My name is Will Spencer, and you're listening to the renaissance of Men podcast.
Will SpencerMy guest this week is the author of the Boniface Option.
Will SpencerPlease welcome Andrew Whisker.
Andrew IskerYou are the Renaissance.
Will SpencerAs many of my listeners know, I spent four years traveling overseas between 2016 and 2020.
Will SpencerDuring that time, from the other side of the equator and then the other side of the Pacific Ocean, I got to watch America go through all the convulsions of the Trump presidency from a distance.
Will SpencerNow, by that time, I already understood who Trump was and who he wasnt.
Will SpencerHe might not have had the best taste in associates and probably had a little issue with his ego, but he certainly wasnt literally Hitler, nor was he even all that orange.
Will SpencerBut I did know that he and the millions of Americans who supported him had a sense that the country that they loved and treasured was either being eaten away or was already gone.
Will SpencerAnd that for all of Trump's obvious flaws, he was courageous enough to lead people to do something about it to the unending scorn of the media.
Will SpencerHence the term the deplorables.
Will SpencerSo I got to watch this process unfold in my home country while traveling through other nations like Peru, Colombia, New Zealand, Mongolia, China, India, and many others.
Will SpencerAnd while watching this, I noticed something strange.
Will SpencerIt seemed that in many of the countries that I visited, their own cultures were being eaten away as well.
Will SpencerThe first sign that something was wrong struck me in September 2016, in a small rural town in a south american country which shall remain nameless.
Will SpencerThe town was inundated with piles of plastic trash just everywhere.
Will SpencerThe trash hadnt been imported from America and dumped there either.
Will SpencerThis was their plastic trash because the wrappers and packaging had spanish words on them.
Will SpencerRoadside stands, basically just wooden shacks, had latin versions of the same kind of bright colored candy wrappers youd find at a local circle k or 711.
Will SpencerI was literally hours outside of any major city on a local bus in the middle of nowhere.
Will SpencerAnd yet it seemed that modernity had arrived long before I did.
Will SpencerThis same pattern seemed to repeat itself wherever I went.
Will SpencerJapan is flooded with american chain restaurants and their own china has fewer chains, but certainly its own massive consumerism in the major cities.
Will SpencerGet on Google Maps right now and look up the Altai mountain range in Mongolia.
Will SpencerThats Altai.
Will SpencerIt is literally in the center of the asian continent.
Will SpencerYou cannot get more into the middle of nowhere than that.
Will SpencerAnd I saw similar consumerism, though on a much smaller scale in that region as well.
Will SpencerAnd as anyone who's visited Thailand or Bali can tell you, parsing out authentic thai or balinese culture from the intensely consumerist materialist conditions can be difficult, if not impossible.
Will SpencerSo I wondered, what's going on?
Will SpencerSometime in 2018, it clicked.
Will SpencerSomething nameless and faceless was eating these nations from the inside out like a rot.
Will SpencerIt presents itself as novel, convenient, comfortable, and even friendly, but it's actually insatiable.
Will SpencerMost in the world look at these trends and apply them to America.
Will SpencerThey call them westernization, or sometimes american cultural imperialism.
Will SpencerBut I was from America, and what I was watching in my home country had nothing to do with all of that.
Will SpencerIn fact, Trump and MAGA were the antithesis of that phenomenon.
Will SpencerAnd the word that they used to describe it was globalism.
Will SpencerSo as Trump and MAGA were pushing back against globalism, I was actually traveling around the globe and could see the same phenomenon they hated firsthand in my face, in places where it shouldn't be.
Will SpencerThat's when I realized that these trends have nothing to do with America or the west.
Will SpencerThey are not our traditions.
Will SpencerThey only appear that way because whatever is eating the world ate America first.
Will SpencerWhich brings me to my guest this week.
Will SpencerHis name is Andrew Isker, and he's the pastor of the fourth Street Evangelical Church in Waseca, Minnesota, the co author, with Andrew Torba, of Christian Nationalism, a biblical guide for taking dominion and discipling nations.
Will SpencerAnd finally, he's the author of the outstanding book the Boniface Option.
Will SpencerMore than any other christian author I've read, Andrew has identified the phenomenon I saw with my own eyes.
Will SpencerAndrew calls it trash world.
Will SpencerAnd while he didnt coin the term, if you ask me, hes the one who made it stick.
Will SpencerIn the preface of the Boniface option, Andrew writes, quote, we are already in the midst of decades of social engineering.
Will SpencerThe society we have is already an anti human one.
Will SpencerIt is already designed to remove from you all that made life meaningful and fulfilling.
Will SpencerIt has torn you from people and place.
Will SpencerIt is designed to make you isolated, lonely, and above all else, totally docile.
Will SpencerThroughout the pages of this book, I use the term trash world to describe this dystopian society.
Will SpencerEnd quote.
Will SpencerNow, not everyone is a big fan of Andrew Isker, but I have to tell you, he's right.
Will SpencerWe've been living in american trash world for years.
Will SpencerIf you're generation z, you might not remember a time before it, but there are places in the world that ive been to that the tentacles of trash world are just beginning to reach, and who, at least in 2016, had far less of an ability to put up a fight.
Will SpencerBecause affluence is seductive.
Will SpencerAnd once you see that for yourself, as I have the productive, formerly self sustaining local cultures of the world being literally devoured by plastic, high fructose corn syrup, and consumerism, there's only one possible response.
Will SpencerIt's a word that christians don't like very much.
Will SpencerIt makes them feel uncomfortable because it involves them getting down into their bodies and feeling themselves as material beings on a physical planet with all kinds of icky attachments to things and people that it's far easier to spiritualize than take responsibility for.
Will SpencerBut the word is hate, which Merriam Webster defines as to express or feel extreme enmity or active hostility.
Will SpencerAnd yes to that.
Will SpencerBut here's iskur again.
Will SpencerTo love a thing is to inherently hate its opposite.
Will SpencerIndifference is the absence of love, not hatred.
Will SpencerWhere love is present, you will axiomatically have hatred of the object of that love's opposite.
Will SpencerIf the Christian has a passionate love for the truth of God's word, the goodness of God's justice, and the beauty of holiness, he will necessarily have an intense hatred of the lies, injustice, and sin.
Will SpencerAnd that captures it.
Will SpencerBecause as uncomfortable as it is to acknowledge there is something hate worthy out there, I came to Christ in part because I saw that evil was real, and I couldnt get anyone out there in the religions of the world to talk to me about it.
Will SpencerChristianity is the only world religion that does in any sort of credible way.
Will SpencerSo if evil exists, can we not hate it?
Will SpencerIf you've seen evil devouring the nations and souls of the world like I have, can I not hate that?
Will SpencerAnd if I see it devouring my country, my culture, and the souls of my countrymen as well, can I not then hate it?
Will SpencerHow about if it almost devoured me?
Will SpencerBecause it did, and God delivered me from that.
Will SpencerSo this is personal.
Will SpencerAnd that's what Andrew Isker touches on, the feeling that this institutionalized, industrialized evil isn't just eating me, but you too, and your sons and daughters.
Will SpencerHeck, even our parents and grandparents.
Will SpencerAre we just going to sit idly by and play nice nice because a schoolmarm preaching hippie Jesus and his fortune cookie platitudes told us to?
Will SpencerOr are we going to be men and speak directly into this wickedness and rip it out?
Will SpencerOr really cut it down from the trunk on up and try for something better?
Will SpencerYou're about to get a marathon four and a half hour ren of men classic podcast with the answer.
Will SpencerIn our conversation, Andrew and I covered a ton of ground, including the origins of the boniface option, the third rail of evangelicalism.
Will SpencerWhat Paul's writing assumes church as the caboose of culture, the enemy of every christian parent, God's blessing of the barbell, the point of the entire Bible.
Will SpencerAnd finally, while you're not angry because you're fat, if you enjoy the renaissance of men podcast, thank you.
Will SpencerPlease leave us a five star rating on Spotify, plus a five star rating and review on Apple Podcasts and share this episode or another one of your favorites with a friend.
Will SpencerAnd if you're new to the show, welcome.
Will SpencerI release new episodes related to Christian Virtue, the culture wars, and the family every Friday.
Will SpencerAnd now for another marathon renaissance of men classic.
Will SpencerFour and a half hours with the co author of Christian Nationalism and the author of the Boniface option, please welcome Andrew Isker.
Will SpencerAndrew, thanks so much for joining me on the podcast.
Will SpencerThe powers that be are trying to shut us down, but it's not going to happen.
Andrew IskerThat's right.
Andrew IskerYes.
Andrew IskerThank you for having me.
Will SpencerYou're welcome.
Will SpencerSo we just ran it for a minute and found that we got cut off midstream.
Will SpencerSo we're going to pick up where we were.
Will SpencerBut hey, we keep fighting on the.
Will SpencerSo what I had said in the original stream was that how much I enjoyed your book, how much I was really looking forward to reading it.
Will SpencerIt was actually a gift from my friend Matt Sider.
Will SpencerThank you, Matt.
Will SpencerAnd he's like, you have to read this.
Will SpencerAnd I was looking forward to it.
Will SpencerI thought it was going to be good, but it massively exceeded my expectations because I'm reading it, I'm like, wow, this is really good.
Will SpencerThis is really good.
Will SpencerAnd so I really enjoyed it.
Will SpencerSo thank you for this.
Andrew IskerYes, thank you.
Andrew IskerI'm glad you liked it.
Andrew IskerThank you.
Will SpencerSo I wonder if you wouldn't mind talking about the inspiration of the book, where it came from, and sort of how it started maybe in seed form, and then grew into the work that it is.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerSo I originally started thinking these ideas around 2017 after reading Rodriere's Benedict option.
Andrew IskerSo I read this book, his book, and that was at the time, there was a ton of discussion on that book.
Andrew IskerA lot of people, a lot of people liked it.
Andrew IskerA lot of people hated it.
Andrew IskerAnd it kind of took over the majority of not just christian discourse, but a lot of discourse online on the right.
Andrew IskerAnd reading it, there were things that I liked.
Andrew IskerThe thesis of the book is, okay, we're in this very anti christian world now.
Andrew IskerIt's in the wake of Obergefell and all of the rapid cultural change that took place in the years following that decision.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, okay, the response to it, we should retreat to intentional community, intentional christian community.
Andrew IskerAnd reading that, I'm like, that's great, that's awesome.
Andrew IskerBut then what do we do, right?
Andrew IskerThere was no, okay, now we're in our community and we're safe and secure altogether.
Andrew IskerNow what do we do?
Andrew IskerBecause, like, they're not going to allow that.
Andrew IskerThey're not going to allow you to have these little christian enclaves, these little christian ghettos or whatever.
Andrew IskerThey're going to.
Andrew IskerThey're going to come for you and destroy that.
Andrew IskerAnd even if they don't, like, send in SWAT teams like Waco or something, they're coming for you in all sorts of different ways.
Andrew IskerLike, you're still going to have Internet in those places.
Andrew IskerYour children are still going to be exposed to all of the destructive cultural things that are carried via Internet, television and everything else.
Andrew IskerAnd so in some ways, you can retreat physically to these places, but you still are not insulated from those things unless you became totally amish and completely cut yourselves out from society, which I don't think people are going to do.
Andrew IskerAnd that really wasn't the argument in his book either.
Andrew IskerAnd so I was left wanting.
Andrew IskerI'm like, well, no, there's got to be more that we can do.
Andrew IskerAnd I started thinking about the story of Saint Boniface.
Andrew IskerI remember in college, many years ago, reading an issue of table talk magazine from Ligonier ministries, where they had a story about Saint Boniface in the 8th century and his mission to Germania across the Rhine, which at that time was all pagan.
Andrew IskerAnd I was fascinated by it.
Andrew IskerI mean, I am mostly german.
Andrew IskerAnd so that had a, struck a chord with me, of course, along those lines.
Andrew IskerAnd these are stories growing up, I'd never heard.
Andrew IskerI'd never heard, yeah.
Andrew IskerHow did all of my people become Christian anyway?
Andrew IskerNo one ever told me.
Andrew IskerAnd so here, St.
Andrew IskerBoniface, who was this monk, and coincidentally was a benedictine monk from England, is commissioned to go be a missionary.
Andrew IskerHe goes across the Rhine and goes to the main shrine of Thor, and there's this massive oak tree that they believed if anybody touched it, they would be struck by a bolt of lightning from Thor and be killed.
Andrew IskerAnd he tells them, I'm going to come back the same time tomorrow.
Andrew IskerAnd not only am I going to touch this tree, but I will chop it down and comes back the next day, takes one swing of an axe and a wind, or at least according to the legend, a wind comes out of the heavens.
Andrew IskerAnd knocks the tree over.
Andrew IskerAnd all of the people who, tons of people had come from all the surrounding villages to go watch this guy get fried.
Andrew IskerAnd they witnessed this, and they're all converted that day and are all baptized.
Andrew IskerAnd from this tree, he had it milled and built the first church in Germany.
Andrew IskerAnd from there, the conversion of the Germans began.
Andrew IskerAnd I thought about that.
Andrew IskerI just thought about what this guy would be like.
Andrew IskerWhat would it be like to have someone go and say, here's your idol, here's this thing that you venerate and adore, and I'm going to destroy it.
Andrew IskerJust the character of a man like that, the ethos of a man that would do that and thinking about what christian men are like, even in the most ideal form in our minds today.
Andrew IskerAnd the contrast between those two is stark, right?
Andrew IskerThere's a major, major difference, especially the last 20 or 30 years.
Andrew IskerThe major ethos of evangelical Christianity is whatever you do, whatever you do, you must never offend anyone.
Andrew IskerYou have to be nice and winsome.
Andrew IskerAnd that's how we, that's how we are going to evangelize and convert people, is they'll see how nice we are, they'll see what wonderful people we are, and they'll say, I want to be like that guy.
Andrew IskerAnd in this post christian world that we now exist in, at least in America, that doesn't work anymore at all.
Andrew IskerThey, they are going to hate you no matter how nice you are, no matter how winsome you are.
Andrew IskerAnd so the time clearly had come where, no, you need to be much bolder.
Andrew IskerYou need to be much more aggressive.
Andrew IskerYou need to have that same type of ethos of, I'm going to fight.
Andrew IskerI'm going to say what's true and right and not care who it upsets, not care who it offends, because it's true and it's right.
Andrew IskerAnd so thinking of those two things together, I'm like, okay, yes, there are tactical, strategic things we can do and sort of retreat to community and build up christian institutions that will be able to stand against the anti christian forces within the culture.
Andrew IskerThat stuff's important, of course, but if you don't have that ethos of we are going to fight for what's right, and we're, we don't care if you're angry at us, if you hate us, we are.
Andrew IskerWe're going to stand against you.
Andrew IskerIf you don't have both those things together, then it's going to fail.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerThen it's going to fail.
Andrew IskerAnd the benedict option is all defensive.
Andrew IskerHow do we retreat and survive?
Andrew IskerHow do we get through this?
Andrew IskerAnd you need offense, too, right?
Andrew IskerYou need to be able to go and take background.
Andrew IskerUm, and.
Andrew IskerAnd so that's really where the book came out of.
Andrew IskerYou know, I wrote an article about that in, in 2017.
Andrew IskerAnd you continued thinking about these things for.
Andrew IskerFor several years, for, you know, four or five more years, then you go through the whole, you know, Trump era, and everything just got intensified even more.
Andrew IskerAnd finally, you know, you go through the year of 2020, and that was certainly eye opening for many, many people.
Andrew IskerAnd by 2022, 2023, it was just incontrovertible that, right, we are firmly in this era where christians that actually do believe the Bible and genuinely follow Jesus, we are in the minority.
Andrew IskerAnd the, the people in power hate us.
Andrew IskerThey hate us the most.
Andrew IskerAnd so we got to change our attitude.
Andrew IskerWe have to change the way we go about things.
Andrew IskerAnd it starts internally.
Andrew IskerIt starts with rejecting a lot of the implicit ideas of just being nice and sweet and a little choir boy that no one will hate, to rejecting all of those things and saying, no, I'm gonna fight.
Andrew IskerI'm going to stand up for what I believe in and do these things take up this kind of character, this much more, much more, dare I say it, masculine approach.
Andrew IskerOh, no.
Andrew IskerYeah, I know.
Andrew IskerIt's terrifying.
Andrew IskerAnything but that.
Andrew IskerBecause you see, throughout christian history, you see men as men living as christians, and they live that way in a much different way than we do now.
Andrew IskerWe think being a good christian man is being a servant leader, and a heavy, heavy, heavy, heavy, heavy emphasis on servant.
Andrew IskerVery little bit, tiny little bit of leading involved in that.
Andrew IskerA tiny little bit of authority, if any.
Andrew IskerMostly just serving and being a doormat and never being disagreeable in any way.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, no, that's got to stop.
Andrew IskerIf we're going to have any kind of christian culture, any kind of christian future for christian people, it has to be led by men who will stand up for their families, for their churches, for their people, and say, enough.
Andrew IskerNo more of this.
Andrew IskerWe are going to do what's right.
Will SpencerAnd you wrote the book in a particular way.
Will SpencerThe metacommunication of the language and the imagery, it speaks to that.
Will SpencerLike, you didn't just write the book with this kind of perspective that you had just kind of articulated.
Will SpencerYou wrote it in it using language like Bugman and world, right?
Will SpencerBut that's the language of this energetic, masculine approach to culture.
Will SpencerBut in most of the cases, it's divorced from Christ.
Will SpencerBut it is a specific way of communicating about social problems.
Will SpencerHow did you land on writing it that way?
Will SpencerCause you could have written it lots of different ways.
Andrew IskerYeah, yeah.
Andrew IskerI think some of it is, like many of us, you go through the cauldron of online, and you learn to communicate ideas in that rhetorical frame, which is very powerful.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerYou see this, and you see how these arguments are made online.
Andrew IskerAnd I.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, it's a lot of, you know, a lot of Internet terminology, you know?
Andrew IskerAnd it's funny because, like, I'll have older people that are not online at all, you know, read it, and they're like, yeah, I didn't get some of the terms, but they all made sense, right?
Andrew IskerNone of that, like, yeah, when you talk about a bug man, and even.
Andrew IskerAnd now it's kind of even somewhat of a dated, you know, term, like, things move pretty fast on the Internet, but it makes sense, right?
Andrew IskerThe social problems that we have where men are demasculinized purposefully and made to be these consumers, that your only existence is just to watch Marvel movies and NFL football and play video games and.
Andrew IskerAnd consume.
Andrew IskerJust have fun.
Andrew IskerI mean, all of these things are things like Doug Wilson talks about this, where all the freedoms that they say, these are our freedoms that we will die for, all of them are freedoms that you can have in a prison cell.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerAnd so the language of the online.
Andrew IskerRight, is like living in the pod.
Andrew IskerIt's the same thing where you look at these extremely bleak.
Andrew IskerLike, there's that one guy who does, like, tiktoks or whatever, and it's like he lives in this tiny little apartment, and it's.
Andrew IskerHe goes to his job, and he has no human contact of any kind at all.
Andrew IskerIt's like life like that, right?
Andrew IskerIt's so depressing.
Andrew IskerAnd there's.
Andrew IskerThere's.
Andrew IskerIt's like, this is.
Andrew IskerThis is all that life is, is I wake up, I go to my office job, I come home and, you know, watch.
Andrew IskerWatch movies or football or porn.
Andrew IskerI, whatever, order Uber eats, and then start the day all over again.
Andrew IskerAnd that's just my life until I die, right?
Andrew IskerThat.
Andrew IskerThat's a horrible life.
Andrew IskerAnd.
Andrew IskerBut people love it, right?
Andrew IskerThey think, this is great.
Andrew IskerThis is great.
Andrew IskerI have freedom.
Andrew IskerI could do whatever I want as long as it's available on Netflix, you know?
Andrew IskerAnd it's.
Will SpencerSo many choices.
Andrew IskerYeah, it's awful, actually.
Andrew IskerLike, you are so constrained in this mode of life, and I.
Andrew IskerAnd you see it in the social dynamics as well.
Andrew IskerYou're not allowed to be a man, you're not allowed to speak frankly.
Andrew IskerYou always have to walk on eggshells with every single thing you say, and you can't ever have any conflict directly with other people.
Andrew IskerIt's awful.
Andrew IskerIt's so terrible.
Andrew IskerAnd that's not the way God made us to be and to live at all.
Andrew IskerAnd you see this.
Andrew IskerYou see, especially young Mendez see this world, and they hate it.
Andrew IskerThey know that something is wrong, and they maybe can't quite put their finger on exactly what it is.
Andrew IskerEspecially because we're so divorced from history, we don't know how people historically lived in any sense.
Andrew IskerYou're born into the situation you're born into, and you just assume life has always been this way, and it always will be this way, and you don't have any other perspective to say, well, maybe it hasn't been that way before.
Andrew IskerMaybe.
Andrew IskerMaybe life was actually a lot better for a lot of people, right?
Andrew IskerEven without all of the modern innovation that we have, even without antibiotics and dentists and air conditioning and everything else, like an iPhones, like, they actually had real life with real human community, where 100 years ago, you didn't have.
Andrew IskerYou didn't have people that are, like, designed to be antisocial and alone.
Andrew IskerYou actually have friends, lots of friends, people that you've known your entire life, many, many relatives that live around you, that we all believe the same things and love and hate the same things.
Andrew IskerAnd instead, this world that we have, everyone is alone.
Andrew IskerAnd you have all of these modern copes, you know, that.
Andrew IskerSome of which we've mentioned that allow you that sort of desensitize you and anesthetize you to the conditions that you are in, and you take those away, and then life becomes really rough.
Andrew IskerSome of that is like, you look at the lockdowns in 2020, and there's some people, many people, I'm sure everybody knows people like this who are like, yes, this is awesome.
Andrew IskerI can stay in my apartment forever, and I can just have food delivered to me.
Andrew IskerI can watch as much streaming stuff as I want, and I can take up a couple new hobbies.
Andrew IskerWon't that be fun?
Andrew IskerAnd maybe I'll get, you know, I'll take the extended unemployment and not have to work for, like, nine months.
Andrew IskerThis will be great, right?
Andrew IskerIt's almost like an early retirement when you're, you know, 25 years old.
Andrew IskerThere are people that loved it.
Andrew IskerAnd for me, I'm sitting there and I'm like, I'm going insane.
Andrew IskerI'm going nuts.
Andrew IskerAnd I would just get up and leave.
Andrew IskerI would just go.
Andrew IskerGo to empty parks and go meet friends illegally.
Andrew IskerI couldn't do it.
Andrew IskerI couldn't do it, man.
Andrew IskerAnd it was a horrible life.
Andrew IskerBut you see these lockdowns.
Andrew IskerPeople have been socially engineered to almost love that way of life where it doesn't affect them at all.
Andrew IskerIt's like, well, I never leave my apartment anyway, so this is great.
Andrew IskerThis is wonderful.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, I mean, you see these social problems, and, I mean, most people don't even see them as social problems.
Andrew IskerThey think this is just the way life is.
Andrew IskerAnd it's good because look at all the stuff that we get to have and things we get to do, and it's like, no, it's actually really, really, really bad.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, that's that.
Andrew IskerAnd so you have to use kind of shocking rhetorical devices and strategies to kind of shake people out of those things where it's like, actually, no, this life isn't very good.
Andrew IskerYou should not like it.
Andrew IskerThis is.
Andrew IskerYou weren't created to live this way.
Andrew IskerYou're created to be a man and to yearn for the unknown, to take risks, to do difficult, hard things and not seek comfort, always not seek the easy way.
Andrew IskerAnd, yeah, I think a lot of people.
Andrew IskerYeah, a lot of people liked it.
Andrew IskerI mean, I tried not to be, like, too funny in it, but some of it, because it's almost like morbid gallows humor in some ways, but you have to be somewhat shocking order to get people to, like, say, to see, like, no, look at the reality of things.
Andrew IskerThings are way worse than you think they are.
Andrew IskerAnd, like, even from the start of the book, you know, I kind of.
Andrew IskerI kind of made fun of, you know, like, the boomer QAnon kind of thinking where it's like, oh, you know, Klaus Schwab is going to create this dystopia where we all have, you know, barcodes and we're living in pods and eating bugs and.
Andrew IskerAnd there's going to be a one world government that, that dominates everything, and it's going to be so bad.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, just step back and think for a minute and compare the way we live now to the way people lived 100 years ago.
Andrew IskerAnd you already have that dystopia.
Andrew IskerYou're already living in it.
Andrew IskerAll the World Economic Forum stuff and everything else, that's just theme, right?
Andrew IskerTrying to advance what they already have.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerIt's not, they already have the dystopia that they.
Andrew IskerThat they want.
Andrew IskerThey've created it.
Andrew IskerAnd you're living in it.
Andrew IskerAnd so instead of, like, focusing your energies on this horrifying future that could be, you should actually learn to hate the world that you already have.
Will SpencerThere's a powerful idea lurking in all of these.
Will SpencerIt's called the Red Pill.
Will SpencerAnd I don't mean it in some sort of masculinity dialogue kind of way, which is kind of co opt.
Will SpencerAnd this idea that there's a moment of awakening where you look around and you see that you are in the dystopia.
Will SpencerAnd I think the language of the online right is really effective at painting a picture of where things already are as opposed to this conspiracy narrative about where they might go.
Will SpencerThis is what already is.
Will SpencerAnd this sense of revulsion that comes up, the sickness.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerLike, this is terrible.
Will SpencerAnd there's something particularly appealing about that, I think, to young men who, as you said, they feel that something's wrong.
Will SpencerThey have the energy within themselves to truly despise it, but they can't articulate it.
Will SpencerAnd once you paint that picture, it's like, yes, I see that now everywhere, and I hate it, and I want to tear it down.
Will SpencerAnd I think that's really effective and very confronting to the american evangelical mind of the past 30 or so years, if not more.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerEspecially because you look at the last 20 or 30 years within evangelicalism, and a lot of it is they just assume that the dystopia that we currently live in is totally fine and okay, and.
Andrew IskerAnd here's how we can kind of baptize it and make it, you know, give it some godly aspects.
Andrew IskerLike you look at, like the gospel coalition, for instance.
Andrew IskerI mean, it's really declined, and no one pays that much attention to it anymore.
Andrew IskerBut in its heyday, right, they were constantly writing these articles about the idolatry of the family and caring about singleness, right?
Andrew IskerThe gift of singleness.
Andrew IskerAnd the subtext of that is you would have young women who, the way our culture has been engineered is for young women, which all of human history young women, they reach maturity, and now they go get married and have families.
Andrew IskerThere's a very short window that God has designed for them to bear children.
Andrew IskerAnd what our culture has done is say, no, we don't want to do that.
Andrew IskerWe want them to go have careers and work, because look at all the lost productivity that we will have if these women go be moms and raise children.
