• Inhabiting the Strange New World Within the Bible

    This is a strange article about a strange book creating a strange world. But its very strangeness is a life-and-death matter. Introduction Let’s begin by noting a short exchange between Jesus and his disciples recorded by Luke: The apostles said to the Lord, “Increase our faith!” And the Lord said, “If you had faith like Continue reading

  • Munus Triplex: The Cure

    A message delivered to the Fellowship of Mere Christianity, July 23, 2014 at City Church, Corpus Christi, Texas (Heb. 1:1–3) Introduction In his classic Mere Christianity, C. S. Lewis compares the communion among Christians to a commodious house with a great hall. Adjoining the great hall were a series of rooms. Lewis says that “mere Continue reading

  • Buffet Multiculturalists

    John Gray, post-postmodernist, perpetuates the merely postmodern idea that reality and ethics must be local and “perspectival”: right and wrong are just a matter of personal preference, like “Boxers or briefs?” and “Chicken salad or tuna salad?” Universal, transcultural ethics are a humanly constructed illusion often designed to vest merely local, perspectival ethics with universal Continue reading

  • Swapping Good Universals for Bad

    John Gray, self-appointed academic assassin of the Enlightenment, observes that the United States, unlike other Western democracies, has little history of regional and local cultures that stand out as authoritative communities in the face of the universalizing culture of the Enlightenment.[1] Like many other postmodernists, Gray deplores how the Enlightenment de-privileges the local and particular. Continue reading

  • Thanksgiving Isn’t Christmas’ Entrance Ramp

    If you assume that Thanksgiving has been canceled this year, you might be forgiven. Wall-to-wall commercials for Black Friday began even earlier this year — some of them I heard as early as October. Let’s be clear: as a proponent of God’s moral law and, therefore, of free markets, I have no objection whatsoever to Continue reading

  • Why You Should Not Sign “The Marriage Pledge”

    First Things (FT) has launched a crusade to get pastors out of the marriage-ceremony-performing business, or, as they would no doubt prefer, out of the business of government-sanctioned marriage-ceremony performance. The problem for “The Marriage Pledge” they are pushing is that these two practices are identical. A dispute among allies FT is one of our Continue reading

  • Political Prognostication Isn’t Rocket Science

    Perhaps the greatest and most pernicious sociopolitical myth of the last two centuries is that social predictions are a form of science (“social science”), that human behavior can be predicted like spaceship trajectories. This is a perennial Leftist myth that conservatives (especially political prognosticators) sometimes embrace. ESA just put a space probe on a comet Continue reading

  • A Chief Role of Conservative Politicians Is to Stay Out of the Way

    The chief task of political conservatives in a majority position in modern constitutional republics (like the new Republican Congress) is to impede the relentless progressive rush by (1) protecting the family and the church, (2) slowing the growth of government, and (3) restoring the rule of law. Politicians in such societies are not particularly important Continue reading

  • “Social Justice” and Jell-O Nomenclature

    Adapted from an introduction to the Center for Cultural Leadership‘s 2014 West Coast symposium on “Social Justice: A Christian View” in Saratoga, California, October 25 We’re talking today about social justice. “Social justice” has become ubiquitous in sociopolitical discourse. It’s what I like to term “Jell-O nomenclature”: its meaning is obvious until you actually have Continue reading

  • Political Conservatives Are (Finally) Figuring Out that Culture Trumps Politics

    Some of the most significant words written by a political conservative in the United States in the last quarter century are here, uttered not by a United States citizen, but by Canadian conservative Mark Steyn. He (finally?) understands that in a constitutional democracy, all of the political victories in the world cannot overturn a single Continue reading

  • On Being Proudly Neo-Reformational

      In the current atmosphere of conservative Christian cultural engagement, the Center for Cultural Leadership stands squarely within the neo-Reformational (or neo-Calvinist) paradigm (most notably in the thinking of Abraham Kuyper, Herman Bavinck, Herman Dooyeweerd, and Cornelius Van Til, today championed also by John M. Frame). Its leading features with reference to culture are: The Continue reading

  • History Doesn’t Pick Sides — You Do

      USA Today’s Christine Brennan chided the soft-spoken, retired-NFL-coach-turned-commentator, devout Christian Tony Dungy, for his comparatively benign comment that he would not have drafted the openly gay Michael Sam since he “wouldn’t want to deal with all of it [the controversy].” The unforgivable sin that Dungy and a number of his over-60-years-old crowd committed is, Continue reading

  • The Aesthetic Terrorists

    In the far-from-Christian New York Times, Dexter Filkins discloses a fact emerging from the ISIS rampage in Syria and Iraq as horrifying in its own way as the images of rape, pillage, torture, crucifixions, and decapitations we are now accustomed to seeing every night on TV: evidence that ISIS fighters are less interested in political objectives Continue reading

  • 5 Things to Know for Monday

    God created the world and all that’s in it (including man and woman, in his image) in six days and pronounced everything he’d made as “very good.”   Man and woman sinned under Satan’s temptation — breaking God’s heart and his law and eliciting his judgment and the pollution of the “very good” world.   Continue reading

  • White (and Black and Red and Yellow and Brown) Privilege

    What I find most objectionable in Matt Chandler’s comments about the Ferguson, Missouri conflagration (literally) is his remarkably unverified and unverifiable statement that “white people, in most cases, have easier paths than most black people,” and, in particular the utter omission, if he is going that route, of addressing secular privilege, female privilege, Asian privilege, homosexual privilege, Continue reading

  • An Economic KICK (Keep It Complex, Knucklehead)

    You have, no doubt, heard the famous advice to speakers, writers and salesmen, expressed in the abbreviation KISS: Keep It Simple, Stupid. It’s good advice for speaking, writing and sales. But it’s bad advice for other activities. In fact, the bleating of sincere, moralistic souls for simplicity in modern life is often, by intent or Continue reading

  • Junk Culture, Join It, or Change it?

    Until recent times, Christianity was a dominant force in the Western world. To one degree or another, and usually to a large degree, Christianity shaped the culture. By culture, I mean the external manifestations of the inward, guiding impulse of a society: its education, arts, politics, technology, economy, and so on. This impulse is always religious. Culture, in the words of Continue reading

  • Prayer Changes Things

    Read: 1 Kings 17:17–24 If you’ve ever visited Christian bookstores, you likely have seen bracelets or plaques or bumper stickers with the statement, “Prayer Changes Things.” For years I thought that statement was trite. After all, lots of these bookstore statements are trite: “God is my copilot,” “Christians aren’t perfect, just forgiven,” “Honk if you Continue reading

  • The Tyranny of Individualism versus the Liberty of Community

      Absence of state coercion is not equivalent to political liberty.  Political liberty is possible only when there is a series of independent social institutions that check each other’s authority.  These institutions are communities.  Man cannot live without community (Gen. 2:18).  Aside from the Bible itself, perhaps no work in recent times has made that Continue reading

  • New CCL Contact Data

    Dear Friends and Supporters, CCL is gearing up to expand as at no time in our history. I need your prayer — fervent, unremitting, prayer. The new CCL contact data is here: P. O. Box 100 Coulterville, CA 95311 209-852-4438 If you donate to CCL via direct checks from your bank, please make the change Continue reading