CR101 Radio - Podcast Network

Rationalism and History

9 min · 20 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Rationalism and History

Descripción

Rationalism consistently detaches truth from history, treating abstract ideas and human reasoning as ultimate rather than God’s acts in time. This stands in direct opposition to Christianity, which is grounded in real historical events the Fall, the Incarnation, and the Atonement. Scripture proclaims that the Word became flesh, a claim Greek and modern philosophy reject because it unites truth with history. By presupposing man’s mind instead of God, rationalism ends in idolatry: gods made in man’s image and truth judged by human logic. Biblical faith begins with God’s revelation in history and sees human reason as fallen and limited. True knowledge is not autonomous but analogical thinking God’s thoughts after Him. When rationalism ignores history, it ultimately ignores God.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de CR101 Radio - Podcast Network!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

999 episodios

episode Are We Over-Polluted and Over-Populated? artwork

Are We Over-Polluted and Over-Populated?

This passage argues that fears of overpopulation and overpollution are largely myths. Citing Dr. Julian L. Simon’s The Ultimate Resource, it emphasizes that food production, farmland availability, and natural resources are increasing, not diminishing. Pollution has been declining, population density does not inherently create social or biological problems, and immigration contributes positively to society. The author highlights that claims of resource scarcity often serve as a pretext for statist controls and planning, which can threaten individual freedom. Rather than limiting growth, evidence suggests human ingenuity continues to expand resources and improve living standards. #OverpopulationMyth #ResourceAbundance #Freedom #PopulationGrowth #EnvironmentalRealities

Ayer3 min
episode Kwan-Yin Versus Christ artwork

Kwan-Yin Versus Christ

In “Kwan-Yin Versus Christ,” Rushdoony contrasts Biblical Christianity with the relativistic, equalitarian impulse he traces to Eastern religions, arguing that modern socialism and progressive lawlessness flow from a worldview that denies absolute distinctions between good and evil. He presents Kwan-yin’s refusal to enter paradise until all are included as the logical symbol of total inclusivism, a mercy that ultimately abolishes justice by treating righteousness and criminality as morally equivalent. This mindset, he contends, has deeply shaped Western liberalism, weakening Biblical law, elevating the rights of criminals over the protection of the innocent, and producing social breakdown rather than compassion. The issue, therefore, is not political technique or voting strategy but a religious choice between relativism and Biblical absolutes: either Christ, with His unchanging law and real justice, or Kwan-yin’s sentimental democracy of good and evil, which promises heaven but delivers hell.

Ayer6 min