POPULARITY
Is the Bible inerrant and infallible or “made up of a lot of myths and fables”? You will take away numerous nuggets of information, inspiration and a better knowledge of church history around the world from this classic conversation between “founding father of the religious right” Carl McIntire and then-SWRC host Noah Hutchings, both of whom have now gone to Glory. Dr. McIntire the “fighting fundamentalist,” then in his 90s, and SWRC host Noah Hutchings discuss the battle with the churches, domestically and abroad, “over the Bible.” McIntire terms it “the modernists vs. the fundamentalists.” The entire interview is available on CD HERE https://www.swrc.com/past-influences-on-todays-church-cd.html
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Israel & the Second Coming Pt. 1 Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 6/11/1967 Bible: Romans 11:13 Length: 41 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Israel & The Second Coming Pt. 3 Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 6/25/1967 Bible: Matthew 24:1-3 Length: 38 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Israel & the Second Coming Pt. 2 Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 6/18/1967 Bible: Luke 21:25-34 Length: 39 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Early Presbyterian History Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 6/18/1967 Bible: Romans 5:9-10 Length: 37 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Let the Lord's Beauty Be On Us Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 1/1/1967 Length: 38 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Being a Good Steward of God Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 2/19/1967 Bible: Deuteronomy 12:11-12 Length: 38 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Christ's Road to the Cross Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 3/24/1967 Length: 44 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Report: Ian Paisley in Prison Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 8/28/1966 Bible: Ephesians 6:19-20 Length: 57 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Thanksgiving to God Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 3/6/1966 Bible: 2 Corinthians 2:9-11 Length: 34 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: How Satan Hinders Us Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 3/27/1966 Bible: 1 Thessalonians 2:18 Length: 44 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: How Satan Hinders Us Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 3/27/1966 Bible: 1 Thessalonians 2:18 Length: 44 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Enemies of the Gospel Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 1/2/1966 Bible: Acts 23:24 Length: 42 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: God is No Respector of Persons Now or in Eternity Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 4/6/1966 Bible: Acts 10:34-40 Length: 53 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: How God Values One Soul Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 4/5/1966 Bible: Mark 8:34-37 Length: 48 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Exposition of Colossians Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Devotional Date: 11/24/1965 Bible: Colossians 1:12 Length: 40 min.
Founder of a newspaper, a radio program, and several Christian organizations, Carl McIntire was incredibly influential in the 20th-century fundamentalist movement. On this episode of 5 Minutes in Church History, Dr. Stephen Nichols tells the story of this colorful figure. Read the transcript: https://www.5minutesinchurchhistory.com/the-christian-admiral/ A donor-supported outreach of Ligonier Ministries. Donate: https://www.5minutesinchurchhistory.com/donate/
A new MP3 sermon from Carl McIntire Sermons is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: We'll Meet the Lord in the Air Speaker: Dr. Carl McIntire Broadcaster: Carl McIntire Sermons Event: Sunday Service Date: 6/13/1965 Bible: 1 Thessalonians 4:17 Length: 36 min.
Today’s right wing media has a long history that is largely unknown to its current listeners. In The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement (Oxford University Press, 2020), Paul Matzko details its emergence in the 1950s and the response to its rise by some of the leading political and religious institutions of the era. As Matzko explains, the origins of postwar conservative media lay in the broader changes taking place in broadcasting in 1950s. As the major networks shifted their focus from radio to television, local radio stations were eager to find programmers willing to pay to put programs on the air. This gave conservative religious broadcasters such as Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis an opportunity to spread their message to a nationwide audience. Fearing the growing influence of commentators organizing against their policies, the Kennedy administration sought to use such means as the previously underdeveloped Fairness Doctrine to constrain it. Working in conjunction with the National Council of Churches, they placed growing pressure on the broadcasters – particularly the acerbic McIntire – in an ultimately successful effort to undermine their nationwide stature. Yet while McIntire’s radio ministry was gone by the early 1970s, his example was followed a decade later by others who took advantage of broadcast deregulation in the late 1970s and 1980s to launch the modern era of conservative broadcasting. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today’s right wing media has a long history that is largely unknown to its current listeners. In The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement (Oxford University Press, 2020), Paul Matzko details its emergence in the 1950s and the response to its rise by some of the leading political and religious institutions of the era. As Matzko explains, the origins of postwar conservative media lay in the broader changes taking place in broadcasting in 1950s. As the major networks shifted their focus from radio to television, local radio stations were eager to find programmers willing to pay to put programs on the air. This gave conservative religious broadcasters such as Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis an opportunity to spread their message to a nationwide audience. Fearing the growing influence of commentators organizing against their policies, the Kennedy administration sought to use such means as the previously underdeveloped Fairness Doctrine to constrain it. Working in conjunction with the National Council of Churches, they placed growing pressure on the broadcasters – particularly the acerbic McIntire – in an ultimately successful effort to undermine their nationwide stature. Yet while McIntire’s radio ministry was gone by the early 1970s, his example was followed a decade later by others who took advantage of broadcast deregulation in the late 1970s and 1980s to launch the modern era of conservative broadcasting. