Chalcedon Podcast
What made America great is almost universally misunderstood — not only by secularists who have revised the record, but by Christians who have accepted the revised version. The phrase "Make America Great Again" assumes a prior greatness that most people cannot actually define or explain. In this episode, the hosts of the Chalcedon Podcast take up R.J. Rushdoony's early work *The Nature of the American System* and trace what that greatness actually consisted of, why it was possible, and through what mechanisms it was dismantled. The answer, as Rushdoony documents from original sources, runs through two elements almost entirely absent from secular historical accounts: the theological dispute that precipitated the War of Independence, and the destruction of localism. The colonies were not unified by abstract Enlightenment ideals — they were Christian communities with distinct theological identities, chartered separately, governed locally, and grounded in a biblical ethic that shaped law, education, economics, and family life. The "second American revolution" was the progressive subversion of that order: the spread of Unitarian influence, the rise of statist education under Horace Mann, the centralization of charitable functions in government, and the steady migration of power from counties and families to a federal apparatus with no ceiling on its ambitions. For Christians seeking to understand how to recover what has been lost, this episode offers something more useful than nostalgia: a precise diagnosis of where the founding order was eroded, what was lost at each stage, and what kind of recovery is actually required. The path forward is not a political slogan — it is the repossession of Christian self-government, beginning at the county, the school, and the family.
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