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Jim Belcher (PhD, Georgetown University) is a political philosopher, researcher, and writer. He previously served as president of Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, and was the founding lead pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach, California. He is the author of In Search of Deep Faith and Deep Church, which won a 2010 Christianity Today Book Award in church/pastoral leadership. We will be discussing his latest book, Cold Civil War: Overcoming Polarization, Discovering Unity, and Healing the Nation.
In this talk, Professor Flora Krook explains how reading can actually enhance the way we think about our faith, our lives and our relationship with God. Professor Krook is a member of High Desert URC and an assistant Professor of English and Literature at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, CA. http://media.urclearning.org/audio/FK-reading-08-04-2023.MP3
In this talk, Professor Flora Krook explains how reading can actually enhance the way we think about our faith, our lives and our relationship with God. Professor Krook is a member of High Desert URC and an assistant Professor of English and Literature at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, CA. http://media.urclearning.org/audio/FK-reading-08-04-2023.MP3
On this episode of Anchored, our Vice President of Partnerships Soren Schwab is joined by Dr. David Alexander, Vice President of Academic Affairs and a professor of philosophy at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. The two discuss Dr. Alexander's educational and spiritual journey and how it revealed to him the necessity and value of the liberal arts. They also explore what makes the liberal arts truly “liberating” and the subsequent danger of a hyper-focused, fragmented education geared toward merely acquiring skills.
Today, Ron is joined by special guest, Dr. David Alexander of Providence Christian College. This episode is the second part of Ron's interview with Dr. Alexander.Connect with The Palatine Institute.Tune in every Wednesday for a new episode of A Cord of Three Strands. Subscribe on your favorite podcasting platform and never miss an episode!
Today, Ron is joined by special guest, Dr. David Alexander of Providence Christian College.Tune in every Wednesday for a new episode of A Cord of Three Strands. Subscribe on your favorite podcasting platform and never miss an episode!
Jim Belcher (PhD, Georgetown University) is a political philosopher, researcher, and writer. He previously served as president of Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, and was the founding lead pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach, California. He is the author of In Search of Deep Faith and Deep Church, which won a 2010 Christianity Today Book Award in church/pastoral leadership. Episode Talking Points Jim's journey to Christ Church planting in California The difficulty of a "middle way" The vital center What is the gospel? Technology advances and the response of the church Retrieval of constitutional republicanism Resources Cold Civil War In Search of Deep Faith Deep Church --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-monday-christian/support
On today's show Jim Belcher discusses his new book Cold Civil War. GUEST OVERVIEW: Jim Belcher (PhD, Georgetown University) is a political philosopher, researcher, and writer. He previously served as president of Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, and was the founding lead pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach, California. He is the author of In Search of Deep Faith and Deep Church, which won a 2010 Christianity Today Book Award in church/pastoral leadership.
On Culture Friday, Nick Eicher and Mary Reichard talk to John Stonestreet about the intersection between family and civil society; Collin Garbarino reviews a new movie about cats and artistic muse, The Electrical Life of Louis Wain; and Myrna Brown talks to Keith Getty about his new album, Confessio. Plus: an armored personnel taxi, and the Friday morning news.Support The World and Everything in It today at wng.org/donate. Additional support comes from Providence Christian College, where students are grounded in biblical truth and a classic liberal arts core to produce virtuous citizens. More at ProvidenceCC.edu From Samaritan Ministries. Health care sharing is affordable, and you can join today. More at samaritanministries.org/worldpodcast. And from Ambassadors Impact Network, a group of faith-driven investors who finance private companies led by gospel-advancing entrepreneurs. More at ambassadorsimpact.com.
On Washington Wednesday, Mary Reichard talks to Devin Watkins of the Competitive Enterprise Institute about the vaccine mandate's effect on the workforce; on World Tour, Onize Ohikere reports on the growing conflict in Ethiopia; and Kim Henderson visits a turkey farm in Minnesota. Plus: commentary from Joel Belz, beach trash, and the Wednesday morning news.Support The World and Everything in It today at wng.org/donate. Additional support comes from Samaritan Ministries. Health care sharing is affordable, and you can join today. More at samaritanministries.org/worldpodcast. From Ambassadors Impact Network, a group of faith-driven investors who finance private companies led by gospel-advancing entrepreneurs. More at ambassadorsimpact.com. And from Providence Christian College, where students are grounded in biblical truth and a classic liberal arts core to produce virtuous citizens. More at ProvidenceCC.edu
Caleb Bailey reports on parents' concerns over the COVID vaccine approved for emergency use by the FDA; Mary Reichard talks to political analyst Kyle Kondik about what lessons Democrats learned from last week's elections; and Paul Butler talks to WORLD's Daniel of the Year, Joel Belz. Plus: commentary from Kim Henderson, a feathered street fight, and the Tuesday morning news.Support The World and Everything in It today at wng.org/donate. Additional support comes from Providence Christian College, where students are grounded in biblical truth and a classic liberal arts core to produce virtuous citizens. More at ProvidenceCC.edu From Samaritan Ministries. Health care sharing is affordable, and you can join today. More at samaritanministries.org/worldpodcast. And from Ambassadors Impact Network, a group of faith-driven investors who finance private companies led by gospel-advancing entrepreneurs. More at ambassadorsimpact.com.
Anna Johansen Brown reports on the latest digital phenomenon, NFTs; Mary Reichard talks to Steve West about the case of a Colorado web designer challenging the state's so-called non-discrimination laws; and Jenny Lind Schmitt joins prolifers in Berlin for the German March for Life. Plus: commentary from Cal Thomas, talked into repentance, and the Thursday morning news.Support The World and Everything in It today at wng.org/donate. Additional support comes from Barnabas Aid, providing hope and support for the persecuted church world-wide, distributing aid from Christians, through Christians, to Christians. More at barnabasaid.org.From Christianbook.com. Great gifts to help you bring on the joy. Christianbook.com. And from Providence Christian College, where students are grounded in biblical truth and a classic liberal arts core to produce virtuous citizens. More at ProvidenceCC.edu
On Washington Wednesday, Mary Reichard talks to AEI's Phil Wallach about the impasse on Capitol Hill over government spending and the federal debt limit; on World Tour, Onize Ohikere reports on international news; and Amy Lewis meets a man collecting milk bottles to preserve a piece of New Jersey history. Plus: commentary from Janie B. Cheaney, a historic toilet, and the Wednesday morning news.Support The World and Everything in It today at wng.org/donate. Additional support comes from Providence Christian College, where students are grounded in biblical truth and a classic liberal arts core to produce virtuous citizens. More at ProvidenceCC.edu From Barnabas Aid, providing hope and support for the persecuted church world-wide, distributing aid from Christians, through Christians, to Christians. More at barnabasaid.org. And from Christianbook.com. Hundreds of thousands of gifts—just a click away at Christianbook.com.
On Legal Docket, Mary Reichard examines the influence of the American Bar Association over legal education; on the Monday Moneybeat, Nick Eicher talks to financial analyst David Bahnsen about the latest economic news; and on History Book, Katie Gaultney recounts significant events from the past. Plus: the Monday morning news.Support The World and Everything in It today at wng.org/donate. Additional support comes from Barnabas Aid, providing hope and support for the persecuted church world-wide, distributing aid from Christians, through Christians, to Christians. More at barnabasaid.org. From Christianbook.com. Christian books, Bibles, music, toys, and gifts—at Christianbook.com. And from Providence Christian College, where students are grounded in biblical truth and a classic liberal arts core to produce virtuous citizens. More at ProvidenceCC.edu
We conclude season two discussing the rise of an oligarchic ruling class in the United States with Dr. Angelo Codevilla, our teacher at Boston University and widely-published scholar of political philosophy and international affairs. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (1:12) - We discuss the release of the new CDC guidelines for vaccinated people. Links: CDC chart; President Biden on Today; Runner Wear a Mask; Red Sox attendance; Major League attendance. Required Reading/Headlines (10:29) - We discuss the latest essay by Dr. Angelo Codevilla, “American Exodus” published by Tablet magazine. Links: Dr. Codevilla at Tablet; Time magazine on the election; “Clarity” at American Greatness by Dr. Codevilla; Rand Paul and Anthony Fauci on masks. Open the Gradebook (47:40) - President Biden gave his first address to a joint session of Congress Wednesday night, followed by Senator Tim Scott with the Republican response. We discuss and grade the two speeches. Links: President Biden’s speech; Senator Scott’s speech. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (1:00:57) - We open by checking in on our long-term quarterback trade projections and our picks for the landing places of the top-5 quarterbacks available in the NFL draft. On the season, Dave is now 27-21; Matt 21-27. We wrap up our picks for the season by making two projections for this weekend’s Kentucky Derby. Link: Kentucky Derby horses and odds. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are those of the speaker.
