Thursday, February 12, 2026

Dead Men Who's Influences Are Still With Us Today Episode 10

 

1️⃣ Kierkegaard as the Father of Existential Emphasis

Breese presents Kierkegaard as a major influence behind modern existentialism — the shift toward:

  • Subjective experience

  • Personal inwardness

  • Individual decision

  • The “leap” of faith

Kierkegaard reacted strongly against:

  • Dead orthodoxy

  • Cultural Christianity

  • State-church complacency

Breese recognizes that critique had force.


2️⃣ Where Breese Raises Concern

The issue, in Breese’s view, is what happened after Kierkegaard.

When faith becomes heavily centered on:

Individual inward experience

It can drift toward:

  • Relativism

  • Anti-rationalism

  • “Truth for me” thinking

  • Emotionalism detached from objective revelation

Breese suggests that while Kierkegaard intended to defend authentic Christianity, later thinkers used existential categories to detach truth from fixed authority.

In other words:

Kierkegaard aimed at awakening faith.
Later movements sometimes weakened doctrinal certainty.


3️⃣ Tone Toward Kierkegaard

Breese’s tone here is more respectful and complex.

He tends to portray Kierkegaard as:

  • Intellectually serious

  • Spiritually earnest

  • Reacting to real spiritual decay

But he views the existential turn as opening the door to modern subjectivism.


4️⃣ The Broader Pattern Breese Sees

Across the three:

  • Wellhausen → Scripture becomes historical development

  • Keynes → Economics becomes managed engineering

  • Kierkegaard (as received later) → Truth becomes internalized experience

Different disciplines.

Similar underlying move:
From objective external authority
To Me centered interpretation or management.

Breese’s concern is not conspiracy — it’s philosophical drift.


5️⃣ And Here’s the Careful Balance

It’s worth noting:

  • Kierkegaard himself defended core Christian doctrines.

  • He was not a liberal theologian in the modern sense.

  • Many conservative Christians still value his insights.

Breese critiques the trajectory more than the man’s heart.


Now here’s something I think you’ll appreciate.

The earlier comment about an “invisible hand” guiding intellectual development — Breese’s argument is actually subtler:

He would say ideas share common soil.
When culture shifts its starting point (authority, revelation, transcendence), thinkers in different fields reflect that shift independently.

Not coordinated.
But connected by presupposition.

That’s less mystical — and more philosophical.

Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Thank you for supporting this  blog.

Get the book HERE 7 Men Who Role The World From The Grave

Dead Men Who's Influences Are Still With Us Today Episode 9

 In Seven Men Who Rule the World from the Grave, Breese treats John Maynard Keynes not primarily as an economist, but as a shaper of modern assumptions about money, government, and man's responsibility.

Here’s the pattern of how he presents him:


1️⃣ Keynes as a Shift in Economic Philosophy

Breese argues that Keynes represents a turning point from:

  • Economic restraint → managed stimulus

  • Balanced budgets → deficit spending

  • Market correction → government intervention

  • Moral economics → technocratic economics

In Breese’s view, Keynes normalized the idea that governments could:

  • Spend beyond their means

  • Use debt strategically

  • Manage economies through centralized policy

Breese sees that as more than economics — he sees it as a philosophical shift about authority and accountability.


2️⃣ Tone Toward Keynes

Like with Wellhausen, Breese does not portray Keynes as evil or foolish.
He portrays him as:

  • Brilliant

  • Influential

  • Culturally catalytic

But also as someone whose ideas carried unintended moral consequences.

Breese tends to emphasize:

  • Keynes’ confidence in elite management

  • His dismissal of long-term consequences (“In the long run we are all dead”)

  • His belief that economic structures could be engineered

Breese interprets that famous line as symptomatic of a mindset that prioritizes immediate relief over enduring moral order.


3️⃣ The Larger Concern

Breese connects Keynes to a broader 20th-century move:

From:

Self-discipline and providence

To:

System-management and state dependency

He suggests that once economic order becomes detached from moral law, it becomes subject to political manipulation.

In Breese’s framework, Keynes becomes emblematic of:

  • The technocratic confidence of modernity

  • Faith in systems over character

  • Management over stewardship


4️⃣ Important Context

To keep balance:

  • Keynes was responding to the Great Depression — a real crisis.

