s You and Him Fight

    Published: 30/08/2023
  11. The Kind of Election We Are Not Going to Have

    Published: 29/08/2023
  12. On Walking Along the Balance Beam of, You Know, Balance

    Published: 23/08/2023
  13. The Prodigal Son and Christian Nationalism

    Published: 21/08/2023
  14. The Case Against Conscription

    Published: 16/08/2023
  15. Sly Dog Teachers

    Published: 14/08/2023
  16. Straight Talk on the Christian Prince, No Varnish

    Published: 9/08/2023
  17. Trump Into the Briar Patch

    Published: 7/08/2023
  18. Why the Apostle Paul Punched Right

    Published: 2/08/2023
  19. In Which I Decline to Gilder the Lily

    Published: 31/07/2023
  20. You May Not be Interested in Interest, But Interest Is Interested in You

    Published: 27/07/2023

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The point of this podcast is pretty broad — “All of Christ for all of life.” In order to make that happen, we need “theology that bites back.” I want to advance what you might call a Chestertonian Calvinism, and to bring that attitude to bear on education, sex and culture, theology, politics, book reviews, postmodernism, expository studies, along with other random tidbits that come into my head. My perspective is usually not hard to discern. In theology I am an evangelical, postmill, Calvinist, Reformed, and Presbyterian, pretty much in that order. In politics, I am slightly to the right of Jeb Stuart. In my cultural sympathies, if we were comparing the blight of postmodernism to a vast but shallow goo pond, I would observe that I have spent many years on these stilts and have barely gotten any of it on me.

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