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It hasnât been since the late 1970s that more Americans have been this aware of the sudden rise in prices and how itâs affecting their livelihood. But there are reasons for inflation, both practical and spiritual.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes and Spotify. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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In this special episode, we answer listenerâs questions on various topics.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes and Spotify. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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Chalcedon began in 1965 for specific reasons, and with a specific purpose, that still govern our mission to this day. Listen in as Chalcedonâs leadership discuss the origins of Chalcedon and the importance of our mission and message for the years ahead.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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Man wants to build his âCanaanâ but only creates continual hells. America itself worsens in its social and economic issues partly due to a retreat by evangelical churches who watch the decline from the sidelines and even participate in it. The same old wounds of class and racial hatred remain, and crime is on the rise. Is this not the time to return to God and His law?
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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Rushdoony wrote that social financing is a necessity, and it will be done either by the faithful tithing of Godâs people or by the coercive taxation by the state. If Christians are to establish alternative means of government, education, and charity, then theyâll have to do it through the tithe.
For this reason, the tithe plays a central role in the great mission of Christian Reconstruction.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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Chalcedon scholar and vice-president Martin Selbrede discusses his recent article in the âArise & Buildâ newsletter (âA Stone Cut Without Handsâ) in which he critiques Stephen Wolfeâs controversial book âThe Case for Christian Nationalism.â
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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Subversive activity seeks to undermine society, and a significant factor in these schemes is the subversion of words where meaning is hijacked to make way for revolution and marginalize opponents. This is especially damaging when the subversion is happening within Christianity itself.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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Humanistic thinkers like Freud and Bertrand Russell believed that the decline of religion would follow the solving of societal ills while diminishing any sense of guilt. In this sense, they wanted to build a society free from religion, which would only mean that it would reconstructed by the religion of man.
To achieve this would require rule by a scientific state acting as God and regulating every area of life and thought.
As we can now see, this idealism took a nose dive as society eroded, especially along moral lines, and confusion and destruction are sapping the hope of the next generation. In this sense, humanism is suicidal, but a great return to Biblical Christianity is underway as a new governing class is developing through Christian education and a return to Godâs law.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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The modern world witnesses a troubling drift, as many today, detached from history and divine purpose, see humans as merely âdisposable.â This perspective is a far cry from the âdominion manâ envisioned by the Scripturesâman made in Godâs image to steward and lead creation with purpose.
Tragically, this detachment from our intended role breeds societal unrest, leading us from one crisis to another. As we abandon our rightful place in history, we risk becoming its victims.
In this episode, we dive deep into this paradigm. Which role will we choose: the disposable or the dominion? Join us to explore the path forward.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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The doctrine of selective depravity, favored by humanism, stipulates that certain people are inherently evil, creating conflict by targeting specific groups instead of addressing universal sin.
This perspective distorts the biblical concept of salvation, replacing Christâs role with a self-identified ârighteousâ segment of society. The doctrine fuels conflicts, as witnessed in the 20th century, and enables politicians to manipulate public sentiment by demonizing specific groups. Marxism effectively exploits this doctrine.
Deeply ingrained in modern socio-political structures and education, the doctrine of selective depravity impedes genuine solutions, intensifying the problem with each âremedy.â
This is the subject of Episode 36 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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Conspiracy theory has played a role in the margins of American society for more than two centuries, but it is now mainstream with the help of the internet and social media and myriads of self-appointed experts. But does the Bible discuss conspiracies? And if so, what should Christians do about it?
R. J. Rushdoony had an extensive collection of books on conspiracies and addressed the subject several times throughout his works. To this day, his position is a unique one, and one that we feel is the Biblical approach to this subject.
This is the subject of Episode 34 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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In the modern era, every decade brings a new public struggle over some aspect of the Bill of Rights. Still, the average citizen is not only unfamiliar with the contents of the Bill of Rights, they are equally unfamiliar with its origin, purpose, and the history that preceded it. Added to this is how we are to view these rights Biblically.
