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Showing posts from January, 2026

America Is Not a Christian Nation

Welcome to the second installment of my small series on Christian Nationalism. If you missed it, you can read the first one here .  We finished the last article with the conclusion that your constitutional rights (life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, leading to free speech, free religion, carrying weapons, private property, etc) are not God-given. There is nothing inherent to your status as a God-created individual that gives you any "right" to express yourself freely, or to carry an assault rifle, or even to enjoy personal liberty (in the human sense of the word). Instead, God created us with the duty to glorify him. Your life is not your own, for you are bought with a price, etc (1 Cor 6:19-20).  What that means is that all the rights we in America value so highly are established by government, not by God. And although that should recalibrate our perspective of them, I don't mean to devalue constitutional rights. Just understand this correctly: that's all they a...

In Defense of Myshkin

"Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth." - Matthew 5:5 I recently finished Dostoevsky’s The Idiot. I quite enjoyed the novel, though it took me a couple of years of sporadic reading to get through it. As has been recognized for the better part of a century and a half, Dostoevsky’s novels are masterpieces. Together with Tolstoy, Dostoevsky’s writing is to Russian literature what the pyramids are to Ancient Egypt. Immense fixtures, solitary products of their time, standing alone on the horizon. In fact, the one criticism that seems to hold some merit, namely, that it is too long, is also something the man himself admits in his letters 1 . This book alone has no doubt minted hundreds of later writings from simple blog posts (such as this guilty piece) to PhD theses. This is why I was quite surprised to find, after reading some of these umbral writings, that Myshkin is quite a controversial figure. Many seem to be confused as to whether he is a hero or, at the ver...

Sports, Society's Virtue

 In another quote that's probably more wordy than you remember, John Adams famously wrote to his wife:  " The Science of Government it is my Duty to study, more than all other Sciences: the Art of Legislation and Administration and Negotiation, ought to take Place, indeed to exclude in a manner all other Arts.—I must study Politicks and War that my sons may have liberty to study Mathematicks and Philosophy. My sons ought to study Mathematicks and Philosophy, Geography, natural History, Naval Architecture, navigation, Commerce and Agriculture, in order to give their Children a right to study Painting, Poetry, Musick, Architecture, Statuary, Tapestry and Porcelaine." Adams referred, of course, to his role in the still-ongoing Revolutionary War (this letter was sent in 1780) and his upcoming role as the second U.S. President. Adams saw the oft-unpleasant exercises of statesmanship as a necessity that was both his duty and opportunity to achieve, in order that future generati...