If Americans are Christian, is America Christian?
A Short (Legal) History A recent symposium in the Roger Williams University Law Review centered on a perennial question that […]
A Short (Legal) History A recent symposium in the Roger Williams University Law Review centered on a perennial question that […]
A Christian public culture, like a Christian person, will still be deeply sinful and deficient. But it can still be an awful lot better than the alternatives. If you’re skeptical, just consider the sex-obsessed public culture of the post-Christian West, with ubiquitous pornography and its inane celebration of gender experimentation as the pinnacle of personal heroism.
For several years now, I’ve heard evangelicals denounce the “mixing of faith and politics.” This juxtaposition has always frustrated me because it fails to make important distinctions and it offers a useful rhetorical device for secularist opponents to undermine Christian political action. In this article, I hope to provide concise and precise clarity on how faith and grace might relate to and “mix” with politics.
The New Right really does have a coherent critique of the current economic, cultural, and political establishment. And it really does have a coherent agenda for a new economic, cultural, and political establishment that would promote the national good and renew the traditions that used to anchor it.
Evangelical Protestants must recover the rich heritage of Protestant political thought and learn to apply it creatively today. Writing off politics as unspiritual simply won’t do. Nor will delegating all serious political reflection and engagement to non-Protestants.
The Enlightenment political project, for all its considerable merits, was doomed from the start.
Men make war. That is the awful reality that exists in our fallen world.
Evangelicals are the largest and most loyal voting block within the Republican coalition. Yet within the intellectual or institutional leadership […]
Almost two years into a worldwide pandemic, amidst at least a decade of bitter partisanship in society, and increased confrontations […]
This leaves us with the post-liberal task of somehow reconstituting the best of the old liberalism—its institutions and habits—on healthy, sustainable grounds.