Almost immediately in the aftermath of the assassination of Charlie Kirk, there have been religious and spiritual types calling on their followers and fellow ‘believers’ to offer ‘grace’ and ‘forgiveness’, to pray for those who have committed acts of evil; to offer these, they say, just as Jesus Christ would do the same — as if any fallible human being possesses the slightest idea of what the Omniscient thinks or knows, as if any mere mortal is remotely capable of imitating the Omnipotent in the betrayal of human emotions or visceral instincts or Earthy concepts of justice, and despite the fact that Judgment on High is separate from Justice on Earth. Scripture’s warnings about judgment are not a call to moral passivity. They are a warning against hypocrisy, not against clarity or conviction. Human beings do judge, must judge, and are right to judge; not out of divine pretense, but out of necessity — for protection, for justice, for truth. Judgment on High may belong to God alone, ...
Some people are late to the conversation. Some think that there’s still room and time for dialogue, that those who don’t get it are still within reach, that they can still be ‘saved’; that, if we are clever and cautious enough, if we just assemble a tighter and more comprehensive argument and package it nicely enough, reason will finally prevail, and that the uninitiated will surely accept the truth when it is finally perfectly and plainly laid before them in the clearest of resolution. This is not just a pipe dream but a complete misreading of the room, a special kind of ignorance to the “godless ideology,” as Virginia Delegate Nick Freitas has described it, “that kills babies in the womb, sterilizes confused children, turns our cities into cesspools of degeneracy and lawlessness… and [led to the assassination of] Charlie Kirk.” Remember this: less than a year ago, half of the country was wholeheartedly prepared to vote for a senile dementia patient, Joe Biden, for the simple reason t...