22 October 2025

MAGA Kuyper? Why the Dutch Polymath Would Not Wear the Hat

Cateclesia Forum has just published my article: MAGA Kuyper? Why the Dutch Polymath Would Not Wear the Hat. An excerpt:

If the American nation is in a covenant relationship with God, along the lines of ancient Israel, we would then have to inquire which institution is responsible to enforce this covenant’s terms. A nation, especially when conceived in undifferentiated fashion, can never be a responsible agent but only an amalgam of pluriform social structures bound loosely together by certain common elements, such as shared culture and language. Yet generally the nationalist assumption is that this responsibility belongs to the state, viewed as the highest agent in that nation. This again makes entirely too much of the state as an institution, in addition to misapprehending its normative structure as led by public justice—a proximate justice falling well short of God’s final judgement.

Read the entire article here.

21 October 2025

Faith Seeking Understanding interview

Last week Allan R. Bevere interviewed me on the subject of my latest book, Citizenship Without Illusions. The interview, which forms a part of his Faith Seeking Understanding podcast, has now been posted online and can be viewed immediately below:

20 October 2025

Stop censoring unpopular speech

A recent controversy over a billboard here in Hamilton prompted me to pen this article: Stop censoring unpopular speech. An excerpt:

[T]he use of psychological language to censor unpopular speech has become commonplace as we near the second quarter of the century. A phobia is generally thought to be an irrational fear properly addressed by therapeutic means. In contemporary parlance, however, a phobia is something to be suppressed, often by political means. Accordingly, the term love is misused as a way of stifling needed discussion of an issue of obvious importance to families with minor children.

Incidentally, I have spoken remotely to the staff of the Association for Reformed Political Action, referenced in the article, several times in recent years. 

Correction:  ARPA's Levi Minderhoud has made a correction to this statement of mine in the article: "It is true, of course, that gender reassignment surgery is not permitted for minors." Here is Minderhoud:

Aside from Alberta, that isn't true for most of Canada (which makes this all the more shocking). Every six days on average, one teenage girl has a "gender-affirming double mastectomy" in Canada (sources: Let Kids Be, National Post, attached CIHI data). Bottom genital surgeries generally are not performed on minors, but even there CIHI has stated that at least one minor has received such a bottom surgery in the last few years. Nova Scotia seems to be a big culprit here.  

Thanks to Minderhoud for setting the record straight. 

15 October 2025

Recent activities for October 2025

I have now posted my Global Scholars Canada newsletter for October 2025. This includes recent travels within Canada and to the US, a response to Canada's recognition of Palestine, a forthcoming online discussion of Christian Nationalism, and the completion of my guitar journey through the Genevan Psalter. Thanks again for your ongoing support for my work! I deeply appreciate it.

10 October 2025

ICE and the rule of law

Three months ago I posted on a topic that has now been published in somewhat modified form in another venue: ICE and the rule of law. An excerpt:

Until recently, I assumed that the rule of law was firmly rooted in the political cultures of the English-speaking countries, uniquely heir to the tradition of the common law, Magna Carta, the Bill of Rights of 1689, and numerous precedents which together are the shared birthright of our several countries. A key principle of this heritage is that the law applies to our rulers as much as to ordinary citizens, who enjoy constitutional protections against abuse by government officials. Such protections apply as well to non-citizens who have entered the country legally. Moreover, even illegal immigrants must be treated in accordance with their shared humanity. How do we know who is who? Great care needs to be taken to distinguish rightly between legal residents and illegal immigrants. Cutting corners for a supposedly greater good inevitably leads to miscarriage of justice.

Read the entire article here

09 October 2025

So many stars

My latest column in Christian Courier describes my boyish fascination with astronomy. In the print edition the title is "So Many Stars," an allusion to this 1967 popular song by the late Sergio Mendes. The online title is: I saw four Galilean moons circle Jupiter. An excerpt:

When I was around 10 years old, my parents bought me a telescope. Although my major adult interests would be in the social sciences, arts and humanities, as a child I had a pronounced affinity for astronomy. Something about those bright celestial objects easily fired the imagination of a schoolboy. . . . I collected a small library on the subject, trying to memorize the constellations and to identify them in the night sky. During the wee hours of the morning, my ever so patient mother would get up with me and join me as I set up my telescope and attempted to view the moon, the planets, and the stars from our suburban front garden.

Read the entire article here.

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