We discuss the character of democratic despotism as it is described by Alexis de Tocqueville and exhibited in America today. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (1:13) - We discuss the conviction of Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin. Links: AP news story; CNN story on Maxine Waters remarks; Susan Crabtree at Real Clear Politics on policing reform efforts. Required Reading (6:52) - We conclude our study of Democracy in America as Professor Corbin leads us through the last three chapters in the work on the character of democratic despotism with some reflections from the preface of Tocqueville’s other major work The Old Regime and the French Revolution. Headlines (39:37) - We revisit the reopening of America, discussing mask mandates and vaccines in light of Tocqueville’s account of democratic despotism. Links: President Biden on ‘Neanderthal thinking’; CDC Covid data; Jim Geraghty on the ‘Texas Maskless Apocalypse’; Philip Klein at National Review; President Biden on vaccines and masks; Rand Paul on Fox News. Open the Gradebook (49:33) - April is a month noteworthy for unique state holidays. In honor of this, we grade the traditions that surround Patriots Day (MA & ME), Mardi Gras (LA & AL), and Arbor Day (NE). Link: regional holidays. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (54:50) - Last week, Dave’s soccer picks went well; Matt’s not so much. On the season, Dave is now 21-13, while Matt is 14-20. With the NFL draft coming up, we predict the landing places of the top five quarterbacks. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We reflect on the democratic tendency toward despotic, centralized government and several manifestations of that tendency today. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (0:55) - We discuss the pause in the administration of the Johnson & Johnson Covid vaccine. Links: CDC and FDA joint statement; Charles C. W. Cooke at National Review; Deseret News on Utah and other states; Charles C. W. Cooke at National Review, part 2. [45 seconds] Required Reading (10:18) - We reflect on the democratic tendency toward despotic centralized government in light of Alexis de Tocqueville’s argument in the opening chapters of the last part of volume 2 of Democracy in America and Publius’s argument in Federalist essays 23-37. [10 min] Headlines (35:45) - We look at two contemporary Progressive efforts to consolidate government power further. Links: Nikolai Wetzel at Law and Liberty; Peter Suderman at Reason; Reuters report on Janet Yellen proposal; Wall Street Journal on Yellen proposal. Open the Gradebook (45:37) - We grade three modest proposals for reforming the national government. Links: Senator Ed Markey on expanding the Supreme Court; House of Representatives equal protection lawsuit. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (52:14) - After a good week picking the Masters, Dave is 19-13 on the season; Matt is 14-18. This week, we cast our eye across the pond to pick the two semifinal matches in Britain’s premier soccer cup competition. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Summary: We discuss the influence of democracy on family life. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (00:57) - We look at the fallout of Major League Baseball’s decision to move this year’s All-Star game from Atlanta to Denver. Links: MLB decision; Stacy Abrams on Georgia boycotts; Democrats on MLB decision; President Biden on the Masters; David Harsanyi at National Review. Required Reading (05:00) - Prof. Corbin leads us through Tocqueville’s discussion of the democratic family in part 3 of volume 2 of Democracy in America and a selection from Rousseau’s Emile. Assignment for next week: DIA, volume 2, part 4, chapters 1-5. Headlines (32:56) - We discuss a CNN article reporting on the recent executive orders by South Dakota governor Kristi Noem aiming to protect the integrity of women’s sports at the high school and collegiate levels. Links: CNN report; Fox News report on the original CNN article. Open the Gradebook (42:40) - With the traditional tax day, April 15, approaching, we grade three conservative tax reform proposals. Links: Mario Loyola at National Review; Senators Rubio and Lee proposal. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (49:30) - After another bad week picking the NCAA basketball tournament, Dave is 17-12 this season; Matt is 11-18. With our busted brackets now behind us, we turn to golf and make our picks for the Masters. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss the decline in American church membership and President Biden’s attacks on the new Georgia voting law in light of Tocqueville’s reflections on American sentiments and mores in volume 2 of Democracy in America. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (1:05) - We discuss the results of the latest Gallup poll on church membership and its consequences. Links: Gallup Poll results; Kevin Williamson writing at National Review. Required Reading (10:36) - Professor Corbin leads us through the end of part 2 and the beginning of part 3 of volume 2 of Democracy in America and a selection from Montesquieu’s Spirit of the Laws. Assignment for next week: volume 2, part 3, chapters 8-12. Headlines (31:25) - We examine President Biden’s characterization of the new Georgia voting law as a return to Jim Crow or worse. Links: Carl Cannon at RealClearPolitics; President Biden press conference transcript; President Biden on SportsCenter at Business Insider; President Biden statement on Georgia voting law; Washington Post fact check on Biden statement; New York Times analysis of Georgia voting law; summary of state absentee ballot laws; state-by-state absentee ballot voter ID laws; Dan McLaughlin at National Review. Open the Gradebook (46:05) - Baseball is back! We grade the entertainment value of two great opening day moments and talk about the results of our fantasy baseball draft. Links: Miguel Cabrera’s sliding home run; Clay Bellinger’s long single. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (52:45) - After a bad week picking the games from the NCAA tournament’s round of 16, we try again with the semifinals and finals. Dave is now 16-10 this season; Matt 11-15. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss the relationship between liberty and equality and the role of the national government in encouraging or discouraging self-government. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (1:31) - We discuss President Biden’s first press conference. Links: press conference transcript; RealClearPolitics presidential approval average; Ipsos/Reuters presidential approval poll; Charles C. W. Cooke at National Review on Biden and the filibuster. Required Reading (10:24) - Professor Corbin leads us through volume 2, part 2 of Democracy in America on the sentiments of the American people with a special focus on the relationship between liberty and equality and with further reflections on a selection from Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan. Headlines (32:36) - We look at the way that the recently-passed Covid relief law and a prospective new spending bill affect local self-government. Links: CBS News on the Covid relief bill; Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost at National Review; CT law on chocolate milk; AP report on prospective $3 trillion spending bill. Open the Gradebook (44:32) - Now that President Biden has confirmed his plans to run for reelection in 2024, we grade the electoral prospects of three leading Republicans candidates for the party’s 2024 presidential nomination. Links: Echelon Insights on Republican candidates for 2024. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (52:53) - After some mixed results on our recent NCAA basketball tournament picks, Dave is 16-7 on the year and Matt is 10-13. This week, we pick three of the Sweet 16 matchups and make our preseason Major League Baseball projections. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss the corruption of elite American education by the pursuit of high status positions and the resulting subordination of that education to ideological fads and pseudo-wisdom. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (1:36) - We discuss the new CDC guidelines for social distancing in elementary schools. Links: National Review reports new guidelines; ABC News report; David Zweig at The Intelligencer; NYT report on AFT reaction. Required Reading (05:21) - Prof. Corbins leads us through chapters 7-10 of volume 2, part 1, of Democracy in America on key qualities of the democratic mind and a selection from Act I of Shakespeare’s The Tempest. Assigned for next week: DIA, volume 2, part II (pp. 479-532). Headlines (38:35) - We discuss the rise of radical ideologies in elite private and public schools in light of Tocqueville’s discussion of the democratic mind. Links: Caitlin Flanagan in The Atlantic; Bari Weiss at The City; Cameron Hilditch reporting at National Review; Cameron Hilditch on California Ethic-Studies standards; David Brooks, Bobos in Paradise. Open the Gradebook (49:20) - We discuss the early stages of NFL free agency and grade the deals signed by the top three free agents to change teams. Links: Sporting News list of top-50 free agents; Position salary rankings at OverTheCap. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (56:07) - Last week, we picked the final two #1 seeds for the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, each getting one of our two picks correct. Dave is now 14-4 in 2021; Matt is 8-10. This week we pick four of Saturday’s first round NCAA tournament matchups. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss the religious character of our contemporary politics and the leading influences on the American democratic mind. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (1:27) - We discuss President Biden’s first primetime address. Links: Biden speech; Susan Crabtree at Real Clear Politics; New York Times fact check. Required Reading (10:28) - Professor Corbin leads us through the opening chapters of volume 2, part 1 of Democracy in America and a selection from Francis Bacon’s Aphorisms Concerning the Interpretation of Nature. Assigned for next week: Democracy in America, volume 2, part 1, chapters 7-11. Headlines (34:42) - We discuss Shadi Hamid’s recent article in The Atlantic, “American without God” in light of our Tocqueville and Bacon readings. Link: Shadi Hamid at The Atlantic. Open the Gradebook (49:31) - With St. Patrick’s Day coming up on Wednesday, we grade four classic Irish entrees. Link: St. Patrick’s Day recipes. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (54:20) - Dave continued his great run of 2021 picks last week by hitting on both of his NBA All-Star game projections. He is now 13-3 this year. Matt was 1-1 and now stands at 7-9. This week we pick the #1 seeds for the upcoming NCAA men’s basketball tournament and some of the first round results. Link: All-time NCAA tournament seed records. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Summary: We discuss efforts to reform our elections and democracy in light of Tocqueville’s observations on the American Union at the end of volume 1 of Democracy in America. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (1:15) - We discuss the decision of Texas and Mississippi to lift their mask mandates and the reaction to it. Links: NBC News report on TX and MS; NBC News report on Biden reaction; CBS article on business response. Required Reading (5:29) - Prof. Corbin guides us through the final part of the last chapter of volume 1 of Democracy in America and our adjacent reading: book 1, chapter 2 of Machiavelli’s Discourses on Livy. Assigned for next week: DIA, volume 2, part 1, chapter 1-10 (pages 403-439 in the Mansfield/Winthrop edition). Headlines (29:32) - We discuss the For the People Act, which recently passed the House, and the ongoing debate over campaign finance and election integrity. Links: Marcia Brown at The American Prospect; Dan McLaughlin at National Review; John Fund at The Spectator. Open the Gradebook (45:15) - We give President Biden a grade after the first forty days of his presidency. Links: Jim Geraghty newsletter; AP story on Biden approach to legislating. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (50:57) - After Dave hit on all his Golden Globes picks, he is 11-3 in 2021; Matt went 2-2 and is now 6-8. This week, we make our picks for the NBA All-Star game. Link: Team LeBron and Team Durant. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss the current debate about equity and equality in light of Alexis de Tocqueville’s reflections on the relationship among Native Americans, African Americans, and European Americans in 19th century American society. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Leading Off (1:06) - We discuss the Equality Act, which was approved by the House of Representatives this week. Links: National Review report; National Review editorial. Required Reading (4:45) - Prof. Corbin leads us through the first half of the last chapter of volume 1 of Democracy in America on the relationship among Native Americans, African Americans, and European Americans in 19th century American society as well as a chapter from Augustine’s City of God and Aristotle’s teaching on equality and justice. Reading for next week: the second half of volume 1, part 2, chapter 10 (pages 348-396 in the Mansfield/Winthrop edition). Headlines (32:40) - We discuss the difference between equity and equality as the terms are understood by the Biden Administration in light of the ideas of justice present at the time of the American founding and the early days of the Progressive movement. Links: Andrew McCarthy at National Review; President Biden’s equity executive order. Open the Gradebook (46:25) - With the first preseason baseball games upon us, we grade the most significant signings from this past offseason. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (52:17) - As the sports lull continues, we make our picks for the top four awards at this Sunday’s Golden Globe Awards. Link: Rotten Tomatoes Golden Globes predictions. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaToday Email: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.com Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We reflect on the ways that circumstances, laws, and mores, especially religion, influence American democracy.Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Leading Off (1:59) - We discuss the death of Rush Limbaugh. Links: Fox News reporting the death of Rush Limbaugh; Andrew Klavan; Ben Domenech; Mark Steyn. Required Reading (7:10) - We reflect on the ways that circumstances, laws, and mores, especially religion, influence American democracy, based on chapters 8 and 9 of part 2 of volume 1 of Democracy in America and selections from Cicero’s Laws. Assignment for next week: the first half of the last chapter of volume 1 of Democracy in America (pages 302-348 in the Mansfield/Winthrop edition).Headlines (31:30) - We talk about the republican virtues spoken of by Alexis de Tocqueville and American founders like John Adams and their counterparts today. Links: “America’s Can’t Do Spirit” at Axios; Rod Dreher, “The Snowplow Test”; Marty Makary in The Wall Street Journal. Open the Gradebook (45:40) - After a bad week for big-state governors, we grade the prospects of Andrew Cuomo, Gavin Newsom, and Greg Abbott continuing as the governors of New York, California, and Texas for another term. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (52:30) - Last week, we both predicted correctly that more than 55 ½ Senators would vote to convict Donald Trump in his second impeachment trial with Dave getting the number of votes to convict (57) exactly right. Dave is now 7-3 in his 2001 predictions; Matt 4-6. This week, we predict how many quarterbacks will be traded between now and the NFL draft--and where. Link: CBS Sports list of quarterbacks that might be traded. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaTodayEmail: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.comMatt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss Alexis de Tocqueville’s account of the merit and demerits of democracy and consider how cancel culture emerges in a democratic society.Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Leading Off (0:58) - We discuss the state of former president Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial. Link: Wall Street Journal impeachment trial coverage.Required Reading (07:02) - Professor Corbin leads us through part one of Alexis de Tocqueville’s case for and against democracy in volume 1, part 2, chapters 6-7 of Democracy in America and a discussion of the different types of democracy in book 4 of Aristotle’s Politics. Assignment for next week: chapter 9 (pages 264-291 in the Mansfield/Winthrop edition). Headlines (33:23) - We consider how cancel culture intersects with Alexis de Tocqueville’s worries about the power of the majority over the minds of democratic citizens. Links: Cato Institute study; Gallup poll on political ideologies; Pew Poll on the makeup of the Democratic Party; backstory of the firing of Don McNeil; Bret Stephens column; NY Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet’s first statement; NY Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet’s second statement. Open the Gradebook (51:21) - We discuss three ways to use your free time now that football is over and baseball hasn’t begun. Links: Andrea Mitchell tweet; Ben Shapiro response. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (56:49) - Dave hit on both of his Super Bowl picks while Matt went one for two. This week, we project the number of total votes to convict former President Donald Trump. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaTodayEmail: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.comMatt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss the role of the political parties and the media in shaping the landscape of contemporary American democracy. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Leading Off (1:24) - We discuss the Senate power-sharing agreement between Chuck Schumer and Mitch McConnell and the fate of the filibuster. Link: Politico on the power-sharing agreement.Required Reading (3:39) - Prof. Corbin leads us through the opening chapters of part 2 of volume 1 of Democracy in America and Plato’s reflections on the degeneration of democracy in The Republic, with a focus on the roles of parties, associations, and the press in American self-government. The assignment for next week: “On the Omnipotence of the Majority in the United States and its Effects” (pages 235-249 in the Mansfield/Winthrop edition).Headlines (32:02) - We consider the political consequences of the deep partisan divide and close elections with unstable majorities that characterize our contemporary politics. Links: Chuck Devore, writing at The Federalist; Robert Reich at The Guardian; Yuval Levin at National Review; National Review on the Cheney vote; Politico on the censure effort against Sen. Sasse. Open the Gradebook (46:55) - The San Francisco School Board recently decided to rename forty-four schools, including those named in honor of Abraham Lincoln and George Washington. We grade four ways to choose names that will be able to stay on the right side of history. Links: The Atlantic on the San Francisco school board decision; BabyNames.com random name generator. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (55:05) - Much to Matt’s disappointment and Dave’s delight, Punxatawney Phil saw his shadow last week, consigning the Northeast to six more weeks of winter. This week, we make our Super Bowl picks. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaTodayEmail: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.comMatt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We look at the strength of our federal system and national character in light of Tocqueville’s reflections on the US Constitution.Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Leading Off (01:26) - We discuss last week’s vote on Senator Rand Paul’s resolution to declare a post-presidency impeachment trial unconstitutional. Links: The Hill reporting on the Senate vote; National Review on the Senate vote; Senator Rubio.Required Reading (06:36) - Prof. Corbin leads us through a discussion of volume 1, part 1, chapters 6-8 of Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America and a selection from Thucydides’s History of the Peloponnesian War. The assignment for next week: DIA, part 2, chapter (pages 165-186 in the Mansfield/Winthrop edition). Headlines (31:43) - In light of Tocqueville’s discussion of the preconditions for maintaining free government over time, we discuss the state of our federal system and national character in the early days of the Biden Administration. Links: Rahm Emanuel on crises; National Review editorial on a “climate emergency”; Issues and Insights editorial on cost-benefit analysis; National Review reporting on the Mexico City policy executive order; President Biden’s signing statement; new Marist poll on public funding for abortion (note: 77%--not 70%--of Americans oppose public funding of international abortions). Open the Gradebook (48:10) - The NFL has replaced the Pro Bowl with a video game this year. In honor of that dubious choice, we grade the all-star games of the NBA, NFL, and MLB.Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (54:36) - After a week of cold weather in New York and only mildly warm weather in California, we predict whether Punxsutawney Phil will see his shadow on Groundhog’s Day and consign us to another six weeks of winter. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaTodayEmail: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.comMatt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss President Biden’s Inaugural Address in light of the tradition of local American democracy described by Alexis de Tocqueville.Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Leading Off (0:56) - We discuss the seventeen executive actions taken by President Biden on his first day of office. Link: CNN story from Inauguration Day. Required Reading (5:28) - Prof. Corbin leads us through a discussion of chapters 3-5 in volume one of Tocqueville’s Democracy in America and the first book of Homer’s Iliad. Assigned for next week: the second half volume 1, part 1, chapter 8 on the federal government.. Headlines (28:07) - We review the major themes of President Biden’s Inaugural Address, democracy and unity, in light of Tocqueville’s discussion of the democratic political life of early Americans. Links: Inaugural Address, Ben Domenech on unity at The Federalist.Open the Gradebook (48:43) - It’s championship weekend in the NFL - and for the second year in a row, the Patriots aren’t involved. We grade four ways to respond when your team is out of the playoffs. Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (55:17) - Last week, we picked the NFL’s divisional playoff games with limited success: Matt went 1-3 and Dave went 2-2. This week it’s the AFC and NFC Conference Finals. Though we both picked the favorites, Green Bay and Kansas City, we’re secretly rooting for a Bucs-Bills Super Bowl and one more chance for Tom Brady to break the hearts of Bills fans. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaTodayEmail: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.comMatt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We look at the opening chapters of Democracy in America and the state of the spirit of religion and the spirit in America today. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Leading Off (2:06) - We remark on the second impeachment of Donald Trump. Link: AP report on impeachment.Required Reading (6:07) - We discuss the Author’s Introduction to Democracy in America and the first two chapters of volume one of the work plus Genesis 1-3 and a selection from Hesiod’s Theogony. Links: Mansfield/Winthrop translation of Democracy in America.Headlines (29:56) - We talk about the role of Christians in the events of January 6 and, more broadly, the way that some leading evangelicals have connected the cause of Trump with the cause of Christ. Links: David French’s newsletter; Rod Dreyer on the Eric Metaxas-Charlie Kirk interview; Eric Metaxas-Charlie Kirk interview; Religion Unplugged report on the Jericho March; Rod Dreyer on the “MLK of the Deplorables”; Franklin Graham on the Republicans voting for impeachment (via Newsweek); The Atlantic on the Jericho March and January 6. Open the Gradebook (43:41) - We grade three possible snow day activities: sledding, a movie marathon, and Zoom school.Tocqueville's Crystal Ball (48:58) - With football season winding down, we make our final picks for the rest of the NFL playoffs. Final records for our fall sports picks: Matt: 33-30-1; Dave: 22-41-1. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Instagram: @DemocracyinAmericaTodayEmail: DemocracyinAmericaToday@gmail.comMatt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Biblical Citizen Let’s Roll with Kathleen and Brian Melonakos
We discuss the huge current challenges to our constitutional republic with Dr. David Corbin, national political science expert and Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, CA. We also look at Providence College from the viewpoint of a prospective student and its unique role here on the west coast. A voice of truth in a time of crisis! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We take a look back at the first season of the show and preview our plans for season 2 beginning January 16. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (3:21): Season 1 Recap - We discuss our favorite topics, writers, gradebook topics, and picks from the first season of our show. Part 2 (16:59): Season 2 Preview - We discuss our plans to study the great works in the history of political philosophy beginning in January and connect them to the headlines of the day. First reading assignment: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, Volume 1 Introduction. Part 3 (26:28): Open the Gradebook - We grade three ways to spend your DIA-Today listening time while we’re on our Christmas break: catching up on the required reading, discovering a new podcast, and sending us better ideas for the Gradebook segment (democracyinamericatoday@gmail.com). Part 3 (31:48): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Matt was 1-4 last week and Dave 2-3, leaving Matt 31-28 and Dave 20-39 overall (not 18-41, sorry!). This week, we pick: #14 Northwestern v. #4 Ohio State (CFB), #3 Clemson v. #2 Notre Dame (CFB), #1 Alabama v. #7 Florida (CFB), San Francisco 49ers at Dallas Cowboys (NFL), Kansas City Chiefs at New Orleans Saints (NFL). Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss the legal battles over the results of the presidential election and the lessons for election integrity from this campaign season. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (2:11): Headlines - We discuss the legal effort by the Trump campaign and others to challenge the results of the presidential election and the lessons for election integrity from this campaign season. Links: The Dispatch summary of election-related lawsuits; Andy McCarthy at National Review on the Texas lawsuit; Chip Roy on the Texas lawsuit; Andy McCarthy at National Review on Trump v. Raffensberger; Kelly v. Commonwealth of PA; Mark Levin on Pennsylvania mail-in ballot laws; James Bovard at The American Conservative on Election Integrity. Part 2 (33:16): Required Reading - Professor Corbin discusses Joshua Mitchell’s new book American Awakening: Identity Politics and Other Afflictions of Our Times in light of our recent discussion of our tribal American political culture. Part 3 (51:00): Open the Grade Book - As our students begin their final push to the end of the semester, we grade four finals week stress relievers: sports/exercise, therapy pets, food (pizza!), and movies (plus our #1 recommendation: sleep). Part 3 (56:39): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - More mediocre results last week as we each finished 2-2 (the Gonzaga-Baylor college basketball game was cancelled), leaving Dave 18-36 and Matt 30-24 overall. This week, we pick: Navy at Army (CFB), North Carolina at Miami (CFB), Arizona Cardinals at New York Giants (NFL), Baltimore Ravens at Cleveland Browns (NFL), and the MLS Cup Final between the Columbus and the Seattle Sounders. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss the history of religious freedom in light of the Supreme Court’s recent “free exercise” ruling in favor of NYC churches and synagogues. Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (1:51): Headlines - We discuss the Supreme Court’s recent decision setting aside Covid-related restrictions on attendance at religious assemblies in New York City in the broader context of the constitutional theory and practice of First Amendment protections of the “free exercise” of religion. Links: NYT report on Supreme Court “free exercise” decision; Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo; CNN report on Supreme Court California church decision; Andrew McCarthy at The Hill; Lawrence Tribe and Michael Dorf at USA Today; Michael McConnell and Max Raskin in the New York Times; Obergefell v. Hodges. Part 2 (25:17): Required Reading - Professor Corbin discusses the history of the “free exercise” of religion in Britain, colonial America, and the American founding era. Links: Westminster Confession (1647 edition); Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan; The Adopting Act of 1729 of the Synod of Philadelphia; Westminster Confession revisions of 1788; Resolution of the 1st General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of the USA and George Washington’s response; James Madison’s original religious liberty proposal. Part 3 (43:12): Open the Grade Book - We grade three Christmas season traditions: the live Christmas tree, Christmas cards, and outdoor lights and displays.Part 3 (50:50): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Unfortunately, the apple doesn’t fall too far from the tree as the Corbin kids went 1-4 with their sports picks last week, leaving Dave’s cumulative record at 16-34. Matt went 4-1 and is now 28-22 overall. In a desperation move, Dave adopted the Costanza rule this week, going with the opposite of his judgment on each pick: Texas A & M at Auburn (CFB), BYU at Coastal Carolina (CFB), Washington Football Team at Pittsburgh Steelers (NFL), Buffalo Bills at San Francisco 49ers (NFL), Gonzaga v. Baylor (NCAAB). Link: Seinfeld clip. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We discuss the election endgame, good news on the Covid-19 vaccine front, and the virtue of gratitude.Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (0:46): Headlines - We discuss the recently-announced Biden foreign policy team, the election lawsuits endgame, and the good news on the Covid-19 vaccine front. Links: Biden’s foreign policy team at The Hill; State-by-state election certification status at CNN; Dan McLaughlin at National Review; Covid vaccine news for Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca/Oxford; Matthew Continetti at National Review. Part 2 (22:47): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns three recent essays on gratitude. Links: Robert Royal at The American Mind; Yuval Levin on conservatism and gratitude; Yuval Levin with Adam White this week at National Review; The Wall Street Journal, “The Desolate Wilderness,” “The Fair Land.” Part 3 (39:49): Open the Grade Book - We grade Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and Giving Tuesday gifts for the person who has it all. Part 3 (46:12): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - After a week off, it’s back to the sports picks with Matt 24-21 overall so far and Dave 15-30. Dave brought in two assistants to make the calls for him this week: Notre Dame at North Carolina (CFB), Penn State at Michigan (CFB), NY Giants at Cincinnati Bengals (NFL), Chicago Bears at Green Bay Packers (NFL), and The Match between the teams of Phil Mickelson/Charles Barkley and Steph Curry/Peyton Manning. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines with special guest Pete Peterson, dean of the School of Public Policy at Pepperdine University.We discuss how to revive our civic life in the face of challenges posed by a lack of viewpoint diversity in academia and the public square and our ongoing epidemic of loneliness. Part 1 (1:20): Introduction - Pete Peterson discusses his pathway to Pepperdine University and the world of public policy. Part 2 (9:43): Viewpoint Diversity and Civic Life - We discuss the challenges faced by conservative professors and students in contemporary colleges and universities and the broader influence of the academy’s “eggshell” culture on the public square. Links: Philadelphia Statement; Shields and Dunn, Passing on the Right; Pete Peterson at RealClearPolicy; Yascha Mounk at The Atlantic. Part 3 (24:47): Loneliness and Civic Life - We discuss the epidemic of loneliness and the way that a communitarian conservatism could help combat it. Links: Michael Hendrix at RealClearPolicy; American Project essays at RealClearPolicy; Pepperdine’s School of Public Policy; The American Project; Senator Mike Lee’s Social Capital Project. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are those of the speaker.