  • Many mainstream economists still credit him with stabilizing economies.

  • Debate continues between Keynesian and free-market schools.

Breese writes from a clear Christian worldview lens, so his evaluation is moral-theological, not purely economic.


5️⃣ It's almost as if an  “invisible hand” 

 not in a conspiratorial sense, but in an uncanny philosophical continuity.

Breese’s point across these men Charles Darwin, Karl Marx, Julius Wellhausen, John Dewey, Sigmund Freud, John Maynard Keynes, and Soren Kierkegaard. is not that they collaborated.

It’s that:

  • They shared modern assumptions.

  • Those assumptions weakened transcendence.

  • Those ideas filtered into institutions.

Wellhausen reshaped how people read Scripture.
Keynes reshaped how people view money and authority.

Different fields. Similar philosophical confidence in people's management thinking.

Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Thank you for supporting this  blog.

Get the book HERE 7 Men Who Role The World From The Grave

Dead Men Who's Influences Are Still With Us Today Episode 8

In David Breese's book "7 Men Who Rule The World From The Grave" portrays Wellhausen as a key architect of modern higher criticism, especially through the Documentary Hypothesis (JEDP theory).

According to Breese:

  • Moses did not write the Pentateuch.

  • The Torah developed gradually from competing religious traditions.

  • Israel’s religion evolved from primitive to advanced forms.

Breese frames this as a major shift from:

Revelation → to religious evolution
Divine authorship → to man's compilation

In his view, that shift had enormous downstream consequences.


2️⃣ Tone Toward Wellhausen

The book is not biographical or sympathetic in tone — he’s analytical and critical.

He sees Wellhausen as:

  • Intellectually influential

  • Historically consequential

  • Theologically damaging

But not as malicious. More as a scholar whose presuppositions shaped his conclusions.

Breese’s argument is that once the Bible is treated primarily as a man made religious document rather than revelation, the foundation shifts.


3️⃣ The Larger Point Breese Makes

Wellhausen isn’t treated in isolation.

Breese connects him to a broader intellectual movement that:

  • Replaced supernatural explanation with natural development

  • Reframed Scripture as literature rather than revelation

  • Influenced seminaries and theological institutions

In other words, Wellhausen becomes symbolic of a larger trend:

The move from “Thus saith the Lord”
to “Thus evolved the tradition.”


4️⃣ Where It Intersects With My Interest

Given my concern about:

  • Bible-doubting footnotes

  • Source-critical frameworks

  • The invisible intellectual thread

Breese would argue that Wellhausen represents a key node in that network — not because he worked with the others directly, but because ideas travel beyond their originators.

That’s part of what feels “uncanny” to you:
Different men Charles Darwin, Karl Marx, Julius Wellhausen, John Dewey, Sigmund Freud, John Maynard Keynes, and Soren Kierkegaard, different countries — but similar philosophical soil.


5️⃣ Important Balance

It’s worth noting:
Modern scholarship has revised, nuanced, and in some cases moved beyond classic Wellhausen-style JEDP. Even secular scholars debate it.

So Breese presents a clear theological critique, but it’s also helpful to remember that academic discussion has continued to evolve.

Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Thank you for supporting this  blog.

Get the book HERE 7 Men Who Role The World From The Grave

Dead Men Who's Influences Are Still With Us Today Episode 5

 

Karl Marx: Putting the Engine to Work

"For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows." — 1 Timothy 6:10


Introduction: From Philosophy to Practice

In the previous post, we looked at how Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel redefined truth as a process driven by conflict. His ideas were abstract, philosophical, and easy for many to dismiss as impractical.

Karl Marx proved otherwise.

Marx took Hegel’s method and applied it to everyday life. If Hegel built the engine, Marx put it on the ground and taught the masses how to use it. What had been philosophy became economic ideology, and what had been theory became revolution.


Marx in Plain Terms

Marx taught that all of human history is driven by class struggle. Society, he argued, is divided between those who own the means of production and those who do not. Every institution—family, religion, government—exists primarily to protect the interests of the ruling class.

In Marx’s worldview:

  • Man is defined by labor

  • Morality is shaped by economics

  • Religion is a tool of control

Truth, like in Hegel’s system, is not fixed. It advances through conflict—this time between classes.