Andrew IskerAnd so they get diverted into the workforce, and then the cultural machine makes, you know, basically propagandizes them and indoctrinates them into this idea very subtly, that being a mom is bad, having children is bad.
Andrew IskerThat's a life or a death sentence to all the good things that you can do.
Andrew IskerLook at all the travel you can do.
Andrew IskerLook at all the brunch you can go have with your friends and post pictures of your avocado toast and mimosas on instagram.
Andrew IskerAnd you won't get to do that if you have to take care of a crying baby all the time.
Andrew IskerAnd so that's, that's buried into their, into the mindset.
Andrew IskerAnd then they go, and they don't have children, they don't get married.
Andrew IskerThey think, well, I can, I can put that off.
Andrew IskerI can go do that anytime.
Andrew IskerAnd then they get to their mid to late thirties and, like, the biological clock has already mostly passed them by, and they're stuck.
Andrew IskerThey're stuck.
Andrew IskerAnd it's really awful and tragic and, and you see, like, that dynamic.
Andrew IskerAnd then the flip side of that is that if all of those young women are not getting married and finding husbands, that means there's an awful lot of men who are not finding spouses within that age cohort.
Andrew IskerAnd so then you have the whole incel phenomenon, and it's just devastating to the entire society.
Andrew IskerIt's really bad.
Andrew IskerAnd the whole evangelical world totally oblivious to it.
Andrew IskerOr if they aren't oblivious to it, they want to attack what they'll do.
Andrew IskerThey'll attack the red pill men, they'll be like, oh, see, this is Andrew Tate, and this is guys like that that are pushing these ideas for making men hate women.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, no, I don't necessarily blame the women here either.
Andrew IskerIt's the people that govern our culture and rule it and decide, it's not like culture is organic.
Andrew IskerIt's not like we organically decided, yeah, we're going to pursue this course instead of what human beings have done for time immemorial.
Andrew IskerNo, people decided this.
Andrew IskerThey decided this.
Andrew IskerAnd multiple parties are involved.
Andrew IskerA lot of the discussion of the book, people are like, you talk about them and they, and who is that?
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, it's really this decentralized conspiracy, right?
Andrew IskerSo it's not, it's not like there's, it's not like George Soros is sitting up there, right, pulling the strings saying, all right, now we're going to send all the women into the workforce and trick them with mimosas, right?
Andrew IskerNo, it's multiple parties, all sorts of different nos to this thing.
Andrew IskerIt's not like there's one central guy where it's like, if we just get rid of this guy, then we'll be okay.
Andrew IskerIt's the entire managerial regime that has decided these things.
Andrew IskerIt's major corporations seeing, hey, you know what?
Andrew IskerYeah, that really will be bad, I guess, if the birth rates fall massively, but we'll just import people from all over the world to make up for it.
Andrew IskerAnd so, but right now we can double our productivity if we bring all of these moms into the workforce.
Andrew IskerAnd, yeah, instead of having four or five children like before, well, maybe have one or two.
Andrew IskerAnd, yeah, we'll save on maternity leave and childcare and all these things because they just want to have kids and we'll make so much more money.
Andrew IskerAnd when you're in your twenties and you make a good amount of money and you don't have a family, you have all this discretionary income to spend and so demand of all the products we sell will go up.
Andrew IskerSo, like, there's, there's clear, like, ego motive behind these things.
Andrew IskerAnd so it isn't like any one guy that decided, we're going to do this.
Andrew IskerA lot of people saw, hey, this is really good.
Andrew IskerI mean, some of it you could go back to like World War Two and women entering the workforce there because all the men are off fighting and we need people to build tanks and bombs and everything else.
Andrew IskerAnd so you see the rosie the riveter, you know, we could do it thing.
Andrew IskerAnd, and the people with a lot of money saw that, too, and thought, hey, this isn't so bad.
Andrew IskerWe can make a lot of money this way.
Andrew IskerAnd so it inserted this sort of very high time preference into a society that didn't otherwise have it, right.
Andrew IskerYou had american society, which was very low time preference, and people would save money, right.
Andrew IskerThey wouldn't want to just go out and buy stuff.
Andrew IskerI mean, you see this kind of, with like, like the tv show Mad Men, right?
Andrew IskerThe subtext of that show is, right, this massive cultural change that's occurring during that era, and, and what are they doing on the show, right.
Andrew IskerThey're trying to promote high time preference in society, right?
Andrew IskerThat's the whole, wait, what's Don Draper doing the whole time?
Andrew IskerIt's like, how do I get people to buy more stuff?
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerThat's, that's what they're trying to.
Andrew IskerThen the background of it is all the massive cultural change from, you know, the idealistic 1950s family to the, you know, sixties sexual revolution.
Andrew IskerAnd so like that, you know, there's, there's, there's good and bad things.
Andrew IskerOf course, about that show.
Andrew IskerOf course, they, they try to glamorize it, but you look at it, it's like, no, they're the villain.
Andrew IskerThey're the bad guys the entire time.
Andrew IskerAnd, and so, yeah, I mean, just that major cultural shift.
Andrew IskerLike, there are economic motives to it.
Andrew IskerThere are culturally subversive motives to it.
Andrew IskerPeople that wanted to remake american society in a particular image.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's not like one guy or even one small group of people just up and decided, we're going to do this.
Andrew IskerAnd so that's why it's like, oh, this is kind of conspiratorial language.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, I don't know, man.
Andrew IskerLike, that's literally what happened.
Andrew IskerLike, people wanted it to be this way.
Andrew IskerI don't.
Andrew IskerI don't think that's up for debate.
Andrew IskerThat's what happened.
Will SpencerThat's what happened.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerAnd so how do you overcome that is the big question.
Andrew IskerI mean, there's basically two ways of thinking.
Andrew IskerAnd I don't get into this too much in the book, because a lot of the book is for the general public.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerIt's for regular people.
Andrew IskerAnd so for regular people, it's.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerYou see the way the culture is, and here's what you can personally do to protect your family, protect yourself, live in a much more human way, rather than a socially engineered, managerial society way.
Andrew IskerThat's a lot of the, the theme of the book, but I think on the larger meta political side of it is this society can't continue to function the way it's been designed to in perpetuity.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerIt's just like, I mean, one is like just a simple math problem, right?
Andrew IskerIf you don't have babies, you don't have a society.
Andrew IskerI mean, this is like Elon Musk's thing, right?
Andrew IskerThat's why he's trying to repopulate the world single handedly.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, it's a busy guy, and Marsden.
Andrew IskerThat's right.
Andrew IskerPeople go to bars, so he's making them himself.
Andrew IskerBut it's.
Andrew IskerI mean, that's just the nuts and bolts of it.
Andrew IskerIt's like, if you don't have people, and you could try to import people from the third world and wherever else, but they're not the same people.
Andrew IskerThey're not able to function in the same way.
Andrew IskerAnd so it will decline and fall apart in some way.
Andrew IskerAll sorts of people want to prophesy, oh, there's going to be a collapse within 20 years, and the whole system is going to fall apart.
Andrew IskerMaybe things are complex.
Andrew IskerAnybody who tries to do that, I think, is selling snake oil to a certain degree.
Andrew IskerBut the reason they're able to do it is because everybody can see this can't keep going on forever.
Andrew IskerI think the background is knowing that, knowing that these things can't keep going on forever.
Andrew IskerHow do you build things and devote your life to the appropriate ends, to the right ends for 100 or 200 years down the road for your children and your grandchildren and so forth?
Andrew IskerHow do you set yourself up, if you're a single guy, to even have children, grandchildren?
Andrew IskerWhat things do you need to do?
Andrew IskerSome of it is just a pastoral question because I've, you know, especially when I was younger, a lot of my pastoral ministry was to younger men.
Andrew IskerAnd so I started, I mean, this is probably, you know, I was online and seeing all of the, I mean, the nice thing about online for those that aren't online is you kind of see things that are going to enter the mainstream, like, five or ten years beforehand.
Andrew IskerAnd so you get, you know, sort of an idea of where things are going.
Andrew IskerAnd so we had, in the church that I was at, there were maybe 20 or 25 young men that were like 18 to 30, and most of them are unmarried, wanted to be married.
Andrew IskerAnd I saw this problem, like, none of them were getting married.
Andrew IskerAnd all the dads are like, well, they just need to stop being lazy.
Andrew IskerThey need to go get jobs and stop playing video games.
Andrew IskerAnd initially, of course, I just assumed that's what was going on.
Andrew IskerAnd I'd see these guys and it's like, no, I'm working like 60 hours a week.
Andrew IskerI don't have time for video games.
Andrew IskerI want to get married.
Andrew IskerAnd I've asked all these girls out and none of them are interested.
Andrew IskerAnd I'd look at these guys and I'm like, well, you're not, you know, you're good shape.
Andrew IskerYou're not big fat slob or anything.
Andrew IskerYou're a good looking guy.
Andrew IskerThat's weird that none of these gals right are giving you the time of day.
Andrew IskerThat's strange to.
Andrew IskerAnd it was like every guy, it wasn't just like one.
Andrew IskerLike, maybe he's just being weird and antisocial, doesn't know how to talk to girls, but it's like, it was all of them.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, what is going on here?
Andrew IskerThis is, this is strange.
Andrew IskerAnd, and I started to see some of the stuff I was seeing on the Internet.
Andrew IskerYou know, you're reading.
Andrew IskerYou're reading.
Andrew IskerYou know, guys like Michael Foster was, was starting to talk about this stuff.
Andrew IskerAnd you'd read a, you know, this, this guy Dalrock would appear all over the place and I'm like, whoa, some of this stuff really makes sense, right?
Andrew IskerEven within, like, conservative christian homeschool communities, we'd have these, you know, 20 something girls that just would say no to every single guy.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, why are they doing that?
Andrew IskerWhy don't they want to get married?
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, oh.
Andrew IskerEven within that very insular, kind of Benedict option kind of community, you still have the same problems that exist in the outside world.
Andrew IskerNow, these girls were not on, like, Tinder and like hooking up with guys like girls out in the world, but the same kind of thinking was there, right?
Andrew IskerEven though, even though they weren't living in an overtly sinful lifestyle, the same ethos of, well, I'm just going to find myself in my twenties and have fun and be with my friends.
Andrew IskerAnd if the right guy comes along, that'll be good.
Andrew IskerAnd then they get closer to their thirties and they're like, well, I just can't find a husband.
Andrew IskerThis is terrible.
Andrew IskerAnd it'd be like, well, I know for a fact like half a dozen guys have asked you out and you've told them all no.
Andrew IskerAnd to me, it was like, it was like selling a house.
Andrew IskerIn a lot of ways, it's like selling a house and you put your house on the market and you want half a million dollars for this house.
Andrew IskerAnd all the offers you're getting are like, for 300, 350,000.
Andrew IskerYou keep saying, no, no, no, no.
Andrew IskerWell, what's the value of the house then, if all the offers are way lower than you think it should be?
Andrew IskerWell, it's the problem with your own valuation.
Andrew IskerAnd of course, I'm a guy analyzing these things in this cold, brutal, rational way.
Andrew IskerSo it's not easy to, to talk to young women and explain that to them because, you know, women don't think that way, right?
Andrew IskerIt's hard.
Andrew IskerIt's like, honey, you're not as good as you think you are.
Andrew IskerLike, you can't say that and you can't communicate that in a way that will be effective.
Andrew IskerLike, only a father can do that.
Andrew IskerSo a lot of it.
Will SpencerRight, right.
Andrew IskerWas like talking to the dads, like, hey, maybe it's maybe just too highly of herself, but I, that is the, that ended up being a lot of you.
Andrew IskerYou end up seeing these things.
Andrew IskerYou see the cultural, social problems that exist all throughout the world.
Andrew IskerOr even in, even in very strong christian communities as well.
Andrew IskerAnd the evangelical world was just totally oblivious to all of these dynamics and any of the resources that you had.
Andrew IskerI mean, some of it is, you'd have know boomer pastors, that they grew up in the seventies and eighties and the sixties and the world was not this way at all for them.
Andrew IskerAnd so they understandably, they have no way of understanding these things and coming up with any kind of solution, right.
Andrew IskerBecause these guys are just being lazy and playing video games, right.
Andrew IskerSeemed like a very simple, easy explanation.
Andrew IskerThey can just harp on the guys being, being lazy and bums.
Andrew IskerAnd that wasn't the answer.
Andrew IskerAnd then you have the whole, all the leadership in the evangelical world really, really, really reinforcing all those ideas and at the same time telling the young women, no, you just have the gift of singleness.
Andrew IskerAnd the gift of singleness means going and having fun with your friends and you don't want these people pressuring you to get married and have babies.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerThat's idolatry of the family.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerYou, that's bad.
Andrew IskerAnd so, right.
Andrew IskerReally, it was primed for this cope of the entire social order collapsing and assigning blame in all the wrong places and not giving good actionable counsel to young people living in light of these drastic social changes.
Andrew IskerAnd thankfully, there has been sort of a sea change, at least among conservative evangelicals, to begin to address these things in different ways.
Andrew IskerThe prime example of the old way is you had very popular conservative evangelical pastor Matt Chandler.
Andrew IskerWhen he gives this, I'm sure you've seen it, Will.
Andrew IskerHe gives this sermon and he's talking about, he's criticizing this older pastor who's talking about promiscuity, who is got this rose.
Andrew IskerI mean, it's kind of a corny example.
Andrew IskerHe's got this rose and he's having all the young women pass this rose around.
Andrew IskerAnd by the end of it, when it gets to the last person, the rose is all crumpled up and damaged and destroyed.
Andrew IskerAnd he's saying, that's what, what you are, right?
Andrew IskerThis older pastor that he's critiquing, that's what you are.
Andrew IskerIf you go live a promiscuous life, you're going to be this damaged rose.
Andrew IskerYou need to keep it pristine.
Andrew IskerYou need to remain chaste and so forth.
Andrew IskerAnd Chandler's like, no, Jesus wants the rose.
Andrew IskerJesus wants that damaged, destroyed Rose.
Andrew IskerYeah, yeah.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, I mean, in terms of like the salvific sense, right?
Andrew IskerCan women who have been promiscuous and so forth.
Andrew IskerCan they be redeemed?
Andrew IskerCan God save the Onlyfans girl?
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerYes, of course.
Andrew IskerNo one disputes that, right?
Andrew IskerThey, they can be right.
Andrew IskerGrace extends to them.
Andrew IskerOf course it does.
Andrew IskerBut when you're talking about ideal ways of life, right, a way of life that you would want for your own daughter, the crusty old pastor that he's critiquing was right.
Andrew IskerHe was correct.
Andrew IskerYou don't want your daughter to live that way.
Andrew IskerThat was their mode.
Andrew IskerAnd you see this even today, constantly.
Andrew IskerWhat happens is the OnlyFans girl, her career starts to end, she gets older and the grift ends.
Andrew IskerAnd what do they do?
Andrew IskerWell, I'm a Christian now, and so now I'm going to be a christian influencer.
Andrew IskerAnd so send me money, right?
Andrew IskerAnd anyone who criticizes them, it's like, well, you must be some kind of incel hater.
Andrew IskerYou must hate women and you must say that women can't get saved.
Andrew IskerWho you're withholding God's grace from them.
Andrew IskerIt's like, no, if you're actually repentant of these things, like you would just go and not live in the public eye anymore.
Andrew IskerYes, that would, that's probably the best counsel you can give them.
Andrew IskerAnd so you don't even give the pretense that you're just doing this as a grift.
Andrew IskerAnd like, nobody can understand, we can understand that they want to, they just want to hate you.
Andrew IskerBut it's the same thing, right?
Andrew IskerIt's the same thing of winsomeness.
Andrew IskerAnd whatever you do, right, one of the third rails of evangelicalism, you know, modern evangelicalism, is that women can't sin, right?
Andrew IskerAnd you can't ever address women's sins, right?
Andrew IskerYou see this all the time with, you go to a megachurch on Mother's Day and it's how women are so great and so wonderful and we love our moms, don't we, folks?
Andrew IskerAnd, and then you get to Father's day and it's like, men, you got a man up, you got to take responsibility.
Andrew IskerYou got to be a servant leader.
Andrew IskerAnd I know some of you are just absolute losers.
Andrew IskerYou got to figure it out.
Andrew IskerIt'll just be, they'll hit you.
Andrew IskerThe only time they'll ever confront sin and be really bold and really hit you between the eyes is like when you're attacking men specifically, right?
Andrew IskerYou have permission to do that.
Andrew IskerEverything else, which kind of shows you the feminization of Christianity and modern american evangelicalism, is, right.
Andrew IskerYou can't, you can't address sin by women.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerYou can't say that like, ah, promiscuity is bad.
Andrew IskerLike, I mean, you see people like this, they'll, they'll, they'll lose their minds.
Andrew IskerIf you, like, use the word whore.
Andrew IskerLike, you can't do that.
Andrew IskerIt's like, I don't know.
Andrew IskerIt's used a lot in the Bible.
Andrew IskerCan I say it there?
Andrew IskerWell, you're, you're not Paul.
Andrew IskerYou're not Jesus.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, okay, all right.
Andrew IskerSo, you know, yeah, it's just nuts.
Andrew IskerAnd so a lot of these things, it's like, well, that stuff's changing, and it has to change.
Andrew IskerWell, largely because Christianity and the christian religion in the Bible, it conforms to reality.
Andrew IskerIt conforms to, and it fits within reality.
Andrew IskerThey're not.
Andrew IskerConform isn't the right word, but they're seamless, right?
Andrew IskerIt's the same God who created all of creation and designed it the way that it is designed men to live like men and women to live like women, and for them to interact the way that they do, that God that built that whole world is the same God that gave us the Bible.
Andrew IskerAnd the two things fit together.
Andrew IskerAnd so what you see with a lot of modern evangelicalism that has conformed itself to the way of the world and to our currently socially engineered dystopia, is the Bible.
Andrew IskerThe way that they will preach it and teach it and so forth, will conflict with reality over here.
Andrew IskerAnd so you see it like this, where, I mean, one of the realities that we badly, badly want to suppress in our current social order is that there is a finite amount of time where a young woman can get married, have a family, start having babies.
Andrew IskerThere's a very narrow window there, and it also corresponds with the time period when women are the most attractive to the opposite sex.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerAnd you can't even say those things out loud without being accused of being a misogynist.
Andrew IskerYou hate women or you just think women are objects constantly.
Andrew IskerYou'll be told this, but it's like, it's just reality, right?
Andrew IskerIt's the way it is.
Andrew IskerSorry you don't like it, but that's how God made it, right?
Andrew IskerHe could have made women to be beautiful when they are 70 years old and just glowing with beauty, but he didn't.
Andrew IskerHe had those two things correspond for some reason, really, it's hard to figure out why that would be.
Andrew IskerYou have that reality that's built into the world, but then you have the world that we have in evangelicalism trying to cope with that.
Andrew IskerAnd trying to justify it.
Andrew IskerAnd so you will have the church telling young women these lies and repeating these lies to young women rather than just saying, hey, you should go get married, you should go be a mom if that's what you want.
Andrew IskerAnd for the overwhelming majority of women, deep down, it is what they want.
Andrew IskerIt is what God has made them to want it.
Andrew IskerThere's very few that actually have this gift of celibacy that want to be devoted to a particular mission, that don't have any desire to be a mom.
Andrew IskerAnd the reality is, no, most people do because that's how God built the world for human beings to want to have a future generation.
Andrew IskerAnd so we're so out of whack with these things.
Andrew IskerFor, for faithful Bible believing Christianity to exist in the future, we have to react to the errors of this previous age.
Andrew IskerAnd it's painful, it's hard.
Andrew IskerPeople will call you a lot of names.
Andrew IskerThey will hate you, they'll attack you, they'll call you an incel, they'll, you know, whatever, you know, I mean, I get called it and I have weird, you know, we are on our 7th baby here, my wife and I.
Andrew IskerIt's like, I guess I'm the only, not the only, but one, one of the few incels with seven children.
Andrew IskerBut you get attacked this way and it's, and it's nuts, but, oh, well, right.
Andrew IskerWho cares?
Andrew IskerLike the world that you let the dead bury their dead, like this world that you are married to, that you love, is destructive and horrible and it's not going to survive.
Andrew IskerWe're after the future and what we can build and the future of christian civilization, and I don't care what people are going to call me.
Andrew IskerThat's like the ethos that you have to have.
Andrew IskerIt's like, I don't care.
Andrew IskerSt.
Andrew IskerBoniface doesn't care if the german pagans are going to hate it.
Andrew IskerHe was martyred.
Andrew IskerThat's the end of the story.
Andrew IskerThey killed him.
Andrew IskerThey killed him.
Andrew IskerAnd that has to be the ethos that we have to have.
Andrew IskerI don't care if you kill me.
Andrew IskerWhat I believe is true and that's what matters.
Andrew IskerAnd so that's, you know, I mean, all of these things and there's so many other ones, but I mean, that's the obvious big one that's right before us is how feminized everything is, how it's geared to support this idea that women should not be mothers and to divert them from motherhood and family life at any cost.
Andrew IskerAnd that's a major, major idol that exists within our society that has to be cut down.
Andrew IskerAnd it's going to take men of boldness and courage to actually do that.
Will SpencerOn a personal level, I really appreciate you saying all that because I've seen many of the same things.
Will SpencerEven though I'm very new to evangelicalism, I've seen all the same things.
Will SpencerAnd these are the inescapable conclusions that I've drawn.
Will SpencerAnd it's very easy for me to feel like, well, I'm the new guy in the room.
Will SpencerMaybe I'm crazy.
Will SpencerAnd I hear you say these things and it's like, okay, no, praise God, I am not crazy.
Will SpencerSo thank you for that.
Will SpencerAnd I'll just.
Will SpencerI have a tweet kind of going viral right now, literally, about this.
Will SpencerLike, look, women, a single, unmarried, childless woman over 30, have to repent for the rebellion that they've been living in.
Will SpencerYeah, that's just true.
Will SpencerYou know what I mean?
Will SpencerLike, men, you can't say that.
Will SpencerNo, you can't say that.
Will SpencerThere's nothing in the Bible that says women should be married.
Will SpencerLike, well, show me the you go single girl scripture verse.
Will SpencerI haven't been able to find one yet.
Will SpencerAnd it's.
Will SpencerIt's, it's.
Will SpencerIt's so sad.
Will SpencerIt's really.
Will SpencerIt's tragic for so many.
Will SpencerFor so many different reasons.
Will SpencerAnd I've just had it.
Will SpencerLike, I, you know, this, this idea, like, guys, does everyone see that fire over there in the corner?
Will SpencerLike, what fire?
Will SpencerThat's keeping us warm as it's burning the house?
Andrew IskerYou know what I mean?
Will SpencerAnd the fact that there are so many pastors that will get up and berate men for hours and like, excuse me, do women sin ever?
Will SpencerWe can't talk about that because they'll lose their church.
Will SpencerAnd I think that's cowardice.
Will SpencerAnd as civilizations burning down and birth rates are crashing, you have all these men, like, I bravely preach the gospel really well, let's hear it.
Will SpencerAre we going to get some equal weights and measures?
Will SpencerAre we going to.
Will SpencerNo, we're not going to do that.
Will SpencerYou say these things like, okay, these things are real.
Will SpencerI'm not making it up.
Will SpencerAnd so I very much appreciate that because your line that I took away from the book, one of the many things is you said harlotry versus the household.
Will SpencerI think that really just crystallizes it.
Will SpencerI don't know if you want to unpack that really quickly.
Andrew IskerYeah, I mean, that really is the.
Andrew IskerThat really is the issue.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerThose are the two ways you can go because the gift of singleness thing is extremely narrow.
Andrew IskerLike, oh, I'm going to devote myself to missions and to serving the church.
Andrew IskerWell, that's not a huge chunk of people.
Andrew IskerThroughout the history of the christian church, most people were just normal people that went and got married and had kids and raised them to be christians and so that their children would go do the same.
Andrew IskerAnd that's how, that's how God has built us to, most normatively built people to live.
Andrew IskerAnd so you divert people away from that.
Andrew IskerWell, then what are they, what else are they going to do, right?
Andrew IskerWhat else are they going to do?
Andrew IskerThey're going to.
Andrew IskerAnd this is, and it's, I mean, you see some of the modern innovations as well, right?
Andrew IskerYou have, you know, antibiotics and modern surgery coupled with, you know, chemical, hormonal birth control that comes into, into being.
Andrew IskerAnd it, it allows women to become just as promiscuous as men.
Andrew IskerIn the past, right?
Andrew IskerIn the past, right, men could be man whores and, and, and go, go to prostitutes or go to just loose women in general that were kind of on the margins of society, and rightfully so, and they could do that seemingly without consequence.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerAnd so what feminism brought and the sexual revolution brought is, right, we want women to be able to do the same thing.
Andrew IskerAnd to do that, well, you have to kill a lot of babies to do that.
Andrew IskerAnd yes, there was abortion in the ancient world and the medieval world and the pre modern world, but it's very dangerous, right?
Andrew IskerYou very likely would die if you did.
Andrew IskerThere's a good chance you would, because you're basically taking poison to kill the baby or doing more primitive surgical techniques.
Andrew IskerBut with antibiotics and modern surgery now, it's relatively safe for the mother.
Andrew IskerAnd on top of that, like your hormones prevent a baby from implanting in the womb.
Andrew IskerSo this conceived egg, which is a human being, gets implanted in the womb ordinarily.
Andrew IskerWell, if your hormones block that, what are you doing?
Andrew IskerYou're killing a human being, the very smallest, tiniest human being, but it's still a unique human being with its own DNA, a person created in the image of God, and you're killing that.
Andrew IskerSo you have in the middle of the 20th century, this technological ability that unlocks this way of life that is unnatural, and you see the corresponding social changes that come out of that.
Andrew IskerAnd women are incentivized to live that way, to live a promiscuous lifestyle.
Andrew IskerIt seems like fun.
Andrew IskerIt seems like this is a good life that you can have all the things you want.
Andrew IskerYou have a life like the tv show Sex and the City that's glamorized for women, and that's the ideal life.
Andrew IskerThat's what you want to do.
Andrew IskerAnd if you do those things, obviously you can't have a household.
Andrew IskerYou can't be a mother raising children.
Andrew IskerAnd those things, of course, are demonized and treated like slavery, treated like a waste of your gifts and abilities.
Andrew IskerLike, that's something.
Andrew IskerI mean, even recently online, some of the discourse has been, well, all the red pill guys and things like that.
Andrew IskerWhat do you do about the really talented, bright women who you're like, well, go be a mom.
Andrew IskerGo have kids.
Andrew IskerWhat do you do about them?
Andrew IskerAnd who have all these abilities, right?