We talk about the ongoing debate over the results of the presidential election and the role of citizens in a republic.Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (1:11): Headlines - We review Joe Biden’s victory speech, Donald Trump’s response, and the ongoing discussion of the integrity of the presidential election. Links: Joe Biden’s victory speech; Donald Trump statement on 11/7/20; Peter Alexander Tweet; Byron York’s summary of Trump statement to reporters; Leon Wolf at The Blaze; The Hill on Georgia hand recount; Paul Kengor at The American Spectator; Jim Geraghty at National Review; Reuters/Ipsos poll on who won the election. Part 2 (25:02): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns a 2017 essay by Pierre Manent, a recent essay by Bradley Birzer, and two chapters from volume 2 of Democracy in America. Links: Pierre Manent at First Things; Bradley Birzer at the Acton Institute; “Your Obedient Servant” from Hamilton: The Musical. Part 2 (47:33): Open the Grade Book - We grade Thanksgiving dinner menu options, including the John Madden special, the turducken. Part 3 (54:22): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - It was an ugly week of sports picks last week: Matt went 1-4 (22-18 overall); Dave went 2-3 (14-26 overall). This week we pick: Oregon State at Washington (CFB, Iowa at Minnesota (CFB), Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants (NFL), Buffalo at Arizona (NFL), and the best performer among Dustin Johnson, Justin Thomas, and Paul Casey at the Master’s (golf).Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
We talk about the results (so far) from the election and the way forward from here.Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (1:08): Headlines - We talk about the election results, the performance of the pollsters, President Trump’s allegations of fraud, and the way forward from here. Links: Trump’s statement; results of state legislatures; exit poll summary; RCP list of polls; Federalist article on Quinnipiac; Quinnipiac University Poll website; Andy McCarthy at National Review. Part 2 (38:18): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns the chapter on conspiracies from Machiavelli’s Discourses. Link: Damon Linker at The Week. Part 2 (47:19): Open the Grade Book - We grade some potential post-presidency plans for Donald Trump.Part 3 (53:59): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - While we wait to find out how well our battleground state picks turned out, we return to sports this week: #23 Michigan at #15 Indiana (CFB), #1 Clemson at #4 Notre Dame (CFB), NY Giants at Washington Football Team (NFL), New Orleans Saints at Tampa Bay Bucs (NFL), and the Breeders’ Cup Classic (horse racing). Matt’s cumulative record so far is 21-14; Dave’s is 12-23.Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (0:59): Headlines - We discuss the conservative case for and against voting for Donald Trump as featured in a National Review symposium and an essay by Pastor John Piper. Links: Andrew McCarthy for Donald Trump; Ramesh Ponnuru against Donald Trump; Charles C.W. Cooke: undecided; John Piper on character and policy; the Massachusetts Body of Liberties. Part 2 (31:10): Required Reading - We consider the character of Donald Trump in light of the ancient teaching of Xenophon on the tyrant’s search for peace and happiness. Links: Xenophon’s Hiero. Part 2 (40:57): Open the Grade Book - We grade the performances of Donald Trump and Joe Biden in the second presidential debate.Part 3 (48:43): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - After six weeks of picks, Matt’s record is 18-12 and Dave’s is 10-20. This week we pick: game three of the World Series between the Dodgers and Rays (MLB), #18 Michigan at #21 Minnesota (CFB), Seattle Seahawks at Arizona Cardinals (NFL), Dallas Cowboys at Washington Football Team (NFL), and #23 North Carolina State at #14 North Carolina (CFB). Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (1:41): Headlines - We discuss the case that’s been made for a Donald Trump presidency in light of republican principles. Links: list of newspapers endorsing Donald Trump; daily newspaper endorsements; Ouachita Citizen endorsement; Santa Barbara News-Press endorsement; John Fonte at The American Mind; Wilfred McClay’s Land of Hope. Part 2 (17:34): Required Reading - We apply foundational republican principles to the candidacy of Donald Trump, discuss the nature of justice with book 1 of Plato’s Republic, then focus on the role of the executive with lessons from the writings and presidencies of Abraham Lincoln, Calvin Coolidge, and Dwight Eisenhower. Links: Federalist 51 and 57; Lincoln’s “Second Inaugural Address”; Autobiography of Calvin Coolidge; Eisenhower’s “Farewell Address”; Paul Johnson’s Modern Times. Part 2 (48:06): Open the Grade Book - We grade the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings for Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett. Links: transcript of day 2 of Senate Judiciary Committee hearings; transcript of Biden town hall; transcript of Trump town hall. Part 3 (53:32): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - After five weeks of picking five different contests in five different sports, Matt leads with a record of 16-9 to Dave’s 8-17. This week we pick: Washington Football Team at New York Giants (NFL), #3 Georgia at #2 Alabama (College Football), game 5 of the National League Championship Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Atlanta Braves (MLB), the European Rugby Champions Cup final between the Exeter Chiefs and Racing 92, and game 6 of the American League Championship Series between the Houston Astros and Tampa Bay Ray (MLB). Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (2:25): Headlines - We discuss the case that’s been made for a Joe Biden presidency in light of republican principles. Links: New York Times endorsement of Joe Biden; George Will endorsing Biden, 2018 column against a Republican Congress, recent column on a Biden presidency.Part 2 (24:08): Required Reading - We examine foundational republican principles with the help of a number of Federalist essays, then focus on the role of the executive with historical examples from the Andrew Jackson and Harry Truman presidencies. Links: Truman at the National War College; Truman and Churchill; Truman and Henry Wallace; Truman and Douglas MacArthur. Part 2 (50:38): Open the Grade Book - We grade the vice presidential debate performances of Kamala Harris and Mike Pence. Part 3 (58:04): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - After four weeks of picking five different contests in five different sports, Matt leads with a record of 14-6 to Dave’s 7-13. This week we pick: Indianapolis at Cleveland (NFL), #7 Miami at #1 Clemson (College Football), game 5 of the NBA finals between the Miami Heat and the Los Angeles Lakers (NBA), game 5 of the Tampa Bay-New York Yankees AL Division Series (MLB), and the French Open final between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal. (Tennis). Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (1:40): Headlines - We discuss the dangerous, deep divisions in American politics and the prospects for promoting civility in the public square. Links: Our essay at The Federalist; Politico on political violence; Colleen Sheehan at The American Mind; RealClearFoundation on civic knowledge; Gallup poll on single-party government; RealClearEducation college free speech rankings; RealClearEducation on campus free speech; University of Chicago Statement on Academic Freedom. Part 2 (24:02): Required Reading - We discuss the roots of our present division and the prospects for reducing it with the help of two books from 1955: Louis Hartz’s The Liberal Tradition in America and Walter Lippmann’s The Public Philosophy. Part 2 (45:10): Open the Grade Book - We grade the first presidential debate and discuss our grading rubrics for next week’s vice presidential debate. Part 3 (52:46): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - After three weeks of picking five different contests in five different sports, Matt leads with a record of 11-4 to Dave’s 4-11. This week we pick: New England at Kansas City (NFL), #10 Texas A & M at #2 Alabama (College Football), game 2 of the NBA finals between the Miami Heat and the Los Angeles Lakers (NBA), game 3 of the St. Louis-San Diego Wild Card Series (MLB), and our first MLS game: NYCFC at Inter Miami. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (1:06): Headlines - We discuss the debate over whether and how Republicans should attempt to fill the Supreme Court opening created by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Gisburg in light of the events of 2016 and the history of post-Roe v. Wade Supreme Court nominations. Links: History of Supreme Court nominations; Justice Ginsburg in the New York Times; Dan McLaughlin at National Review; AP on 2016 v. 2020 hypocrisy; President Trump’s position; Former Vice President Biden’s Constitution Center speech; Senator Joe Biden in 1992 on C-Span; George Neumayr at The Hill; David French at Time; Yuval Levin at National Review; 2018 New York Times list of Supreme Court frontrunners. Part 2 (38:14): Required Reading - We discuss the proper role of the Supreme Court in our republican system with the help of Federalist 78 and Federalist 51. Part 2 (50:58): Open the Grade Book - In anticipation of the first presidential debate next week, we discuss our grading rubrics for Donald Trump and Joe Biden.Part 3 (59:36): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - After two weeks of picking five different contests in five different sports, Matt leads with a record of 8-2 to Dave’s 2-8. This week we pick: Green Bay at New Orleans (NFL), #23 Kentucky at #8 Auburn (College Football), game 5 of the Stanley Cup finals (NHL), game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals (NBA), and the final four National League playoff teams. Our bonus pick: how many people will watch the first presidential debate? Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (2:01): Headlines - We take a close look at the presidential race in three Big 10-country battleground states: Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. Links: RealClearPolitics Battleground polls; RealClearPolitics Create-Your-Own-Map; 538 article on Pennsylvania; Pennsylvania in 2012; Pennsylvania in 2016; Bucks County, PA; Wisconsin in 2012; Wisconsin in 2016; Juneau County Star-Times; Minnesota in 2012; Minnesota in 2016; Dakota County, MN. Part 2 (27:45): Required Reading - We discuss Yuval Levin’s Constitution Day essay at National Review: “What is Our Constitution?” and challenge the audience to read one Federalist essay each day between now and the election (#’s 1, 37-58, 62-66, 68-85 recommended). Note: the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was announced shortly after we had recorded the episode.Part 2 (46:00): Open the Grade Book - Looking beyond the election, we grade three groups on the center-right on how well they can contribute to the revitalization of our republic going forward.Part 3 (56:17): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Matt won the first Friday Five competition, getting four of five picks correct; Dave got one of five. This week we pick: New England at Seattle (NFL), Denver at LA Lakers (NBA), Liverpool at Chelsea (EPL), the winner of the US Open (golf), and how many games the Red Sox will win in their final series with the Yankees this year (MLB). Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (2:06): Headlines - We take a close look at the presidential race in three sunbelt battleground states: Florida, North Carolina, and Arizona. Links: RealClearPolitics Battleground polls; Politico backgrounder; 270towin election simulation; Politico on Florida; Politico on Arizona; 2016 presidential results in Florida, North Carolina, and Arizona; 2016 Senate results in Florida, North Carolina, and Arizona; Tillis video; McSally video. Part 2 (30:40): Required Reading - We suggest readings to prepare you for November 4, the day after the presidential election: Harry Jaffa’s 1990 essay, “The America Founding as the Best Regime,” and Ecclesiastes 2:18-26 with 1 Corinthians 15:58. Link: Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992).Part 2 (51:40): Open the Grade Book - With the Parks family in the middle of a kid birthday run and Dave’s next birthday coming soon, we discuss the virtues and vices of having your birthday in the fall, winter, spring, and summer.Part 3 (58:06): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Dave earned a narrow victory with last week’s NFL prediction by being slightly less wrong. This week we introduce the Friday Five: Five picks in five different sports for the weekend to come. Who will win Tampa Bay at New Orleans (NFL), Boston at Toronto (NBA), Las Vegas at Dallas (NHL), Houston at LA Dodgers (MLB), and Everton at Tottenham (EPL)? In case you can’t find anyone else to ask, we’ve got our answers for you. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (1:01): Required Reading - We go straight to the required reading, discussing key passages from Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America and their intersection with contemporary political culture. Links: Mansfield & Winthrop’s Democracy in America; Liberty Fund’s Democracy in America.Part 2 (42:28): Open the Grade Book -We grade some popular ways to celebrate Labor Day, including a backyard barbecue, going to a ballgame, going to a movie, and writing class lectures. Links: Alissa Wilkinson’s review and explainer of Christopher Nolan’s Tenet at Vox. Part 3 (49:56): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Last week we predicted (badly) how the Republican Convention would move the presidential poll numbers in the battleground states. This week, we check in on our predictions for the champions of the NBA, NHL, NFL, and MLB, our fantasy baseball teams, and make our calls for the opening game of the NFL season. Link: “Top Battleground States” polling at RealClearPolitics. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
The 2nd Anniversary of PA Grand Jury Report on Catholic Church Clergy Sexual Abuse ... GUEST Kevin Hayes and Gretchen Jezerc (JEZ-urk) ... Kevin Hayes is the President of Catholics for Change in our Church, and President of the Hayes Design Group - Architects ... + ... Gretchen Jezerc is the Vice-President of Catholics for Change in our Church, and VP of Marketing, First Insight Inc. Polarization: how we got to this place and how dangerous it is ... GUEST Jim Belcher ...President of Providence Christian College in Pasadena, CA Western PA Covid-19 Update ( ) ... GUEST Dr Rick Zimmerman ... is a COVID-19 researcher collaborating with the Centers for Disease Control See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The 2nd Anniversary of PA Grand Jury Report on Catholic Church Clergy Sexual Abuse ... GUEST Kevin Hayes and Gretchen Jezerc (JEZ-urk) ... Kevin Hayes is the President of Catholics for Change in our Church, and President of the Hayes Design Group - Architects ... + ... Gretchen Jezerc is the Vice-President of Catholics for Change in our Church, and VP of Marketing, First Insight Inc. Polarization: how we got to this place and how dangerous it is ... GUEST Jim Belcher ...President of Providence Christian College in Pasadena, CA Western PA Covid-19 Update ( ) ... GUEST Dr Rick Zimmerman ... is a COVID-19 researcher collaborating with the Centers for Disease Control See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (starts at 0:55): Headlines - We review the major themes of the Republican National Convention, including the Republican response to the Democratic case against Donald Trump and for Joe Biden. Link: Don Lemon on CNN. Part 2 (33:45): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns a selection from Herbert Hoover’s 1922 book, American Individualism, Hoover’s 1941 speech, “The Fifth Freedom,” and Robert Penn Warren’s 1946 novel, All the King’s Men. Part 3 (54:36): Open the Grade Book -We wrap up our coverage of the Democratic and Republican Conventions by giving an overall grade to each. Part 4 (1:00:01): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - After discussing our (relatively successful) predictions for the Republican Convention, we look ahead to the post-convention polls in the six “top battleground states.” Link: “Top Battleground States” polling at RealClearPolitics. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (starts at 3:52): Headlines - We do a night-by-night review of the Democratic National Convention, discussing its major speeches and overall themes. Part 2 (29:17): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns William James’s Pragmatism: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking, Herbert Croly’s The Promise of American Life, and the first chapter of Paul Johnson’s Modern Times. Link: Washington Examiner editorial on Joe Biden’s speech.Part 3 (52:23): Open the Grade Book - We grade three convention innovations on display last week: applause from a virtual Zoom wall of supporters, nightly award show-style hosts, and unsubtle speech backdrop metaphors (we’re looking at you, John Kasich). Part 4 (59:58): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - After Dave earned an acceptance speech bingo by hitting on all four of the words he predicted Joe Biden would use, we make our predictions for the upcoming Republican National Convention. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (1:17): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns two essays by Frank S. Meyer to understand the intellectual roots of modern conservatism and Meyer’s own contribution to that intellectual tradition, fusionism: “Western Civilization: The Problem of Freedom” (1968), published in In Defense of Freedom and Other Essays, and “Freedom, Tradition, and Conservatism,” chapter 1 of What is Conservatism? (1964).Part 2 (starts at 26:42): Headlines - Since the end of June, The American Conservative has been publishing a series of essays that, in the spirit of Meyer, ask the question “What is American Conservatism?” today. We discuss key elements of the debate within that symposium and the grounds for an intellectually-coherent and politically- viable contemporary conservatism. Link: “What is American Conservatism?” symposium at The American Conservative.Part 3 (45:12): Open the Grade Book - With three Power 5 college football conferences planning to play this fall and two having postponed football to the spring, we grade three plans for determining the national champion. Part 4 (51:13): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - With the Democratic National Convention set to dominate next week’s political headlines, we make predictions about the forthcoming speeches of Michelle Obama, Bill Clinton, Kamala Harris, and Joe Biden. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (starts at 3:43): Headlines - Covid-19 has led many states to expand absentee or mail-in voting in advance of the general election this November. We talk about how to preserve the integrity of the election and assure its legitimacy in the midst of our ongoing health crisis. Links: National Review report on the Wisconsin primary; AP report on President Trump’s position; Adam Laxalt on the Nevada law at Real Clear Politics; Public Interest Legal Foundation on the Nevada June primary; Ari Fleischer on voting by mail at Fox News; New York Post report on judge’s ruling concerning the Brooklyn primary; Fox News report on total number of NYC ballots invalidated; AP article on North Carolina election fraud; New York Times articles on North Carolina election fraud; Heritage Foundation election fraud database; Deroy Murdock at Fox News on election fraud; Trump tweet on postponing the election; AP reports Trump unwilling to commit to election result; Nancy Pelosi and Biden campaign comment on Trump leaving the White House; Transition Integrity Project study; New York Times and Byron York reports on the Transition Integrity Project study. Part 2 (35:48): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns Abraham Lincoln’s November 10, 1864 “Response to a Serenade” to discuss the importance of elections and the pathway of political magnanimity.Part 3 (42:49): Open the Grade Book - With schools starting soon, we propose and discuss our own animal-based grading scales. Part 4 (52:47): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Our NHL predictions weren’t great last week so we are back to politics, asking whether Ilhan Omar’s primary challenger has any chance for an upset. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines. Part 1 (starts at 1:46): Headlines -President Trump deployed federal agents to protect the federal courthouse in Portland in early July. We discuss the charges of authoritarianism that have followed. Links: Bill Hutchinson for ABC News; Oregon Public Broadcasting report; Reuters reports on ‘Operation Diligent Valor’; Ryan Cooper at The Week; Zach Beauchamp at Vox. Part 2 (17:00): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns The Authoritarian Personality by Theodor Adorno et al., “What is Authoritarianism?” by Hannah Arendt, and “The Return of Political Philosophy” by Pierre Manent. Part 3 (52:58): Open the Grade Book - As Dave gets ready to move back to California from Texas, we grade life in the Pacific, Mountain, Central, and Eastern time zones. Part 4 (1:00:53): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - We wrap up the show by predicting how many NHL play-in playoff series will end with a sweep and a bonus prediction of Joe Biden’s choice for the Democratic vice presidential nomination. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons. Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (starts at 2:09): Headlines - Major League Baseball is back (!) with the NBA, NHL, and NFL starting soon. We discuss the big stories for each league. Part 2 (27:12): Required Reading - Professor Corbin recommends Michael Lombardi’s Gridiron Genius while Professor Parks talks about Ted Williams’s The Science of Hitting and Michael Lewis’s Moneyball. Part 3 (35:41): Open the Grade Book - We grade the biggest stories of the MLB and NFL offseason: Mookie Betts’s trade from the Red Sox to the Dodgers and Tom Brady’s move from New England to Tampa Bay--plus the first four picks of each other’s fantasy baseball draft. (After two days, Dave’s Canyon Lake Texas are in 2nd place and Matt’s Suffern Sluggers are in 4th). Part 4 (47:10): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - We close out the show by making our picks for this year’s NHL, NBA, NFL, and MLB champions. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (starts at 2:27): Headlines - We discuss the politics and the science surrounding the debate over reopening schools this fall. Links: Noah Rothman at Commentary; Fox News report on the demands of the LA Teacher’s Union; Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos on CNN’s State of the Union; Florida’s Covid-19 data; Yahoo! News report on German school reopening study; Science reports on school reopenings worldwide.Part 2 (25:18): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns three classic texts, Plato’s Phaedrus, Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan, and C.S. Lewis’s The Abolition of Man, as we explore the purpose of education and the hazards of a risk-averse society. Part 3 (41:57): Open the Grade Book - We discuss the three leading contenders for the Democratic nomination for vice president, Senator Kamala Harris, former Ambassador Susan Rice, and Senator Tammy Duckworth, and grade the contribution each would make to the Biden ticket. Part 4 (51:18): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Matt won last week’s challenge when Tommy Tuberville defeated Jeff Sessions in the Alabama Republican Senate primary. This week: baseball’s back (!) and we predict the outcome of the first two games of the season.Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (starts at 3:20): Headlines - We discuss the reaction to President Trump’s July 3 address at Mt. Rushmore and the release of the film of Hamilton the same night. Links: President Trump’s speech; Zeeshan Aleem at Vox; Senator Duckworth; Charles C.W. Cooke at National Review; Roger Kimball at American Greatness; Ed Morales at CNN; Kyle Smith at National Review. Part 2 (21:23): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns two thoughtful pieces analyzing the character of President Trump and selections from three of Plutarch’s Lives. We discuss the role of spiritedness and patriotism in politics through these and two other readings. Links: Harvey Mansfield at Commentary; Carson Holloway at The New Criterion; William B. Allen at RealClearPublicAffairs. Part 3 (45:14): Open the Grade Book - We grade possible new names for the Washington Redskins and the Cleveland Indians. Links: Odds Released on Washington Redskins New Name; How did Cleveland's baseball team end up with the name 'Indians'? It's more complicated than you think; New odds released for Cleveland Indians' new name; Spiders now favored. Part 4 (51:18): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Dave won last week’s challenge when Joey Chestnut managed to down 75 hot dogs on the Fourth of July. This week: who will win the contentious Alabama Republican primary between former Auburn head football coach Tommy Tuberville and former Senator and Attorney General Jeff Sessions - and by how much? Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (starts at 1:08): Headlines - We discuss the recent efforts to remove, destroy, and deface monuments and memorials remembering key figures from American history. Links: Wilfred M. McClay at First Things; Rich Lowry at National Review; David Marcus at The Federalist. Part 2 (18:06): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns Fourth of July addresses from John Quincy Adams (July 4, 1821), Frederick Douglass (“What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” on July 5, 1852), Abraham Lincoln (“Special Message to Congress” on July 4, 1861), Calvin Coolidge (July 5, 1926), and Ronald Reagan (July 4, 1986). We talk about the principles of the Declaration of Independence and their ongoing significance for the American Republic. Part 3 (48:05): Open the Grade Book - Some have argued recently that the United States needs a new national anthem. We grade “The Star-Spangled Banner” and three possible replacements, including “America the Beautiful,” John Lennon’s “Imagine” (as suggested by one “Star-Spangled Banner” critic), and a surprise entry from Prof. Corbin. Part 4 (56:09): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Matt won last week’s challenge on the state of the presidential race. This week: will Joey Chestnut win the Coney Island hot dog eating contest again - and if so, how many hot dogs will he eat? Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (starts at 2:00): Headlines - We take a look at the criminal justice system through the lens of the changes in the crime rate and incarceration rate over the last 55 years. Links: FBI crime data; Bureau of Justice Statistics on the prison population; President Johnson's 1965 message to Congress; report of President Johnson’s Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice. Part 2 (27:05): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns William Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure and a selection from Pierre Manent’s latest book, Natural Law and Human Motives. Reflections on human nature, the pursuit of justice, and the preconditions for self-government. Part 3 (44:55): Open the Grade Book - July usually means family vacations. We grade four options for our Covid-19 summer: a trip to the big city, camping and visits to national parks, time at lakes and beaches, and a staycation. Part 4 (50:55): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - After a dispute over who won last week’s podcast downloads challenge, we project the state of the presidential race leading into the Fourth of July. Link: RealClearPolitics Presidential Campaign Betting Odds. Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
Christian college professors Matt Parks and David Corbin explore the ideas behind today's headlines.Part 1 (starts at 3:26): Headlines - “Cancel culture” continues to encourage snap judgments about historical figures, individuals, and institutions. We discuss the firing of Emmanuel Cafferty and the effort to demonetize The Federalist. Links: National Review’s “Cancel Counter”; Emmanuel Cafferty: local NBC News article; radio interview; The Federalist: NBC News report; David Harsanyi responds.Part 2 (19:37): Required Reading - Professor Corbin assigns Abraham Lincoln’s February 22, 1861 speech at Independence Hall and Adam Garfinkle on “Deep Literacy” at National Affairs. Reflections on the role of persuasion, literacy, humility, and mercy in the pursuit of justice. Part 3 (39:49): Open the Grade Book - As the baseball stalemate continues, we give (low) grades to the owners and Players Association. Part 4 (44:39): Tocqueville's Crystal Ball - Coming off his first victory, Dave asks: will we have more listeners in the next week from California and Texas or New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and Rhode Island?Opening and closing music is from the beginning of "Happy Life" by Ryan Andersen from his 2018 album, Americana volume 1. Available here. Licensed by Creative Commons.Matt Parks is an Associate Professor of Politics at The King’s College in New York City. David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and the Vice President of Academic Affairs at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California. All views expressed in this podcast are their own.
