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Adam McIntosh Responds to Doug Wilson’s Article

In a recent post, Doug Wilson, someone I deeply respect argued–in some ways persuasively–that Paul’s rhetoric in last night’s debate proves that Ron Paul’s formal position is…secularist. The article makes some good points, and I have argued elsewhere that Ron Paul is a product of Lutheran pietism, and Baptist privatization worldview thinking. At the same time, Paul’s rhetoric, though flawed, and though not what Kuyperians like us would prefer is still to be preferred over the false and statist rhetoric of other candidates. In this sense, Adam McIntosh’s comments add a helpful caution:

Sure, it would be great if Paul was a Van-Tillian presuppositionalist and went all Bahnsen-y on that stage, but it would also be great for him to win the presidency. (Not saying a Van-Tillian can’t win the presidency, but we sometimes have to be wise like serpents in this immoral age, right?)

It’s hard for me to take this isolated incident as something to criticize Paul for. If anyone has ever read his books, he is unashamedly a Christian. He frequently quotes the Bible & Church history to support his platform. Sure, he buys into the whole natural law thing, but who doesn’t nowadays? Let’s remember to not adopt the purist attitude.

Paul has frequently defended his Christianity in interviews and on TV. He specifically said that he “gets to God through Christ.” The difference between Paul and Santorum is that Paul admits that he doesn’t want to use his faith as a tool for political gain. He references Matthew 6:5-6 as an example of what he tries to avoid. And for anyone who has seen his 2011 Values Voter speech, it couldn’t be clearer! What other candidate openly talks about Biblical stories and theology? Only Paul.

I certainly don’t understand praising someone for using better rhetoric, when that rhetoric is empty and irrelevant to the person’s agenda and voting record. Who is being more consistent with his stated worldview? Paul, by a long shot. There is a huge difference between using yourself to promote Christianity, and using Christianity to promote yourself.

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Abraham Kuyper and the Secularization of Society

Kuyper did not believe in the churchification of the Dutch society. He believed that the various spheres are independent of one another, though all spheres submit to the authority of Christ. He did not attempt to form an ecclesiastical bureaucracy, but he strove to obey God in whatever capacity he was in. Kuyper believed in a voluntary society of Christ’s followers who revolutionized society through example.<>созданиезарегистрировать на яндексе

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Rand Paul on John Stossel discussing State of the Union address

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Provoking Cuba to War in the 1960’s

A 2001 report by David Ruppe reveals this fascinatingly evil report.<>москва поисковое продвижение ов

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Isolationism, Non-Interventionism, Policing the World?

John Stossel’s great report is an excellent summary of Kuyperian Commentary:

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Open Relations with Cuba

Mulshine is at it again arguing that Ron Paul is correct on the Cuba question. But to me, I confess I no longer wish to smoke fake Cubans, I want the same thing Fidel smokes.<>продвижение а статьями

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How to Threaten the Iranian Regime

The increasing growth of Christianity in Iran is viewed as a threat to Iran’s regime, whose strategy is to eliminate any potential challenge to its sovereignty, Clay told TGC. However, their approach appears to be having opposite effect. An Iranian pastor recently told International Christian Concern that rather than fighting persecution, “Iranian church leaders have accepted it and are using it to their advantage. In fact, the church is thriving under persecution.”

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Gary Johnson’s Critique of Newt Gingrich on Drug Legalization

“On drug policy alone, I am beginning to see what Rick Santorum means when he talks about the former Speaker having an idea a minute,” Johnson surmised. “We are talking about millions of Americans’ lives here, and having positions ranging from embracing medical marijuana to the death penalty for possessing a small amount of that same substance is astounding both in its hypocrisy and its inconsistency.”

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2012/01/23/gary-johnson-hammers-newt-for-hypocrisy-on-executing-marijuana-users/#ixzz1kKejH7O4<>wi-fi-pirate.comhome yandex

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Christian Political Party and Abraham Kuyper

McKendree Langley observes that though Kuyper desired a Christian political party in the Netherlands, yet it is no longer reasonable to expect such in the United States. Why is this the case? No reason is given. Politics has essentially been given over to be used by any other religious expression, but Christianity. This perspective is incoherent.

Much of modern political discussions find a parallel in the ecclesiastical discussions about reforming or re-starting. Many in the Anglican tradition attempted to reform their churches from within, while others attempted to re-start. There is a valid thrust in both approaches. There is a strategic model that can be contextualized. However, the goal is still a Christian political party.<>cheat-na-dengi.comпродвижение а с нуля

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Mansfield on NDAA

Stephen Masnfield offers a sharp critique of the NDAA.<>техническая поддержка а битрикспроверка pagerank

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