Defending the Family in Liquid Modernity
No institution—including the Church—is immune from feminism’s influence, so no one can ignore its deeply personal wounds.
No institution—including the Church—is immune from feminism’s influence, so no one can ignore its deeply personal wounds.
Will evangelicals hear prophetic warnings not only from a courageous talk-show host, but from their putative leaders?
There’s power in the plain-spoken truth of scripture.
Christian Nationalism is a restorative, civilizational movement that sets out to challenge and conquer Critical Neo-Liberalism, and then restore the American way of life according to her western and Christian heritage.
It is a political imperative that conservative and Christian magistrates obstruct the cathedral’s dangerous “priests of democracy,” or we may lose what is left of our heritage.
The Case for the Law’s First Table A few months ago, Jonathan Leeman debated Brad Littlejohn at Colorado Christian University […]
A Response to John Ehrett's critique of The Case for Christian Nationalism.
In the past eighteen months of the Covid pandemic crisis, there has been a great deal of attention on how to control the governed—keep them inside, keep them separated, keep them masked, get them vaccinated—but relatively little on restraining the inevitable abuse or ill-advised use of that control.
A new strategy is needed for Christians to cope in a world where Christianity is viewed as a social negative.
Kevin DeYoung critiques the proposal for racial reparations made by Duke Kwon and Greg Thompson in their new book Reparations: A Call for Repentance and Renewal.