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today’s right wing media has a long history that is largely unknown to its current listeners. In The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement (Oxford University Press, 2020), Paul Matzko details its emergence in the 1950s and the response to its rise by some of the leading political and religious institutions of the era. As Matzko explains, the origins of postwar conservative media lay in the broader changes taking place in broadcasting in 1950s. As the major networks shifted their focus from radio to television, local radio stations were eager to find programmers willing to pay to put programs on the air. This gave conservative religious broadcasters such as Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis an opportunity to spread their message to a nationwide audience. Fearing the growing influence of commentators organizing against their policies, the Kennedy administration sought to use such means as the previously underdeveloped Fairness Doctrine to constrain it. Working in conjunction with the National Council of Churches, they placed growing pressure on the broadcasters – particularly the acerbic McIntire – in an ultimately successful effort to undermine their nationwide stature. Yet while McIntire’s radio ministry was gone by the early 1970s, his example was followed a decade later by others who took advantage of broadcast deregulation in the late 1970s and 1980s to launch the modern era of conservative broadcasting. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today’s right wing media has a long history that is largely unknown to its current listeners. In The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement (Oxford University Press, 2020), Paul Matzko details its emergence in the 1950s and the response to its rise by some of the leading political and religious institutions of the era. As Matzko explains, the origins of postwar conservative media lay in the broader changes taking place in broadcasting in 1950s. As the major networks shifted their focus from radio to television, local radio stations were eager to find programmers willing to pay to put programs on the air. This gave conservative religious broadcasters such as Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis an opportunity to spread their message to a nationwide audience. Fearing the growing influence of commentators organizing against their policies, the Kennedy administration sought to use such means as the previously underdeveloped Fairness Doctrine to constrain it. Working in conjunction with the National Council of Churches, they placed growing pressure on the broadcasters – particularly the acerbic McIntire – in an ultimately successful effort to undermine their nationwide stature. Yet while McIntire’s radio ministry was gone by the early 1970s, his example was followed a decade later by others who took advantage of broadcast deregulation in the late 1970s and 1980s to launch the modern era of conservative broadcasting. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today’s right wing media has a long history that is largely unknown to its current listeners. In The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement (Oxford University Press, 2020), Paul Matzko details its emergence in the 1950s and the response to its rise by some of the leading political and religious institutions of the era. As Matzko explains, the origins of postwar conservative media lay in the broader changes taking place in broadcasting in 1950s. As the major networks shifted their focus from radio to television, local radio stations were eager to find programmers willing to pay to put programs on the air. This gave conservative religious broadcasters such as Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis an opportunity to spread their message to a nationwide audience. Fearing the growing influence of commentators organizing against their policies, the Kennedy administration sought to use such means as the previously underdeveloped Fairness Doctrine to constrain it. Working in conjunction with the National Council of Churches, they placed growing pressure on the broadcasters – particularly the acerbic McIntire – in an ultimately successful effort to undermine their nationwide stature. Yet while McIntire’s radio ministry was gone by the early 1970s, his example was followed a decade later by others who took advantage of broadcast deregulation in the late 1970s and 1980s to launch the modern era of conservative broadcasting. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today’s right wing media has a long history that is largely unknown to its current listeners. In The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement (Oxford University Press, 2020), Paul Matzko details its emergence in the 1950s and the response to its rise by some of the leading political and religious institutions of the era. As Matzko explains, the origins of postwar conservative media lay in the broader changes taking place in broadcasting in 1950s. As the major networks shifted their focus from radio to television, local radio stations were eager to find programmers willing to pay to put programs on the air. This gave conservative religious broadcasters such as Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis an opportunity to spread their message to a nationwide audience. Fearing the growing influence of commentators organizing against their policies, the Kennedy administration sought to use such means as the previously underdeveloped Fairness Doctrine to constrain it. Working in conjunction with the National Council of Churches, they placed growing pressure on the broadcasters – particularly the acerbic McIntire – in an ultimately successful effort to undermine their nationwide stature. Yet while McIntire’s radio ministry was gone by the early 1970s, his example was followed a decade later by others who took advantage of broadcast deregulation in the late 1970s and 1980s to launch the modern era of conservative broadcasting. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today's right wing media has a long history that is largely unknown to its current listeners. In The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement (Oxford University Press, 2020), Paul Matzko details its emergence in the 1950s and the response to its rise by some of the leading political and religious institutions of the era. As Matzko explains, the origins of postwar conservative media lay in the broader changes taking place in broadcasting in 1950s. As the major networks shifted their focus from radio to television, local radio stations were eager to find programmers willing to pay to put programs on the air. This gave conservative religious broadcasters such as Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis an opportunity to spread their message to a nationwide audience. Fearing the growing influence of commentators organizing against their policies, the Kennedy administration sought to use such means as the previously underdeveloped Fairness Doctrine to constrain it. Working in conjunction with the National Council of Churches, they placed growing pressure on the broadcasters – particularly the acerbic McIntire – in an ultimately successful effort to undermine their nationwide stature. Yet while McIntire's radio ministry was gone by the early 1970s, his example was followed a decade later by others who took advantage of broadcast deregulation in the late 1970s and 1980s to launch the modern era of conservative broadcasting.
