Click on the titles to go to the linked articles…
Jordan Peterson pressed on whether he is Christian or not (10 min)
Jordan Peterson has seemingly been on the cusp of repenting and believing for a long time, speaking glowingly about both Jesus and His Word. But past examinations of Jordan’s beliefs have shown him to be Jungian rather than Christian. So has anything changed?
Well, in late July he talked with John Rich, best known for being half of the country/pop duo Big & Rich. I only recently learned that Rich professes to be Christian (during his Tucker Carlson appearance) as the duo’s best known song, Save a Horse (Ride a Cowboy), wouldn’t have you thinking so. But in a July 26 interview on Peterson’s podcast, Rich pressed Canada’s most famous psychologist on whether he is or isn’t a Christian. The video below hits the highlights, but if you want to listen to the whole 90-minute original, click here.
Was Jesus just a good moral teacher?
As John Stonestreet notes and as C.S. Lewis did before him (and as Jordan Peterson should consider – see above), you can’t call Jesus a good teacher if you don’t acknowledge Him as God.
Limiting my phone expanded my view of God
“I’ll always remember summer 2024 as the first ‘real-world summer’ of my adult life—the summer I fundamentally changed how I interact with my smartphone. I left social media behind in 2022, but according to my screen-time reports, I was still spending around two hours a day on my phone. Two hours. I have a full-time job and two kids. Surely I could have been doing something else with all that time…”
11 statistical tips for a healthy marriage
Some great points here for couples to ponder, whether these are reminders or entirely new thoughts for you.
The great myth of the Sexual Revolution: you will always be young
Jonathon Van Maren reports on how egg-freezing for women employees is becoming a common thing, promising that they can first establish their career and then have children later. But it is a false promise.
The myth of “Junk DNA“
Evolutionists predicted that much of our DNA would be junk – it was just the remnants of our long-ago evolutionary ancestors.
Creationists and Intelligent Design proponents made a very different prediction: we’d find functions for this “Junk DNA” since we are fearfully and wonderfully made.
Guess which prediction came true?
It’s important to note, too, that the secular assumptions discouraged inquiry – atheism stymied science, and an acknowledgment of a Creator furthered science.