Andrew IskerWhat do you do about them?
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerWhat, what have, what do you have to offer them?
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, it kind of goes back to the meme, right?
Andrew IskerThis.
Andrew IskerIt's, it's an older meme, but it checks out of.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerThe woman who's like, ah, I was a scientist, and I did all of these things and cured these diseases, discovered these things.
Andrew IskerWhat did you do?
Andrew IskerAnd this woman's like, well, I raised five scientists.
Andrew IskerIt's like, which is better?
Andrew IskerWhich contributed board of science, right?
Andrew IskerAnd it's that kind of thing.
Andrew IskerLike, it's better to have children and have many children and raise them up, train them, devote your life to them, devote all your talent and ability to that than to go have a single, solitary career of 40 or 50 years and leave nothing behind after that.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerThat's what you have to offer.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerAnd people used to think this way and understand this intuitively, that God has made men and women different.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerThat he's made.
Andrew IskerHe's made men and women different.
Andrew IskerThat women have this extraordinary ability to create new life inside their own bodies.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerAnd bring forth the next generation of humanity.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerOnly they have this.
Andrew IskerMen don't have this ability.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerThis is controversial statement today, but men don't have this ability.
Andrew IskerWomen only women do.
Andrew IskerAnd God has endowed them with this ability and even, like, psychologically and physiologically giving them different ways of understanding the world than men do.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerWe talk, you know, you talk about, like, men are, men are kind of autistic and rational and.
Andrew IskerAnd cold and heartless, right?
Andrew IskerThey just think about things like this.
Andrew IskerBoom, boom, boom, ABCD.
Andrew IskerAnd women are much more emotional.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerThey make decisions more emotionally.
Andrew IskerThat's also a controversial thing.
Andrew IskerWhat do you mean?
Andrew IskerYes, they do.
Will SpencerAnd you just proved it.
Andrew IskerThank you.
Andrew IskerYes, you do.
Andrew IskerAnd, I mean, you see this also just in group dynamics, women seek consensus and they seek.
Andrew IskerThey avoid conflict, right.
Andrew IskerThey want everybody to get along.
Andrew IskerAnd men are like, I'm right, you're wrong, and this is the way we're going to do it and let's have it out, right.
Andrew IskerAnd if you win, then you win.
Andrew IskerAnd I'll submit, right.
Andrew IskerThat you have rigid hierarchies form among men, women.
Andrew IskerIt's like nice democracy, right?
Andrew IskerThey all get along.
Andrew IskerIsn't this nice?
Andrew IskerAnd.
Andrew IskerAnd so like that.
Andrew IskerThere's a reason for that, because within the household, when you got a bunch of little people, you raise them to get along.
Andrew IskerYou have matronly instincts where you have a much greater degree of empathy and care and love just built it in.
Andrew IskerThe hormones that are all throughout your body exist.
Andrew IskerThis way, women are unique compared to men.
Andrew IskerThey're different.
Andrew IskerThat's the skill and ability and everything else.
Andrew IskerYes.
Andrew IskerIf they're high iq, well, guess what, you're going to raise high IQ children that have lots of abilities or if they're very athletic, well, guess what, you're going to have athletic children or whatever it is.
Andrew IskerLike you're going to replicate yourself in these people.
Andrew IskerAnd people understood that not just 100 years ago, but throughout all of time, they understood that's what women are, that's what God made them to be, that there's a telos behind men and women.
Andrew IskerThere's an end for which God created them, a purpose of, for men and for women.
Andrew IskerAnd God created women to be mothers.
Andrew IskerAnd that is insanely controversial today, to say that.
Andrew IskerWhat do you mean?
Andrew IskerThat means you don't think they're as good as men.
Andrew IskerIt's like, no, I think they're different.
Andrew IskerI think they're different than men.
Andrew IskerAnd it would be like saying men aren't as good as women because they can't produce babies inside of them.
Andrew IskerNo, they're just different.
Andrew IskerThey're different.
Andrew IskerThey're different beings.
Andrew IskerAnd so just recovering that, recovering this natural order of what men and women are, you see this really the full bloom of it is within transgenderism, where it's like, all right, we take away all the social conventions between men and women, where we have to think of men and women as identical things in every possible way.
Andrew IskerYou own a corporation and you can't say, well, we're only going to hire men because we want.
Andrew IskerYou run an oil rig and you say, we're only going to hire men because this is a dangerous job and everything else.
Andrew IskerNo, you have to interview women for that job, too.
Andrew IskerThose are the laws we make in our society, you take away all the social conventions around differences between the sexes, and then what happens?
Andrew IskerWell, the next step of that, of course, is men can become women and vice versa.
Andrew IskerIt makes.
Andrew IskerIn this sick, twisted way, it makes sense, right?
Andrew IskerThat one would flow from the other, and it takes.
Andrew IskerI mean, it took, I think, because most people.
Andrew IskerMost people are okay with all the weirdness of feminism and all of that stuff.
Andrew IskerThey're even okay with perverted sexuality, like homosexuality and lesbianism and everything else.
Andrew IskerThey'll maybe be okay with those things.
Andrew IskerBut then when they see the transgender issue appear, especially when it starts to affect children, like, whoa, hold up here.
Andrew IskerWe're gonna put the brakes on right at this point, and you have to show them.
Andrew IskerIt's like, no, these are all, like, this is a clear line from one to the other.
Andrew IskerAnd, like, you can't just go back to 1992 and say, we're going to stop right here.
Andrew IskerThat was good.
Andrew IskerWe'll stay right?
Andrew IskerWe just want to put all that.
Andrew IskerThat's what a lot of the anti wokeness stuff ultimately is.
Andrew IskerA guy like James Lindsay, the anti woke guy, what does he want to create?
Andrew IskerHe wants to create a world where it was like it was in 2012, right?
Andrew IskerRight back the clock up just to 2012, and then we'll be good.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, buddy, even if you're successful in doing that, you're gonna get 2015 and 2024 like that.
Andrew IskerIt's baked into the cake.
Andrew IskerThere's no way around it.
Andrew IskerYou either have a normal, natural order or you do not.
Andrew IskerIt's one or the other.
Andrew IskerA lot of the thing seems like I harp in the book the transgender issue a lot, and I do that deliberately because that's the thing that people can grasp hold of, where it's like, yeah, this is wrong.
Andrew IskerYou're right.
Andrew IskerThis is wrong.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, yes, there's a direct line from this line I use in the book, a direct line from Rosie the riveter to the genderqueer goblin with pink hair that's actually a dude that's 400 pounds in a wig.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerThere's a straight line between those two things.
Andrew IskerIt doesn't just stop somewhere.
Andrew IskerNow we have this nice, liberal, secular society, Star Trek style right now.
Andrew IskerNo, we have this horrible dystopia, and it's this progression from one to the other, and there's no way to stop it reaching these ends.
Andrew IskerAnd people have to understand, and the church doesn't really want to understand that because we've made our.
Andrew IskerWe have made our peace with feminism we've made our peace.
Andrew IskerMany evangelicals even have made their peace with homosexuality.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm sure the same people will make their peace with transgenderism and whatever is next.
Andrew IskerAnd you have to say, no, not only are we going to stop here, but we have to go back to a normal order.
Andrew IskerAnd that's really painful because everyone has built their lives around, even, even normal.
Andrew IskerLike, you go to a large mega church in a metropolitan area, in a suburb, and a church of ten or 15,000 people, and 90% of the family's there.
Andrew IskerMom and dad both work and they have 1.3 children.
Andrew IskerAnd that's what's normal.
Andrew IskerThat's like normal family life in our dystopia.
Andrew IskerAnd to get them to not do that is, I mean, they built their entire lives around it, right?
Andrew IskerYou can't just say, okay, mom's gonna stay home from work now.
Andrew IskerLike, that's hard.
Andrew IskerThat's hard for, that's a very hard pill to swallow for people because, right, all of their lives, decades of their lives, have been, have they've worked toward having things the way they are, and you can't just rip them out of that.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's much easier to just not go down that road in the first place and to disciple young people to avoid those things at all costs.
Andrew IskerAnd that too, is very, very hard.
Andrew IskerYou look at housing prices today, and average cost of a house is nearly $400,000 throughout the country, and you would have to devote more than half your salary, the average, the median income, to paying just for the house, much less all the other expenses which continue to go up.
Andrew IskerIt's extremely difficult for people.
Andrew IskerYou can carve out a path on the margins.
Andrew IskerYou can live out in the sticks like I do, where the housing prices aren't quite as much, or you can be on the other end of the margin and make a lot of money, and then your wife can stay home and raise your kids and homeschool you.
Andrew IskerBut the median, the people in the middle of the bell curve, um, economically, right, they're stuck.
Andrew IskerThere's nowhere for them to go, and, and there's really no desire for any kind of change like that.
Andrew IskerAnd, and the church is not going to, because they, it's not like, it's not like, um, like if you were, if you had a big, huge megachurch of 10,000 people, you start saying this stuff immediately.
Andrew IskerPeople would be like, well, show me in the Bible where it says to do this.
Andrew IskerShow me in the Bible.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, first thing, show me in the Bible where it's a sin to cut off your arm, right.
Andrew IskerWell, there isn't actually, like, jesus says, cut off your hand, but, like, show me the Bible where this is.
Andrew IskerThis is not.
Andrew IskerThis is not right.
Andrew IskerIt's like, well, no, this is extremely foolish way of life that's destructive to every.
Andrew IskerTo your own family and to the entire society.
Andrew IskerAnd it takes a lot of work to.
Andrew IskerI mean, I had to write an entire book, like, outlining these things, and I don't have, like, little proof text to be able to say, here's where it's wrong.
Andrew IskerIt's like, no, you could see it if you have the sense to see how God built the natural order.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's a tough hill to climb for people because they want just a quick, easy Bible verse that says, live this way.
Andrew IskerAnd even the Bible verses that describe the household and describe how life is to be, even those ones.
Andrew IskerEveryone wants to carve out these exceptions and make them say things other than they say.
Andrew IskerLike, you look at ephesians five where wives are to submit to their husbands.
Andrew IskerYou'll have evangelicals who will say, well, that's conditioned on the husband loving the wife as Christ loved the church.
Andrew IskerThen you make it conditional, and the wife can say, well, I don't have to submit to you for this, that and the other thing, because you're not loving me the way I think you should be loving me.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's.
Andrew IskerIt's entirely subjective at that point.
Andrew IskerThere is no, like, objective command.
Andrew IskerNo, just listen to what your husband says.
Andrew IskerAnd.
Andrew IskerAnd all of this, all of what Paul says is predicated on an understanding of the natural order and how God made households.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerHe he just assumes it.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerHe assumes that the, um, ancient greek and first century jewish people that he's preaching to just implicitly understand, yes, we have households with husbands and wives, and men and women are different.
Andrew IskerAnd we can't make that assumption anymore as easily because we've revolted against the natural order.
Andrew IskerAnd so much of this stuff, I make this analogy in the book, too.
Andrew IskerSo much of this stuff is, it's like, I live in Minnesota, and we've got the Mississippi river here, this big, massive river, and our society is like, as if we manufactured a way to make the Mississippi run north, right, instead of south.
Andrew IskerAnd we build all of these dams and we divert the whole river and everything else, but gravity is still working the way that it's working, and it doesn't actually work very well, but we've built all these things, and it seems like it's working okay.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like going up to people and saying, actually, I think the Mississippi is supposed to run south, man.
Andrew IskerWhat do you mean?
Andrew IskerNo, no.
Andrew IskerWe've devoted everything to this, right?
Andrew IskerWe've rebelled against the natural order, and we've advanced in technologically and sociologically to make it seem like it will work right.
Andrew IskerForever.
Andrew IskerBut it's not going to.
Andrew IskerIt's not going to.
Andrew IskerAnd it'd be like, well, tell me in the Bible where it says that the Mississippi should run south.
Andrew IskerYou know, it's like, this is insane.
Andrew IskerThis is nuts.
Andrew IskerAnd you almost feel in some ways like a cassandra, right?
Andrew IskerIf you know that, you know the ancient greek myth where this woman is cursed with prophecy, where everything that she says will come to pass, but nobody's gonna believe her, right?
Andrew IskerYou feel this way constantly, and I'm sure you do in the circles you run in as well, where it's like I'm just describing reality and nobody wants to listen at all.
Andrew IskerNobody wants to hear it.
Andrew IskerBut the white pill there is that there actually are people that want to listen.
Andrew IskerThere are people that seed reality all around them, and they hate the way things are.
Andrew IskerAnd you have this duty and responsibility to help them to say, okay, you see the way things are, and we're not going to persuade the masses to give up their 401 ks and their life in the suburbs.
Andrew IskerThat's probably not going to happen.
Andrew IskerI'm not going to have 20 million people read my book and say, yeah, we need to go back to an older way of living.
Andrew IskerAnd so it will end up being the people on the margins on either end that are going to be able to rebuild a functional society and live in the way that God is intended for human beings to live and await the river, to start all the dams, to start bursting the river, start running south again, and to have things in place, to have institutions in place, to have communities in place where people live in a normal human way, and for that to finally grow when God brings it all down.
Will SpencerSo I really appreciate so much of what you had to say there because there's a lot of context that I find myself also missing the fact of just how much of evangelicalism has bought in to feminism.
Will SpencerI can see the rainbow flags going up.
Will SpencerI can see the diversity equity and inclusion.
Will SpencerI can see that stuff happening.
Will SpencerBut I haven't been able to see quite so clearly just how much feminism has gotten its claws deep into the evangelical church.
Will SpencerBut I experience the pushback when I try to talk about these things, including well, where is that in the Bible?
Will SpencerWhere does it say that women should get married?
Will SpencerI'm like, well, let's see.
Will SpencerThe book starts with a married couple, Adam and Eve, and then it finishes with a married couple, Christ and his bride.
Will SpencerAnd there's marriages all throughout the thing.
Will SpencerSo where isn't it in the Bible?
Will SpencerShow me the, you go single girl scripture verses as the thing.
Will SpencerI said, but people don't want to be challenged on that.
Will SpencerBut when you say, and I love the image that you put into the book, all the engineering that's been trying to make the Mississippi river go north.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd you can feel that in culture, like, the gears are grinding.
Will SpencerBut what I don't understand, and I guess I get the part that they don't want to have their ways of life upended.
Will SpencerBut when you show people the truth, when you show them, like, this is God's design for the family, and I know that they've been engineered through complementarianism and egalitarianism.
Will SpencerLike, I understand that dialogue.
Will SpencerBut when you show them and you show people inflation, you show people immigration and you show people crashing birth rates and you show people transgenderism and you see weak and aimless men and brassy women, and you say, like, you know, there's a book about all this and it says that we're supposed to do things this other way.
Will SpencerThat worked pretty well.
Will SpencerTheir response is like, is violent.
Will SpencerThey get angry and they get mad and they make it about you.
Will SpencerAnd that's the part that I don't understand.
Will SpencerFor people who in the next breath will call themselves Bible believing, faithful christians, that's the part that I don't get.
Will SpencerI also get the making it on the margins.
Will SpencerBut what has, and again, in many ways, I'm the new guy in the room, right?
Will SpencerYou're articulating things that I also see what I'm trying to figure out.
Will SpencerI had a great conversation with Jeff Wright about this.
Will SpencerUnderstand the context of what is the, from the evangelical perspective, where is the rejection of these things coming from?
Will SpencerWhere is the energy to reject these things coming from?
Will SpencerIs it pride?
Will SpencerIs it an unwillingness to be duped?
Will SpencerDo they really believe it?
Andrew IskerYeah, I think a lot of it is that.
Andrew IskerAnd this is other things that I've mentioned in the book just on worship, is that pragmatism is the thing that drives evangelicalism and evangelical culture?
Andrew IskerThat, and this hearkens back to the second great awakening.
Andrew IskerThat second great awakening is this event in american christian history where you had traditional, mostly Protestant America and you would have Presbyterian and congregationalist and Baptist and Methodist churches.
Andrew IskerAnd what the second great awakening brought about were things that were parallel to the church.
Andrew IskerI mean, many of them, like Charles Finney, was an ordained minister, one of the leading lights of the second great awakening.
Andrew IskerBut you'd have these revivals that would take place where people would make decisions for Christ, and everything became about securing decisions for Christ.
Andrew IskerAnd whatever pragmatic means you had to use, whatever emotional manipulation you would use to bring these things about was all on the table.
Andrew IskerAnd that became really the driving force since within the evangelical world, and you see, especially in the 20th century, when you started to have a collapse of mainline denominations and people fled those places because they just stopped believing the bible wholesale.
Andrew IskerThey started going to evangelicalism.
Andrew IskerAnd evangelicalism grew to be this large force within the american religious landscape in the sixties and seventies.
Andrew IskerIt was all the same methodology as the second great awakening is what drove it.
Andrew IskerAnd it was pragmatic.
Andrew IskerIt was whatever we have to do to get them in the church, whatever marketing methods we have to use.
Andrew IskerSo by the eighties and nineties, you begin having the seeker sensitive movement where guys like Rick Warren, people like that bill Hybels, where whatever we got to say or do to get them in the church, thats what well do, right?
Andrew IskerAnd you see the result of that is what we'll just soften on some of these things that conflict with the more mainstream culture, because that will be a roadblock to getting them into the church.
Andrew IskerOnce we get them in them, maybe we'll straighten things out, but we got to get them in the church.
Andrew IskerLike you even see this with the Super bowl ads of he gets us.
Andrew IskerI'm sure you've seen those ads.
Andrew IskerThat's the same dynamic at play there where they're trying to appeal to this kind of middle of the road current american sensibility of racism is bad guys and right wing stuff is bad.
Andrew IskerBeing against immigrants is bad.
Andrew IskerAnd there's all this imagery countering kind of maga impulses among evangelicals.
Andrew IskerAnd that's purposeful, right?
Andrew IskerThere's a goal there.
Andrew IskerThey want to appeal to the culture.
Andrew IskerAnd so I think a lot from the leadership perspective of the church, that drives a lot of it.
Andrew IskerI think we have this idea.
Andrew IskerAnd so guys like Doug and others who in one sense they're totally right, that the church should be the engine that's driving the culture, that the church, just the idea of culture and what it is is the famous quote, like, what is culture but religion externalized?
Andrew IskerAnd that's where you get like cult, cultus is at the core, it's a religious thing.
Andrew IskerAnd so our culture is not driven by the church at all.
Andrew IskerIt's driven by.
Andrew IskerBy other religious impulses.
Andrew IskerAnd so what the church ends up being is the caboose, right?
Andrew IskerThe culture takes it along and they're at the back end and they adopt whatever cultural things are extant, like ten years later.
Andrew IskerAnd you even see this with worship music.
Andrew IskerSo, like, whatever music is popular, whatever pop music there is today, right.
Andrew IskerYou'll see within five or ten years, like the mirror or a parallel to that within christian music, right.
Andrew IskerIt just, it's the caboose following the train of culture.
Andrew IskerAnd so that's the situation that we're in.
Andrew IskerAnd so thinking along those lines, why do people react so violently to that?
Andrew IskerIt's because what is at, what is the, what is the cultist that's at the center of all of their cultural beliefs and practices?
Andrew IskerIt's not this christian idea of how we live life.
Andrew IskerIt's the world's.
Andrew IskerAnd so if you conflict with how the world says you're supposed to live, then you're a bad person, right.
Andrew IskerYou're an evil person.
Andrew IskerAnd they'll.
Andrew IskerOr what you're doing, it's like, will, you're saying I'm an evil person because I live in this way and not in this way that you say I should.
Andrew IskerYou're saying I'm a bad person, right.
Andrew IskerThat's why they react violently to it, because you're really actually striking at the center of their actual religious belief.
Andrew IskerThat's the thing within christian churches today.
Andrew IskerYou can go to your pastor and say, you know, I'm having a lot of doubts about the resurrection and the virgin birth and all these things.
Andrew IskerI've been on Reddit and I've been reading atheists, and they've been making some good arguments, and I think they're persuading me.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerWell, your pastor or your friends at church or your friends at Bible Study or whatever, they won't freak out if you begin expressing doubts about these things.
Andrew IskerBut if you begin expressing doubts about certain cultural things or certain narratives that our culture believes, you will be cast out of the church immediately.
Andrew IskerGet out of here.
Andrew IskerWe don't want you.
Andrew IskerYou're a bad person.
Andrew IskerYou're saying that women shouldn't work.
Andrew IskerIf you said, hey, sort of have some doubts about the 19th amendment, I think maybe that was a bad idea.
Andrew IskerIt's like, get out of here.
Andrew IskerWe do not want you at all.
Andrew IskerYou're divisive.
Andrew IskerYou're a bad person.
Andrew IskerIt's like, no, I've just been reading.
Andrew IskerI'm not sold on.
Andrew IskerI'm not persuaded.
Andrew IskerI'm just.
Andrew IskerI'm starting to have some doubt, like, no, we don't want you.
Andrew IskerBecause what is at the core of their religion is.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerThe post war consensus, right.
Andrew IskerThe actual religion that we have in America, which is we live in this secular liberal democracy, we buy into at least some strain of feminism, whether it's first wave or second wave or third wave.
Andrew IskerWe're somewhere on that spectrum that we think is we've made our peace with.
Andrew IskerAnd if you confront those things, if you challenge those things, you'll be put out of.
Andrew IskerOut of churches, because their actual belief, their actual religious belief that they would burn at the stake for is not Christianity, not the claims of the Bible, but the current civil religion of the United States.
Will SpencerThat's right.
Will SpencerI think that's an excellent way you put it.
Will SpencerThe church is the caboose of culture.
Will SpencerBecause I want to talk a little bit about christian nationalism, because christian nationalism viewed that way would seem to be.
Will SpencerThere are some of us who are in the caboose, like, no, I think we're going to go up to the front of the engine.
Will SpencerI think we're going to start making our way forward on the train, and maybe we're gonna, you know, see if we can get an engineer put in to drive us, you know, where we want to go, instead of being comfortable in the back.
Will SpencerBut it seems that there are christians at the door that can woosh.
Will SpencerLike, no, you can't do that.
Will SpencerYou're not allowed to do that.
Will SpencerIt's like, well, we're probably going to.
Will SpencerSo maybe we can talk.
Will SpencerMaybe we can talk about that.
Will SpencerAt the risk of.
Will SpencerThere are some more things in the book I want to cover, but I want to just kick this idea around for a little bit, if we can.
Andrew IskerYeah, we'll spend the rest of our time talking about this.
Andrew IskerYeah, no, I think you're right.
Andrew IskerI think a lot of it is just that, like, the people that are strongly reacting to any talk of.
Andrew IskerNo, the christian religion should be the foundational cultural expression or the center of our culture.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerThat's bad.
Andrew IskerYou can't have.
Andrew IskerJesus doesn't want us to have power.
Andrew IskerWhat are you talking about?
Will SpencerMy kingdom is out of this world.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerNo, no.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerAnd it's weird because it will be guys who.
Andrew IskerIt doesn't matter what tradition they come out of.
Andrew IskerI mean, it can be people who are reformed and believe in the Westminster confession and catechisms, you know, 100% without exception.
Andrew IskerAnd then they'll be like, no, we can't have Christianity at the center of cultural identity in the United States.
Andrew IskerWe're a secular democracy.
Andrew IskerOr they could be, I mean, they can be Baptist, they can be mainstream, evangelical, they can be anything.
Andrew IskerAnd they all end up in the same place because they've bought into this idea that secular liberal democracy is the end of history, and this is the good and best and most virtuous society that we could possibly have.
Andrew IskerAnd if you say that no Christianity should be at the center, the christian religion should be at the center, then you're a bad, very, very bad person because you're threatening that.
Andrew IskerAnd the irony, of course, is before the 20th century, and certainly at the time of the founding of the country, there wasn't any other option other than Christianity being at the center of the culture.
Andrew IskerIt was at the center of every culture in the western world.
Andrew IskerAnd it would be inconceivable to those people for Christianity not to be at the center of your culture.
Andrew IskerYou don't have any expression of this in the west anywhere until 1789 with the French Revolution, where now we're going to have this atheistic, rational society where Christianity is not at the center.
Andrew IskerIt's going to be human reason.
Andrew IskerAnd that's what's revolutionary about the French Revolution and all revolution, revolutionary ideology since 1789, is that it's man centered, it's humanistic, it is us recreating society along our own lines and in our own vision and remaking everything.
Andrew IskerAnd so what they're doing is saying, we want, that we want to have this permanently revolutionary society where God isn't at the center, where Jesus isn't at the center, right?
Andrew IskerHe can be.
Andrew IskerOften we'll carve out some space where we have a little safe space for us to exist, right?
Andrew IskerAnd that's what they cling to because they think if you have Christianity at the center of a culture, well, then what are you going to have?
Andrew IskerIt's going to be like the 15 hundreds and the 16 hundreds, where you're going to be persecuting other christians and it's going to be so horrible.
Andrew IskerWe're going to have religious wars and all these things.
Andrew IskerIt's like, man, you are in a religious war right now and you are being persecuted for being a Christian.
Andrew IskerIf you, if you say there are only two genders, male and female, and I believe that because that's what Jesus said, that's what the Bible says, well, guess what?
Andrew IskerYou're a bad person, you're going to lose your job, you're going to lose economic opportunity, you're going to be shut out of normal society for believing that simple truth.
Andrew IskerWhat is that?
Andrew IskerBut being persecuted for your beliefs like it is.
Andrew IskerIt is.
Andrew IskerAnd so, no, we are in a religious conflict, religious war.
Andrew IskerIt's just not among various christian traditions and sects.
Andrew IskerIt's between an anti christian society and christians.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's, what is, I mean, fundamentally, I guess what is happening is that just from a political and cultural and sociological perspective, the secular liberal democracy order that came into being after the second world war in America is collapsing.
Andrew IskerThis kind of neutral space where no one religion is going to have dominance, we're just going to have a neutral society.
Andrew IskerWell, that's a transitionary period, right?
Andrew IskerYou can't.
Andrew IskerIt's a vacuum.
Andrew IskerAnd something is going to fill that.
Andrew IskerAnd what is filling it?
Andrew IskerIt's like this anti christian, anti God, anti Bible, religious view.
Andrew IskerAnd it's becoming more and more obvious by the day that that's what we have.
Andrew IskerAnd so now you have christians that are saying, no, I actually don't like that.
Andrew IskerI think that's bad.
Andrew IskerI think it's bad to kill a million babies a year.
Andrew IskerI think it's bad for.
Andrew IskerFor children to be put in dresses and put on hormone blockers and have their genitals removed surgically.
Andrew IskerI think those are bad things that are just deleterious to any society, and in particular to a society that has millions and millions of christians.
Andrew IskerAnd so as these things fall apart, it's just a natural expression of it.
