In this sharp and sobering meditation, R.J. Rushdoony draws a striking parallel between physical handicap and the deeper, often more damaging affliction of the soul—a crippled mind. Using the example of patients who demand from corrective shoes what only healing can give, he critiques the modern tendency to seek salvation in politics, programs, or laws rather than in Christ. True freedom, Rushdoony insists, cannot come from external fixes but only through the inner transformation brought by the g...
In this sharp and sobering meditation, R.J. Rushdoony draws a striking parallel between physical handicap and the deeper, often more damaging affliction of the soul—a crippled mind. Using the example of patients who demand from corrective shoes what only healing can give, he critiques the modern tendency to seek salvation in politics, programs, or laws rather than in Christ. True freedom, Rushdoony insists, cannot come from external fixes but only through the inner transformation brought by the gospel.
View more