The opening chapter of Genesis has long been a battleground between competing worldviews: divine revelation versus human speculation, biblical authority versus scientific naturalism. Yet for the Christian committed to Scripture as the infallible, inerrant Word of God, Genesis 1–3 must be treated not as poetry to be molded to modern theories, but as history spoken…
Blaming the Boomers
I remember a US History class lecture in university with an excellent professor, Dr. Clifford Scott. He made some keen personal observations about his students from the Liberation Movement era who were criticizing their parents for being materialistic, while enjoying the benefits of the funding of their education and the licentious activities they were pursuing.…
Media Hall of Fame Series: Fox News
In the modern American media ecosystem, no outlet has been more synonymous with conservative news than Fox News. Since its founding in 1996 by media mogul Rupert Murdoch and former Nixon and Reagan advisor Roger Ailes, Fox News has grown from a fledgling upstart into the most-watched cable news network in the country. It is…
Media Hall of Shame Series: Huffpost
HuffPost—originally known as The Huffington Post—emerged in 2005 during the blogging boom as a kind of liberal response to the Drudge Report, but it quickly evolved into one of the most influential online news and opinion platforms on the Left. It was founded by Arianna Huffington, a political chameleon who shifted from center-right conservatism to…
Media Hall of Shame Series: The Atlantic
The Atlantic carries itself as a publication of gravitas—serious, literary, urbane. It appeals to readers who see themselves as thoughtful and enlightened, citizens of the world rather than mere inhabitants of a nation. Founded in 1857 by abolitionists and intellectuals like Ralph Waldo Emerson and Harriet Beecher Stowe, The Atlantic has long framed itself as…
Media Hall of Shame Series: The New Yorker
The New Yorker, despite its cultural sophistication and literary legacy, has over the past few decades evolved into one of the most predictably progressive media outlets in the United States. Founded in 1925 and owned since 1985 by Condé Nast—a media conglomerate that also owns Vogue, GQ, and Vanity Fair—The New Yorker today functions less…
Media Hall of Shame Series – Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News is often presented as the grown-up in the room: sober, data-driven, and immune to the hysterics of legacy broadcast networks. Its target audience isn’t the average voter—it’s the policymaker, the hedge fund manager, the international bureaucrat. With its vast network of reporters and global presence, Bloomberg offers financial news, economic forecasts, and business…
Media Hall of Shame Series: Time Magazine
Once a titan of American journalism, Time magazine—founded in 1923 by Briton Hadden and Henry Luce—was, for decades, considered the defining voice of middlebrow America. It brought news to coffee tables across the nation with gravitas and clarity. But that era is gone. Since being sold off by Meredith Corporation to Salesforce co-founder Marc Benioff…
Does Matthew 19 teach that Christ affirmed transgenderism?
A few weeks ago, I participated in a strong discussion about transgenderism and intersex conditions with a leftist Democrat in a barber shop. In recent years, debates about gender identity have made their way into nearly every aspect of cultural discourse, including the church. What once would have been considered fringe theology—if theology at all—is…
Islam and the abuse of women
Francis Schaeffer, the Presbyterian philosopher and theologian of L’Abri fame, is widely known for his winsome and compassionate approach to apologetics. He repeatedly insisted that he had “no set method,” and that “each person must be approached as an individual.” While this is true on the level of pastoral care and relational contact, it would…
Media Hall of Shame Series: The Chicago Tribune
Founded in 1847, the Chicago Tribune once branded itself as “The World’s Greatest Newspaper.” That was no modest claim, but there was a time it might have been taken seriously. For decades, the paper wielded enormous influence over Midwestern politics and national opinion, often leaning Republican and embracing a muscular editorial tone. However, like so…
Media Hall of Shame Series: Wikipedia
Wikipedia presents itself as a free, crowd-sourced online encyclopedia “that anyone can edit,” a claim that seems democratic and open-minded on the surface. However, this anonymity and openness mask an entrenched ideological ecosystem shaped not by the average contributor, but by a relatively small group of senior editors, moderators, and administrators. These gatekeepers enforce not…
Media Hall of Shame Series – BBC News
Few media organizations enjoy the brand prestige of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). For generations, it was considered the gold standard in international journalism—calm, impartial, thoroughly researched, and dignified. Its name conferred trust. Its tone conveyed seriousness. And its global footprint extended from English villages to African townships to American college classrooms. But in the…
