Omslagafbeelding van de show CR101 Radio - Podcast Network

CR101 Radio - Podcast Network

Podcast door Cr101 Radio

Engels

Geschiedenis & Religie

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aflevering The Disastrous War artwork

The Disastrous War

In “The Disastrous War” (Chalcedon Report No. 369), Rushdoony argues that the American Civil War was the greatest tragedy in U.S. history, not only because of its immense human cost but because it entrenched a worldview of irreconcilable conflict that still divides the nation. He contends that the war was driven less by Biblical moral reasoning than by Enlightenment humanism shared by influential leaders on both sides—especially Unitarian, Transcendentalist, and Hegelian ideas that exalted revolutionary conflict as the means to justice and progress. Slavery, though real and evil, could have been abolished peacefully, as it was elsewhere, but extremists North and South demanded confrontation rather than resolution. Rushdoony shows that Southern secessionist leaders were largely non-Christian in outlook, while Northern abolitionist rhetoric was often anti-Christian and revolutionary, united by a belief in the “conflict of interests” rather than the Biblical doctrine of moral reconciliation under God. This philosophical shift transformed a legal dispute into a revolutionary war, inaugurated the doctrine of total war (seen in figures like Sherman and Quantrill), and replaced Christian moral antithesis—resolved by repentance and regeneration—with annihilating conflict. The legacy of this war, he concludes, is the ongoing fragmentation of American life, rooted in a humanistic worldview that seeks peace through destruction rather than justice through God’s law and grace.

27 mei 2026 - 14 min
aflevering Does Bionic Man Have a Future? artwork

Does Bionic Man Have a Future?

This passage critiques the uncritical glorification of science and technological enhancements, using the “bionic man” as a symbol of this trend. The author argues that while medical devices pacemakers, glasses, crutches are helpful, they are no replacement for God’s original design and natural human faculties. Scientific interventions, including test-tube babies, are portrayed as risky, morally complex, and often overhyped, with failures underreported. The core message is that God’s creation is superior, and reliance on technology as a supposed improvement over natural human design can mislead us and potentially jeopardize both life and moral freedom. #BionicMan #ScienceVsCreation #NaturalDesign #MedicalTechnology #MoralConsiderations

27 mei 2026 - 3 min
aflevering Testing and Purity artwork

Testing and Purity

Olympia Fulvia Morata (1526–1555), the brilliant Italian scholar raised among nobility and intellectuals, lived a life far harsher than her privileged beginnings suggested. After a cultured youth, she and her husband, Andrew Grunthler, were trapped for nine horrific months in the siege of Schweinfurt, where plague killed half the population, Andrew nearly died, and the city was burned and plundered, leaving them destitute and fleeing for their lives. Even after reaching Heidelberg in 1554, their health broken by famine, fear, and disease collapsed; Olympia died within two years, and her husband and brother soon after. Yet this remarkable Christian woman insisted, “The prize of life comes not from learning, but from conflict and trial,” believing her severe sufferings had shaped her character. In contrast, our age shuns hardship; we try to shield ourselves and our children from all difficulties, even complaining that academic tests are oppressive. Scripture, however, teaches that true “purity” means tested and refined by fire, not untouched innocence. Olympia embraced her trials as God’s refining work, and while we may pray to be spared her extremes, we cannot pray to escape testing itself, for “the fire shall try every man’s work of what sort it is” (1 Cor. 3:13).

27 mei 2026 - 3 min
aflevering Juvenile Justice and the Family (Doctrine of the Family) artwork

Juvenile Justice and the Family (Doctrine of the Family)

Modern “juvenile justice” can’t be understood until you see the sleight-of-hand behind it: the state keeps redefining what counts as “public” and “private” so it can seize what God assigned to the family while excusing what God calls public evil. Historically, Christian law carved life into distinct spheres under God—family, church, commerce, civil government—each with real jurisdiction; but modern statism claims that only the state is truly “public,” so it can declare childrearing, schooling, welfare, property, and inheritance “public concerns” (meaning state-controlled) while quietly reclassifying abortion, homosexuality, prostitution, drugs, and even the logic toward child corruption as “private choices.” The result is total jurisdiction by bureaucracy: if the state owns the delinquent child, it soon claims ownership of the obedient child too—public education becomes the pipeline, and courts begin speaking of children as “property of the state.” Even pagan regimes admit the truth they fear: without parental love and intact family authority, you don’t get citizens—you get deformed, predatory “wolf children.” This lecture’s punchline is sharp: juvenile justice is family justice—when the state replaces parents as the moral governor, it manufactures disorder, then expands again to “manage” the chaos it created. #JuvenileJustice #FamilyFirst #SphereSovereignty #AgainstStatism #ParentsNotState #BiblicalWorldview #ChristianReconstruction #EducationMatters #PropertyAndInheritance #WelfareStartsAtHome #LawAndOrder #Chalcedon

Gisteren - 33 min
aflevering The Hegelian Revolution artwork

The Hegelian Revolution

The Hegelian revolution completed a long philosophical shift that began with Descartes: reality and truth were relocated from God and creation to the human mind. For Hegel, reason itself became sovereign, and what the rational elite declared to be true became reality. God was effectively replaced by human consciousness, and the state was elevated as the incarnation of reason on earth. This worldview reshaped modern life. It fueled statism, feminism, Darwinism, Marxism, and modern spirituality, all built on the idea of humanity evolving toward freedom from limits law, morality, family, history, and even God. Churches absorbed this thinking by retreating into vague “spirituality,” rejecting God’s law, and surrendering culture, education, and politics to the state. The result has been liberation without truth: lawless sexuality, moral relativism, and politics without justice. Hegel’s promise of freedom has instead produced bondage and judgment. True freedom, Scripture insists, is found not in human reason or the state, but in repentance, regeneration, and submission to the living God.

Gisteren - 14 min
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