Andrew IskerSome of it, too, is, where does this term come from?
Andrew IskerA lot of it came from the tail end of the Trump years, where you have very widespread support, despite evangelical leadership that hate Donald Trump.
Andrew IskerYou had widespread support of him by evangelicals, like, 80% vote for him.
Andrew IskerAnd I mean, that's just like, vote yes or no.
Andrew IskerBut among evangelicals, not only did they say, yeah, I guess I'll take him as president, if that's my only option, it's like, no, this is the guy we want positively, right?
Andrew IskerThere's very intense support among Trump, or for Trump among evangelicals, and it's a reaction to that where it's like, we have to eradicate this among the population, because the base of his, of this guy's support is among christians who think that we should have a Christian America.
Andrew IskerAnd that's very bad, very scary.
Andrew IskerSo they wanted to attack this.
Andrew IskerI mean, this goes back to Stephen Wolf's lone bulwark tweet.
Andrew IskerWhere he just looks at demographic data and that's who's being described.
Andrew IskerAnd they do it negatively all the time where it's like white christian evangelicals.
Andrew IskerThey are the strongest supporters of Trump, and they're very bad people.
Andrew IskerThis is why Russell Moore and David French and people like that attack Trump, supporting evangelicals all the time.
Andrew IskerIt's because they want to chip away at those things.
Andrew IskerThey want to get rid of it.
Andrew IskerThey want christians to buy into their project.
Andrew IskerAnd so what is christian nationalism?
Andrew IskerIt's just telling those people that you're not crazy, you're not insane, extremist people for wanting the morality of our laws to be shaped by the Bible.
Andrew IskerThat's not a bad thing.
Andrew IskerThat's not horrible.
Andrew IskerIt's a good impulse.
Andrew IskerIt's the right impulse for christian people to have, actually.
Andrew IskerAnd then Woolf is able to take it a few levels deeper and just place it within traditional protestant political theory that, yeah, when you have a majority of christians in a place, civil power is going to be exercised by christians.
Andrew IskerAnd that's good.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerThat's what we want.
Andrew IskerThat's not a bad thing.
Andrew IskerAnd so that's where a lot of this conflict arises out of is.
Andrew IskerAnd I don't think, like, even when I wrote the first book, Torba, my, I mean, there were a few goals that we had here.
Andrew IskerI mean, some people interpreted it as, we're gonna create this, like, new political party and have this voting bloc and take over America and winter and instill this positively christian state in America through the ballot box.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, I don't see that happening at all.
Andrew IskerI think there's maybe 20 or 30 million american evangelicals that would generally be described as having these christian nationalist sensibilities.
Andrew IskerThat's not a majority.
Andrew IskerYou're not going to win an election that way at all.
Andrew IskerIt's more.
Andrew IskerSo my goal was to just, one, to defend christians that had the right ideas and maybe don't have the words to articulate why they have these feelings and thoughts and everything else.
Andrew IskerSo to defend them, and then secondly, to move the conversation forward that the church's understanding of politics is really messed up and that it's okay to vote for things that are good for christian people and good for christian society, that it's okay to want that.
Andrew IskerNot that we're going to somehow turn the United States around by voting our way out of it.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerYeah, I think a lot about this, and also what you said about James Lindsay wanting to turn the clock back to, like, can we just go back to 2012 or 1995 and without fully grasping people, with not fully grasping that, no, we're at the tail end of a process that was initiated and, I don't know, 250 years ago.
Will SpencerI mean, you can take it back to the garden if you want, but like you can go back to the french revolution.
Will SpencerLike, it's arbitrary ultimately, but the foundations need to be of where we are need to be ripped out.
Will SpencerAnd I think everyone wants to continue having their little bit of modernity.
Will SpencerLike, I just want this little bit of thing.
Will SpencerI just like this.
Will SpencerI just like this.
Will SpencerNo, its all got to go because I had to go through this myself.
Will SpencerIm not sure if you know, but I spent 20 years in the new age, right?
Will SpencerAnd so I absorbed all kinds of really terrible ideas about men and women and religion and spirituality and Christianity.
Will SpencerAnd so as I started going into my own sanctification process, I had to go digging within myself.
Will SpencerPlus I grew up liberal, atheist, jewish, feminist, you know what I mean?
Will SpencerSo I had to dig in.
Will SpencerIt's like the core of my being and find beliefs that were rooted in there from the start, maybe even in my bloodstream in some sense, and just rip them all out.
Will SpencerIt's like I don't want to hold on to any of this stuff because I recognize that it's all lies.
Will SpencerIt's all caused me pain.
Will SpencerIt's all been deception.
Will SpencerAnd I want to start moving towards something more in line with scripture and God's truth because that's freedom.
Andrew IskerYes.
Will SpencerWhat I encounter is people.
Will SpencerYou start pulling these things out, it's like.
Will SpencerBut no, I like that.
Will SpencerIt's like, why do you like that?
Will SpencerIt's poison.
Will SpencerStop.
Will SpencerAnd I don't get it.
Will SpencerI mean, on some level I do.
Will SpencerI understand the fear of change.
Will SpencerI understand all of that.
Will SpencerBut it just seems like people want to hold on to things that are bad for them and that I don't understand.
Andrew IskerMaybe some of it is just like naturally what men in their sin are.
Andrew IskerI've already mentioned Doug a few times.
Andrew IskerI think this is his analogy where he's like, sin is often like a little baby who has a dirty diaper.
Andrew IskerIt's warm and it's mine.
Andrew IskerI don't want to get rid of it.
Will SpencerI haven't heard that one.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, it's like that's true.
Andrew IskerLike we don't.
Andrew IskerIt brings us comfort, even though we know the end of it is pain.
Andrew IskerBut we would rather have this thing that gives us comfort in the moment and makes us feel good and getting rid of it can be painful, and people don't want that.
Andrew IskerThey'd much rather have.
Andrew IskerI mean, that's the thing, too.
Andrew IskerIt's like, yeah, we want to be back in 2012 or 1995 and just live that way again.
Andrew IskerWhy can't we just have that?
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, no, things weren't bad then.
Andrew IskerIt's just, it wasn't as readily apparent.
Andrew IskerAll the toothpaste hadn't come out of the tube yet, and so it seemed like things were fine.
Andrew IskerBut we're already on this trajectory of where we were going to get to the place where we are now.
Andrew IskerAt that time, it wasn't like it could stop there at any point.
Andrew IskerAnd people, yeah, most people, because, I mean, I've had some reaction to the book.
Andrew IskerThere are people that hear about it or hear it described were like, you got to read this book.
Andrew IskerThis is a really good book.
Andrew IskerAnd be like, I refuse to believe that the world is as bad as you say it is.
Andrew IskerAnd usually the people that say those things, right, they have, they have pretty comfortable lives, right?
Andrew IskerSo they, you know, it's usually like, like a middle class couple, right?
Andrew IskerThings are, things are a little tougher than they used to be.
Andrew IskerBut, you know, mom and dad both are making a pretty good income, and life is good.
Andrew IskerYou get to, you get to enjoy all the hobbies that you like.
Andrew IskerYou know, you get to, you get to watch barstool sports and, you know, watch football.
Andrew IskerFootball and go have fun with your friends.
Andrew IskerAnd things are pretty nice, right?
Andrew IskerYou don't have to deal with these things.
Andrew IskerYou're kind of, you're insulated from a lot of the pain.
Andrew IskerAnd that really is life in the early two thousands and the 1990s is way more people were insulated from the pain of the massive social changes that were occurring that they didn't have to.
Andrew IskerThink about it.
Andrew IskerThink about it.
Andrew IskerI've got a pretty nice life, right?
Andrew IskerI make plenty of money.
Andrew IskerI like my life.
Andrew IskerAnd if they did consider these things or if they did accept that, wait, actually, this maybe isn't good, it would radically disrupt their lives.
Andrew IskerTheir nice, comfortable life that they have would suddenly be way less comfortable then it would be otherwise.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, and if there isn't, like, show me in the body.
Andrew IskerAnd this is the thing, I mean, this is, this is like, this goes back to like, the gospels where it's like, show me, show me a sign, Jesus, that you're actually the messiah.
Andrew IskerAnd he's like, no.
Will SpencerAnother one.
Will SpencerNo.
Andrew IskerYou want some more?
Andrew IskerWhat?
Andrew IskerNo, I'm not gonna show you any more signs.
Andrew IskerOr it's like.
Andrew IskerOr it's.
Andrew IskerIt's the parable that he tells of the rich man in Lazarus where he's like, please let me go back to my brothers so that I could tell them not to do the things that I did.
Andrew IskerAnd he's like, well, they have Moses and the prophets.
Andrew IskerIf they wouldn't listen to them, they're not going to believe someone that came back from the dead.
Andrew IskerAnd it's a similar kind of thing where if they can't extrapolate from.
Andrew IskerFrom the Bible and from the natural order of the world that God has made, that's apparent to all.
Andrew IskerThey're not going to listen to some guy on a podcast who wrote a book or whatever.
Andrew IskerThey're not going to do that.
Andrew IskerAnd so I think things will inevitably become more painful for more people, and more people will begin to see these things.
Andrew IskerLike the guy who's living a comfortable life right now when his kids get trans or when he has to deal with his, you know, whatever other social problems come down the road.
Andrew IskerThen you start to feel the pain.
Andrew IskerI mean, you even see this to a certain extent, in, like, the 2022 election where you had all of these moms running for school board and fighting, like, the trans issue.
Andrew IskerIt's because these people are starting to actually feel the pain.
Andrew IskerIt's like, oh, maybe gay porn in the public school library is not a thing that I want my children exposed to.
Andrew IskerAll the other stuff until that point, whatever.
Andrew IskerAll the sex ed and everything, they're getting near pornographic stuff anyway.
Andrew IskerAll of the pro homosexual stuff that had been in schools for years, whatever, all the feminism, everything else, okay?
Andrew IskerBut when it came to that, it's like finally they're feeling some pain and they are pushing back.
Andrew IskerAnd I think it's the same kind of thing where it isn't until people start to feel pain from it and start to feel their own families personally affected by it.
Andrew IskerI mean, it's.
Andrew IskerYou know, it's the meme, right?
Andrew IskerHow does this personally affect you?
Andrew IskerAnd it's like Rome is burning behind them, right?
Andrew IskerIt's.
Andrew IskerIt's the same kind of thing wherever people don't get it until it does personally affect them.
Andrew IskerAnd I wish it were some other way.
Andrew IskerI wish people could see, like, no, here's what's going to happen if we continue to do the things we've been doing.
Andrew IskerBut until then, you're only going to have the small group of people on the vanguard who are, for whatever reason, willing to think through these things and come to the same realizations that a lot of us have that will continue to push ideas that are true and, like, self evidently true to everyone, for them to eventually gain more mainstream credibility.
Will SpencerThat actually brings me some peace, is to remember just how many people doubted Jesus.
Will SpencerLike, didn't.
Will SpencerWasn't in the resurrection.
Will SpencerLike, he's there.
Will SpencerHe's like.
Will SpencerAnd some doubted, like, he's right there.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Will SpencerYeah, I'm not so sure about that.
Will SpencerLike, bro, right?
Andrew IskerYeah, you are.
Will SpencerYeah, here I am.
Will SpencerLook at my hands.
Will SpencerLike, I'm not so sure.
Will SpencerI appreciate knowing that because it's a very heartening reminder that some people just will not see the truth right in front of their face.
Will SpencerBecause for me, it's like, give me truth.
Will SpencerPeople, maybe they're incapable.
Will SpencerI always think it's people's high ability to tolerate cognitive dissonance, but it's actually deeper than that.
Andrew IskerIt's beyond psych.
Andrew IskerI mean, it's manifested in psychology, for sure, and tolerance of cognitive dissonance.
Andrew IskerBut at a certain point, it's the human heart, where we would rather believe lies all day long than one uncomfortable truth.
Andrew IskerThat's just the reality of the way we are.
Andrew IskerI would rather someone live in a fantasy world.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerI mean, it does often go back to the Matrix.
Andrew IskerLike, I'd rather just live in it.
Andrew IskerAnd I don't care if this.
Andrew IskerI know it's not a real steak, but it sure tastes good.
Andrew IskerAnd I want to go back to that.
Andrew IskerI want to go back to that.
Andrew IskerI don't want to confront the reality that things are way worse than anyone recognizes.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, it's a.
Andrew IskerIt can be blackpilling for people.
Andrew IskerIt could be really depressing, and you could feel like I'm the only person that gets these things.
Andrew IskerNone of everybody around me thinks I'm nuts.
Andrew IskerAnd you have to understand that this is the way we are, that human beings, in our sin, we will happily accept lies.
Andrew IskerIt will provide us comfort.
Andrew IskerI mean, most people.
Andrew IskerPeople don't naturally don't want to be weird, right?
Andrew IskerThey don't want to stand out.
Andrew IskerThey don't want to have everyone around them think they're nuts.
Andrew IskerAnd so it will take.
Andrew IskerIt takes massive, like, black swan events for people to, like scales to fall off their eyes and see things.
Andrew IskerLike, I think, you know, 2020 was a big one, where there were tons of people who in 2019, because nothing I really believed was majorly changed from 2019 to 2020.
Andrew IskerBut there were a lot of people in 2019, like, if I would have any conversation that had about any real things beyond just small talk.
Andrew IskerPeople would think I'm nuts.
Andrew IskerThey'll think you're crazy.
Andrew IskerAnd I got really good at just.
Andrew IskerOnly talking small talk with people because it's like, you're gonna think I'm nuts if we talk about anything real.
Andrew IskerAnd after 2020, there were a lot more people way more receptive to things that I had to say that all of a sudden, I wasn't so crazy.
Andrew IskerOh, maybe this guy gets some things I don't.
Andrew IskerAnd so I think it takes events like that where you're just forced to confront realities that you would way rather leave alone.
Andrew IskerAnd that's the thing that God does, right?
Andrew IskerHe makes things happen.
Andrew IskerIt's the current meme on the Internet that nothing ever happens.
Andrew IskerAnd I have some fun with that, too, because everyone's like, oh, is this it?
Andrew IskerIs there gonna.
Andrew IskerIs this world war three happening?
Andrew IskerIs this.
Andrew IskerIt's like, hold your horses.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerNothing ever happens.
Will SpencerThat's red heifer, bro.
Andrew IskerThat's right.
Andrew IskerThat's right.
Andrew IskerAnd they did it this week.
Andrew IskerAnd, like, what happened?
Andrew IskerNothing and no one.
Andrew IskerYeah, we're all still here, Vin, and so it's like.
Andrew IskerBut sometimes things do happen, right?
Andrew Isker2020 was a happening, a big happening, and there are going to be things happening this year as well that we have to be prepared for.
Andrew IskerAnd really, the preparation is people might start listening to ideas that they wouldn't have otherwise, given the time of day when.
Andrew IskerWhen stuff, you know, starts to hit the fan.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's.
Andrew IskerIt's just to be.
Andrew IskerTo be steady.
Andrew IskerI mean, some of the stuff I talk about in the book, too, is there is.
Andrew IskerAnd it's really hard because there's this propensity that we have if you're, like me, where, like, if you get things that nobody else gets and you see the world so clearly and nobody else is getting it, or it's easy, very easy, to become extremely antisocial, right.
Andrew IskerJust to be, like, a gadfly and just happily upset everyone all the time, to be, you know, to be the guy at the party that ruins it all the time and.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerIt's important not to be that way at all, to.
Andrew IskerNot.
Andrew IskerTo not be the person that's not fun at parties and pick your spots and just wait for the moment when people are willing and ready to listen to you.
Andrew IskerThat takes a lot of wisdom that we don't always have, that people are not just knowing, all right, this is not the time for me to start explaining this because they're not going to listen to me.
Andrew IskerBut sometimes they are.
Andrew IskerAnd when things happen, then you are able to give an answer that is sufficient for the things that are taking place.
Andrew IskerAnd it can be a lonely thing.
Andrew IskerOne of the things with this book is it puts people in a position to be a prophet.
Andrew IskerNot a prophet in the sense that you are predicting the future and saying this thing is going to happen and come to pass, but rather prophetic in the sense that all these things that you love so much and think are awesome are actually really bad and we need to stop doing them and.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerYou know, you don't have to be a huge Bible scholar to understand how prophets get treated when they speak prophetically.
Andrew IskerIt's people don't like them, they think they're bad people and they beat them up and kill them.
Andrew IskerAnd if you're taking this call upon yourself to be a prophet, and really the call is, do you see reality that nobody else is willing to see, well, then there it is.
Andrew IskerThat's your calling.
Andrew IskerAnd learning to speak prophetically in a wise and effective way where you can win people and have your message heard and help people out.
Andrew IskerIt's a lonely place.
Andrew IskerYou're not going to get a lot of accolades.
Andrew IskerYou're not going to have a big gin Normo, 20,000 person church.
Andrew IskerIf you want to be a pastor like this.
Andrew IskerThat's part of it, too.
Andrew IskerGoing back to evangelicalism and just the structure of it is like, it would be very easy in some senses.
Andrew IskerI mean, it's not easy.
Andrew IskerNot everybody rises to the top of the heap in the evangelical world like, it does take some talent and ability, of course, but in another sense, it would be easy for me to, like, climb that ladder and say the things that I had to say to preach the Father's day sermon, chewing the men out and the mother's Day sermon saying how great women are.
Andrew IskerI could do all that stuff.
Andrew IskerI could be a good little boy and make my way all the way as high as I can.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, I can't.
Andrew IskerI could never do that.
Andrew IskerI cannot.
Andrew IskerI could not bring myself to do that and sell out in that way.
Andrew IskerI can't be shameless like that.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like that for anyone who sees these things, wherever they're at in life, where you could have a lot more success in life, if you just lie to people all the time, don't tell them the truth about how life is.
Andrew IskerYou'll have a lot more friends, you'll be invited to a lot more parties.
Andrew IskerBut can you live with yourself being that way.
Andrew IskerNo, it would be impossible.
Andrew IskerAnd so the upside, and I.
Andrew IskerThe white pill in all of it is those things really ultimately don't matter at all.
Andrew IskerWhat matters is the truth.
Andrew IskerAnd what matters is whether you're able to help people or not.
Andrew IskerAnd I do think, I mean, I saw a lot of things that were very white pilling in 2020, when I saw the churches that refused to close down or fought lockdowns and things like this, I saw those churches have a lot of growth.
Andrew IskerA lot of people came to them, and that is really good.
Andrew IskerAnd I saw courage being rewarded in those years.
Andrew IskerAnd so it doesn't always have to be this gloomy, sad thing where it's like, ah, you're like the prophet Elijah on Mount Sinai.
Andrew IskerIt's bemoaning.
Andrew IskerEveryone has abandoned you.
Andrew IskerLord, I alone am left.
Andrew IskerAnd what does God say to him?
Andrew IskerNo, I reserved 7000 who have not bowed the knee to bail.
Andrew IskerThere are way more people out there that are willing to face reality and hear things that are true, that are unpopular, to say way more of those people than you even realize.
Andrew IskerThere are a lot of people that get, and maybe in ways that they can't articulate or understand, but they know things are not right here.
Andrew IskerThere are problems, and I don't quite get it.
Andrew IskerAnd they're looking for someone to say, this is it.
Andrew IskerThese are the problems.
Andrew IskerThis is what has gone wrong.
Andrew IskerAnd you can build people up, and those are the people you can build things with.
Andrew IskerThose are the people that you can rebuild a christian society out of.
Will SpencerGreat.
Will SpencerYou went right to where I wanted to go.
Will SpencerBecause there is a phenomenon where men, especially young men, become aware of these trends, these realities.
Will SpencerLet me give you my definition of anger.
Will SpencerAnger is a legitimate emotional response to a crossed boundary.
Will SpencerSo when someone crosses a boundary, we have.
Will SpencerWe feel anger.
Will SpencerAnger is our body letting us know that someone has crossed a boundary.
Will SpencerIt's instinctive, right?
Will SpencerSo that's how we know someone has crossed a boundary.
Will SpencerWe've been living in this trash world where all of men's boundaries, particularly men's boundaries, have been crossed multi generationally for 50, 60, 80 years.
Will SpencerThat's just how it's been.
Will SpencerThe sexual revolution, feminism, women's liberation, has entirely been about crossing men's boundaries.
Will SpencerAnd you can even go back to the betrayal of world War one and world War two, especially world War one and Vietnam, etcetera.
Will SpencerAnd so.
Will SpencerAnd so men have inherited this upside down world that demands them to be smaller and smaller.
Will SpencerSmaller.
Will SpencerYou know, don't, don't even sit in a train with your knees apart.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerDon't speak in a loud voice.
Will SpencerDon't.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerIt's to that degree.
Will SpencerAnd so men's boundaries have been crossed.
Will SpencerAnd so someone points out to them this is going on, and they feel this overwhelming relief and then a release.
Will SpencerNow our society doesn't really know what to do with men's anger.
Will SpencerThis is something I can talk a lot about, and I think it's a real phenomenon.
Will SpencerSo what do we do with it so it doesn't become corrosive?
Will SpencerBecause I think that's everyone's worry.
Will SpencerThis is a real thing.
Will SpencerWe can't shame it out of existence.
Will SpencerIt's really there.
Will SpencerWe want to channel it productively and we don't want it to melt down on itself.
Will SpencerWhat do we do?
Will SpencerAnd this can be as practical as what do you and I do having platforms.
Will SpencerWhat do we do in our individual lives?
Will SpencerWhat can we do for men to help them work with that channel that productively, use that anger so it doesn't feed back in on itself?
Andrew IskerYeah, I think that's like the million dollar question because, and even like, it's funny, Rod Dreher reviewed my book pretty early when it came out, and in one sense, I'm very grateful that he took the time to read my book and took it seriously.
Andrew IskerThat's commendable.
Andrew IskerBut he hated it.
Andrew IskerAnd his major critique of it is that Andrew Isker is this angry, angry young man.
Andrew IskerHe is angry and he's young.
Andrew IskerAnd he apparently found the podcast with CJ and me, maybe watch some of it.
Andrew IskerAnd I don't think I come across as very angry on the podcast.
Will SpencerYou don't, you don't come across as angry in the book either.
Andrew IskerNo, I think it was his own, he was imputing his own feelings, probably onto it.
Andrew IskerAnd it's funny because he looks like he's in his early thirties.
Andrew IskerAnd so I'm like, wow, I'm almost 40, man.
Andrew IskerSo thanks.
Andrew IskerI look younger than I am.
Andrew IskerBut no, I think like you're saying anytime you express that things are wrong, there are problems here.
Andrew IskerWell, you're just angry, young man.
Andrew IskerYou're just angry.
Andrew IskerReally angry.
Andrew IskerAnd there is that fear, especially among the older generation, especially among the people that kind of are in power and in control, that the angry young men are going to take over and they're going to mess everything up.
Andrew IskerAnd yeah, this stuff happens.
Andrew IskerThere are, Elliot Rodgers was a real thing.
Andrew IskerThere are angry incel people.
Andrew IskerIt's not a totally made up fear.
Andrew IskerAnd I could see it going a lot of different directions.
Andrew IskerI think on one hand, there is, if things continue to decline, and you have these episodes where things decline precipitously, because I don't think there's going to be this full on collapse like the Soviet Union, but there will be regular, continual decline in the state of things into the future.
Andrew IskerAnd at some point there will either be like a total left wing maoist revolution, so all the people doing the Hamas protests on Ivy League campuses will come to power and just destroy everything, or there will be a right wing reaction to these people and to the state of things, which some people discount.
Andrew IskerThey think that's not going to happen.
Andrew IskerThe right is disorganized.
Andrew IskerThere's nothing.
Andrew IskerIt doesn't really exist.
Andrew IskerBut things change when economic circumstances change.
Andrew IskerInflation is bad right now, but imagine much worse inflation.
Andrew IskerAnd people are just not able to provide for themselves and their families, and now all sorts of right wing ideas, people are much more willing to hear them.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerAnd so I can easily see in the next 20 years this reactionary movement taking off, and it won't be a christian one, it will be a pagan one.
Andrew IskerAnd for this entire time, the church has been on the side of the regime and will provide no moderating influence whatsoever on any of this stuff.
Andrew IskerSo I think on the meta political level, the church has to become a lot more right wing politically and just culturally and sociologically.
Andrew IskerSo much so that it's able to influence the young men that are going this direction and to be able to moderate them, to be able to say, okay, yes, you're angry about the things, and rightfully so.
Andrew IskerThere is a lot to be angry about.
Andrew IskerAnd how do you direct this anger?
Andrew IskerWhat do you direct it toward?
Andrew IskerDo you direct it toward productively building things that are good, that'll be good for you personally and for your family and for the people around you?
Andrew IskerOr do you direct it into fruitless things that will be destructive?
Andrew IskerThat's one of the things.
Andrew IskerOne of the main things that the church can and should be doing is if you're, if, I mean, some of it is just to be able to say these things out loud and tell people, these are the things going on.
Andrew IskerThese are the things you should be angry about.
Andrew IskerHere's what you can do to, to fix it for yourself personally and for others.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerThat, that alone provides a lot of moderation to the anger, because what, what other outlet is there other than to people, people to, to go online and, and call women whores?
Andrew IskerI mean, what else is there?
Andrew IskerI mean, you see a lot of that.
Andrew IskerIt has to be directed into productive ends.
Andrew IskerThe feelings and the emotions that people have in their circumstances.
Andrew IskerThey're just going to remain black pilled and have no hope for anything.
Andrew IskerAnd that's a horrible situation to be in.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerIt's almost worse than.
Andrew IskerThan just being a normie that wants to watch sports and play Xbox.
Andrew IskerThat's a worse state of things than being aware of reality and having nothing you could do remotely whatsoever to affect your situation.
Andrew IskerSo that is the huge one is all right, you're angry.
Andrew IskerI get it.
Andrew IskerI get why.
Andrew IskerHere's what you can do.
Andrew IskerThe church today will stop right there.
Andrew IskerIt'll say you're angry.
Andrew IskerWell, you need to repent.
Andrew IskerIt's bad to be angry and provide nothing for young men to do in any positive way to make things better for themselves.
Andrew IskerSome of it is just to have someone say to you, an older man, say, I get it.
Andrew IskerI get why you're angry.
Andrew IskerI would be angry if I were in your shoes, too.
Andrew IskerAnd if I were in your shoes, here's what I would do.
Andrew IskerLike, we don't do any of that kind of stuff.
Andrew IskerAnd it is like that alone.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm working myself.
Andrew IskerI'm getting angry about it, too.
Andrew IskerLet's go.
Andrew IskerBut it upsets me that I see millions of young men who have some semblance of understanding of the problems that existed around them.
Andrew IskerAnd the people that should have the answers don't provide any answers for them at all.