Media Hall of Shame Series: ABC News
ABC News, the news division of the American Broadcasting Company, is one of the most recognized and trusted names in American media. For decades, it carried an aura of dependability and respectability, largely shaped by the gravitas of figures like Peter Jennings and Barbara Walters. For many baby boomers and Gen Xers, ABC News represented…
Media Hall of Shame Series: CBS News
CBS News holds a place of historic prestige in American journalism. For generations, it was known as the “Tiffany Network”—a reference to its polish and class. Names like Edward R. Murrow, Walter Cronkite, and Dan Rather defined the idea of a trustworthy broadcaster for millions of Americans. Even now, CBS retains a certain aura of…
Media Hall of Shame Series: Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera presents itself to the world as a global beacon of journalism—an independent voice from the Arab world, offering a fresh, critical perspective on Western imperialism, global inequality, and injustice. With its slick design, diverse correspondents, and sharp critiques of the West, it has gained a loyal audience among college students, anti-imperialists, and progressives…
Media Hall of Shame Series: MSNBC
If CNN has drifted into progressive bias, MSNBC has fully embraced it. Where other networks attempt to maintain a facade of neutrality, MSNBC wears its ideological allegiance on its sleeve. It is not merely a news channel—it is a platform for moral and cultural evangelism on behalf of the political Left. From its talking heads…
Media Hall of Shame Series: CNN
Once hailed as the pioneer of 24-hour news coverage, CNN (Cable News Network) began in 1980 with the promise of neutral, fact-based reporting delivered straight to the American people. Founded by Ted Turner, CNN emerged during the Cold War as a vehicle for bringing fast, global coverage into living rooms across the country. For years,…
Media Hall of Shame Series: NPR
Among American media outlets, few possess the aura of quiet authority and intellectual charm quite like NPR (National Public Radio). With its calm-voiced hosts, refined music interludes, and thoughtful long-form features, NPR has cultivated a public image of credibility, civility, and sophistication. For many of its loyal listeners—especially on college campuses, in coffee shops, and…
Media Hall of Shame Series: The Young Turks
The Young Turks (TYT) is an online news and commentary network founded in 2002 by Cenk Uygur, a former MSNBC contributor, and co-hosted by Ana Kasparian, among others. It began as a radio show before expanding to YouTube, becoming one of the earliest and most aggressive examples of a fully digital leftist broadcast outlet. TYT’s…
Media Hall of Shame Series – Reuters
Among global news organizations, Reuters occupies a distinctive position. It is not known for flashy anchors, primetime punditry, or ideological screeds. Instead, Reuters wears the mantle of a straight-laced wire service, supplying raw news to newspapers, websites, financial firms, and governments around the world. In many ways, its reputation for neutrality rivals that of the…
Media Hall of Shame Series: Semafor
The name Semafor is derived from the maritime word “semaphore”—a visual signaling system once used by ships to communicate over distances with flags or lights. It suggests clarity, signaling, and structured communication—ideals that Semafor claims to embody in a noisy, fragmented media landscape. According to its founders, the name reflects a goal to “signal” truth…
Media Hall of Shame Series: Associated Press (AP)
The Associated Press (AP) enjoys one of the most prestigious reputations in global journalism. It’s often referred to as the “gold standard” for objective, fact-based reporting. Its wire service feeds newspapers, broadcasters, and digital platforms around the world—its content reaching more than half the globe’s population on any given day. For decades, the AP symbolized…
Media Hall of Shame Series: NBC News
NBC News, one of the oldest and most established broadcast networks in the United States, is a pillar of the mainstream media complex. It projects stability, professionalism, and seriousness through its slick productions, high-profile anchors, and constant presence on television, cable, and digital platforms. For many Americans, NBC has long been a household name—once trusted,…
Media Hall of Shame Series: The New York Times
Few institutions in American journalism carry the historical prestige of The New York Times. Once dubbed “The Newspaper of Record,” the Times has long been associated with elite East Coast intellect, rigorous reporting, and careful editorial scrutiny. Its slogan, “All the News That’s Fit to Print,” implies sober impartiality, reasoned analysis, and dedication to truth.…
Media Hall of Shame Series: The Washington Post
For generations, The Washington Post was the gold standard of serious journalism in the American capital. With its famed exposure of the Watergate scandal and a long history of investigative work, the Post earned a reputation as the paper that held the powerful to account. It was once described as “the conscience of Washington”—a journalistic…
Media Hall of Shame Series: Democracy Now!