Join us on this podcast as we dive deep into the Bill of Rights and explore the Bibleâs primacy over all of man and his social contracts.
This is the subject of Episode 33 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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Socialism is basically and essentially humanism applied to economics. Socialism denies economic laws; it plans to remake the world in terms of manâs welfare as seen by the planners. It is a government of men, not of laws, by men, not by law, and society is placed under man, not under God.
A generation reared in humanism is bent on sacrificing law to suit the criminal, giving food to subsidize socialism; paying men not to work, appeasing criminals and Communists, and on pouring out its pity on the degenerates.
This is the subject of Episode 32 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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The faith of modern man is Pelagianism, and Pelagianism believes in the natural goodness of man; it is not man who is evil but his environment. The state also is naturally good and is therefore to be trusted with all the powers necessary in order to cope with an evil environment.
This is the subject of Episode 31 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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Syncretism is the âreconciliation or union of conflicting beliefs,â with a secondary definition being an âegregious compromise in religion or philosophy.â
Biblically stated, man can have no other gods before Him; there can be no syncretism. Biblical revelation cannot be mixed with anything else. Yet, we live in an era of syncretism within the church.
This is the subject of Episode 30 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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âThe rights of manâ is a political doctrine, and this is basic to its error. The assumption is that manâs freedom depends on and must come from the state. Now, certainly, the state can be a major enemy to manâs freedom, but it cannot be seen as the source of liberty.
A âdutyâ is an obligation we owe to God or man, or to both. A ârightâ is a claim we make on the world, on men, and even on God, as in Adamâs case, who claimed with Eve the ârightâ to be as God (Gen. 3:5). The two are seriously at odds in our culture because we are at odds with God. A duty can be a legal obligation, but it is also always a moral obligation.
This is the subject of Episode 29 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
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For well over 500 years now, Western civilization has been in a state of civil war, with two aspects thereof in a growing conflict with one another. These two contending forces are humanism and Christianity. Humanism began its rise to power in the medieval era, and its strength was such that it captured the church, much of the academic world, and the state as well.
At the same time, however, the growing bankruptcy and imminent collapse of humanism has been increasingly in evidence. By replacing God with man as the new ultimate and absolute, humanism has introduced moral anarchy into the world. If every man is his own god and law, then no order is rationally possible. Humanism, having deified rationality, must now use the irrational and coercive power of the socialist state to hold society together.
This is the subject of Episode 28 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
#rjrushdoony #chalcedonfoundation #humanism #theonomy #christianreconstruction
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Deuteronomy is the âgo toâ book for theocracy because itâs the most clear about the importance of the law and its application in the promised land where Israel would no longer be guided by the pillars of cloud and fire nor miraculously provided for by manna and water out of a rock.
Wilderness season is ending, so the emphasis of the law will shift to governing a people within their own country instead of as a nomadic people in the wilderness. This is extremely helpful for the church today.
This is the subject of Episode 27 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher. Just visit our website for more information. http://chalcedon.eduâ
#rjrushdoony #chalcedonfoundation #pentateuch #deuteronomy #theonomy #moses
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The temptation to skip over books like Numbers is a great one. After all, isnât it just the numbering of Israel? Is there anything of significance found in its pages? R. J. Rushdoony penned an enlightening commentary on Numbers, and Chalcedonâs leadership sits down to discuss the importance of Rushdoonyâs insights.
This is the subject of Episode 26 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Mark Rushdoony, Martin Selbrede, and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher.
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The Book of Leviticus reveals more than a way to holiness. It shows us the path to dominionâeven to a realized new Garden of Eden. The laws of God are essential to modern Christian community.
This is the subject of Episode 25 of the Chalcedon Podcast.
Hosted by Martin Selbrede and Andrea Schwartz
đ§The audio version of this podcast is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and Stitcher.
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