Today's right wing media has a long history that is largely unknown to its current listeners. In The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement (Oxford University Press, 2020), Paul Matzko details its emergence in the 1950s and the response to its rise by some of the leading political and religious institutions of the era. As Matzko explains, the origins of postwar conservative media lay in the broader changes taking place in broadcasting in 1950s. As the major networks shifted their focus from radio to television, local radio stations were eager to find programmers willing to pay to put programs on the air. This gave conservative religious broadcasters such as Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis an opportunity to spread their message to a nationwide audience. Fearing the growing influence of commentators organizing against their policies, the Kennedy administration sought to use such means as the previously underdeveloped Fairness Doctrine to constrain it. Working in conjunction with the National Council of Churches, they placed growing pressure on the broadcasters – particularly the acerbic McIntire – in an ultimately successful effort to undermine their nationwide stature. Yet while McIntire's radio ministry was gone by the early 1970s, his example was followed a decade later by others who took advantage of broadcast deregulation in the late 1970s and 1980s to launch the modern era of conservative broadcasting.
Today’s right wing media has a long history that is largely unknown to its current listeners. In The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement (Oxford University Press, 2020), Paul Matzko details its emergence in the 1950s and the response to its rise by some of the leading political and religious institutions of the era. As Matzko explains, the origins of postwar conservative media lay in the broader changes taking place in broadcasting in 1950s. As the major networks shifted their focus from radio to television, local radio stations were eager to find programmers willing to pay to put programs on the air. This gave conservative religious broadcasters such as Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis an opportunity to spread their message to a nationwide audience. Fearing the growing influence of commentators organizing against their policies, the Kennedy administration sought to use such means as the previously underdeveloped Fairness Doctrine to constrain it. Working in conjunction with the National Council of Churches, they placed growing pressure on the broadcasters – particularly the acerbic McIntire – in an ultimately successful effort to undermine their nationwide stature. Yet while McIntire’s radio ministry was gone by the early 1970s, his example was followed a decade later by others who took advantage of broadcast deregulation in the late 1970s and 1980s to launch the modern era of conservative broadcasting. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A Wikipedia stub about the worst Florida theme park idea ever sends John on a search for the reason it never opened. Show notes: 0:45 - New Vietnam on Wikipedia 1:12 - Dolly Parton's Stampede (formerly Dolly Parton's Dixie Stampede) 2:16 - Carl McIntire on Wikipedia 3:52 - Wild West City 5:50 - New Vietnam in Uncle John's Ahh-Inspiring Bathroom Reader 7:25 - Portable Press 8:11 - 20th Century Reformation Hour 8:44 - Some clips of the 20th Century Reformation Hour 9:37 - Christianity Today, May 2002 (paywall) 10:41 - Dr. Randall Balmer's website 12:42 - Fred Phelps on YouTube 14:54 - The Carl McIntire Collection at Princeton Theological Seminary Library 15:55 - Faraday Cage 19:03 - "Body Counts" by Dr. Yen Espiritu 24:27 - FCC Fairness Doctrine 24:46 - Infowars on Wikipedia 24:50 - This American Life episode about Alex Jones 29:17 - History of the Present (registration required), an article about film theory published in The North American Review in 1976, led us to the Newsweek story about New Vietnam. 30:40 - Actually, Newsweek's online archives only go back to 2013 30:48 - The September 8, 1975 issue of Newsweek that John bought on eBay 37:19 - Florida Today, November 8, 1975 39:33 - Ricky Ly's food blog Tasty Chomps
This recording is a sermon on John 16-27, 28. Run Time- 46 Minutes.-For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on Proverbs 1-1-4. Run Time is 37 minutes.-For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on Exodus 6-2. Run Time is 36 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This is the second of two separate recordings -dates- 7-12-64 - 7-19-64-. This second recording -7-19-64- is a sermon that covers Philippians 4-23. Run Time is 36 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This is the first of two separate recordings -dates- 7-12-64 - 7-19-64-. This first recording is a sermon that covers Philippians 4-20-23. Run Time is 41 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on John 4-42. Run Time is 38 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on Genesis 4-13. Run Time is 41 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on John 5-30-31. Run Time is 41 minutes.-For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
JESUS HEALS THE NOBELMAN'S SON. This recording is a sermon on John 4-50. Run Time is 34 minutes.-For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
Run Time is 46 minutes.-For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on Exodus 18. Run Time is 40 minutes.-For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on John 7-1. Run Time is 44 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on Exodus 3-2. Run Time is 36 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on John 8-24. Run Time is 48 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on John 1 John 2-2. Run Time is 47 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on Exodus 14. Run Time is 33 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on 2 Timothy 3.5. Run Time is 46 minutes. -For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on Exodus 17-15. Run Time is 40 minutes-For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org
This recording is a sermon on Exodus 13-8,14 and Exodus 16-32-35. Run Time is 45 minutes.-For more information on Dr. Carl McIntire visit- www.carlmcintire.org