Evangelical Elitists left ecclesiastical positions for leftwing parachurch ministries funded by progressive Dark Money. They'll be trying to come back.
Agreed as to all of the foregoing, with this caveat. Smart leftists will understand that controlling six seminaries that educate 1/3 of all U.S. seminary students -- as well as other institutions that may be cheaper to control -- is valuable. To them, the pulpit is another "screen" like your TV and your phone, and they want to dominate it. They won't stop.
And that means there will be more money. Maybe not from the same people and maybe not tomorrow. But this won't go away.
It would be well worth re-reading Gary North's "Crossed Fingers: How the Liberals Captured the Presbyterian Church". Our secular leftist friends have been at this for more than a century more than we've been any good at fighting them. Except Pressler and Patterson, of course.
It was pretty hip of you to use that wholesome television show "Always Sunny" to make a point. "South Park" and "Two and a Half Men" could be similar sources for future articles.
Memes have become a common language, because they are simple and their context widely understood in culture. I try to communicate in a way that people understand.
This is an excellent article.
Agreed as to all of the foregoing, with this caveat. Smart leftists will understand that controlling six seminaries that educate 1/3 of all U.S. seminary students -- as well as other institutions that may be cheaper to control -- is valuable. To them, the pulpit is another "screen" like your TV and your phone, and they want to dominate it. They won't stop.
And that means there will be more money. Maybe not from the same people and maybe not tomorrow. But this won't go away.
It would be well worth re-reading Gary North's "Crossed Fingers: How the Liberals Captured the Presbyterian Church". Our secular leftist friends have been at this for more than a century more than we've been any good at fighting them. Except Pressler and Patterson, of course.
It was pretty hip of you to use that wholesome television show "Always Sunny" to make a point. "South Park" and "Two and a Half Men" could be similar sources for future articles.
Memes have become a common language, because they are simple and their context widely understood in culture. I try to communicate in a way that people understand.