Andrew IskerThe answer is, you're a bad person.
Andrew IskerYou just need to be a better servant, leader.
Andrew IskerAnd then, right, if you just show all the women what a great and godly doormat you are, they'll come flocking to you and you'll find a wife and all of these.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, no, that's the opposite.
Andrew IskerThey all go to the jerks.
Andrew IskerThat's just reality, you know?
Andrew IskerAnd so, no, that's not the direction you should tell young men to go down.
Andrew IskerYou need to tell them things are really messed up.
Andrew IskerHere's what you personally can do.
Andrew IskerAnd there are major problems, and I hear them and I see them all around, just like you do.
Andrew IskerAnd you need to direct that into things that you.
Andrew IskerBecause there are.
Andrew IskerIt shouldn't be black peeling because it's nothing.
Andrew IskerNot all hope is lost.
Andrew IskerNot everything is totally ruined.
Andrew IskerYou still can have a good life.
Andrew IskerIt's just much, much harder.
Andrew IskerThe good life that our fathers and our grandfathers just were born into.
Andrew IskerThey didn't have to do anything out of the ordinary to achieve.
Andrew IskerYou just reach 18 years of age.
Andrew IskerBoom, here's a job.
Andrew IskerWork hard and things will be good.
Will SpencerSingle income families, you can support your family on a job here.
Andrew IskerHere are all the women that want to get married, and you have a job with money, and they're all really pretty, and you pick one and boom, you got a family.
Andrew IskerThat world doesn't exist anymore.
Andrew IskerIt doesn't exist anymore, but you can still make it happen.
Andrew IskerYou have to work a lot harder than your father and your grandfather did.
Andrew IskerYou have to, you have to search a lot harder for a good woman to marry that wants to have a family.
Andrew IskerYes, you do.
Andrew IskerBut it's not impossible.
Andrew IskerIt's not impossible.
Andrew IskerThe path is just much narrower than it was for everyone else.
Andrew IskerAnd so directing young men down this much narrower, harder path and encouraging them, in spite of the difficulty and problems that they face is, is what we have to do rather than, rather than what we've done, which is just.
Andrew IskerNo, the problem is you.
Andrew IskerYou're a bad person, right?
Andrew IskerOh, you can't afford a home.
Andrew IskerWell, that must mean you're lazy, right?
Andrew IskerIt's like, I'm working as hard as I can.
Andrew IskerI'm working two jobs.
Andrew IskerWhat do you, what do you, what do you mean I'm lazy?
Andrew IskerAll right.
Andrew IskerYou play too much video games.
Andrew IskerI don't even own any video games.
Andrew IskerWhat are you talking about?
Andrew IskerI mean, I see that stuff all the time, even from pastors that are really good, conservative men that oppose a lot of the things in trash world.
Andrew IskerThey'll just be oblivious to what a 22 year old guy has to the world that he has to live in today.
Andrew IskerAnd so then their anger gets directed at the church.
Andrew IskerTheir anger gets directed at the pastors and the men that don't understand and refuse to understand the things that they are experiencing.
Andrew IskerAnd so then where do you go?
Andrew IskerWell, you go find, I mean, this is the thing.
Andrew IskerIt's like, why are all these young guys listening to Jordan Peterson or Andrew Tate?
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerWhy are they listening?
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, man, I don't want young guys listening to Andrew Tate.
Andrew IskerI mean, one, he's an idiot, and two, he's not a good guy, but he is saying things, some of which are true, that you don't say.
Andrew IskerAnd he sees all of these young men and all the problems that they face and is providing answers that you won't even address the question of.
Andrew IskerAnd so that's a huge thing that we have to change.
Andrew IskerA huge thing is just listen to these young men.
Andrew IskerDon't assume that they're bad people because they're upset about their circumstances.
Andrew IskerDon't assume that they're just these bitter young guys that are losers.
Andrew IskerThey are, they're young men that are trying to have a good life.
Andrew IskerAnd all of the routes that traditionally were open to them to have a good life are all closed off.
Andrew IskerI mean, even just like economically, like the, with, I mean, these are guys who are like totally against Dei and things like that, and they should be able to see that.
Andrew IskerI mean, there was that story, I think it was in Bloomberg about, right in the wake of George Floyd, corporate America now hires 90% non white male people.
Andrew IskerLike out of all the thousands of jobs that went to the top 500 corporations, 90% of them went to non white males or non whites or non males.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, the majority of the workforce is white and male.
Andrew IskerSo that means you're actively restricting this group of people and saying, nope, white men need not apply.
Andrew IskerAnd so, like, if that's the dynamic of the corporate world and you're saying, you young guys are just lazy, like those two things don't work together.
Andrew IskerLike they're saying, no, we don't want you.
Andrew IskerWe're not going to give you economic opportunities.
Andrew IskerAnd so that's shut off to you.
Andrew IskerYou can't just call these guys lazy, right?
Andrew IskerThey're doing the things they can and they're not allowed to have nice c suite corporate jobs anymore.
Andrew IskerSo what do you do with that?
Andrew IskerYou have to be able to say, oh, the deck is stacked against you.
Andrew IskerThis is bad.
Andrew IskerI understand the problems that you're facing, and you're going to have to work harder and we will encourage you in this hard work that you have to do.
Andrew IskerWe get that.
Andrew IskerYou have to work way harder than we ever had to work.
Andrew IskerYou have to pay way more for a home than I ever had to pay for.
Andrew IskerAnd that is really horrible and rough.
Andrew IskerAnd I will encourage you in whatever way I can.
Andrew IskerI'll try to help you out in whatever way I can.
Andrew IskerWe don't say those things ever.
Andrew IskerWe don't do that stuff.
Andrew IskerAnd that's the thing that I find the most distressing in the church, broadly speaking today, is we have these and it's like they are fields, white for the harvest.
Andrew IskerAll of these people that would be open to everything that we say, everything that we teach how to be a Christian, what it means, what the faith is, what the Bible says about every single thing, these guys would listen to us and hear us if we would just say, yeah, you are getting a rough deal.
Andrew IskerThat is bad.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerBut we don't.
Andrew IskerWe don't.
Andrew IskerAnd for all the reasons we've talked about, right.
Andrew IskerYou're not allowed to say those things.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerYou're not allowed to have any sympathy for young men because that would mean you're going to have to reject some of the things in our prevailing civilization, religion.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Will SpencerNailed it.
Will SpencerBecause that's the thing.
Will SpencerThis is why I've tweeted before that the reason why we don't tell young men who they are is because you have to tell young women who they are.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerIf you want to tell a young man what he's, what he's for, you gotta.
Will SpencerThat involves women.
Will SpencerWe can't tell women what they're for, so we can't tell anybody what anyone's for because we don't want to offend the young girls.
Will SpencerAnd I've been saying, like, okay, so the gospel dies at the 20.
Will SpencerAt the foot of a 22 year old girl.
Will SpencerGreat.
Will SpencerOkay, cool.
Will SpencerRight?
Will SpencerAnd that's, and that's really what it comes down to.
Will SpencerPlus the grandfather also, by the way, was able to support his wife on one income.
Will SpencerAnd now men are, they're having to compete with women.
Will SpencerAnd like, this might be a really unpopular truth, but let me tell you, in an office environment, a 22 year old girl at the peak of her attractiveness is going to have a lot more success, especially with older male executives.
Will SpencerThen will a young 22 year old man who isn't at the peak of his abilities just yet, but who's a threat?
Will SpencerSo now you're having this thing like, oh, young women are buying more homes than young men.
Will SpencerWell, yeah.
Will SpencerYou want to know why that is?
Will SpencerBecause they're getting the promotions thrown at them.
Will SpencerBecause young guys are a threat to the guys in power, but young girls aren't.
Will SpencerNo one can address these.
Will SpencerNo one can address these things.
Will SpencerAnd so, yeah, young men are angry.
Will SpencerAnd I really appreciate that you said that there's this rising pagan right wing movement because I do battle with some of these guys.
Will SpencerThe hellenist is a good example.
Will SpencerThere's a bunch of them out there.
Will SpencerThey're all talking about these pre christian civilizations, and they all hate on Jesus as some rabbi and all this different stuff.
Will SpencerAnd they're like, they're welcoming these men in.
Will SpencerAnd the reason why men are going to them is because, as you say, pastors aren't offering them anything.
Will SpencerThey won't offer them anything.
Will SpencerLike, sorry, kid, you're the price to pay for my big church.
Will SpencerSorry, young man, I'm going to sacrifice you for my big church.
Will SpencerI'm paying more than that.
Andrew IskerYeah, yeah, I mean, you're losing your entire society and.
Andrew IskerYeah, and, yeah, I mean, that's so much of it.
Andrew IskerLike, yeah, why is a pagan rite coming to.
Andrew IskerI don't think it's going to dominate or anything like that, or could, but why are men attracted to it?
Andrew IskerBecause.
Andrew IskerExactly.
Andrew IskerYou're going to find answers to these questions that no one is even willing to ask.
Andrew IskerAnd these guys provide answers, and they provide a lot of not good answers to them, a lot of very bad answers.
Andrew IskerAnd it's hilarious in a sad sense that these church leaders will refuse to get this stuff and their denominations and their churches will die as a result of it.
Andrew IskerSo much of it is the same high time preference thing where it's like, the getting's good right now.
Andrew IskerWe can let these young guys die on the vine and flee the church.
Andrew IskerBut it's also interesting, too.
Andrew IskerI think Aaron Redd had something about this recently about young women leaving the church that they're leaving in droves.
Andrew IskerAnd that too is interesting because that's the whole kitten caboodle for the modern evangelical world, is we got to have the women.
Andrew IskerWe got to have the young women.
Andrew IskerWe got.
Andrew IskerThe young women will be okay.
Andrew IskerIf they're even leaving, then you got nothing.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, I think the altar of pragmatism within the church is collapsing in on itself anyway.
Andrew IskerIt's not going to sustain itself for very long.
Andrew IskerIf you don't have marriages and families and children, you've got nothing for the future.
Andrew IskerAnd so I think in the, in the near term future, the churches that actively combat trash world and teach people, hey, this is the historic way of living that your ancestors lived in for millennia.
Andrew IskerAnd it's good.
Andrew IskerIt's hard.
Andrew IskerIt's really hard in the world that we have right now, but it's good.
Andrew IskerIt's very good.
Andrew IskerAnd creating communities that can flourish even in the midst of trash world where people can, people can have families, where you have young people, children being raised to have families consciously.
Andrew IskerI mean, this is the thing.
Andrew IskerMy daughters are.
Andrew IskerMy oldest daughter is still only nine years old, but we're constantly telling them and just like, subtly reinforcing is right.
Andrew IskerWe want you to grow up to be a mom.
Andrew IskerWe want you to grow up to be a mom.
Andrew IskerI mean, some of the things that reinforce it is we just keep having babies and they're around babies all the time, and they don't.
Andrew IskerI mean, some of it is the boomer generation.
Andrew IskerThey had like, two, maybe three children on average, and nobody grew up with little babies around them.
Andrew IskerYou weren't a teenager.
Andrew IskerThe older kids weren't teenagers.
Andrew IskerAnd there's a little baby that's having his diaper change.
Andrew IskerI had one sister that was two years younger than me, and the first time I held a newborn baby in my entire life was one week before my own son was born.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, I don't even know what to do here.
Andrew IskerIs his head gonna flop over if I hold him the wrong way?
Andrew IskerI was terrified.
Andrew IskerI was, like, shaking, like, I don't know.
Andrew IskerI'd never held a baby before in my entire life.
Andrew IskerAnd so, I mean, an entire generation that grows up not being around in their youth, around babies, that has massive sociological implications, because the young women, it's the same thing.
Andrew IskerThey're terrified of them, too.
Andrew IskerWhat do I do now?
Andrew IskerI have this person to take care of, and now I can't go out and have fun.
Andrew IskerI have to be changing diapers all day and nursing and all, and that my life is revolving around this baby.
Andrew IskerBut if you, your entire life, you're just around other children, little babies, constantly, it's not terrifying.
Andrew IskerIt's like, oh, this is normal.
Andrew IskerPeople have babies and they take care of them.
Andrew IskerAnd when you're older, you're helping mom out, you maybe change your younger sibling's diaper.
Andrew IskerAnd that's not a weird thing at all.
Andrew IskerWhen you grow up in that, then it's an easy transition to, okay, now I'm 20 years old, and I want to get married and have a family and have my own children.
Andrew IskerAnd so, I mean, some of it is just enculturating, things like that.
Andrew IskerAnd being in communities where you have lots of babies, like going to a church where you hear the sound of five month old baby crying.
Andrew IskerThere's some churches where you don't ever hear that.
Andrew IskerI mean, big ones with thousands of people, they'll have a nursery.
Andrew IskerYou go have the little babies off here, and they'll have children's services.
Andrew IskerAnd some of it is just that, where you have the children cut out of the life of the body entirely, which is a huge problem, but it reflects how our society thinks.
Andrew IskerAdult time is what matters.
Andrew IskerThe freedom of adults getting to do their thing and listen to a lecture and go to a concerte on Sunday morning.
Andrew IskerThat's what really matters.
Andrew IskerBut the reality is, no, if you have little children, sometimes they make noise and babies, and they're all together and you're just used to it.
Andrew IskerAnd you realize this is normal life for all of humanity throughout all of time, is to be around really old people, brand new babies and everything in between.
Andrew IskerThen it's not so terrifying then it's not so scary to.
Andrew IskerTo have a family and raise children.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, we've been trying to teach our daughters, especially our sons, we want to raise them to be men, to have jobs, and to fight for things that are good and right and, of course, for our daughters, too.
Andrew IskerBut to understand the uniqueness of what God has given them, that he has given you this precious ability to bring new life into the world, and you get to use that.
Andrew IskerYou get to go be married and have a family that's wonderful and a beautiful thing.
Andrew IskerI don't think that's a thing that even some people may be hearing this.
Andrew IskerMaybe people that hate you and me hearing this is like, whoa, this guy is indoctrinating his children to be breeders.
Andrew IskerUh, and it's like, mind.
Will SpencerYou literally read my mind.
Will SpencerYeah.
Will SpencerYeah.
Will SpencerIt's like, I heard that objection.
Andrew IskerYeah, I am.
Andrew IskerOkay.
Andrew IskerYou're indoctrinating your children to be whores and homosexuals.
Andrew IskerSo why don't.
Andrew IskerWe're all indoctrinating children, right?
Andrew IskerI mean, really, that's.
Andrew IskerThat's it, though.
Andrew IskerI mean, that's the thing is, right?
Andrew IskerYou are.
Andrew IskerI mean, even if it isn't, it.
Andrew IskerIsn't that so extreme?
Andrew IskerRight?
Will SpencerYou.
Andrew IskerYou're indoctrinating your daughter to.
Andrew IskerEven if you think that promiscuity is bad and sex outside of marriage is bad, you're telling her to do all the same things that the 20 something year old woman that's on Tinder and bumble and cycling through the Rolodex of men, you're saying, go live the exact same way as that girl, but just don't have sex.
Andrew IskerThat's what you're instilling in her.
Andrew IskerAnd we don't want to do that.
Andrew IskerWe consciously are saying, no, we don't want that for our daughters.
Andrew IskerWe're going to prevent whatever is within our power to hold the forces of trash world at bay for them.
Andrew IskerBecause I want to have grandchildren.
Andrew IskerI want my daughters to have a good life.
Andrew IskerI don't want them to go through that pain and sorrow.
Andrew IskerI see the 30 something year old women who are despairing because the biological clock ran out.
Andrew IskerI don't.
Andrew IskerThat's.
Andrew IskerThat's.
Andrew IskerThey are a warning to young girls.
Andrew IskerDon't do this.
Andrew IskerDon't do this.
Andrew IskerOh, all the.
Andrew IskerAll the eggs that you stored away that are frozen.
Andrew IskerNone of them are.
Andrew IskerYou can't, you can't get pregnant now at, at 39.
Andrew IskerOh.
Andrew IskerScience lied to you and said you'd be able to have this like that.
Andrew IskerThat's horrible.
Andrew IskerThat's awful.
Andrew IskerI don't want that for them.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerAnd that's, that's part of, that's part of what it means to be a father is you have young children, teenage children, even young 20 something year old children that.
Andrew IskerI mean, I remember what it was like to be a 20 something year old.
Andrew IskerAnd I was an idiot.
Andrew IskerI was really stupid.
Andrew IskerAnd because I hadn't learned, I hadn't matured and discovered the world and learned hard lessons that I've learned over the last 20 years.
Andrew IskerAnd the role of a parent, the role of a father is to have gone through all of those things, reached this maturity, have the wisdom that comes with age, and to be able to tell your children, no, actually, this thing you think might be good, it's actually really bad, and don't pursue that.
Andrew IskerThat's good.
Andrew IskerThat's actually good and wise.
Andrew IskerThe 18 year old girl just getting whatever she wants, or the 22 year old girl just getting whatever she wants, because she's been, she's been engineered.
Andrew IskerHer mind, her soul, everything has been engineered to pursue this kind of life.
Andrew IskerYou have to prevent that from happening.
Andrew IskerThat's why it is.
Andrew IskerAnd it's not even through their own fault.
Andrew IskerIt's not like they were born just to live this way.
Andrew IskerSomeone made them that way.
Andrew IskerSomebody wanted them to think, this is the good life.
Andrew IskerAnd so you have to.
Andrew IskerYou have to protect them from these things.
Andrew IskerThat's what it means to be a father.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, I think that just along those lines, you have these duties that a father has in our age that have always existed for fathers to protect their children.
Andrew IskerBut it's taken on a completely different aspect, where if you're living in a culture that more or less is in line with the natural order of the world that God made, you don't have to protect them from insane stuff because nobody else believes insane stuff.
Andrew IskerThere are things you have to protect them from, but now you have to protect them from a culture that is encroaching on their minds and their souls and every part of them to want to live in this destructive way.
Andrew IskerAnd it seems good.
Andrew IskerIt seems like it's healthy and it'll be pain free and that it's beneficial and it's not.
Andrew IskerAnd you have to be able to see down the road things that your children won't I mean, I look at it like, when I was 17 years old, a bunch of my buddies on the football team were starting to get tattoos, right?
Andrew IskerLike, one of them, he got this really dumb incredible Hulk tattoo.
Andrew IskerI mean, now it looks dumb, but when I was 17, like, that looks cool.
Andrew IskerI want something like that.
Andrew IskerAnd I go to my parents, right?
Andrew IskerAnd, you know, you got to get permission from your parents to when you're 17.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, I want to get a tattoo.
Andrew IskerYou know, can I.
Andrew IskerCan I get one, please, please, please?
Andrew IskerAnd they're like, no, that's stupid.
Andrew IskerYou don't want to do that.
Andrew IskerYou know, you're gonna mark up your body, and it's gonna look hideous.
Andrew IskerYou're a 17 year old.
Andrew IskerYou're an idiot.
Andrew IskerYou don't.
Andrew IskerI mean, they didn't say that, but that's more or less the vibe of what they're saying.
Andrew IskerAnd, like, they protected me from that.
Andrew IskerCause, like, now I'm sure whatever I would have gotten would look really stupid, and I have to live with that the rest of my life.
Andrew IskerAnd this isn't, you know, I'm not like, attack.
Andrew IskerI know you got tattoos, will, so I'm not attacking.
Andrew IskerThat's not an attack.
Andrew IskerIt's not an attack.
Andrew IskerBut it's like, that's the job of parents, to protect their children from really stupid decisions that they would make that will last them the rest of their lives.
Andrew IskerAnd now I was really mad at them when I was 17, but now I look back on it, and I think, boy, I'm really happy that the same thing happened when I was 17.
Andrew IskerA lot of stuff happened when I was 1720 years ago.
Andrew IskerI tried to join the army, and the recruiter comes.
Andrew IskerI had a really good Asvab score.
Andrew IskerAnd so he kept calling and calling because most of the people that would take the AsVab couldn't pass it.
Andrew IskerHe's calling me every day and taking me out to dinner and all these things.
Andrew IskerComes to finally sign the paperwork.
Andrew IskerMy dad was in the army, so he's like, yes, my son's going to follow in my footsteps.
Andrew IskerThis is great.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm about to sign my name on the dotted line.
Andrew IskerI'm like, my mom just breaks down weeping.
Andrew IskerAnd this is like, 2003, Iraq is going on.
Andrew IskerAnd I was like, because the recruiter, they just lie to you about everything, right?
Andrew IskerBut the recruiter is like, you got a 99 in the AsVab.
Andrew IskerYou can have any job you want.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, I want to be infantry.
Andrew IskerI want to be a ranger.
Andrew IskerI want to try to be special forces.
Andrew IskerAnd they're like, yeah, you can do it.
Andrew IskerYou can do it, man.
Andrew IskerAnd so, like, it wasn't, like, so my mom knew, like, andrew's not gonna.
Andrew IskerHe's not gonna be like, the supply guy, you know, fixing a truck somewhere way back in the rear, right?
Andrew IskerHe's gonna be wanting to go to combat, right?
Andrew IskerAnd he's gonna die or have his arm blown off or whatever.
Andrew IskerAnd she just breaks down weeping, weeping and weeping, like, please, just go to college.
Andrew IskerJust go to college and wait to join the army until after college or go to ROTC.
Andrew IskerJust don't do this.
Andrew IskerDon't do it.
Andrew IskerAnd I pushed the paper back and I said, all right, I can't do it today.
Andrew IskerMaybe some other time.
Andrew IskerSo I never joined, never enlisted, never joined the army.
Andrew IskerAnd then I go through college and my views on foreign policy and the Iraq war, and things began to change, so I never joined afterward.
Andrew IskerBut nevertheless, I look at that and it's like, yeah, she probably saved my life.
Andrew IskerShe probably saved my.
Andrew IskerI mean, sometimes I look back and think, man, it probably would have been fun, though.
Andrew IskerIt probably would have been a lot of fun.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerI mean, I would have some cool stories, but no, she made, I think, a good decision in that moment for me.
Andrew IskerAnd that's what parents are supposed to do.
Andrew IskerAnd I think about it along those lines just as far as the duty of fathers today, living in trash world is, there are way more things like that to protect your children from.
Andrew IskerAnd it starts when they're really, really young that this stuff just creeps in and attacks, and the kids, they won't understand.
Andrew IskerMy friends watch this show on Netflix.
Andrew IskerWhy can't I watch it?
Andrew IskerIt's like, we don't.
Andrew IskerWe don't watch that stuff.
Andrew IskerNo, we're not going to watch those things.
Andrew IskerAnd, of course, you're never going to be able to have your children live in a bubble.
Andrew IskerThey're always going to feel like FOMo.
Andrew IskerThey're always going to feel fear of missing out.
Andrew IskerThese other people get to do this thing.
Andrew IskerAnd so the enemy that you're constantly combating as a parent today is FOMo.
Andrew IskerIt's like, why don't I get to do these things?
Andrew IskerWhy don't I get the stuff the other kids get?
Andrew IskerWhy don't they get to do this?
Andrew IskerWhy not me?
Andrew IskerAnd it's hard.
Andrew IskerIt's hard.
Andrew IskerAnd the battle is mostly within yourself to stick to your guns, just to be like, no, we're not doing that.
Andrew IskerNo, no, and so some of these fights, some of the chopping down of idols and things like that are totally within yourself to have the will and the resolve to stand even within your own household for what is good and right.
Andrew IskerBecause, like, little kids, or even, and certainly like teenagers, they don't understand this stuff.
Andrew IskerThey don't understand why these things are bad.
Andrew IskerBut you're an adult, you do.
Andrew IskerAnd so you have to draw hard lines.
Andrew IskerAnd a lot of people don't want to do that because it's way easier just to be like, ah, let them have.
Andrew IskerLet them watch it.
Andrew IskerYou know, I'm busy.
Andrew IskerI got stuff to do.
Andrew IskerJust let them watch.
Andrew IskerLet them watch Mister beast on YouTube.
Andrew IskerWho cares?
Andrew IskerYou know?
Andrew IskerAnd it's like he's got the tranny, you know, right there on camera with it.
Andrew IskerYou really want your kids watching that?
Andrew IskerLike, no, no, man.
Andrew IskerLike, don't do that.
Andrew IskerJust delete the app from.
Andrew IskerFrom your phone or your tv.
Andrew IskerLike, don't even let him near it.
Andrew IskerYeah, have them.
Andrew IskerHave them go outside.
Andrew IskerYou know, give them.
Andrew IskerGive your.
Andrew IskerGive your little boy some knives to, like, to carve sticks with or whatever.
Andrew IskerGive them something dangerous to do.
Andrew IskerLike, you'd be better off.
Andrew IskerLet him just throw knives out of the woods, then play around with that stuff.
Andrew IskerThat is the great irony.
Andrew IskerWe're happy to insulate our children from any kind of danger that they might face.
Andrew IskerLike, physical danger.
Andrew IskerWe'll wrap them in bubble wrap and prevent them from ever facing any kind of, especially boys physical danger of any kind, but spiritual danger.
Andrew IskerWe're like, eh, whatever, you know, they're kids.
Andrew IskerLet's let kids be kids.
Andrew IskerIt's like, no, I'd rather give my, my eight year old a chainsaw to play with than mess around with that stuff.
Will SpencerI think an eight year old will have a better sense of the danger of a chainsaw than they will the danger of a Netflix series.
Will SpencerRight?
Andrew IskerYes, they won't.
Will SpencerIt's colorful and it's bright and everyone's smiling.
Will SpencerVersus a chainsaw, it's like, this is very sharp.
Will SpencerI can demonstrate how it will cut you, but kids can't see how these being indoctrinated with these ideas will cut them in other ways.
Andrew IskerYeah, absolutely.
Andrew IskerAbsolutely.
Will SpencerAnd I think this also speaks to the importance of a father, because a father, a strong, confident father who's leading his household is the one who says, no, it's not mom's job to hold the final no, it's dad's job.
Andrew IskerRight?
Will SpencerAnd so if mom has to always be holding the final no, I don't think women are meant to be that way because as we talked about, they tend to be more like, get along, more agreeable is the Jordan Peterson word, whereas men tend to be more hierarchical.
Will SpencerThe buck stops here.
Will SpencerI am taking responsibility of this household.
Will SpencerMy children are not going to watch this.
Will SpencerAnd I have spoken.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd when you weaken fathers, there's no one to say that, yeah, I see.
Andrew IskerThis in my own, I mean, my own household.
Andrew IskerI don't even ever think about it.
Andrew IskerBut all the time, the kids will ask my wife, can we do this?
Andrew IskerCan we do that?
Andrew IskerAnd my wife will say, no.
Andrew IskerYour dad said, no, you can't do that.
Andrew IskerShe'll just put it all on me, and I'm happy to be the bad guy all the time.
