| Pursuing: | justice, mercy, and humility. |
| Supporting: | love, joy, peace, patience, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, and sobriety. |
| Opposing: | secularism, humanism, anti-family sex, bigotry, institutionalized religion, autonomy, totalitarianism, and archism. |
God is the perfect Father. This means, among other things, that He is ridiculously easy to please, and impossibly difficult to satisfy. He is here with us today, and He rejoices with us. He is delighted with us. [O]ur hearts are full and overflowing, and that is how He designed it to work.
Wedding exhortation to Caleb and Katie, Douglas Wilson
“The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of other people’s money”
- Margaret Thatcher
Dear Heathen:
The Lord Jesus Christ hath promised that the time shall come when all the ends of the earth shall be His kingdom. And God is not a man that He should lie nor the son of man that He should repent. And if this was promised by a Being who cannot lie, why do you not help it to come sooner by reading the Bible, and attending to the words of your teachers, and loving God, and, renouncing your idols, take Christianity into your temples? And soon there will not be a Nation, no, not a space of ground as large as a footstep, that will want a missionary. My sister and myself have, by small self-denials, procured two dollars which are enclosed in this letter to buy tracts and Bibles to teach you.
(June 23, 1833. A letter to the “heathen” from ten-year-old A.A. Hodge and his sister Mary Elizabeth, given to J.R. Eckard, a Princeton Seminary graduate who was to go to Ceylon. Quoted in Princeton Seminary: Faith and learning 1812-1868, v. 1, p. 193).
I have often quoted that glorious passage in Ambrose Bierce’s Devil’s Dictionary, where a junior officer in the War Between the States was being reprimanded by the general for his unit’s reluctance to charge. “Sir,” the hapless lieutenant replied, “I am convinced that any further demonstration of valor on the part of my troops will bring them into contact with the enemy.”
The early Reformers were not like this at all. They were about the most un-gnostic bunch ever assembled in the history of Christendom. They were the most Christ-loving, world-affirming, money-making, beer-drinking, sword-wielding, music-making, kingdom-overthrowing, love-making, poetry-writing bunch of Christians the world had ever seen up to that point. And they kept it up, by and large, for several centuries.
- Doug Wilson, A Tornado With Boots
“When there are so many problems in life, I should put myself on the scale?”
- Yitta Schwartz, who died last month at 93, leaving behind perhaps 2,000 living descendants.