Andrew Sandlin has recently posted this about American exceptionalism, and since he mentioned me (lumped in with Obama and McLaren, ouch), I thought I should say something. Of course I have no problems whatever with an appropriate patriotism, qualified as Andrew qualifies it. I made similar points in the post to which Andrew links. Americans …
Folly at the Top
“Stupidity generally has the run of high places (Eccl. 10:5-7). Egalitarianism proceeds from the top, and a denial of nobility is the folly of nobles” (Joy at the End of the Tether, p. 98).
One Form of Pulpit Abuse
“Lloyd-Jones protested against the use of the pulpit as what he called ‘a coward’s castle’ into which a man might retreat to vent his spleen on his enemies or simply as a place where he can express his own view” (Sargent, A Sacred Anointing, p. 149).
Getting Some Balance in There
We have had a really good response to the videos we have been posting over at CanonWIRED. In the Ask Doug segments, we have received a lot of good questions, but some might be wondering something like, “Yeah, that’s true, and that point, that’s good . . . but where’s the beauty? That Wilson guy …
Changing My Name to Van Wilsma
A few weeks ago I taught at a conference in Boise together with my friend Alan Burrow, and the audio from that conference is now available here. Here is a good thing. Some Canadian Reformed theologians interact with some questions related to the FV, and they do so as adults. If anybody else is watching, …
Which Explains All the Typonis
In discussing the Right, the Left, and the Anas, Hunter begins his next chapter by noting the fact that “the three competing myths discussed here, and the political theologies that derive from them, are all held passionately by people of the same faith community” (p. 176). But in doing this, Hunter does something else that …
Of Cannonballs and Cow Patties
I had a great time with this article by my brother — Gordon Wilson — who teaches science here at NSA. The intricacies of God’s incredible design work are found absolutely everywhere. How many times does God try to make us exclaim “No way!”

