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How the Christian Will Reconquer Through Economics: The Problem and the Very Great Hope (Economics, Money, and Hope) (Remastered)

35 min · 11. Juni 2026
Episode How the Christian Will Reconquer Through Economics: The Problem and the Very Great Hope (Economics, Money, and Hope) (Remastered) Cover

Beschreibung

This opening session argues that economic collapse is not accidental but moral, the predictable fruit of a statist, fiat-driven world that has abandoned God’s created order. Using Christ’s parable of the steward, the teaching confronts Christian other-worldliness and insists that faithful stewardship of money is a spiritual requirement, not a worldly distraction. Humanistic economics treats reality as something man can remake by decree—fiat money, fiat law, fiat planning—but Scripture declares a law-governed universe where debt enslaves, inflation punishes thrift, and judgment is built into disobedience itself. The modern debt mountain—personal, corporate, and governmental—is portrayed as borrowing against a future that is now running out, making inflation the false “salvation” of a bankrupt order. Yet this crisis is framed as a salvation-judgment: God clearing the ground for reconstruction. The Christian hope is not political tinkering but recapitalization—material, moral, and spiritual—through hard money, thrift, work, character, and obedience to God’s law, laying the foundation for a renewed Christian social order. #BiblicalEconomics #ChristianReconstruction #DebtAndJudgment #AgainstFiatMoney #Stewardship #GodsLawOrder #EconomicCrisis #HardMoney #ThriftAndWork #FaithAndEconomics #Chalcedon #HopeThroughObedience

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Episode Easy Chair No. 150, July 14, 1987 Sweden: The “New Totalitarianism” of Comfort and Conformity Cover

Easy Chair No. 150, July 14, 1987 Sweden: The “New Totalitarianism” of Comfort and Conformity

In Easy Chair 150 (July 14, 1987), R.J. Rushdoony and Otto Scott interview Gary and Carlinda Mose about two years in Sweden, portraying a society that looks peaceful and prosperous yet functions as a “new totalitarianism” built not on terror but on education, conformity, and cradle‑to‑grave dependency. The Moses describe a nation where the state effectively replaces God, families are weakened by high taxes (they cite roughly 55% income tax plus a 25% sales tax) and two‑income necessity, and dissent—though celebrated in theory—is punished in practice through social shaming and even official intimidation (Gary recounts being threatened with arrest and recorded by police for quietly holding alternative placards at a public “peace” demonstration). They warn that the system increasingly treats children as belonging to the state: spanking is illegal, kids are encouraged to report parents, and welfare authorities can remove children with little meaningful appeal, while the established church is politicized and moral standards are inverted (abortion widely accepted, private Bible studies labeled “subversive”). Yet they also testify to faithful Swedish believers who pray earnestly and meet in informal “house” settings because they know only God can heal what state planning cannot—making Sweden, in their view, a sobering preview of where the wider West goes when comfort replaces conviction and “non‑discrimination” is used to silence the freedom to call right and wrong. #EasyChair #Rushdoony #OttoScott #Sweden #TheNewTotalitarians #ChristianLiberty #Family #Education #SoftTotalitarianism #FreedomOfSpeech #ChristianReconstruction"

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