Listen "Socialism or Christian Reconstruction"
Episode Synopsis
This episode centers on Mark Rushdoony’s new biography of his father, R. J. Rushdoony, and why his life story matters for Christian Reconstruction. Mark explains how the book grew out of earlier biographical essays and expanded into a heavily documented historical “touchstone,” drawing on journals, letters, and family papers. He and Martin Selbrede highlight the deep Armenian and Presbyterian roots that shaped Rushdoony’s historic, kingdom-centered worldview—Armenia as the first Christian nation, his grandparents’ survival of the massacres, and his father’s ministry example. This background formed Rushdoony’s big-picture perspective on history, culture, and the certainty of Christ’s advancing kingdom, as well as his insistence that a man’s moral and religious commitments can’t be separated from his ideas. They also discuss the growing interest among younger Christians in Rushdoony’s uncompromising, whole-life application of Scripture at a time when many churches and previous generations have compromised or become syncretistic.
The conversation also deals frankly with opposition, misunderstandings, and the price Rushdoony paid for telling hard truths, especially in academia and the broader church world. Mark includes painful family episodes and courtroom transcripts to correct myths and show how Rushdoony not only wrote about Christian education and liberty, but actively defended Christian schools and homeschooling in key court cases and congressional hearings. Both Mark and Martin emphasize Rushdoony’s personal character—his joy, lack of bitterness despite harsh attacks, his focus on God’s issues rather than personal grievances—and his deliberate turn from academic elites to “intelligent laymen.” They argue that all Christians, not just scholars, are called to scholarship in the Isaiah 50:4 sense: having “the tongue of the learned” to speak a timely word, stand on the shoulders of faithful predecessors, and continue the kingdom work Rushdoony only began to “scratch the surface” of. The book is presented as both a clearing of the record and a call for readers to see their own lives and family histories within God’s providential, long-term kingdom story.
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