Andrew IskerI don't even think about it.
Andrew IskerIt's like, yeah, no, I'll be the bad guy.
Andrew IskerI'll be the one that they're angry at.
Andrew IskerThen they'll come to me, dad, dad, dad.
Andrew IskerNo, no.
Andrew IskerGet out of here.
Andrew IskerLeave me alone.
Andrew IskerYou're not going to get to do that.
Andrew IskerNo, no, we're not doing that.
Andrew IskerAnd that's the end of it.
Andrew IskerIt's hard, especially because if you have this environment that is very egalitarian and the role of the father is not to be the head of the household, and parenting is a partnership and all of that kind of stuff.
Andrew IskerWell, then you don't have a dad.
Andrew IskerThat's just, I'm in charge when we're gonna do what I say, and we're not gonna do that.
Andrew IskerWell, if that.
Andrew IskerIf that's not the role that you have, if you're kind of, you know, the co parent of your children, you can't do those things.
Andrew IskerYou can't say, no.
Andrew IskerI've said, no, we're not doing that.
Andrew IskerAnd I mean that.
Andrew IskerAnd that starts, like, well, before you have kids.
Andrew IskerI mean, that starts when you, when you're, when you're dating and engaged and everything, it's like, no, I'm going to be in charge of things.
Andrew IskerAnd, I mean, some of it is like the manosphere language of the s test and passing those where you're just like, no, not doing that.
Andrew IskerOh, you're going to break up with me?
Andrew IskerOkay, whatever, fine.
Andrew IskerAnd there has to be, men have to have this confidence and this purpose and this mission where they're following it, and your wife has to be the partner in that mission that you have.
Andrew IskerIt can't be.
Andrew IskerWe have maybe separate missions and we're going to try to work together.
Andrew IskerIt's like, no, it's your mission.
Andrew IskerYou're the one leading.
Andrew IskerShe's coming with you, alongside you and supporting you, encouraging you.
Andrew IskerAnd then if you have a family like that, well, then it's not hard.
Andrew IskerI can't imagine what it would be like in my own household if every single decision I make, I have to persuade my wife and have a fight with her about everything.
Andrew IskerIf the kids want to watch some show that I think is bad, I have to then argue with her about that.
Andrew IskerIt's not good for her either.
Andrew IskerShe doesn't want to spent time thinking through those things and fighting those battles.
Andrew IskerThat's a huge waste of time.
Andrew IskerIt's much easier for her to just say, yeah, dad says, no, that's it.
Andrew IskerAnd you can hear.
Andrew IskerYou can think about the people just hearing that they're thinking, that's patriarchal.
Andrew IskerIt's patriarchal, and it's toxic masculinity.
Andrew IskerAnd his wife is a slave.
Andrew IskerCan you believe that?
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, I don't know how you live your life, but that would be horrible.
Andrew IskerThat would be agony to have to not be able to lead.
Andrew IskerA friend of mine, he just got married, and I did the wedding, and it was a lot of fun doing their wedding, did marriage counseling for them and on all of the pastoral stuff.
Andrew IskerAnd normally, normally when I do weddings, I just pick out the passage that I'm going to preach at the wedding, and I do it.
Andrew IskerBut I knew them.
Andrew IskerI knew how they tick.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, why don't you guys pick out the passage?
Andrew IskerWhat do you want me to preach on at your wedding?
Andrew IskerLet me know right before and I'll start working on it.
Andrew IskerThey pick ephesians 522 33, and then they're like, go as hard hitting as you want with this, right?
Andrew IskerSay whatever you want.
Andrew IskerBe as offensive as you want to be.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, are you sure?
Andrew IskerAnd they're like, yep.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, all right, I understand the assignment.
Andrew IskerAnd so I just preached on it.
Andrew IskerAnd, I mean, one of the things I pointed out is that, like, even the, even the people who are totally bought into our completely messed up society and reject distinctions between men and women and their roles and everything else, even they, if you have a married couple and you hear a window break in your house and your house is getting broken into, even the people that are hyper feminists and pro gay and everything else, if the dude told his wife, honey, go check that out, even they would be filled with revulsion at this man sending his wife to go deal with the burglar.
Andrew IskerWe understand that at this deep level, even despite all of the social engineering, that men have responsibility.
Andrew IskerMen have.
Andrew IskerThey have a responsibility to go die for their wives if need be.
Andrew IskerWe get that, and we'll put that responsibility on men.
Andrew IskerBut we refuse to have that responsibility correspond to the same degree of authority.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerSo if your job is to go die, your job is to go provide your job.
Andrew IskerYou have all these duties, all these responsibilities that are on the Mendez.
Andrew IskerThen we turn around and say, look, you don't have any authority here at all.
Andrew IskerI'm in charge, not you.
Andrew IskerYou just have a duty and a responsibility.
Andrew IskerWell, we have a term for a person that has all the responsibility and no authority.
Andrew IskerThere's a term for that.
Andrew IskerIt's called a slave.
Andrew IskerThat's a slave.
Andrew IskerA person that only has responsibility and no authority is a slave.
Andrew IskerAnd that's what we've made men into.
Andrew IskerAnd so if you want.
Andrew IskerYou know, if you want him to go get the burglar, right.
Andrew IskerThen you need to go listen to what he says at the same time.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerYou need to say, all right, honey, we're not going to buy 15 more pairs of shoes.
Andrew IskerThat's enough.
Andrew IskerAnd you need to say, okay, right?
Andrew IskerHe has authority.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerHe has the final say.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerBut we'd be the same.
Andrew IskerPeople who are revolted at a man sending his wife to go deal with the burglar are equally revolted at a man telling his wife, no, we're not going to do that.
Andrew IskerAnd it's ironic.
Andrew IskerIt's there.
Andrew IskerIt's because they don't want men to have any authority, because they want freedom.
Andrew IskerThey want to have autonomy, to do whatever they want.
Andrew IskerAnd so you have to admit these things.
Andrew IskerYou have to say these things flat out.
Andrew IskerMen do have authority in their households, and they're going to, no matter what, just by virtue of the created order, men are always going to have authority.
Andrew IskerThe household is going to follow their lead regardless.
Andrew IskerAnd what men do is just abdicate it.
Andrew IskerThey say, I'm not going to fight those battles.
Andrew IskerI'll just happy wife, happy life, my way through everything.
Andrew IskerAnd so they abdicate the authority.
Andrew IskerThey don't fight for it.
Andrew IskerThey don't stand up for themselves and the authority that God has given them, then the family is just a disaster.
Andrew IskerAnd so you see that.
Andrew IskerAnd then you see Paul, the things that he says in that chapter, it's like.
Andrew IskerIt's just so obvious that this is the way God has built the world, and he's not creating something new, he's not creating some kind of new doctrine that people have to live by.
Andrew IskerThat until the first century Ad, didn't exist in the world until then.
Andrew IskerHe's saying, no, it always has existed since God created Adam and Eve.
Andrew IskerAnd this is how you live in a godly way in light of these realities.
Andrew IskerAnd so many people don't want to do that.
Andrew IskerYou could be in an evangelical church your entire life.
Andrew IskerPreach on every other part of the Bible except for there and a couple other passages, and you'll be just fine.
Andrew IskerNo one will be upset with you ever.
Andrew IskerYou can even say somewhat controversial things, but you touch on that.
Andrew IskerIt's like the third rail, and you will lose.
Andrew IskerYou will lose people in your church if you say these things.
Andrew IskerBecause our culture doesn't want to believe.
Andrew IskerThe Bible culture doesn't want to believe.
Andrew IskerIt doesn't want to believe in the order that God has created in the world.
Andrew IskerAnd it will take a tremendous amount of courage from pastors and from leaders of churches to combat these things.
Andrew IskerAnd the optimistic thing, I say all these things.
Andrew IskerI'm trashing the trash world that we live in.
Andrew IskerBut the optimistic thing is these things are falling apart.
Andrew IskerPeople understand that things are not right and we have no place to go but telling the truth.
Andrew IskerIn the evangelical world, there was this compromise.
Andrew IskerYou mentioned the word complementarianism before, where what complementarianism was, was this kind of middle ground, this sort of third way where it's like, okay, all right, we're evangelicals, so we're forced to agree with the Bible on everything.
Andrew IskerAnd so what is the bare minimum that we can agree with the Bible and still, still treat the Bible as authoritative and as the word of God but still fit in with the culture?
Andrew IskerAnd so out of that, complementarianism was formed.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, yeah, within the household, yeah, I guess husbands have authority and then they'll have carve outs where it's kind of subjective but nowhere else in society.
Andrew IskerPaul is not making any kind of broad sociological claim there.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerMen don't have this leadership role in society.
Andrew IskerThat's patriarchal.
Andrew IskerAnd so we're not that.
Andrew IskerBut reality is patriarchal.
Andrew IskerIt just is.
Andrew IskerYou don't want to use the p word, but it is.
Andrew IskerAnd men are different from women.
Andrew IskerMen are built to lead.
Andrew IskerMen are built for war.
Andrew IskerMen are built for fighting.
Andrew IskerAnd this is true even in, even apart from the fall.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerAnd this is a point I brought up in the book that Adam is created in the garden.
Andrew IskerThis is actually the part that Cam Haynes shared on Instagram, and then Joe Rogan reshared it.
Andrew IskerSo I guess even Joe Rogan agrees with me on this point.
Andrew IskerBut Adam's created in the garden, and he's given two jobs to guard and keep the garden.
Andrew IskerAnd that means, like, there's a martial aspect to it.
Andrew IskerAnd actually, Adam is a priest in the garden.
Andrew IskerI mean, it's the same two things that the priests in the sanctuary are called to do.
Andrew IskerThey're called to garden, to keep the sanctuary.
Andrew IskerAnd they're all armed with swords, right?
Andrew IskerIn the Old Testament, around the tabernacle in the temple, they're armed with swords.
Andrew IskerAnd anything that comes in that's not supposed to be there, anyone that comes in that's not supposed to be there, they're supposed to kill him.
Andrew IskerAnd so you take that and you think about later revelation, what it tells us the role of a priest is and what he's supposed to do.
Andrew IskerAnd you see that same language used of Adam in the garden.
Andrew IskerWell, what happened, right?
Andrew IskerHere's something that's not supposed to be in the garden, and he's supposed to guard everything in the garden, including his wife.
Andrew IskerSo what was Adam supposed to do in the garden?
Andrew IskerHe's supposed to kill the serpenthenne.
Andrew IskerHe's supposed to kill it.
Andrew IskerYou don't belong here.
Andrew IskerGet out of here.
Andrew IskerDon't talk to my wife.
Andrew IskerAnd he's supposed to kill the serpent instead.
Andrew IskerHe lets the serpent talk to his wife.
Andrew IskerThat's why it's not Eve's sin that casts all of humanity into the fall.
Andrew IskerIt's Adam's.
Andrew IskerAdam is the one that's responsible, not Eve.
Andrew IskerAnd Paul even says the woman was deceived, not the man.
Andrew IskerAnd for that reason, women can't be pastors.
Andrew IskerOh, whoa, whoa.
Andrew IskerWhat?
Andrew IskerWhat is he saying about men and women, right?
Andrew IskerThat women are more easily deceived.
Andrew IskerOh, no.
Andrew IskerHow am I supposed to tell my church that.
Andrew IskerOh, my goodness.
Andrew IskerThat men have a responsibility, they're not as easily deceived, and so they have to protect women.
Andrew IskerWhoa.
Andrew IskerThat sounds a little bit patriarchal.
Andrew IskerI don't know if we can say that.
Andrew IskerBible says it.
Andrew IskerI don't know.
Andrew IskerWhat are you supposed to do?
Andrew IskerAnd you have these touch points in the Bible that are extremely controversial in the modern, secular, liberal, egalitarian society that we have, and everyone's just afraid to talk about them.
Andrew IskerYou can't talk about those things.
Andrew IskerThat's bad.
Andrew IskerIf you do talk about them, then that opens the door to, wait a second.
Andrew IskerMaybe the way that we're living generally isn't so good.
Andrew IskerMaybe there's some problems with it.
Andrew IskerThat's where you get into these things and people freak out about it.
Andrew IskerThey hate it because they're so married to this world that we have that they will attack you.
Andrew IskerThey will say, you're a horrible person.
Andrew IskerThey say, you must be mistreating your wife, and you must be this terrible guy.
Andrew IskerIt's like, I don't care.
Andrew IskerI'm going to tell the truth.
Andrew IskerAnd whatever happens to whatever you say to me, it doesn't matter.
Andrew IskerThis is true.
Andrew IskerThis is real.
Andrew IskerAnd so what?
Andrew IskerSo what?
Andrew IskerYou know?
Andrew IskerOh, you called me a name, okay?
Andrew IskerI don't care.
Andrew IskerThis is what God has said.
Andrew IskerDo you believe it or not?
Andrew IskerAnd unfortunately, many people don't believe it.
Andrew IskerBut God is not mocked.
Andrew IskerAnd you can set up this superstructure of a society that is contrary to the world that he created.
Andrew IskerIt's not going to last.
Andrew IskerIt's not going to continue on forever.
Andrew IskerAnd it requires the blood of a million babies a year to continue on.
Andrew IskerThat's a great sin that cries to heaven for vengeance.
Andrew IskerAnd there will be.
Andrew IskerWe like to pretend that no things will go on forever.
Andrew IskerWe've reached the Francis Fukuyama end of history.
Andrew IskerWe're here.
Andrew IskerThe american global empire is going to be here forever, and we're going to sit fat and happy in our society.
Andrew IskerNo, it's not going to.
Andrew IskerThere will be judgment that will come for all of these things.
Andrew IskerAnd, I mean, that's.
Andrew IskerI actually, when I wrote the book, I think I finished the first draft maybe a month before the Dobbs decision.
Andrew IskerAnd afterward, I thought, oh, should I change this?
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, no, no, I'm going to keep this in there.
Andrew IskerLike, one of the things I say in there is, like, if you got rid of abortion in America, right?
Andrew IskerIf you got just stroke of a pen, it's gone.
Andrew IskerYou would have an economic collapse.
Andrew IskerYou would have millions of women that would have to leave the workforce.
Andrew IskerAnd now you have to pay workers a lot more to attract a smaller share of workers, and that would have massive repercussions on the economy.
Andrew IskerAnd I make this point, people don't want to believe it or think about it, but it's true.
Andrew IskerIt's true.
Andrew IskerLike, our country, I said this in the twitter space a couple weeks ago on the abortion debate.
Andrew IskerOur country runs on it.
Andrew IskerIt doesn't run on Dunkin donuts.
Andrew IskerIt runs on abortion.
Andrew IskerAnd we don't get that.
Andrew IskerWe don't think about how all of life is crafted, and it's built on top of millions and millions of tiny little skulls.
Andrew IskerAll of our current world is built on these things.
Andrew IskerAnd you take all of that away.
Andrew IskerThat's the foundation for the entire society.
Andrew IskerAnd there are massive repercussions for that.
Andrew IskerAnd we don't want to confront these things.
Andrew IskerWe want to think, oh, if we end abortion, all right, we could just, you know, change the law and then it's done and we go back to having a more normal society.
Andrew IskerAnd that's not, that's not how it will work.
Andrew IskerLike, and you see it with the abortion debate today.
Andrew IskerLike, people have to have it.
Andrew IskerThey want to have it.
Andrew IskerOh, no, don't take this away.
Andrew IskerMy freedom.
Andrew IskerMy freedom.
Andrew IskerAnd it's a society, I mean, that in and of itself, to have a people that are there that love child sacrifice as much as they do is itself a judgment.
Andrew IskerTo live in a world where you have to have that, I mean, it's so much like ancient Israel in the time of the judges and then the kings, where, I mean, I used to read growing up, I used to read that and hear about, hear it in sermons.
Andrew IskerThe rare, the rare moments when someone would preach on the Old Testament.
Andrew IskerAnd I would think, well, how could these people who, God has done all of these things for them, miraculous things, how could they so easily turn to worship idols?
Andrew IskerHow could they so easily go worship Baal and offer their children to Molech?
Andrew IskerHow could they do that?
Andrew IskerHow could they do that?
Andrew IskerAnd now I'm like, oh, I know.
Andrew IskerI know now.
Andrew IskerI know now how they could do it very easily, right?
Andrew IskerVery easily they could because they see the benefit to it.
Andrew IskerThey get benefits from these things by offering their children to demons.
Andrew IskerAnd our society isn't all that different from what they faced in the ancient world.
Andrew IskerWe are, we are offering our children up to demons, and there's going to be judgment for it one way or the other.
Andrew IskerAnd so the only answer to that is to preach against it, for the gospel to combat it on the one hand, and for christians to acquire political power to stop it.
Andrew IskerAnd I mean, that goes back to our previous discussion about christian nationalism, because anytime you say that, even like I said that on the Twitter space, it's like, well, the issue that we're facing is that we don't have as much political power as we think we do.
Andrew IskerAnd people are like, no, what are you talking about?
Andrew IskerPower?
Andrew IskerJesus doesn't want us to have power.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, then why are we even talking about ending abortion?
Andrew IskerIf he doesn't want us to have power, then just let him do it.
Andrew IskerLet him go ahead and do it then.
Andrew IskerIf we're talking about the exercise of power here, that's what it is.
Andrew IskerAt the end of the day, it's not just, oh, if we.
Andrew IskerWe have to persuade people.
Andrew IskerWell, power persuades people, right?
Andrew Isker2015.
Andrew IskerI mean, 2008, state of California voted a majority, a large majority of Californians.
Andrew IskerCalifornians in 2008 voted against gay marriage and voted to ban it in their state, in California.
Andrew IskerAnd seven years later, you get Obergefellen, and you see the public opinion shift on a dime regarding homosexuality as a result of that Supreme Court decision.
Andrew IskerYeah, power does persuade people.
Andrew IskerIt absolutely does.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, I'm probably rambling here on these topics, but you get me going here, Will.
Will SpencerNo, I think I.
Will SpencerYou touched on so many important interlocking topics, and that's the challenge of this whole conversation, is that all of these things are connected.
Will SpencerRight?
Will SpencerIt's not that.
Will SpencerChristian nationalism, abortion, feminism, right?
Will SpencerCollege, Netflix, it doesn't all exist.
Will SpencerIndependent puzzle pieces just scattered around.
Will SpencerIt's one holistic, consistent system that reinforces itself to produce, as you said in the book, the bugman, the consumer.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerThe Sex and the city feminist lifestyle.
Will SpencerThat's what it does.
Will SpencerThis is not a broken system.
Will SpencerIt's doing exactly what it was designed to do.
Will SpencerAnd it was assembled around us, piece by piece during our lifetime.
Will SpencerIt's like there are carpenters.
Will SpencerIt's like christians are in America, and there's carpenters building stuff.
Will SpencerHammering, bang, bang, bang.
Will SpencerStuff's going up.
Will SpencerWhat's that?
Will SpencerOh, don't worry about it.
Will SpencerJust nothing.
Will SpencerYou know what I mean?
Will SpencerAnd then we're all in this house, like, you guys see all this house, like, what do you mean?
Will SpencerThere's no house here.
Andrew IskerNo, no.
Andrew IskerLike that.
Will SpencerThere's nothing here.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerThe purpose of a system is what it does.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerAnd the purpose of our system is it's functioning exactly the way it should be.
Andrew IskerIt's like, yeah.
Andrew IskerYou hear the people like, oh, it's such a broken.
Andrew IskerIt's such a broken system.
Andrew IskerWhether they're talking about, like, the political order or whatever else, it's like, no, no.
Andrew IskerPeople wanted it to be the way that it is.
Andrew IskerYou didn't just accidentally stumble upon the world that we have.
Andrew IskerPeople created it this way for a purpose, and we're living in it.
Andrew IskerAnd so the only way out is to recognize things for what they are and consciously begin living in a different way.
Andrew IskerThat's it.
Andrew IskerAnd this.
Andrew IskerAnd the really great challenge for us today is that the majority of the christian church especially, I mean, the majority of american christians are evangelicals.
Andrew IskerAnd that's why, I mean, I am one and that's why I say these things.
Andrew IskerAnd the majority of our churches want to live in like this minimalistically biblical lifestyle where it's like, okay, you're a Christian, you believe in Jesus, right?
Andrew IskerHere are things that are sins.
Andrew IskerDon't do those things and then figure the rest out for yourself.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerJust this tiny little, it's very minimalistic.
Andrew IskerIt's just Jesus in your heart and keep them there, hide them away right there.
Andrew IskerAnd don't you personally sin or involve yourself in sins of others and things like that.
Andrew IskerBut anything beyond that, it's whatever, don't worry about it.
Andrew IskerWhen the reality is that Jesus is king of everything and everyone, and he's king not only of individuals but entire societies.
Andrew IskerAnd you aren't at the end of a day, at the end of the day, a mere individual.
Andrew IskerYou are part of, of a family, you are part of a community.
Andrew IskerWherever you live, you are part of a broader nation.
Andrew IskerAnd you can't live totally as an individual.
Andrew IskerHow you live is in community with other people.
Andrew IskerAnd so if you are a Christian, that has an effect on every single part of your life, what you believe about who God is and who Jesus Christ is.
Andrew IskerAnd so you can't be reductionistic in this way.
Andrew IskerYou can't just be, okay, well, you don't go sin and you'll be fine.
Andrew IskerIt's like, no, here's this whole society that is operating contrary to the way God wants it to.
Andrew IskerHow do I live in light of that?
Andrew IskerWhat are the things I have to do?
Andrew IskerHere are all these things that are messed up and how do I get a job?
Andrew IskerHow do I have a family, how do I raise children in this world?
Andrew IskerAnd we don't have anything to say to any of those things.
Andrew IskerI'll just believe in Jesus harder.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, like, well, what does that mean practically, though?
Andrew IskerAnd so a lot of, I mean, just even like in my own preaching, I mean, so much of it is reinforcing and encouraging people that you're living in this messed up world.
Andrew IskerAnd the most important thing is to remain faithful to Jesus in everything you do.
Andrew IskerAnd you might have to take stands on things that are unpopular.
Andrew IskerYou might have to take stands that are going to cost you in very personal and deep ways.
Andrew IskerAnd you have to count the cost.
Andrew IskerYou have to prepare yourself now and look down the road.
Andrew IskerThis might be a thing like my job is making me call the Bob is now Susan.
Andrew IskerAnd so now I have to use the pronouns, right.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, it might be time for you to get a different job.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerLike, people haven't even prepared their minds for those kinds of things.
Andrew IskerIt's like, well, I guess just say the, you know, say the pronouns, man.
Andrew IskerNo, no.
Andrew IskerYou shouldn't be forced to lie, and you shouldn't care if, like, legally they can require it.
Andrew IskerYou need to go somewhere where you don't have to do those things, and you might.
Andrew IskerYou might lose your career to do that.
Andrew IskerWe haven't prepared people for life in this world at all because, well, there's nothing in the Bible about using someone's pronouns.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerThere's.
Andrew IskerShow me the Bible verse that says, I have to call men men.
Andrew IskerWe keep going back to that.
Andrew IskerBut that's part of it, too, is there is no.
Andrew IskerWhen you have evangelicalism that is both, like, biblicist, that's a word that people throw around a lot, but where it's like, I need a proof text for every single possible thing.
Andrew IskerAnd the Bible seems like a long book, but it's not that long.
Andrew IskerIt's not 12 billion pages long with a proof text for every single possible circumstance you might face.
Andrew IskerThe Bible is a short book, actually, and it provides a moral framework for you to understand the world, and it's there for you to apply it.
Andrew IskerAnd we don't do a very good job of that at all.
Andrew IskerWe want to just say, here's the Bible verse.
Andrew IskerWe don't want to do the work.
Andrew IskerWe want it all to be just basic two plus two stuff.
Andrew IskerBut you might have to do some calculus.
Andrew IskerYou might have to do some long division from a Bible verse, applying it to life here in.
Andrew IskerIn the 21st century.
Andrew IskerAnd it will be consistent.
Andrew IskerIt will flow right from what the Bible says, but it's not.
Andrew IskerNot always so easy.
Andrew IskerClear.
Andrew IskerAll right.
Andrew IskerThis verse says this thing, so we haven't done those things.
Andrew IskerAnd.
Andrew IskerAnd it's to a massive detriment of our.
Andrew IskerOf our people.
Andrew IskerUm, because they're.
Andrew IskerThey're trained to think, I need a Bible verse for every possible occasion, and if I don't have one, then it's free game.
Andrew IskerI can do whatever I want.
Andrew IskerAnd that's not true at all.
Andrew IskerIt's very clear, actually.
Andrew IskerAnd christians in the past understood this.
Andrew IskerThey understood there are principles that guide us from scripture that we derive from God's word that will show us the right thing to do.
Andrew IskerIt's much harder.
Andrew IskerIt takes wisdom that we don't currently possess and it takes discipline, it takes courage to do these things.
Andrew IskerAnd at this point, some of it is he didn't.
Andrew IskerWhy is it the way it is for the last 40 or 50 years?
Andrew IskerYou didn't have to do that stuff.
Andrew IskerYou lived in a much more normal world where, despite America not being a very christian place in the sixties and seventies and eighties and nineties, deep down, it still was guided by christian moral sentiments.
Andrew IskerChristian social and cultural moray has pervaded everything, and those things are gone now because you could fall back on that stuff.
Andrew IskerWell, people just don't do that.
Andrew IskerThat's wrong.
Andrew IskerAnd so you're playing life on easy mode in that way, but now it's much, much harder.
Andrew IskerGod is placed in a much more difficult position where a lot of things take a lot of thinking, a lot of wisdom and a lot of courage to operate in this world and to live faithfully in this world.
Andrew IskerAnd we haven't, we haven't provided that very well at all.
Andrew IskerBut thankfully, I think things are starting to change.
Andrew IskerI think there are people that are providing that stuff that are willing to say, to preach unpopular texts in the Bible and say, here's what it says.
Andrew IskerAnd so let's extrapolate from that how God wants us to live.
Andrew IskerPeople are summoning that courage, and I think God is rewarding them.
Andrew IskerGod is rewarding the people that are earnestly pursuing faithful living in a very, very difficult, oppositional world.
Andrew IskerAnd I think continue to bless people doing that.
Andrew IskerI always want to circle back to encouraging things with these things because that's part of the book.
Andrew IskerThe first half of the book, if you only read the first half, it would be really depressing, right.
Andrew IskerAll the things that are bad and wrong.
Andrew IskerAnd I kind of wanted, like, I'm like, do I want to organize the book that way?
Andrew IskerAnd I went back and forth with the editor, like, maybe we change it.
Andrew IskerIt's like, no, it's short enough book that I think people read the whole thing, hopefully, and the first chapters correspond with the latter chapters, and the latter chapters are much more optimistic and hopeful that there is, there are ways out, there are ways that you can pursue a good and faithful life despite all of the challenges all around you.
