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The Bankruptcy of Rationalism

7 min · 16 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Bankruptcy of Rationalism

Descripción

Rationalism claims to prove God by human reason, but the “god” it produces is only a product of fallen imagination acceptable to man but not the living God of Scripture. By ignoring the Fall and its corruption of the human mind, rationalism assumes reason is neutral and pure, when in fact sin has radically warped man’s thinking. Because fallen man resists a God who judges him, he reshapes truth to fit his reason, making himself the final standard of knowledge. This shifts epistemology from God to man and replaces revelation with human judgment. Rationalism is thus not intellectual strength but evidence of the Fall at work. True knowledge begins with God’s revelation and Christ’s atonement, not autonomous reason. The long philosophical trail of rationalism has led not to certainty, but to confusion and despair revealing its deep intellectual and spiritual bankruptcy.

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Portada del episodio No Vacancies

No Vacancies

The Christmas story reminds us that when Christ came into the world, there was no room for Him not in the inn, not in the town, and not in the busy lives of men preoccupied with their own affairs and that same tragedy is repeated whenever our hearts are so crowded with trivialities, schedules, excuses, and self-interest that there is no place left for the Lord. Like the people of Bethlehem, we often mean well, speak kindly, and offer explanations, yet still turn Him away because our lives are already “full.” And yet the wonder of the gospel is this: though we so often have no room for Him, He always has room for us, calling the weary, the overlooked, and the undeserving to come in, making space by grace where none seemed possible. The question Christmas presses upon us, therefore, is not whether Christ is willing to enter, but whether we will make room for Him in the inn of our hearts.

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