CR101 Radio - Podcast Network

Moral Disarmament

13 min · 1. juli 2026
episode Moral Disarmament cover

Description

In “Moral Disarmament,” Rushdoony argues that before societies are conquered politically or militarily, they are first defeated morally, as distinctions between good and evil, truth and error, Christ and Antichrist are deliberately blurred. Through literature, theology, education, and popular culture, sympathy is shifted from righteousness to rebellion, from law to lawlessness, until betrayal, criminality, and perversion are reinterpreted as tragic or noble while moral discipline and principle are condemned as Pharisaical evil. This process disarms the conscience, teaching coexistence with sin and even reconciliation with Satan, thereby denying the Biblical realities of judgment, hell, and moral separation. Rushdoony insists that such moral confusion inevitably leads to political surrender, tyranny, and social collapse, as seen in the French Revolution and modern totalitarian movements. The antidote is not sentimental pietism but Christian maturity: sound doctrine, Biblical law, and comprehensive Christian thinking applied to every sphere of life, so that believers may stand fully armed in God’s truth rather than defenseless before the advance of evil.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the CR101 Radio - Podcast Network community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

999 episodes

episode Who is Taking Care of the Poor? artwork

Who is Taking Care of the Poor?

This passage emphasizes that the primary caregivers for the poor in the U.S. are not government agencies, but private and voluntary institutions. The family remains the most effective welfare system, providing for sick members, elderly parents, and children’s education from kindergarten through college. Churches, both Protestant and Catholic, supplement this care by aiding the homeless and transient populations, often with limited resources and in spite of bureaucratic resistance. Additionally, private organizations like Strategies to Eliminate Poverty (STEP), led by wealthy evangelical businessmen, actively work to alleviate poverty and empower individuals to succeed. The author underscores that understanding and supporting these “free sector” efforts is crucial for maintaining freedom and effective social care. #PovertyAlleviation #FamilyCare #ChurchAid #PrivateInitiatives #FreeSectorImpact

Yesterday2 min
episode Moral Paralysis artwork

Moral Paralysis

In “Moral Paralysis,” Rushdoony argues that modern society is increasingly incapable of decisive moral action because it has abandoned belief in absolute truth and God’s sovereign law, replacing it with relativism and pragmatism. This results in people who may recognize evil but lack the authority, confidence, or will to oppose it, mistaking moral insight for moral strength and denunciation for righteousness. Without an objective foundation, principles become personal preferences that cannot bind anyone else, producing inaction, cynicism, and drift in both liberal and conservative camps alike. Rushdoony contends that moral vitality comes only from acknowledging a transcendent moral order grounded in God, not from human opinion or state decree. Where relativism reigns, society collapses into either anarchy or statism, both expressions of moral paralysis. True moral action, he concludes, requires faith in God’s absolute law, which alone provides a solid foundation for dominion, reconstruction, and a future worth commanding.

Yesterday15 min
episode Liberty artwork

Liberty

Throughout history, “liberty” has carried radically different meanings. In pagan cultures, liberty meant freedom from restraint especially moral and sexual restraint. It was celebrated in fertility cults, festivals, and carnivals where lawlessness was treated as a virtue and indulgence as a social duty. This idea of liberty was not about justice, responsibility, or human dignity, but about license: the supposed right to do as one pleased. Biblical liberty stands in direct contrast. Scripture presents liberty as freedom under God’s law, not freedom from it. God’s law is described as “the perfect law of liberty” (James 1:25) because it frees man from sin, chaos, and self-destruction. Liberty in this sense is not bondage but joyful obedience a life ordered by God’s truth and empowered by His Spirit. As Paul declares, “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty” (2 Cor. 3:17). When societies abandon God’s law in the name of liberty, they do not become freer. Instead, they lose real freedoms religious, political, economic, and personal and descend into disorder and tyranny. License masquerades as freedom, while true liberty withers. Genuine freedom is found not in lawlessness, but in submission to the Lord who alone gives life, order, and peace.

7. juli 20266 min