Andrew IskerAnd, yeah, I always want to go back to that, that anytime I'm like, ah, things are really bad, but there's a way out, right?
Andrew IskerBut there are things you can do.
Will SpencerWell, I'm glad you mentioned that you read my mind because I want to talk about one of the last chapters, which is the paideia of Christianity, because I think that was.
Will SpencerAnd for 01:00 a.m.
Will Spencergrateful that you organized it the way that you did, because you built up to this case that, no, this is the way we need to be thinking about these problems.
Will SpencerSo trash world is this interlocking system of ideas and bureaucracies and culture that has been assembled around us piece by piece.
Will SpencerWell, there was this christian worldview that everyone was steeped in that also had its own interlocking system of piece by piece that produced a very different kind of man, for one.
Will SpencerAnd so these systems are somewhat in opposition.
Will SpencerSo let's talk about this paideia of Christianity.
Will SpencerI also want to talk about Barbara's.
Will SpencerLet's talk about.
Andrew IskerThey're related.
Will SpencerThey're very much related.
Will SpencerSo let's talk about that a little bit because I think it's important.
Will SpencerWe've been deprived in America an image of a society that works any different from the way that ours does.
Will SpencerIn fact, our way of life is being exported around the world so that everyone lives in the same trash world kind of way.
Will SpencerSo if trash world's all that exists, trash world's the only thing that's ever existed.
Will SpencerIt's like.
Will SpencerBut no, there is another total worldview that previous generations lived in.
Andrew IskerYeah, I think, I mean, just going back to that word like paideia and what it means, I mean, there's a ton of, there's actually this long series of books.
Andrew IskerI think I referenced it in the book itself, just on that single greek word.
Andrew IskerAnd what it meant in greco roman culture that paideia was everything.
Andrew IskerIt was the, it was the full cultural experience of the ancient greek and ancient roman world.
Andrew IskerAnd so you grow up into it.
Andrew IskerWhat does it mean to be a Greek?
Andrew IskerWhat does it mean to be a roman?
Andrew IskerWhat is this identity that you are formed and shaped by?
Andrew IskerSo when Paul uses that word in Ephesians, chapter six, to raise up your children in the paideia of the Lord, usually it just gets translated as, like, nurture and admonition of the Lord is the common one, I think, like King James kind of thing.
Andrew IskerAnd that's a nurturer of the Lord.
Andrew IskerAnd it's easy.
Andrew IskerThat's the thing.
Andrew IskerYou can read over the Bible in, like, an english english translation, and that word doesn't hit you the same way.
Andrew IskerIt's just a word.
Andrew IskerAnd there are words that have deep, deep, deep meaning that you could write volumes about.
Andrew IskerLike if you told an american today that you believe in democracy.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerWell, what does that mean?
Andrew IskerWell, you could write twelve volumes on what democracy actually is right.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's not just some throwaway word that Paul is using.
Andrew IskerThere's deep meaning to that word.
Andrew IskerSo what is the paideia of the Lord?
Andrew IskerWell, it's culture, and it's a full system of culture.
Andrew IskerAnd so to raise children in.
Andrew IskerIn christian culture means from cradle to grave and from, in this interlocking system of how do communities exist and operate together?
Andrew IskerHow do individuals work with others?
Andrew IskerHow do they govern themselves?
Andrew IskerAll of these things.
Andrew IskerHow do they buy and sell things?
Andrew IskerHow do they make living?
Andrew IskerThat's what Padilla involves.
Andrew IskerAnd what does it mean to be a Christian?
Andrew IskerAll of that.
Andrew IskerAnd so you bring up children in christian culture.
Andrew IskerThe great irony, too, is modern evangelicals like to decry cultural Christianity.
Andrew IskerThere was Russell Moore, the odious Russell Moore wrote this article, I think it was in the New York Times or the Atlantic or one of those regs, and is celebrating that, the loss of cultural Christianity.
Andrew IskerBecause you get rid of cultural Christianity and then all that's left are real christians, right?
Andrew IskerNot fake ones, right.
Andrew IskerThen it will only have real christians, not the people that just are christian because they're born, right?
Andrew IskerAnd by articles like Mayberry leads to hell just as easily as Gomorrah or something along those lines, right?
Andrew IskerAnd that's what all this was.
Will SpencerThat's why the argument over cultural Christianity, I didn't understand that.
Andrew IskerYeah, this is where it comes from.
Andrew IskerBecause they have it in their minds that, like early Christianity, when it's a very small minority in the roman world, that's ideal, right?
Andrew IskerIt's ideal for the church to be this beleaguered, tiny little group that's them against the entire world.
Andrew IskerBut they did that and then they won.
Andrew IskerThen the whole roman empire became christian.
Andrew IskerOh, it's bad.
Andrew IskerConstantine is bad because he was just doing it for political reasons.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, okay, well, even granting that that's true, and I don't think it is, but granting that that was true, a ruler wanting to rule as a Christian because all of his subjects are christian and this is a thing that can unite his empire, I don't think that's a bad thing for lots of people to be Christians.
Andrew IskerI think that's actually good.
Andrew IskerAnd so anyway, it's like this loss of culture, I mean, some of it too, is like, as a parent, would you rather raise your children in trash world where you're having to protect them from all sorts of things that you wouldn't even otherwise be on your radar?
Andrew IskerAnd all around you are enemies that are fighting for their souls constantly.
Andrew IskerWould you rather raise them in that environment or an environment, would you rather raise them in an environment where I, a major chunk of the country thinks men can become women and that children, that we have to protect trans children, you rather raise them in that environment or an environment where everybody, whether they actually genuinely are a Christian or not, believes that the Bible is good and true and that God's law is good and these are good moral principles to live by, and everyone just implicitly understands that.
Andrew IskerWould you rather them grow up in that environment?
Andrew IskerIt's like, obviously.
Andrew IskerObviously.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's interesting because that admonition from Paul to raise your children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord to raise them in the paideia and discipline of the Lord is a command to parents, but it's also a command to a church.
Andrew IskerAnd what happens when the whole society adopts the paideia of the Lord?
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerIs that bad?
Andrew IskerNo, I think he actually commanded that.
Andrew IskerYeah, it's actually good.
Andrew IskerThat's like, I mean, you want to talk about proof texts?
Andrew IskerThat's like the proof text that shows that cultural Christianity is a command from God, right?
Andrew IskerYou're to produce cultural Christianity like you're supposed to have it in your home and from the, from the home.
Andrew IskerThat's like the fundamental, the household is the fundamental building block.
Andrew IskerAn entire society.
Andrew IskerIt's a whole society in a microcosm.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, if you get into like the christian nationalist debate and all of these things, it's like, well, I don't know, man.
Andrew IskerIt's like right there.
Andrew IskerYeah, I don't know how you get around, I mean, I know how they get around it, but they do some gymnastics to make.
Andrew IskerNo, doesn't mean that.
Andrew IskerBut it's like, I think it does.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, you, you have this fully orbed culture that you're raising people in and raising little people to just be these sponges that soak this culture up.
Andrew IskerAnd so that affects, I mean, obviously the go to for everyone with those verses is education.
Andrew IskerBut it's much, much more than that.
Andrew IskerIt isn't just, and this is how Greeks would understand Paideia is education, but it's education into an entire society.
Andrew IskerIt's being formed and shaped to take your place in greek civilization, to be a citizen of this society and take on the duties and the responsibilities and the authority of being a citizen.
Andrew IskerWhat does that mean for the Christian?
Andrew IskerIt means that their entire way of thinking, their way of life, the way they understand the world has to be shaped by christian things, has to be shaped by the word of God.
Andrew IskerYes.
Andrew IskerWith regard to education, especially in trash world, the advantage this is, I think the biggest white pill is like, it's not hard to be relative to your peers, extremely well educated compared to everyone else around you.
Andrew IskerYou don't have to have a 150 iq to be a genius anymore.
Andrew IskerYou can have a 105 and be fine if you've been taught things that's withheld from everyone else.
Andrew IskerLike, I remember growing up, I went to public school and I hated it.
Andrew IskerI hate it because especially by the time you're in middle school and high school, it's just a huge waste of time.
Andrew IskerAnd that was the case in the early two thousands and late nineties.
Andrew IskerI can't imagine what it's like now.
Andrew IskerAnd I would not get good grades, not because I intellectually couldn't understand the material because I was just so bored by it.
Andrew IskerAt the same time, I constantly was reading books.
Andrew IskerI was reading whatever I could about whatever subject I wanted.
Andrew IskerI was, of course, fascinated by history.
Andrew IskerAs a teenager.
Andrew IskerYou go through your world war two stage.
Andrew IskerI read every book that I could get my hands on about World War two and learning about history.
Andrew IskerAnd I was, you know, even like the history classes I had, I was really depressed that like there's all this history from the ancient world and the medieval world and we never talked about any of it.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerI felt like an idiot because I didn't know who Plato was or Aristotle was, right.
Andrew IskerAnd, and no one would teach me it.
Andrew IskerNo one would teach me ancient greek philosophy.
Andrew IskerAnd so I started to read this stuff on my own.
Andrew IskerAnd I guess I was probably a weird kid, but I was just fascinated by the world around me and all of these subjects that I wasn't allowed to learn about.
Andrew IskerI was fascinated by ancient history.
Andrew IskerI was fascinated by the medieval era.
Andrew IskerAnd so I would just read, read whatever I wanted to read and study whatever I wanted to study.
Andrew IskerAnd I'd get terrible grades, but I was actually like educating myself.
Andrew IskerAnd the same thing happened in college, right?
Andrew IskerI think I had, I did not have an impressive GPA in college.
Andrew IskerAnd not because it was like intellectually difficult, but because it's like C's get degrees.
Andrew IskerI'm just going to do the bare minimum and I'm going to spend all my time studying history and theology and whatever else I'm interested in.
Andrew IskerAnd so I would go to the library in college and I'd read all sorts of books that, I mean, I spent a lot of time in the library but not for like my actual classes, I would just take advantage of the library to find.
Andrew IskerFind stuff I was interested in.
Andrew IskerAnd, I mean, and I was interested.
Andrew IskerI took.
Andrew IskerI got a history degree, but it was all.
Andrew IskerIt was like, I took a class on the.
Andrew IskerOn, like, colonial America, right?
Andrew IskerAnd I'm thinking, like, all right, I'm gonna read, like, the federalist papers, and I'm gonna read, you know, all of the.
Andrew IskerYou know, all of this stuff about, like, Thomas Jefferson and George Washington and things like that.
Andrew IskerI can't wait.
Andrew IskerAnd I get the syllabus, and it's like, we're gonna learn about women's roles in colonial America, and we're going to read this feminist book about how they made the women churn butter and things like that.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, ugh.
Andrew IskerAnd so I think I could look at my transcript.
Andrew IskerI think I either dropped that class or got a d in it.
Andrew IskerAnd so my transcript doesn't look good.
Andrew IskerYeah, that's right.
Andrew IskerAnd so what I did instead is I educated myself on colonial America and read as much as I could about it, checked out books in the library, and none of them were applicable to the papers I had to write for that class.
Andrew IskerBut I actually learned about it and learned a lot about it.
Andrew IskerAnd it was like that for all of my classes, whatever the subject was.
Andrew IskerI took a class on medieval Europe.
Andrew IskerAnd what am I going to learn about medieval Europe?
Andrew IskerWe're going to learn about gender roles in medieval Europe.
Andrew IskerOh, okay.
Andrew IskerThat's what really mattered.
Andrew IskerWe're not going to learn anything about Charlemagne, but we're going to learn about how they thatched their huts.
Andrew IskerOkay, cool.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerSo, like, I mean, my education that I paid for, I'm still paying for, is.
Andrew IskerWas worthless.
Andrew IskerBut I I came away from college, you know, extremely well educated, not because of the college.
Andrew IskerAnd so the.
Andrew IskerThe thing that you can do for your children, and thankfully, homeschooling is still legal.
Andrew IskerAnd more and more legal, in many ways, is your children can actually get an education.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerI mean, one of the things I point out in the book is, and it's kind of famous, this.
Andrew IskerYou can go online and find the entrance exam for, like, Harvard or Yale from, like, 1898.
Andrew IskerAnd you look at it, you can go look.
Andrew IskerYour listeners can go look this up, just, like, google Harvard entrance exam, 1898.
Andrew IskerAnd you'll get a PDF of it.
Andrew IskerAnd this is what 17 and 18 year olds had to take to get into Harvard.
Andrew IskerAnd it was like, from memory.
Andrew IskerDescribe the route of Xenophon and his men back from Babylon.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, okay, I don't think I.
Andrew Isker98% of the people applying to Harvard today have even heard of Xenophon.
Andrew IskerI don't think 98% of the people who've graduated from Harvard today could tell you who Xenophon was.
Andrew IskerAnd these young people had to be able to describe from memory the entirety of Xenophon's anabasis.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, okay.
Andrew IskerAnd then they had to be able to do calculus from memory, find the matrice or cosine of whatever.
Andrew IskerAnd so they needed fully formed people that had an education that far surpasses the college education people would have now just to get into college.
Andrew IskerAnd you can actually provide this for your children.
Andrew IskerSo I look at that and I think, all right, when my children reach 18 years old, I want them to be able to answer these questions on this exam.
Andrew IskerThat's my own personal standard that I have for my kids.
Andrew IskerMaybe not everyone's going to have that standard, but it's achievable.
Andrew IskerYou can do that.
Andrew IskerLike, you can actually provide them the education that you never got to have.
Andrew IskerAnd they're going to be so well educated, so learned compared to their peers.
Andrew IskerThere's going to be no comparison whatsoever.
Andrew IskerSo you think about the economic problems and disadvantages that our people have.
Andrew IskerThat's one major way to overcome it, is, right.
Andrew IskerYou could just give them all the stuff that you never got to have and they will know so much more about the world and be much wiser than you were at 18 years old, hopefully.
Andrew IskerAnd they have this massive advantage.
Andrew IskerYou look at the literacy stats today, I think it's like 50 or 60% of Americans can't read at a 6th grade level, which if you look at like a 6th grade level, that's really low.
Andrew IskerLike, it's.
Andrew IskerThat's below the newspaper level of literacy.
Andrew IskerAnd so you think about that, right?
Andrew IskerIf your children can read at like, 12th grade level, even, you're massively.
Andrew IskerYou have a massive advantage if they can write, right?
Andrew IskerI mean, you go to the workplace and you see like, how people write emails.
Andrew IskerIt's like, oh, my goodness, is this person?
Andrew IskerYeah, exactly.
Andrew IskerYou should probably just have chat GPT write your emails for you.
Andrew IskerBut it's like, it's astounding how poorly educated people are today.
Andrew IskerSo that's a major advantage that they'll have.
Andrew IskerJust to be able to write anything and communicate in the, in the written form effectively will help your children massively.
Andrew IskerAnd so I think about those things a lot as a parent, what am I doing to set my children up to be able to thrive in the midst of trash world and not just survive, not just eke out some form of existence, but rather do well and to conquer.
Andrew IskerI can, you know, I'll take, I'll brag a little bit about my, my oldest daughter.
Andrew IskerUm, you know, I, and I'm, I'm like, blown away by her, like, every year.
Andrew IskerAnd this is the hard thing with, like, homeschooling in elementary is, um, you only end up doing like one or 2 hours of work a day because, like, elementary kids in, like, public school, they go there for 8 hours.
Andrew IskerBut the reality is, like, the teachers are working hard and everything because, like, they're, they're trying to keep everything under control for the kids.
Andrew IskerBut in terms of, like, academic content, that's probably all they're actually getting is one or 2 hours.
Andrew IskerAnd, and so my wife all year is worried because in Minnesota here, the kids have to take a math and reading test, like every other year.
Andrew IskerAnd she's worried.
Andrew IskerAnd if you don't pass it or if you do really poorly, then they have to go to public school.
Andrew IskerSo she's like, oh, what happens if she's, you know, she's not going to pass this test and we're going to be in.
Andrew IskerWe're going to have to send her to school and it's going to be a disaster and be embarrassing and all failed and everything.
Andrew IskerI'm like, it's going to be okay.
Andrew IskerAnd so my daughter, you know, takes this test for, in third grade, and she does the reading test, and she's reading it like a 10th grade level.
Andrew IskerAnd my wife, the whole time my wife is thinking, like, we have hardly done any work.
Andrew IskerI feel so lazy, like, we haven't done anything.
Andrew IskerShe's reading a 10th grade level.
Andrew IskerIt's like the standards are pretty low.
Andrew IskerYou don't have to work that hard.
Andrew IskerAnd it's because she learned how to read and likes reading.
Andrew IskerAnd we don't have the tv on all day and all day long to get her to do chores.
Andrew IskerI have to make her put a book down right.
Andrew IskerShe loves to read.
Andrew IskerAnd it's not quite the same with my son, but boys are a little bit different.
Andrew IskerBut that's the thing.
Andrew IskerIt's like, I don't think we're doing anything special or that we have some silver bullet that we figured out about education.
Andrew IskerIt's just we're doing the work and putting it in.
Andrew IskerAnd if you're able to do that, if you're able to bless your children in that way, you give them such a massive advantage.
Andrew IskerYou even see this.
Andrew IskerI'm sure you saw this article a year or two ago where it's like, it's white privilege that parents, white parents on average, read books to their children.
Andrew IskerAnd so we need to close that gap.
Andrew IskerIt's like white privilege that they're parents read bedtime stories to their kids more on average than other people.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, huh, okay, well, I didn't take that conclusion away from it, but you could give your children these massive, massive advantages just by doing, and it doesn't take all the work that you think it does.
Andrew IskerYou don't have to be spending 8 hours a day slaving away at lessons and grading and all of this when you're educating a handful of children.
Andrew IskerIt is work.
Andrew IskerTeaching a kid to read is hard, really hard.
Andrew IskerSo I'm not demeaning that or belittling it at all, but it doesn't take 8 hours a day of just going over the Alphabet and sounding out words.
Andrew IskerBut it's worth it.
Andrew IskerIt's worth all the hard work that my wife puts in, and you will see the fruit of it when they reach 18.
Andrew IskerAnd they can, even if they can't pass the 1900 Harvard entrance exam, they're going to be so far above their peers, whatever their ability level is.
Andrew IskerEven if your child is not given to academics in any way, a child that is at the same ability level, they're going to be so far beyond what their peers get that it will matter.
Andrew IskerAnd again, this is a thing on the margin, but that's where I'm trying to point people to, to look for hope, is that there is hope on the margins.
Andrew IskerThat's where we can go and do these things.
Andrew IskerYeah, homeschooling is this marginal thing only a small percentage of people in America do.
Andrew IskerBut the benefits of it are absolutely massive to give to your children, and so you build them up, right?
Andrew IskerAnd it isn't just like, okay, we're going to do public school type stuff, but then pray a little bit.
Andrew IskerIt's actually, all right, well, how do christians do math?
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerWhat do we understand about the world?
Andrew IskerLike, well, God built a world with order and patterns and reason built into the world, and that's what mathematics comes from.
Andrew IskerAlmost all of the great advances in mathematics over the centuries were done by christians.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerWow.
Andrew IskerWeird even.
Andrew IskerThey're like, oh, what about algebra?
Andrew IskerThat's a muslim ad.
Andrew IskerActually, no, it wasn't.
Andrew IskerIt was a persian dhimmi in Baghdad that they just had a muslim name.
Andrew IskerAll of these, all the advances in science and all of these things that we think are actually done by christians because they understood the world from a christian point of view and they understood it's God's world that they're examining and discovering.
Andrew IskerThat's the amazing thing that you can do with your kids is, is show them that this is actually our God's world that he's made and he's built it for us to discover and learn about.
Andrew IskerAnd it's just so beautiful.
Andrew IskerAnd I could go on for hours about homeschooling and how great it is, but really, that's what I want to build up.
Andrew IskerAnd I know you wanted to talk about barbells with that too.
Andrew IskerAnd I think especially as it pertains to boys, because homeschooling boys, and this can be an issue, is if a little boy is home with mom all day, he's going to grow up in a world that is obviously going to be gynocentric.
Andrew IskerHis mom is in charge of everything and he's in the household.
Andrew IskerAnd it might be, in some ways it's harder.
Andrew IskerSome ways school is better for boys because there's this rigid structure and they have to follow rules and be in a classroom.
Andrew IskerAnd so homeschooling can be a lot of times harder for boys.
Andrew IskerBut because they need physical activity, they need to do stuff.
Andrew IskerAnd part of this discipline, and this goes beyond just school age stuff, is men need to develop.
Andrew IskerThey need to physically develop.
Andrew IskerThey need to be big and strong.
Andrew IskerThat's what God built them to be.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, if you're doing homeschooling, you have to include physical activity.
Andrew IskerYou have to include when they're old enough and it's much younger than you think, everyone's like, oh, they can't start lifting weights until they're twelve because their bones are not developed.
Andrew IskerIt's like, ah, no.
Andrew IskerI make my kids pick up heavy stuff all the time because even though they're not going to get the big boy muscles until they hit puberty, it's a good discipline for them to follow, especially in our age, because of all the technological advances.
Andrew IskerMost, the average person in the pre modern era, average man, he had to do physical labor, he had to use his body to make money.
Andrew IskerAnd today that's not the case at all.
Andrew IskerMost people, how they make money is by sitting down and doing stuff, right?
Andrew IskerThey're sitting at a desk.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerAll of us, right?
Andrew IskerWe're sitting down at a desk, typing up things on a computer.
Andrew IskerWe're sitting in a truck driving around.
Andrew IskerAnd that takes a toll on your body in an opposite way than physical labor does, right?
Andrew IskerYou are sedentary, and along with all of the problems with modern food, you will get fat.
Andrew IskerYou will be unhealthy from the lifestyle that we have because of all the technological changes.
Andrew IskerAnd so a major part of it is right here.
Andrew IskerWe've built this world where we can make a living and provide for ourselves without having to do physical labor.
Andrew IskerAnd the downside to that, because we think we've overcome, we have this world where there's so much prosperity, we're in an anti scarcity world now.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, we're in our Star Trek utopia.
Andrew IskerBut the problem there is that, right?
Andrew IskerIf you don't have to physically use your body, you decay, right there.
Andrew IskerYou are sedentary, you get fat, you get weak, and you get sick way more.
Andrew IskerAnd so you have to go out of your way to just be healthy in a way that people didn't have to like.
Andrew IskerYou just live your normal life and you're going to be usually pretty thin and muscular.
Andrew IskerIf you're a man, because you're working in a factory or you're working on a farm now, you have to, at sometimes great expense of both time and money, go to a gym and work out and do all of these things.
Andrew IskerBut it's just like all these other things, right?
Andrew IskerIt's just like the dating market and things like that.
Andrew IskerYou have to do all these things out of the ordinary just to pursue a good life.
Andrew IskerIt's the same thing with your physical body, right?
Andrew IskerYou have to consciously devote time and effort and money to live healthy and to have a healthy body.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, that's worth it, right?
Andrew IskerIt's worth it to do those things.
Andrew IskerYou should do that.
Andrew IskerAnd even, and the, and it's not just for men, too.
Andrew IskerLike, I want, you know, I want my daughters to be healthy as well.
Andrew IskerIt is like, the benefit of it goes well beyond, like, physical strength and ability.
Andrew IskerLike, that's important, being healthy and being strong.
Andrew IskerBut what lifting weights does is there are physiological changes that happen to your body.
Andrew IskerIf you're fat, you produce less testosterone.
Andrew IskerAnd we talked earlier about men's emotions and anger and things like that.
Andrew IskerOne of the reasons why people aren't so angry is they're really fat and they don't have the testosterone flowing through their veins to make them angry about things that should make them angry.
Andrew IskerAnd so what happens is, yeah, you lose body fat, you build up musculature, your body produces more testosterone.
Andrew IskerYou're going to be more aggressive, you're going to be more confident, and you start acting much more like a man.
Andrew IskerIt's crazy.
Andrew IskerIt's crazy.
Andrew IskerEven for me.
Andrew IskerMy own personal experience is such that I was, at one point in my life, I was 310 pounds.
Andrew IskerI put on a lot of weight, and we'd gone through difficult time in life, and I got big.
Andrew IskerI didn't have time to go to the gym.
Andrew IskerI was doing everything I can to provide for the family, didn't have time for.
Andrew IskerFor working out.
Andrew IskerAnd I consciously, through a ton of effort, lost 60 pounds over the course of a year.
Andrew IskerI started working out every day and doing everything I could to get in shape.
Andrew IskerAnd the thing that I noticed about myself way more than just I had to get different clothes because the clothes I had didn't fit was I had way more self confidence and not in, like, a fake way where you're putting it on, where you have to pretend like you're confident.
Andrew IskerLike, I just.
Andrew IskerI was way more certain of myself, way more certain of things that I had to do, interpersonal actions, things like that.
Andrew IskerI was.
Andrew IskerI was way less depressed and anxious and, like, there were all these, like, emotional and physiological changes that occur just by not being as fat anymore and being stronger.
Andrew IskerIt changes you.
Andrew IskerAnd even, like, consciously, when you know that I could pick up 500 pounds off the ground, like, just like, consciously knowing that it changes how you relate to the world, I can impose my will on the world in this physical way, and it changes your entire mindset.
Andrew IskerIt changes you into a different kind of person.
Andrew IskerUsually for a good way.
Andrew IskerIn a good way.
Andrew IskerI look at that and I think it's like, oh, I don't think it's just personal to me.
Andrew IskerI don't think I'm the outlier here.
Andrew IskerI think that this affects everybody.
Andrew IskerLike, every man can do the exact same thing where not everybody's going to have, there's a bell curve of what your body can do strength wise, but most men can learn to deadlift at least 315 pounds.
Andrew IskerThat's not with training.
Andrew IskerI think the average person could do that.
Andrew IskerAnd once you start doing that, once you start squatting and doing bench press, overhead press, all the basic barbell lifts, it's crazy, man, what it does to your mind and your emotional state, where it's like, I don't really care about that minor difficulty anymore because I could squat 400 pounds.
Andrew IskerAnd it seems like this fake macho thing.
Andrew IskerIt seems like it's fake, but it's not at all.
Andrew IskerIt's not where it's like, yeah, I don't care.
Andrew IskerI'm strong now, and that's cool.
Andrew IskerAnd so I think the most important thing out of all of that is you develop your physical body, and some of it is within the people will be like, oh, no, that's vanity.
Andrew IskerIt's vanity to want to be strong and to look good.
Andrew IskerIt's like, well, no, God gave us bodies, right?
Andrew IskerAnd so much of the evangelical world is functionally gnostic.
Andrew IskerAnd I know that's a word people use and throw out all the time, but it's like, this is real.
