Tagged “Douglas Wilson”

“I do admit that there are times when I crack myself up”

This brings us to those instances where I deliberately set up the accusers, making a point of doing what I know they are demanding we all stop doing. For example, in the comments of Thabiti’s last post, one person pointed out that I use the word sodomite from time to time. “I can imagine a glee, sitting at desk, typing, and thinking, ‘Watch this! Watch how the ‘libs’ blow up over this one. . .’” Now I do admit that there are times when I crack myself up — as for example if I were to write about Anglican sodomites processing up the central aisle in their sodomitres. At the same time, I take no glee in being a ‘bad boy.’ I am in deadly earnest.
Douglas Wilson

“blame someone else”

We have been looking at self-control as the foundation of all civic and political liberty. Living as we do in a time when such liberty is eroding at alarming rates, we need to make sure that when we run our spiritual inventories we do not do what sinners always love to do, which is to blame someone else.
Douglas Wilson

From the combox on Blog & Mablog

I added the hyperlink in the word “mangina” because, having never heard it, I made the mistake of looking it up. Apart from that, the text is original. Here’s the original source:

jeers1215 says:
Monday, January 19, 2015 at 4:13 pm

I can just hear the gynocentric delusions starting to melt. You can’t imagine what it’s like to be a man. No one’s asking you. Regardless of what your supplicating mangina tells you, he is alone with you. And you will never be able to understand or satisfy his desires in the way that he is apparently bending over backwards to do for you. Pastor Wilson is presenting some brave truths here, painful truths that most poor idiots are going to miss. Romance is a story we tell ourselves, but it doesn’t move the gears. Your happy little home was bought at the price of a man’s freedom.

Pastor Wilson is offering the true pretense of marriage, finally with the fraudulent language of idealism stripped away. If a man marries without being convinced of these things, he enslaves himself to a falsehood. This is the world that men must live in and no other.

Wednesday, June 8, 2016 |

“It is not necessary to take someone aside privately after they have just done something publicly.”

This is as good a place as any to make note of the fact that public controversy is not bound by the rules of confrontation laid out for us in Matthew 18. When Peter sinned at Antioch, Paul rebuked him publicly, face to face (Gal. 2:11), and he did this on the spot. It is not necessary to take someone aside privately after they have just done something publicly. I do not know how many times I have been asked about this. Let’s say I have written critically of a recently published book — ‘Did you contact Tony Campolo privately before you wrote the book review?’
Douglas Wilson

“the importance of breaking some arms”

We learn here the importance of breaking some arms. Are there no arms today which need breaking? Is there no insolence in our halls of justice? Are there no enthroned criminals who make life wretched for the humble of the earth? And is it not true that our authorities refuse to heed what God has told them to do?
Douglas Wilson