No, There’s No “Hate Speech” Exception To The First Amendment
There is no hate speech exception to the First Amendment
Calls for a new First Amendment exception for “hate speech” shouldn’t just rely on the undefined term “hate speech” — they should explain just what viewpoints the government would be allowed to suppress, what viewpoints would remain protected, and how judges, juries, and prosecutors are supposed to distinguish the two. Saying “this isn’t free speech,... Continue Reading
University Approves ‘History’ Class That Doesn’t Mention Both World Wars
Anthropology class can meet U.S. history grad requirement, prompting debate and concern
The new introductory “history” course leaves out, among other things, the Progressive Era, World War I, women’s suffrage, the Great Depression, FDR, the New Deal, World War II, McCarthyism, the Cold War, the Korean War, the nuclear arms race, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the JFK assassination, Freedom Summer, the United Farm Workers Union, the Vietnam... Continue Reading
Our Family Narrative: Why Christians Should Study Church History
Perhaps the Church should avoid trying to make faith seem culturally hip and instead look to the past.
Augustine’s Confessions felt like reading my own journal at times. By becoming familiar with the Christian historical narrative, one quickly realizes that the “New Atheists” aren’t actually saying anything new at all and that the Biblical canon wasn’t simply decided upon at random. Studying Church history can help us develop a strong sense of what Dr. Duke... Continue Reading
No, Evangelicalism Isn’t In Decline
Challenging Jonathan Merritt’s notion that Evangelicalism is declining as are mainline denominations
On almost every point of fact, Merritt is simply wrong. There are more evangelicals in America today than at any time in our nation’s history. Conservative denominations have continued to grow for the past fifty years while liberal denominations have declined. Currently, 1 in 5 Americans is an evangelical, including 22 percent of older Millennials... Continue Reading
Christopher Dawson and the “Benedict Option”
Is forming small communities that to a large extent withdraw from the cultural mainstream in order to protect and cultivate a Christian way of life the way to go?
Even today the public school is widely regarded not as a purely educational institution in the nineteenth century sense – that is, as an elementary introduction to the literary and scientific traditions of culture – but as a moral training in citizenship, an initiation and indoctrination in the American way of life; and since the... Continue Reading
Tennessee Passes Wait Period, Licensing Mandate for Abortion Centers
The bills include a 48-hour wait period before performing abortions, with an exception for medical emergencies.
The bills’ opponents argued the legislation would burden women, especially the 48 hour wait period requirement. It will increase travel expenses for women who travel long distances to the facilities, they said. Republican state Rep. Matthew Hill, who sponsored the wait-period bill, said the goal was to inform women, not restrict abortion: “We are making... Continue Reading
Socialization as a Religious Phenomenon
Socialization is not a home schooling issue; it is a religious phenomenon.
Religious practice creates a community that encourages social interaction and fosters positive youth development, so much so that it overwhelms differences in schooling choice. There is no evidence that home schooling youth are poorly socialized. However, there is evidence that we are asking and addressing the wrong question. Instead, the data suggest that children and... Continue Reading
Senate Breaks Gridlock, Passes Human Trafficking Bill
Republicans win five-week battle over legislation’s abortion language
“Help is finally on the way for the thousands of enslaved victims who suffer unspeakable abuse in the shadows,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. The Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act boosts law enforcement’s ability to pursue perpetrators, strengthens penalties, and establishes a domestic fund to help trafficking victims. (WNS)–The U.S. Senate unanimously... Continue Reading
How To Restore A Culture In One Easy Step
One of the most important activities we can undertake to restore culture is to get people to read, to instill in them a passion for reading the Bible
Imagine what might happen, though, if we took a different approach. Imagine if we treated the Bible as if it were an actual book that we read from beginning to end. Imagine that instead of reading a chapter a day (as proscribed in our devotionals) that we hunkered down and read large chunks, the way... Continue Reading
The Sexualization Of The American College…
Universities have totally abandoned the idea of strengthening character
Mary Ann Glendon, a Roman Catholic law professor at Harvard University, wrote a review of Tom Wolfe’s I Am Charlotte Simmons in which she said that his book should be mandatory reading for all parents sending a child to college. Much of her review can be summed up by two equally damning points: “Not only have institutions of... Continue Reading
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