Biblical Worldview

  • The Hate Delusion Blog 3.A: Ideas That Shape the Debate

    Loving people while hating evil has never been easy, but Critical Theory makes it even harder by teaching our neighbors to interpret every moral claim as a grab for power. What begins as abstract theory now shapes classrooms, courtrooms, and corporate policy, quietly training a generation to see Christian conviction as oppression. History warns us where such ideas can lead when they are cut loose from objective morality, yet our call is not to panic but to persevere—to speak truth in love, even when love is mistaken for hate. The church must sharpen its discernment, count the cost of faithfulness, and prepare to live with courage and creativity when ridicule, cancellation, or loss of employment become the price of obedience. We cannot change the culture by force, but we can refuse to be seduced by slogans that promise compassion while sowing division, and we can show a better way through lives of humble conviction and voluntary generosity.

  • The Man Who Offered a Mic Was Silenced with a Bullet

    The Facebook notification hit my phone like a punch to the gut: “Charlie Kirk has been shot.”
    When Charlie was murdered, the reaction revealed something disturbing about our culture. Within hours, people blamed him for his own death, saying he “spewed hate and it caught up with him.” Some were even celebrating.
    This exposes the central delusion destroying America: the belief that disagreement equals hate.
    Read how the “hate delusion” is tearing our country apart—and what we can do to fight back peacefully.