683 Episodes

  1. On Shaking Off the Christian Nationalism JimJams

    Published: 20/10/2022
  2. Drag Queens Twerking in the School Library

    Published: 19/10/2022
  3. Wedding As Adornment

    Published: 13/10/2022
  4. Don’t Waste Your Fifteen Minutes

    Published: 10/10/2022
  5. 11 Reasons Why We Should Not Consider Thomism to be the Theological Equivalent of the Butterfly’s Boots

    Published: 28/09/2022
  6. Kin, Skin, & Sin

    Published: 26/09/2022
  7. A Nest of Asian Murder Hornets Mistaken for a Piñata

    Published: 23/09/2022
  8. Courtship and Sexual Baggage

    Published: 14/09/2022
  9. A Brief Scattershot Primer on Christian Nationalism

    Published: 12/09/2022
  10. Idaho and the Red State Grooming Festival

    Published: 07/09/2022
  11. The Bait Lies Before You Now. Do Not Take It.

    Published: 06/09/2022
  12. Affection for Israel as Biblical Requirement

    Published: 30/08/2022
  13. The Kill Switch and the Steering Wheel

    Published: 24/08/2022
  14. So Then...the FBI

    Published: 22/08/2022
  15. Crossway at a Crossroads

    Published: 15/08/2022
  16. Hanlon’s Razor and the Mar a Lago Raid

    Published: 11/08/2022
  17. Hellbent in Creepy Clown World

    Published: 08/08/2022
  18. No RomCom Ending

    Published: 03/08/2022
  19. Augustine, Priorities, Rightly Ordered Affections, and the Red Pilled Among Us

    Published: 01/08/2022
  20. The Right Kind of Beauty Treatment

    Published: 27/07/2022

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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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