The Westminster Assembly (1643-53) was one of the most important ecclesiastical councils in the history of Reformed Protestantism, but until very recently it had received little in the way of scholarly attention. With the rediscovery of the minutes of the assembly, and their publication in 5 volumes by Oxford University Press, historians are now able to see inside its workings, and to understand how the doctrines of its famous confession of faith were established. Working on this exciting frontier of historical-theological scholarship, Whitney G. Gamble, who teaches biblical and theological studies at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, has published an outstanding account of the assembly's response to its theological bogeyman – the popularisation of the claim, made possible by the sudden collapse of censorship, that Christians had no moral obligations at all. Her new work, Christ and the Law: Antinomianism at the Westminster Assembly(Reformation Heritage Books, 2018), shows how seriously assembly members took the new antinomian threat, and how challenging was their effort to shut it down. Crawford Gribben is a professor of history at Queen's University Belfast. His research interests focus on the history of puritanism and evangelicalism, and he is the author most recently of John Owen and English Puritanism (Oxford University Press, 2016). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Westminster Assembly (1643-53) was one of the most important ecclesiastical councils in the history of Reformed Protestantism, but until very recently it had received little in the way of scholarly attention. With the rediscovery of the minutes of the assembly, and their publication in 5 volumes by Oxford University Press, historians are now able to see inside its workings, and to understand how the doctrines of its famous confession of faith were established. Working on this exciting frontier of historical-theological scholarship, Whitney G. Gamble, who teaches biblical and theological studies at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, has published an outstanding account of the assembly’s response to its theological bogeyman – the popularisation of the claim, made possible by the sudden collapse of censorship, that Christians had no moral obligations at all. Her new work, Christ and the Law: Antinomianism at the Westminster Assembly(Reformation Heritage Books, 2018), shows how seriously assembly members took the new antinomian threat, and how challenging was their effort to shut it down. Crawford Gribben is a professor of history at Queen’s University Belfast. His research interests focus on the history of puritanism and evangelicalism, and he is the author most recently of John Owen and English Puritanism (Oxford University Press, 2016). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Westminster Assembly (1643-53) was one of the most important ecclesiastical councils in the history of Reformed Protestantism, but until very recently it had received little in the way of scholarly attention. With the rediscovery of the minutes of the assembly, and their publication in 5 volumes by Oxford University Press, historians are now able to see inside its workings, and to understand how the doctrines of its famous confession of faith were established. Working on this exciting frontier of historical-theological scholarship, Whitney G. Gamble, who teaches biblical and theological studies at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, has published an outstanding account of the assembly’s response to its theological bogeyman – the popularisation of the claim, made possible by the sudden collapse of censorship, that Christians had no moral obligations at all. Her new work, Christ and the Law: Antinomianism at the Westminster Assembly(Reformation Heritage Books, 2018), shows how seriously assembly members took the new antinomian threat, and how challenging was their effort to shut it down. Crawford Gribben is a professor of history at Queen’s University Belfast. His research interests focus on the history of puritanism and evangelicalism, and he is the author most recently of John Owen and English Puritanism (Oxford University Press, 2016). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Westminster Assembly (1643-53) was one of the most important ecclesiastical councils in the history of Reformed Protestantism, but until very recently it had received little in the way of scholarly attention. With the rediscovery of the minutes of the assembly, and their publication in 5 volumes by Oxford University Press, historians are now able to see inside its workings, and to understand how the doctrines of its famous confession of faith were established. Working on this exciting frontier of historical-theological scholarship, Whitney G. Gamble, who teaches biblical and theological studies at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, has published an outstanding account of the assembly’s response to its theological bogeyman – the popularisation of the claim, made possible by the sudden collapse of censorship, that Christians had no moral obligations at all. Her new work, Christ and the Law: Antinomianism at the Westminster Assembly(Reformation Heritage Books, 2018), shows how seriously assembly members took the new antinomian threat, and how challenging was their effort to shut it down. Crawford Gribben is a professor of history at Queen’s University Belfast. His research interests focus on the history of puritanism and evangelicalism, and he is the author most recently of John Owen and English Puritanism (Oxford University Press, 2016). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Westminster Assembly (1643-53) was one of the most important ecclesiastical councils in the history of Reformed Protestantism, but until very recently it had received little in the way of scholarly attention. With the rediscovery of the minutes of the assembly, and their publication in 5 volumes by Oxford University Press, historians are now able to see inside its workings, and to understand how the doctrines of its famous confession of faith were established. Working on this exciting frontier of historical-theological scholarship, Whitney G. Gamble, who teaches biblical and theological studies at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, has published an outstanding account of the assembly’s response to its theological bogeyman – the popularisation of the claim, made possible by the sudden collapse of censorship, that Christians had no moral obligations at all. Her new work, Christ and the Law: Antinomianism at the Westminster Assembly(Reformation Heritage Books, 2018), shows how seriously assembly members took the new antinomian threat, and how challenging was their effort to shut it down. Crawford Gribben is a professor of history at Queen’s University Belfast. His research interests focus on the history of puritanism and evangelicalism, and he is the author most recently of John Owen and English Puritanism (Oxford University Press, 2016). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Westminster Assembly (1643-53) was one of the most important ecclesiastical councils in the history of Reformed Protestantism, but until very recently it had received little in the way of scholarly attention. With the rediscovery of the minutes of the assembly, and their publication in 5 volumes by Oxford University Press, historians are now able to see inside its workings, and to understand how the doctrines of its famous confession of faith were established. Working on this exciting frontier of historical-theological scholarship, Whitney G. Gamble, who teaches biblical and theological studies at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, has published an outstanding account of the assembly’s response to its theological bogeyman – the popularisation of the claim, made possible by the sudden collapse of censorship, that Christians had no moral obligations at all. Her new work, Christ and the Law: Antinomianism at the Westminster Assembly(Reformation Heritage Books, 2018), shows how seriously assembly members took the new antinomian threat, and how challenging was their effort to shut it down. Crawford Gribben is a professor of history at Queen’s University Belfast. His research interests focus on the history of puritanism and evangelicalism, and he is the author most recently of John Owen and English Puritanism (Oxford University Press, 2016). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Westminster Assembly (1643-53) was one of the most important ecclesiastical councils in the history of Reformed Protestantism, but until very recently it had received little in the way of scholarly attention. With the rediscovery of the minutes of the assembly, and their publication in 5 volumes by Oxford University Press, historians are now able to see inside its workings, and to understand how the doctrines of its famous confession of faith were established. Working on this exciting frontier of historical-theological scholarship, Whitney G. Gamble, who teaches biblical and theological studies at Providence Christian College in Pasadena, California, has published an outstanding account of the assembly’s response to its theological bogeyman – the popularisation of the claim, made possible by the sudden collapse of censorship, that Christians had no moral obligations at all. Her new work, Christ and the Law: Antinomianism at the Westminster Assembly(Reformation Heritage Books, 2018), shows how seriously assembly members took the new antinomian threat, and how challenging was their effort to shut it down. Crawford Gribben is a professor of history at Queen’s University Belfast. His research interests focus on the history of puritanism and evangelicalism, and he is the author most recently of John Owen and English Puritanism (Oxford University Press, 2016). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dr. Whitney Gamble speaks about antinomianism and the Westminster Assembly. She has written Christ and the Law: Antinomianism at the Westminster Assembly, which is part of the Studies on the Westminster Assembly series published by Reformation Heritage Books. Dr. Gamble is associate professor of biblical and theological studies at Providence Christian College. She holds a PhD in historical and systematic theology from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, a master of theological studies from Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and a B.A. in biblical studies from Geneva College in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. Dr. Gamble is a frequent guest on The White Horse Inn podcast, speaking on issues ranging from the doctrine of justification to the theology of Christmas movies: https://www.whitehorseinn.org/host/whitney-gamble/ Her first book, Christ and the Law: Antinomianism at the Westminster Assembly, is forthcoming with Reformation Heritage Books. Along with seventy other leading scholars from around the world, she is contributing a chapter in the forthcoming multi-volume series, The History of Scottish Theology, published by Oxford University Press. https://www.historyscottishtheology.div.ed.ac.uk
An interview with Dr. David Corbin of Providence Christian College in Pasadena, CA. What is the state of higher education in the USA. -A stunning and perceptive answer--- What is the place of the -Great Books- in a Christian College- How does each part of the curriculum relate to God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit- Why are Liberal Arts and -The Trivium- so important to healthy Christian education- How does Christian faith expand the mind rather than narrow it. A rich 55 minutes on the importance of raising our children and young adults to think under the Lordship of Jesus Christ.
This week, we welcome Dr. Ryan McIlhenny, author of the book Kingdoms Apart ? Engaging the Two Kingdoms Perspective. Dr. McIlhenney is Associate Professor of History and Humanties at Providence Christian College. Dr. McIlhenney received a B.A. in history from Covenant College, an M.A. in history from California State University, East Bay, and later a Ph.D. in the same subject from the University of California, Irvine.