They Had Been Images of God: IV – Cataclysm
In which we explore the first civilization, its wickedness, the Nephilim, the cataclysm of the Flood, and the beginning of recorded history.
Part 5 of 6 on the beginning of history.
Read MoreIn which we explore the first civilization, its wickedness, the Nephilim, the cataclysm of the Flood, and the beginning of recorded history.
Part 5 of 6 on the beginning of history.
Read MoreExploring life after the Fall, what we can know of Adam and Eve after their exile from Eden, and with particular focus on Cain and Abel.
Part 4 of 6 on the beginning of history considered within Catholic creationism.
Read MoreIn which we cover the Fall, disobedience, sin and death entering the world, and the transformation of creation.
Part 3 of 6 exploring the beginning of history within a Catholic creationist framework.
Read MoreIn which we cover the formulation of Adam from the slime, the creation of Eve from his rib, and the world before the Fall.
Part 2 of 6 exploring Biblical creationism within a Catholic framework.
Read MoreWho was the first man, Adam? When did he live? What was the world like, not merely before the Flood, but before even the Fall? Is his life relevant to us?
Part 1 of 6 exploring Biblical creationism within a Catholic framework.
Read MoreThe Great Reset is just about here. Welcome to the future, wagie.
Read MoreCOVID restrictions are back, for some of us, and with 2021 approaching, it’s time to see whether our anarcho-tyranny has an end in sight.
Read MoreErnst Junger provides a detailed account of WWI trench warfare, greatly expanding upon The Storm of Steel. Here he includes meditations on nationalism, technology, and daily life on the front: insights contemporary reactionaries could learn from.
Read MoreWith Live Not by Lies, Rod Dreher continues in much the same vein that his 2016 effort The Benedict Option left off: a practical stab at dealing with the severe cultural rot that lurches ominously toward outright persecution. Where his previous book used the Benedictine Order and its impact on medieval Europe as its framework, Dreher here focuses on the Soviet empire’s totalitarianism and the efforts Christian dissidents used to survive its reign of terror.
Read MoreFirst published in 1920, Ernst Junger famously depicts the brutal trench warfare of WWI in his visceral memoir.
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