The Biblical Collision

Scripture does not deny injustice or oppression. But it locates the root problem not in economics, but in the human heart.

"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked." — Jeremiah 17:9
"From whence come wars and fightings among you? come they not hence, even of your lusts that war in your members?" — James 4:1

Marx externalized the problem. The Bible internalizes it.

Where Marx says systems corrupt man, Scripture says sinful man corrupts systems.


Why Marx Had to Reject God

Marx did not merely criticize religion; he had to remove it.

If God exists:

  • Moral law is fixed

  • Human value is inherent

  • Justice transcends class

Marxism cannot tolerate those truths. To make conflict the engine of history, there can be no higher authority to appeal to—only power.

This is why Marx famously dismissed religion as an illusion. Not because it was ineffective, but because it stood in the way.


How Marx Rules from the Grave Today

Marx’s influence is no longer confined to overt communism. His ideas operate quietly beneath the surface.

Culture

  • People reduced to oppressor and oppressed categories

  • Moral guilt assigned by group identity

Politics

  • Redistribution framed as moral righteousness

  • Power struggles presented as justice movements

Education

  • History taught primarily as economic exploitation

  • Critical theories built on class-based analysis

Many who reject Marx’s name still use his lens.


A Human Pause

At this point, someone usually says, “But Marx cared about the poor.”

So does the Bible.

The difference is how and why.

Scripture calls for generosity, compassion, and justice—but never at the cost of truth, responsibility, or worship of God.


Scripture’s Answer to Marx

"If any would not work, neither should he eat." — 2 Thessalonians 3:10
"Let him that stole steal no more: but rather let him labour, working with his hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give." — Ephesians 4:28

The biblical model produces charity without envy, justice without coercion, and compassion without resentment.


Conclusion

Karl Marx has been dead for over a century, yet his ideas continue to shape how people understand justice, power, and inequality. He rules not by revolution alone, but by categories—by teaching people how to interpret the world.

When economic conflict becomes the primary lens for understanding life, the gospel is inevitably reduced—or replaced.


Coming Next

Marx explained the struggle. Charles Darwin explained it away.

In the next post, we will look at how evolution redefined life itself—and why that shift was essential for the worldview Marx helped unleash.

Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Thank you for supporting this  blog.

Get the book HERE 7 Men Who Role The World From The Grave

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

This Is For Teachers Teaching The Lombardi Way

 

“Ladies Abd Gentlemen, This is a Bible” — Start with the Fundamentals

There’s a famous moment in American football lore that teaches us something about learning anything well — even Scripture.

In the summer of 1961, legendary NFL coach Vince Lombardi walked into Green Bay Packers training camp with a group of professional athletes — men who had played at the highest level, some of whom were just a play away from a championship. Instead of launching immediately into advanced plays, schemes, or conditioning, he did something surprisingly simple. He held up a football and said:

“Gentlemen, this is a football.”

That’s it.
The coach of one of the most successful teams in NFL history started not with strategy or talent, but with fundamentals.

Lombardi wasn’t patronizing his players — he was reminding them that mastery starts with basics. The Packers went on to win five NFL championships under his leadership, including the first two Super Bowls, and he became a symbol of discipline, clarity, and excellence in leadership and learning.


Why Start with the Basics?

Most of us bring assumptions into a Bible class. We’ve heard verses quoted, doctrines summarized, songs that sound familiar. But before diving into layered theology — grace, law, covenant, dispensations — we need to be grounded:

This is a Bible.
This is God’s word.

Before we can rightly divide (as Paul commanded in 2 Timothy 2:15), we need shared vocabulary and shared walls of the building we’re about to enter. And it’s okay to start there — even necessary. Without the basics, everything above them is shaky.


A Simple Starting Framework

If I were to teach a class on Scripture from scratch, here’s how I’d begin:

  1. Introduce the Book:
    This is the Bible — God’s Word. Different translations, same core message.

  2. Handle With Care:
    2 Timothy 2:15 — teach them what it means to handle the word accurately and carefully. Greek is orthotemeo meansto cut straight or patrician.

  3. Permission to Explore:
    Ephesians 3:1–2 — even Paul acknowledges there is unfolding revelation and stewardship, administartion dispensation if you will of God’s mystery given to Paul.