Of all the outlets featured in this series, Democracy Now! is arguably the most openly ideological—yet it cloaks that ideology in the language of journalism, justice, and truth-telling. Hosted by Amy Goodman, and broadcast across alternative radio, internet, and public-access television, Democracy Now! presents itself as a fearless, independent news program “speaking truth to power.”…
The Seed of the Serpent, the Seed of the Woman, and our Spiritual Warfare
The Battle Foretold — Genesis 3:15 and the War That Shapes History At the very dawn of human history, when sin first slithered into God’s good creation, a prophecy was spoken that has echoed throughout the ages—a declaration of war. In Genesis 3:15, the Lord God, addressing the serpent after the fall of Adam and…
Fragmented Faiths: How Both Islam and Judaism Lack a Complete, Coherent Storyline
In a world increasingly torn between conflicting ideologies and religious claims, one question stands out as paramount: which worldview truly explains reality? Not merely in isolated doctrines or moral teachings, but in the grand scope of history—origin, meaning, morality, and destiny. For the Christian, the answer lies in the majestic sweep of redemptive history, a…
Book Review: No God but One: Allah or Jesus? by Nabeel Qureshi
What if everything you believe were false—would you want to know? That question haunted Nabeel Qureshi for years. Raised in a devout Muslim family, trained in apologetics by his parents and Islamic mentors, and deeply invested in defending the truth of Islam, Qureshi seemed the least likely candidate for conversion to Christianity. And yet, over…
Book Review: Seeking Allah, Finding Christ by Nabeel Qureshi
On September 11, 2001, as the world watched the Twin Towers collapse in horror, countless families were forced into a moral and spiritual reckoning. Among them was the Qureshi family, devout Muslims whose faith had always been a source of identity, structure, and dignity. For young Nabeel Qureshi, a promising American student of Pakistani heritage…
Enemies in the Newsroom: How Media Bias Shapes Anti-Israel Narratives
In the modern information age, the way a story is told can be as influential as the facts themselves. This is especially true when it comes to international affairs, where few issues ignite as much controversy—or as much journalistic bias—as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. For decades, the mainstream media has portrayed Israel in ways that often…
The Betrayal of Britain’s Daughters: A Tragedy of Grooming Gangs, Institutional Cowardice, and Cultural Delusion
Over more than two decades, a tragic pattern of exploitation unfolded across the United Kingdom: vulnerable girls and, sometimes, boys —many of them white, working-class, and underage—were systematically targeted and sexually trafficked in cities large and small. This was not a hidden crisis. These crimes were committed in plain view, in towns where local officials,…
The Christian Duty to Confront Culture
Christians today are under enormous pressure to remain silent. In a society increasingly hostile to biblical values, many believers have adopted a posture of cultural disengagement. They retreat into private faith, assuming that if they simply preach the gospel and avoid confrontation, they will be faithful witnesses. But is that truly what God expects? Is…
Playing by the Rules: How to Read the Bible Rightly
The Bible is the most influential book in human history. It has shaped nations, comforted the grieving, rebuked kings, and changed the hearts of millions. But while Scripture is inspired, the way people interpret it often is not. You’ve probably heard someone say, “Well, that’s just your interpretation.” And in a sense, they’re right: everyone…
Public Spaces Protection Orders and Christian Persecution in “Progressive” (woke) Britain
In recent years, the United Kingdom has witnessed an unsettling trend: the gradual encroachment of state power into the realm of individual liberty—particularly religious liberty. At the center of this shift stands a bureaucratic but powerful instrument: the Public Spaces Protection Order, or PSPO. While framed as a means of promoting public safety and curbing…
The Purpose of Suffering
Few questions strike the human heart more deeply than, “Why would a good and all-powerful God allow suffering?” From the cries of a mother at the grave of her child, to the silent anguish of a man betrayed by his own body through chronic disease, suffering challenges our assumptions about justice, purpose, and the nature…
Dr. Joseph Nicolosi and the Counseling of Male Homosexuals
Dr. Joseph Nicolosi remains one of the most controversial figures in modern psychological discourse—not because he was hateful or coercive, but because he dared to ask whether same-sex attraction in men could be understood, and even redirected, through therapeutic means. At a time when culture insists that sexuality is fixed, identity-based, and beyond question, Nicolosi…
Antifa: The Antifascist Handbook by Mark Bray – A Blueprint for the Neo-Marxist Insurrection?
