1. The Core of Romans 13 Romans 13:1–7 teaches that government is ordained by God to maintain order, justice, and peace in society. It emphasizes that rulers are to “punish those who do evil and praise those who do good” (Romans 13:3–4). This is a secular function: to protect citizens from harm, uphold justice, and […]
Category: Practical Tools and Rhetorical Defense
The arguments, scripts, and vocabulary you need when Christian nationalism shows up in real conversations. How‑to guides, rebuttal cards, and field manuals for answering the most common claims—without losing the room or sounding anti‑Christian. Every article in this category translates the historical and legal record into specific moves a reader can use today and turns “I know this is wrong, but I don’t know what to say” into “Here’s exactly how to answer that.”
Why Public Ten Commandments Displays Are Offensive to Non‑Christians
Summary The Ten Commandments are often presented as neutral, universal moral rules that everyone should feel comfortable seeing in schools, courtrooms, and other public spaces. But the very first commandment divides the world into those who worship the Christian god and everyone else, and treats the second group as morally suspect by definition. When that […]
Why It’s Necessary to Speak Up About Christian Encroachment
Summary Christian encroachment is not just a matter of Christians being visible in public life. It is a pattern of laws, policies, and cultural pressure that quietly push one group’s religious doctrines into the rules everyone has to live under. When that happens, people who don’t share those beliefs—especially women, LGBTQ+ people, and religious minorities—are […]