  4. Walk Through the Scope:
    Turn to Genesis 1 — creation, God speaks.
    Then flip to Malachi 4 — the last book of the Old Testament.
    Show them how the Bible was collected — not bound by apostles, but recognized over time.

  5. Explain the Volume, Not the Wow:
    It's divided into the Old and New Testament — that’s a later title, not something the writers themselves gave. Knowing that saves a lot of confusion.


Why This Matters

Going into theology before knowing the text is like teaching complex football plays before kids know what a football is. You might get some players moving the right way by accident, but you won’t build a team that understands the game.

What Lombardi did with pro athletes — start with the basics — is something Christian teaching could do more often:

  • Start with Scripture itself.

  • Teach people how to read.

  • Build confidence in the process of discovery.

  • Let the Holy Spirit guide real understanding.

Just like a coach showing a football before showing a playbook, we can show Scripture before we show systems.

And that simple posture — “This is a Bible” — can revolutionize how people think about everything that comes after.


A Few of Lombardi’s Principles That Apply to Bible Study

(Not about winning games — about learning well)

  • “Winning is not a sometime thing — it’s an all the time thing.”
    → Consistent reading matters.

  • “Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence.”
    → We won’t understand everything at once, but faithful effort grows insight.

  • “If you aren’t fired up with enthusiasm, you’ll be fired with enthusiasm.”
    → Passion for truth grows motivation to dig deeper.


Closing Thought

Some people look at the Bible and see complexity. Some see tradition. Some see rules.

But what if we all started the way a great coach did —
with the fundamentals, explained plainly, patiently, accurately?

Then maybe Scripture wouldn’t be something to memorize —
it would be something to live.

Monday, February 9, 2026

Conditional Prophecy, Faith, and the Example of Jesus

 In Scripture, we see that God often speaks warnings or promises—prophecies that interact with people's choices. Sometimes, these prophecies are conditional, depending on repentance, obedience, or faith. Other times, they are deterministic, fulfilling God’s ultimate plan no matter what.

Take the story of Jonah and Nineveh: God warned the city of impending judgment. The people had a choice—to repent or to persist in sin. They repented, and God relented. The prophecy was conditional, and their faith and response changed the outcome.

This pattern becomes even more profound in the life of Jesus.


Jesus’ Example

Hebrews 4:15 tells us that Jesus was tempted in every way we are, yet He did not sin. That means His choice was real—He could have yielded to temptation, but He did not. On the cross, John 17 shows Jesus exercising trust in His Father, knowing the suffering He would endure, and trusting in the resurrection to vindicate Him.

Faith, therefore, is not just a passive gift. Romans 10:17 reminds us that “faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.” Jesus is the pattern of active faith: hearing the Word, trusting God, and responding in faith.


Conditional Prophecy in Action

Here’s the flow:

  1. Prophecy / Warning – God gives a warning or promise

  2. Hearing / Awareness – people or Jesus perceive the warning

  3. Choice / Temptation – A real decision must be made

  4. Exercise of Faith – Trusting God’s Word and promises

  5. Obedience / Response – Acting according to faith

  6. Outcome – Conditional prophecy is fulfilled or withheld; mercy or judgment realized

In Jesus, faith is perfect and active, showing us the example of faith for responding to God’s Word as in John 17, Galatians 2:15 and Philippians 3:9..."the faith of Christ." In people and groups' examples—such as: Nineveh, Hezekiah, or rebellious kings—the outcome depends on how faith is exercised.


Takeaway

Therefore it seems that prophecy, faith, and obedience are intertwined. God’s warnings are real, but He gives people the responsibility to respond. Jesus shows the perfect response, modeling faith in action. Our role is to hear and trust - faith is the conduit, not a passive gift Ephesians 2:8-9 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God Not of works, lest any man should boast. What is grace it is the Death, Burial and Resurrection of Jesus Christ(1 Corinthians 15:1-4. What are we save from the 2nd death (Revelation 21:8.)

Dead Men Who's Influences Are Still With Us Today Episode 10

  1️⃣ Kierkegaard as the Father of Existential Emphasis Breese presents Kierkegaard as a major influence behind modern existentialism — the...