So much time is spent "in the fight," that it is easy to forget what we are supposed to be fighting for. To answer that, join Michael Quinn Sullivan each week as he puts the continuing fight for life and liberty in historical, biblical, and even just pers
As citizens, we have failed to inspire sufficient fear in our elected servants.
To appreciate salvation, we must embrace our spiritual context.
“Our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people.”
Liberty isn't achieved in timid nibbles, but through bold actions.
The decline of the crony establishment media might just be what saves our republic.
Lies are created when facts are taken out of context.
Neither heavy stones nor flimsy excuses can stop the Messiah.
Easter reminds us that our faith is based on very real events.
To be a self-governing republic, we as individuals must first govern ourselves.
Modern education is designed to produce serfs, not champions of liberty.
Move from passive recipient to active participant.
The measure of our joy is found where we direct the vision of our hearts and minds.
Sin blinds us to many things, but perhaps most especially the truth of who we are.
In the fight for liberty, we not allowed to give up, back down, or walk away.
Chorazin had a spectacular view of the Sea of Galilee, but an even better view of history of history in the making. They squandered both.
Too often, conservatives cede the selection of the rhetorical battleground to the left. It is why we are losing.
People who cower and cringe rarely fight back. The political elite wants us to live lives full of anxiety so that we can be more easily controlled.
Stop waiting for a politician to do your job. It is up to us to re-take our government and our culture.
It's hard work, but self-governance is worth it.
Doing right in our “own eyes” is a recipe for trouble.
Every generation must shrug the vestiges of socialism if we are truly thankful for liberty.
The right of an individual to securely own property is central to Scripture.
On Veterans Day, we should thank those who served… and make sure we are building a republic worth serving.
Feeding an irksome “frenemy” to an alligator in the fray of an internecine fight might feel good, but it ignores that the alligator will next be looking to feed on you.
The world tells us that the ends justify the means if we make them sound righteous enough.
Self-pity is a bottomless pit when we make our lives about ourselves. INTRO: In this week's reflection, Michael Quinn Sullivan writes that rather than star as the martyrs in our […]
Political purity czars are a lonely lot and rarely as pure as they perceive themselves.
America watched as church leaders in 2020 put the gathering of the saints on par with the meeting of the Rotary Club.
All law is a matter of morality; the only question is if that law is in keeping with, or foreign to, the moral precepts of holy scripture.
As a self-governing nation, each of us are supposed to be the leaders. Do we act like it?
As citizens, we must look past the political packaging.
The issues facing our republic are deadly serious, but that doesn't mean we always have to be.
Like Hunter Biden, wealth and political status were intertwined for the rich young man in the often misquoted New Testament story.
Politicians can serve the establishment, or the citizens, but not both.
The gooey, saccharine-sweet niceness demanded of us by politicians isn't found anywhere in the Bible.
A Muslim shrine built in the form of a Christian church on the ruins of a pagan temple built on the ruins of a Jewish temple, built on the rock designated by God for a sacrifice.
For the price of a tax cut, Jeroboam turned the people of God into idolatrous pagans.
Americans were already self governing, and they meant to continue being so.
The world wants us to oppose anyone who hasn't declared for us; Jesus has other ideas.
However exalted or self-important we may be, we all eventually become a footnote in the great story of history.