I wrote a book review for the American Historical Review but did not experience the joy of reviewing books until I reviewed James Baird's King of Kings.
Defenders of Christian nationalism pretened to be based but take great offense when they receive snark.
Do you think they are sufficiently resilient to submit to a Christian government?
@markdtooley@ReallyOldLife And to get even further into these conversations, this conversation with @McGillPatterson about Hungary specifically and Catholic postliberalism/integralism more broadly was also super fascinating. These three conversations form a very interesting trilogy https://t.co/68f4QFEhYK
To get a contrasting perspective, I also recommend this conversation with myself, @markdtooley, and @ReallyOldLife on postliberal protestantism more generally https://t.co/wo4OyMB2Fv
@CamdenBucey "provides some helpful analysis regarding this rather pivotal episode in the life of Geerhardus Vos (1862-1949) and his 1886 refusal to join Abraham Kuyper at the Free University in Amsterdam." https://t.co/9c4r7RzYKO
"Michigan’s native elk herd was gone by 1875, the victim of unregulated hunting and deforestation. Yet the 7 elk released near Wolverine in 1918 have multiplied into a herd of more than 1,000 animals....the state has allowed a limited hunt since 1984" https://t.co/FWDlI7cUNf
"Although [it] is a slapstick comedy and No Country for Old Men is a neo-western thriller, they are both madcap manhunt films about the search for a prized MacGuffin; it’s just that Raising Arizona is about a kidnapped infant"
https://t.co/kqzABTQOEG
checks notes - true
#Machen "Trained at Johns Hopkins and Princeton, he became known for defending the reliability of Scripture, the reality of Christ’s miracles, and the necessity of the new birth." https://t.co/MubZomCXAL