Welcome to The Light, where we pause to consider what endures.
Historians Allen Guelzo and James Hankins offer a quiet warning: the danger facing Western civilization may not be hatred, but forgetting. Their new textbook argues that condemnation, however fierce, still implies memory. Erasure is the deeper wound, and perhaps the more urgent one to tend.
That question of what sustains us moves naturally into another. Across every season of a woman's life, whether she is raising children, mourning parents, or simply carrying the ordinary weight of days, there is a recurring search for strength that outlasts the moment. Where that strength is found, and how it is renewed, remains one of the oldest and most honest human questions.
And renewal, it seems, requires presence. Sherry Turkle's enduring work on conversation reminds us that the front porch was never really about architecture. It was about the willingness to sit with another person, unhurried, without a screen between you. That willingness, she argues, is quietly disappearing, and something essential goes with it.
That's this hour's reflection. Carry the light gently.["https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/podcasts/gospelbound/save-western-civilization-allen-guelzo/","https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/weary-women-find-strength/","https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/reviews/apologetics-dinner-party/"]πΊ The Light Β· 5 AM Update Β· player loadingβ¦