Ideas have consequences. History testifies that books change the world—not merely by spreading information, but by sowing seeds of ideology that germinate into action. From Marx’s Communist Manifesto to Hitler’s Mein Kampf, and from Paine’s Common Sense to Darwin’s Origin of Species, ideas birthed in the privacy of study have exploded into revolutions in the streets. In that tradition—but with far…
Refuting the Lie That Gender-Confused Children Will Commit Suicide Without “Transitioning”
It has become a common refrain in modern discourse: “Would you rather have a living daughter or a dead son?” This emotionally charged question, repeated endlessly in media coverage, school board meetings, school counseling offices, and activist circles, implies that gender “transition” is a matter of life or death for children with gender dysphoria. The…
Afghanistan and the Child Sexual Abuse the Obama/Biden Adminstration Enabled
It is difficult to imagine anything more morally jarring than rescuing someone from death—only to deliver them, unknowingly, into the hands of predators. Yet that is precisely the type of nightmare that many American soldiers experienced during our two decades of war in Afghanistan. These soldiers did not lose faith in their mission because of…
Unmasking the Truth: How BLM, Antifa, and the Radical Left Exploit Victimhood While Waging Violence
In recent years, America has witnessed an alarming trend: the increasing brazenness of far-left protest movements like Black Lives Matter (BLM), Antifa, and anti-ICE coalitions. These movements—often presented by the mainstream media as grassroots responses to injustice—have employed tactics that range from disruptive civil disobedience to calculated acts of violence. Simultaneously, they’ve operated behind masks,…
The Seven Sisters of Protestantism and the Descent into Progressive Christianity
The term “Seven Sisters of Protestantism” once referred to the dominant mainline Protestant denominations in the United States. These were the churches that sat at the center of American religious life for much of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Today, however, many of these institutions bear little resemblance to the historic Christianity they once…
When Ideology Becomes “Truth”: Exposing Leftist Propaganda Techniques
In every era, societies are shaped not only by what is true but by what is believed to be true. In our time, a concerning development has arisen: the increasing tendency of leftist movements to define “truth” not by objective facts or logical coherence, but by ideological conformity. Under this view, if a claim comports…
Lindy Li and the Fracturing of the Democrat Party
In recent years, cracks have begun to show in the carefully constructed facade of Democratic Party unity. While many of these tensions were visible to political insiders, they remained obscured from the public eye—until now. Lindy Li, a prominent former Democratic fundraiser and party official, has stepped into the spotlight to expose what she characterizes…
Book Review: How to Read a Book by Mortimer J. Adler
In a culture awash in information, genuine understanding is surprisingly rare. Many read much but comprehend little. Mortimer J. Adler, a philosopher and educator from the twentieth century, confronted this problem head-on in his now-classic work How to Read a Book. First published in 1940 and revised in 1972 with Charles Van Doren, the book…
Book Review: Even Better than Eden by Nancy Guthrie
There are certain books that take the truths you already know and arrange them so beautifully, so coherently, and so redemptively that it feels like hearing the gospel again for the first time. Nancy Guthrie’s Even Better than Eden is one of those books. This is not a book about you—but it will profoundly affect…
The Myth of Conservatives Suppressing “Baseline Studies” in Gender Ideology
In public debate today, few subjects provoke more confusion, emotion, and controversy than gender ideology. Supporters of transgender activism often claim that the science is “settled” and that those who question the legitimacy of “gender identity” are engaging in harmful denialism. One talking point that has grown more common is the claim that “baseline studies”…
Book Review: The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx
Few texts in modern history have generated more controversy—or inspired more movements—than The Communist Manifesto, penned by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in 1848. At just under 25 pages in most English translations, this slim document is anything but minor in its impact. It has shaped revolutions, toppled monarchies, reconfigured political economies, and left an…
Book Review: The Devil and Karl Marx by Paul Kengor
There are few names in history that generate as much ideological fervor—or controversy—as Karl Marx. He is hailed as a liberator by some, vilified as a destroyer by others. For over a century, Marx’s ideas have catalyzed revolutions, toppled governments, and redefined economics and politics around the globe. But what kind of man was Karl…