Andrew IskerPhysical body doesn't matter.
Andrew IskerWe only care about spiritual things.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, there isn't a division between the body and, and spiritually what you are.
Andrew IskerThe two things are combined.
Andrew IskerAnd if you are unhealthy and out of shape and really weak, that affects your spirit, that affects your emotional state, that affects how your mind works, and not in a good way.
Andrew IskerAnd when you're able to develop these physical capacities that God has given you, it changes your entire outlook on the world.
Andrew IskerEven if life is really hard and you're in a rough place, you have physical strength, you feel pretty good.
Andrew IskerYou feel really good about yourself, about the world.
Andrew IskerYour mind is much clearer.
Andrew IskerYou sleep better.
Andrew IskerI can go on and on about all the benefits of it.
Andrew IskerAnd it's crazy because, right, you see most of the people, and it's funny how this works this way.
Andrew IskerLike, most of the people who are anti christian, nationalist and anti masculine Christianity and anti right wing Christianity or whatever, they're all really fat, and they'll attack guys like me or Stephen Wolf or everyone else who are like, no, you should just go lift weights and be strong and like, even.
Andrew IskerAnd, like, the thing with the young guys like this is this goes back to when I ministered to younger men, is, well, I don't know exactly what, you know, how to change your situation or make things better, but, like, if you're really strong and really good shape, that will help you in a lot of ways.
Andrew IskerWhen, when it comes to attracting young women, it's, you know, we're not supposed to say it.
Andrew IskerWe're not supposed to say that girls like guys that are, that look good and are in shape.
Andrew IskerBut it's true.
Andrew IskerIt's true.
Andrew IskerAnd so maybe you should try to do that.
Andrew IskerAnd so I think that's good pastoral advice to most young men.
Andrew IskerLike, start deadlifting and see if that changes anything.
Andrew IskerAnd.
Andrew IskerBut it's reality like it is.
Andrew IskerAnd the other aspect of it is.
Andrew IskerIt takes discipline, right?
Andrew IskerYou don't get a four or five or 600 pound deadlift, like, after a couple trips to the gym, right?
Andrew IskerThat takes months or years to develop consistently, day after day after day.
Andrew IskerIt takes a lot of time to develop a lot of technique and discipline.
Andrew IskerIt cultivates this discipline.
Andrew IskerAnd it's sort of self reinforcing, too, because you go to the gym and you're a novice.
Andrew IskerIt's like your first time there that you've ever gone to a gym.
Andrew IskerAnd you maybe can bench press the bar with, like, five pound weights on it.
Andrew IskerAnd you look around, you're, like, shaking on the way down and everything, and you see all these guys that are like, that are just specimens, right?
Andrew IskerIt can be intimidating.
Andrew IskerAnd then the next time you come back, you could put, like, five more pounds on there and your arms aren't shaking quite as much anymore.
Andrew IskerAnd then the next time you come back, you put a little more weight on the bar and you see these gradual gains that you make.
Andrew IskerAnd so the work that you're putting, you can tangibly see the reward of the work that you're putting in, that you see the linear progression that you go on with a barbella and you feel a lot better each time.
Andrew IskerIt's like, oh, that was hard, but I did more than last time.
Andrew IskerYou write it down in your little notebook or on your app or whatever, and then you check back the next time and like, oh, I did a little bit more.
Andrew IskerThis is good.
Andrew IskerAnd all of a sudden, right after six months now, you are doing a lot of weight, and you look in the mirror and you start to look like one of those guys that you saw the first time you went to the gym.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, that's not so bad.
Andrew IskerAnd it applies to so much in life that so much in life is this way where you have to discipline yourself to put in a little bit of work today and then the next day, and then the next day, consistently over a long period of time, you cultivate that kind of discipline, and it bleeds over into so much of life that you see the benefits tangibly from this discipline that you're undergoing, like, consciously and willfully, like, voluntarily doing these, this.
Andrew IskerThis hard thing in little spurts every single day.
Andrew IskerYou see the payoff from it and it builds you into a different kind of man.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, I think.
Andrew IskerI think that, like, everybody.
Andrew IskerAnd, and, I mean, unless you have, like, some physical disability where you cannot pick up a bar bill, right, every.
Andrew IskerEvery guy should do.
Andrew IskerAnd if they're able to take time to do it.
Andrew IskerEvery guy should, and I think women should, too.
Andrew IskerIt's not just exclusively for men.
Andrew IskerWomen should be in good physical shape, too.
Andrew IskerBut I think most of your audience is probably men and.
Andrew IskerOh, really?
Andrew IskerOkay.
Andrew IskerOkay, ladies.
Andrew IskerWell, you could pick up barbells, too.
Andrew IskerI don't want to break your heart, to tell you the awful truth that you're not going to be able to pick up quite as much weight as men, but even so.
Andrew IskerAnd the other thing for gals is, I think a lot of times they think I'm going to look like one of these crossfit women.
Andrew IskerIf I ever pick up a barbell, I'm going to have these delts and stuff that I'll look like I'll have man arms if I ever pick up a.
Andrew IskerNo, you won't.
Andrew IskerYeah, just one time.
Andrew IskerBoom.
Andrew IskerNow I look like a man.
Andrew IskerNo, no.
Andrew IskerActually, you'll feel really good and you'll look good, and it has the same benefit that it does for you, and it helps just the hormonal changes that happen to you.
Andrew IskerBecause of physical fitness, men and women's bodies are different, and your hormones will be regulated in the appropriate way if you get physical activity and especially if you're building muscle.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yes, I mean, I can't say enough about how much it does for you.
Andrew IskerAnd then you get to the point where, like, you have to have it, where you have to work out and if you miss a day, you feel terrible.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerOh, man, I can't believe I missed the day.
Andrew IskerLike today, I'm missing going to the gym.
Andrew IskerI didn't go to the gym because I was recording with you.
Andrew IskerSo I'm already feeling terrible.
Andrew IskerBut it's worth it.
Andrew IskerIt's worth it.
Andrew IskerBut that's how much it means to go on your show, Will.
Andrew IskerBut no, I think if you can devote the time to it, especially young men.
Andrew IskerThat's one of the regrets in my life, is I wish I would have developed this discipline when I was in college and in my twenties.
Andrew IskerI didn't wait until my later twenties and into my thirties to begin consistently doing this because I probably would have hit my peak and had a much bigger deadlift and squat and everything else.
Andrew IskerSome of it is not even just vanity.
Andrew IskerI do it.
Andrew IskerAnd I would try to get to the certain point because I'm thinking, okay, what are my sons going to be able to do if I can get to this level of strength?
Andrew IskerWell, maybe.
Andrew IskerMaybe my boys will do 100 pounds more things like that.
Andrew IskerEspecially as you get older, you can bring your children with you to do these things, and they see it.
Andrew IskerIt's really cool when your little boy sees you pick up 500 pounds, and they're like, whoa, dad is strong.
Andrew IskerWhen you wrestle and let them win, they think they're like the.
Andrew IskerThey think they're the best thing in the world.
Andrew IskerI'm bigger than, stronger than dad is.
Andrew IskerAnd so, like, all of that stuff, like, they.
Andrew IskerWhen the kids will.
Andrew IskerThey'll want to be like their parents, and they'll want to do the stuff that mom and dad do.
Andrew IskerAnd so your little guys seeing that, I mean, that's part of, you know, part of Paideia is you're raising them up to be the people that you are and the people that you want to be, and they're enculturated into the.
Andrew IskerInto the same thing.
Andrew IskerAnd so, yeah, I love it.
Andrew IskerAnd I know, and I know, yeah, you're in.
Andrew IskerYou're into lifting, too.
Andrew IskerAnd so, I mean, what, what, you know, what.
Andrew IskerWhat is your experience?
Andrew IskerIs it similar to.
Andrew IskerSimilar to mine?
Andrew IskerUh, with.
Andrew IskerWith lifting?
Will SpencerIt's exactly that.
Will SpencerYeah.
Will SpencerSo, um.
Will SpencerSo I was courting a woman, uh, the second half of last year.
Will SpencerThat didn't work out, and it's pretty tough, but as I've been saying, you know, broken hearts, right?
Will SpencerSo I got into.
Will SpencerI got in the gym and started specifically strength training, and it made a huge difference.
Will SpencerSo, specifically, big four lifts training.
Will SpencerAnd there were some really tough days, but then I was like, well, I can bench press 250 pounds.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerI feel good about myself.
Andrew IskerExactly.
Will SpencerI feel good about that.
Will SpencerThere were whole days where it's like, well, I could bench press that much, and so it's not that bad.
Will SpencerAt least I have something tangible.
Will Spencer100% facts.
Andrew IskerAnd then.
Will SpencerAnd then a couple weeks ago, I deadlifted over 400 pounds.
Will SpencerIt's like, that's a good.
Will SpencerThat's a good feeling.
Will Spencer500 pounds is a lot.
Andrew IskerBefore you get there.
Andrew IskerYou'll get there.
Andrew IskerYou can do it.
Andrew IskerI think most people, right.
Andrew IskerIf you dedicate yourself to training, and, I mean, because you'll hit plateaus where it's like, I don't think I'm ever going to get beyond this.
Andrew IskerAnd then you.
Andrew IskerYou keep pushing through like you used to.
Andrew IskerYou go, it keeps growing.
Andrew IskerLike you.
Andrew IskerThere's more muscle you could put on, coincidentally.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerAnd it is.
Andrew IskerIt feels so good, right.
Andrew IskerThat you're able.
Andrew IskerAnd I think, really, it's just this, like, grug brain kind of thing.
Andrew IskerIf I could impose my will on this barbell, I could do anything right.
Andrew IskerIt does change how you think.
Andrew IskerI mean, and it could be any kind of.
Andrew IskerIt doesn't.
Andrew IskerIsn't necessarily just strength training.
Andrew IskerLike, if you.
Andrew IskerIf you dedicate yourself with cardio and running a certain pace, I want to be able to run a mile like I did when I was 17.
Andrew IskerI want to run under six minutes.
Andrew IskerOkay, let's do it.
Andrew IskerAnd when you accomplish that, the feeling you have of achieving a goal like that, I mean, some of that, too, is just.
Andrew IskerIt's just like, basic life, basic wisdom of, like, setting a goal and achieving it and what that feels like, because so much of, like, modern life, you don't have that.
Andrew IskerLike, what's the goal that you set?
Andrew IskerOh, I want to beat this video game under so many hours or whatever like that.
Andrew IskerI mean, that's why video games are so attractive to so many people, because it feels like you're accomplishing something, right.
Andrew IskerOh, I killed this many bad guys, and I'm on top of the leaderboard or whatever, and I've accomplished something.
Andrew IskerIsn't this great?
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, actually, I mean, you really didn't, but it feels like you did.
Andrew IskerBut with something like this, you're forcing yourself to confront reality, too.
Andrew IskerI mean, that's part of it, is like, barbell training can be really brutal because we like to think that we're things that we're not, and you're just confronted with the cold, hard reality of, I'm only as strong as I actually am, and I can get stronger, but this is my Max right now, and that's all I can do.
Andrew IskerAnd I see all these other people, they can do way more than me, and I want to get to that point, but I'm not there right now.
Andrew IskerAnd you recognize where you actually are in reality.
Andrew IskerAnd very rarely in life.
Andrew IskerWe're so insulated from having to confront reality about ourselves.
Andrew IskerWe normally think that we're so much better than we are, that we're so much better looking than we are, that we're so much more successful than we are.
Andrew IskerAnd no one will ever tell you it's very rare.
Andrew IskerI do have some good, close friends.
Andrew IskerWhen I was really big that said, andrew, you got to lose some weight, man.
Andrew IskerYou're getting really fat.
Andrew IskerAnd nobody tells people that stuff.
Andrew IskerNobody says, hey, dude, no.
Andrew IskerI mean, it isn't just, like, girls on the Internet that are like, oh, you're so beautiful.
Andrew IskerAnd whenever they post a new Facebook picture, whatever, you.
Andrew IskerOh, you're gorgeous.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerEverybody is like that.
Andrew IskerOh, you're the best.
Andrew IskerYou're the best, right?
Andrew IskerBut behind, you know, behind your back, they're like, man, he is really tubby.
Andrew IskerLike, they don't, nobody tells you that to your face.
Andrew IskerBut then, but with the barbell or with any kind of fitness thing, right.
Andrew IskerYou're dealing with reality like, I am what I am.
Andrew IskerYou step on the scale.
Andrew IskerI weigh that much.
Andrew IskerAnd, you know, nothing I do today is going to change that.
Andrew IskerBut what I do over the next six months, cat could, could change that.
Andrew IskerAnd that's why, I mean, part of like education and Padea and this whole discussion, that's why like, I mean, most of like the christian homeschool world kind of poo poos, sports and physical activity, which I think is a huge problem.
Andrew IskerAnd as I think like, okay, if I was going to start a christian school, classical christian school, what would I have?
Andrew IskerWe're starting from square one.
Andrew IskerAnd maybe people listening to this have done.
Andrew IskerI mean, it's a lot of work to start a school, but I'm like, whatever we do, there's going to be barbell training for the kids.
Andrew IskerThere's 2 hours of physical fitness, right.
Andrew IskerBecause if you want to read Plato and Aristotle, you got to do the same stuff.
Andrew IskerWhat did the ancient Greeks do all day?
Andrew IskerThey went to the gymnasium, they wrestled and they lifted weights and their minds and their bodies were in shape.
Andrew IskerThose two correspond to each other.
Andrew IskerWe want to just have big brains.
Andrew IskerWhat sports does, though, and you see this within trash world.
Andrew IskerWe look at sports as entertainment and it's just a fun thing.
Andrew IskerIt's like a Marvel movie.
Andrew IskerBut at the end of the day, you're only as good as you actually are.
Andrew IskerAll of the boomer participation trophy stuff, actually, that's one of the things that's true, is.
Andrew IskerNo, actually not everybody is as good as they think.
Andrew IskerThey're only a tiny few are actually really, really good.
Andrew IskerEverybody thinks their kid is going to make a.
Andrew IskerGet into the NFL or play in the NBA or whatever your sport is.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like your kid might be the best in the entire town.
Andrew IskerHe might be one of the best in the whole, in the five county area, and he might never get beyond like division three in college.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerIt's so tiny few that, that make it.
Andrew IskerAnd it's a good for you to deal with reality and find that I'm not as good as I think I am.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerIt's good for a kid who thinks he's great to go up to bat and strike out and deal with failure.
Andrew IskerGo wrestle and lose.
Andrew IskerIt's actually really, really good.
Andrew IskerAnd insulating yourself from failure and from losing is bad for you.
Andrew IskerYou have to experience failure.
Andrew IskerYou have to experience loss.
Andrew IskerAnd in athletic endeavors, that's one of the few places we still allow it to happen.
Andrew IskerWe still allow people to discover that, oh, not every single person is exactly the same.
Andrew IskerSome people are better than others at different things.
Andrew IskerAnd so that's why I'm like, even if my kids are not great at sports, you're gonna go do it.
Andrew IskerYou're gonna go and you might not like it, you might fail at it.
Andrew IskerThe other kids might be better than you, but you're going to go do it, and you're going to find out how good you are.
Andrew IskerAnd it's so important to face those things, because all of life is failure all around.
Andrew IskerYou're going to fail at lots of stuff.
Andrew IskerAnd if you never confront these things, if you never subject yourself to the possibility of failure, you're always going to fail.
Andrew IskerYou're never going to have success.
Andrew IskerAnd so all of these things together, that's part of building these fully formed christian human beings is living in the actual real world that God has made and giving them opportunities.
Andrew IskerI mean, that's part of maturation, of growth.
Andrew IskerOne of the things I'm really fond of saying is that the Bible, the point of the Bible, if you have to sum it up, the entire Bible in one word, is maturity.
Andrew IskerThat's the word, maturity.
Andrew IskerAnd you actually alluded to it earlier.
Andrew IskerA will where it starts in a garden.
Andrew IskerIt starts with a husband and wife, a bride and a groom.
Andrew IskerAnd it ends with a bride and a groom.
Andrew IskerAnd it ends with a garden city.
Andrew IskerYou go from a garden to a garden city, where you go from Adam being this little baby, even though he was created as a man.
Andrew IskerBut maturity wise, a baby.
Andrew IskerAnd all throughout the whole thing, humanity is maturing until it reaches Jesus, who's the fully mature man.
Andrew IskerAnd that's the thing.
Andrew IskerI ask people this all the time.
Andrew IskerI'm like, why is the Bible so.
Andrew IskerIt's not long, but why is the Bible so long?
Andrew IskerWhy are there all these stories in there?
Andrew IskerWhy is there all this stuff in there?
Andrew IskerIf the whole point of the Bible is just believe in Jesus and you go to heaven when you die, if that's the point of the Bible, why didn't Eve have Jesus?
Andrew IskerWhy did it have to wait thousands of years until Mary had Jesus?
Andrew IskerWhy all this stuff in between?
Andrew IskerA lot of times, people can't give you a good answer to that question because they haven't considered these things.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, no, because God is slowly, patiently maturing humanity.
Andrew IskerHe's maturing his people throughout time, right?
Andrew IskerThey have.
Andrew IskerThey suffer a lot of failures, a lot of setbacks.
Andrew IskerThey sin, and they mess things up, and he picks them up, cleans them up, and puts them right back, and they learn, they mature.
Andrew IskerHe gives them a.
Andrew IskerThey go from being a baby to a toddler to a child to an adolescent to a teenager to a man, right?
Andrew IskerThat's the process of how it happens, that God is very low time preference.
Andrew IskerHe is the extremity of low time.
Andrew IskerHe's an eternal God that exists outside of time.
Andrew IskerAnd so he's got a lot of patience and slowly, slowly develops.
Andrew IskerYou see this with the parables that Jesus gives, right?
Andrew IskerThe parable of the mustard seed and the parable of the leaven, right?
Andrew IskerThis slow buildup of the kingdom of God over time leaven slowly, imperceptibly working its way through the loaf.
Andrew IskerAnd that's what God does with us, right?
Andrew IskerHe could have created human beings any way he wanted to, right?
Andrew IskerWe could show up and be born full adults.
Andrew IskerI mean, I don't know how that would, you know, biologically.
Andrew IskerI mean, he'd figure out a way, right?
Andrew IskerBut we could be born like Benjamin Button, you know, like you're.
Andrew IskerYou're already.
Andrew IskerYou're already old the second you're born and have all the wisdom that you need and everything else.
Andrew IskerBut he doesn't.
Andrew IskerHe didn't create us to be that way.
Andrew IskerWe come into the world as babies, and slowly, through years, we grow and we mature and we learn and we gain wisdom, and we understand things better and better and better until we're grown men.
Andrew IskerAnd even as we're grown men, like, when you're 20, you understand things differently at 30 than you did when you're 20.
Andrew IskerAnd then every.
Andrew IskerWhen you're 40 and 50 and 60.
Andrew IskerAnd that's.
Andrew IskerThat's built into how God built the world, right?
Andrew IskerHe wants us to experience these things.
Andrew IskerAnd so much of.
Andrew IskerSo much of how we approach things is like no patience, no slow development of virtue and wisdom.
Andrew IskerIt's, you got to get it right now.
Andrew IskerYou got to get all these things right now.
Andrew IskerAnd rather, what we have to be building is the slow development of maturation and growth.
Andrew IskerAnd the obvious example of it, in my mind, that you can see where it's just so tangible, it's so obvious, is barbells is lifting weights.
Andrew IskerYou see this slow, very, very slow growth of strengthen that you gain, and it's like, applicable to all of life.
Andrew IskerYou see that with, in wisdom.
Andrew IskerLike, you grow in wisdom in the exact same way.
Andrew IskerYou grow in maturity in the exact same way.
Andrew IskerSo that's.
Andrew IskerYeah, we could spend another 3 hours on barbells, so.
Will SpencerYeah, easily.
Will SpencerWell, it's true.
Will SpencerI mean, there's this idea that it's high time preference, but it's also extreme youth focused.
Will SpencerLike, our culture isn't good at talking about what happens to people when they turn 40.
Will SpencerLike, oh, you're in the forbidden stage of your life.
Andrew IskerYou might as well get 1ft in the grave.
Will Spencer57.
Will SpencerYeah, exactly.
Will SpencerAnd so there's this emphasis on youth and beauty and all this.
Will SpencerBut wisdom only matures over a lifetime.
Will SpencerBut we don't have any elders.
Will SpencerI talked about this recently.
Will SpencerWe don't have any elders over the age of 70 who are able to wisely reflect back on life and say things that are true.
Will SpencerInstead, they're just regurgitating propaganda from their youth.
Will SpencerAnd I think the young people today are like, this is obvious nonsense.
Will SpencerAnd so we'll just focus on being young.
Will SpencerWhereas there are virtues to every single stage of life.
Will SpencerIf you know how to grow in wisdom and you have a concept of maturity, instead of, like, Netflix, Disney plus infantilism, which is what we have, that's our culture.
Will SpencerIt keeps men essentially soft featured, undeveloped in body, mind and spirit.
Will SpencerAnd, you know, the PI day of Christianity, if it, when it's successful in building up the men and women that it can, I don't know that there's going to be a whole lot of contests there, like how are, how are, how are your homeschool kids?
Will SpencerHow is any other children from the public school system being able, going to be able to compete with your home school kids?
Andrew IskerNo, I don't understand.
Andrew IskerI don't think they will.
Andrew IskerAnd I think one of, well, I hope not.
Andrew IskerWe'll see.
Andrew IskerWe'll see what happens.
Andrew IskerBut I think you bring up a really good point, is that the padea of the Lord is also intergenerational, and so you should have wise elders.
Andrew IskerAnd that's one of the things, there's this constant dismissal and hatred of the boomers, and some of it is merited, some of it isn't.
Andrew IskerAnd so the difficulty there, like you said, is that the elder generation is, there is a disconnect with them from their own elders.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerAnd so when you have the younger people, when you have the younger people who are saying, no, we need to do things differently, like, the way we've been living is wrong.
Andrew IskerAnd we need to go back to further in the past what they're doing, because the older generation today will be like, you're not respecting your elders, you're dismissing us, and you're calling us boobers and blah, blah, blah.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, actually, no, I'm trying to honor my elders in a way that you are not.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerThat's what I'm doing.
Andrew IskerI'm trying to honor my great grandparents and great great grandparents that it skipped this generation.
Andrew IskerOf course, there's a way that you can dishonor the boomers in a sinful way and be dismissive of them and hate them.
Andrew IskerI think the way to go about it is, is like, when they're obviously not getting it, when they're obviously not seeing a thing, just be as kind as you can and respectful as you can, and just say, okay, you're not gonna get it, that's okay.
Andrew IskerAnd not fight with them.
Andrew IskerBut that ultimately is the case that 200 years ago, if you had a problem, if you're a young guy that has a problem, you would go to the old men, you would go to your grandpa and your great grandpa or the other older men around you and say, what should I do?
Andrew IskerWhat should I do here?
Andrew IskerAnd they would have wisdom, because the situations in which they lived, there was continuity.
Andrew IskerThe world hadn't changed that much in 80 years, from when they were young to now that they're old.
Andrew IskerThey're all living in the same world.
Andrew IskerAnd so the wisdom that they had accrued and gained over their lifetime would be applicable to the world that the young people are living in.
Andrew IskerBut our world has undergone such rapid social change that some people, some of the older generation definitely see, like, they see many of the bad things on the surface, but they don't dig any deeper, and they don't see how the things that they were okay with are now affecting the youth in ways they don't understand.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's difficult.
Andrew IskerBut I think if you are developing this fully orbed community of paideia, and you have elders that get these things, because I think about it this way, too, as I'm interacting with guys who are in their sixties and seventies that just don't get it right.
Andrew IskerAnd the whole time I'm thinking, all right, how would I want to be treated if I were them?
Andrew IskerJust like basic golden rule stuff, how would I want to be treated if I were them?
Andrew IskerI wouldn't want the young guys to be dismissive of me and spurning anything I say and just fighting with me.
Andrew IskerBut the flip side is like, how do I want to act when I'm in that position?
Andrew IskerSo when I'm 60 or 70 years old and you have 20 something, 30 something year old guys that disagree with me, how will I act?
Andrew IskerWell, I'd be kind of haughty and be like, you young guys don't get it.
Andrew IskerYou young guys are fools.
Andrew IskerI hope that, because I think a lot of the social change will continue happening and the situation that young men are might, might be things might be a way that I don't fully comprehend 40 years from now.
Andrew IskerAnd I want to have the humility that should come with age to be able to say, man, I don't get it.
Andrew IskerI don't understand what's going on and the world that I grew up in doesn't exist anymore.
Andrew IskerAnd so help me understand these things.
Andrew IskerSo I try to look at it both ways and think about, okay, what am I going to be when I'm an old man?
Andrew IskerAnd what kind of wisdom can I impart to my grandchildren and great grandchildren?
Andrew IskerAnd that's like a thing that weighs on me because I'm thinking about this in an intergenerational paideia.
Andrew IskerWhat will be my role at that point?
Andrew IskerBecause traditionally, ordinarily, these would be the guys that would guide the community, that would provide the wisdom.
Andrew IskerEven when they don't have their hand on the wheel anymore, they're kind of in retirement.
Andrew IskerThey're not running businesses and leading churches and things like that.
Andrew IskerThey'll be older and they'll step away from those things, which also, strangely enough, the silent generation and Boomer generation isn't doing.
Andrew IskerAs an aside, all these guys are hanging on to the bitter end.
Andrew IskerI mean, this is the thing that people, I can't remember who said this with the Tom Cruise Top Gun movie where it's like he's like 60 years old, still flying fighter jets.
Andrew IskerIt's like the boomer's taking one last mission.
Andrew IskerHe's still holding onto this thing and not giving it up to the young guys.
Andrew IskerAnd in a lot of ways, that's true.
Andrew IskerThey're going to hang on to the bitter end.
Andrew IskerAnd some of that is they didn't develop younger men to take their place, partly because they didn't trust them.
Andrew IskerThey didn't think they, oh, if I hand it off to a young guy, they're going to screw it all up.
Andrew IskerEverything that I've built.
Andrew IskerAnd you see this not even just in churches, but in businesses and families and all over the place.
Andrew IskerAnd so like the intergenerational conflict that exists is a major part of trash.
Andrew IskerI think that's, that's part of, like, it's part of, it's my design as well that we want to have.
Andrew IskerWe want to have the older generation so bought into.
Andrew IskerI'm going to live, I'm going to have retirement.
Andrew IskerI'm going to go live in my retirement community.
Andrew IskerI'm going to take my four hundred one k and my pension and everything I earned, and I'm going to buy an annuity and that's going to give me a guaranteed payment.
Andrew IskerI'm going to take my whole nest egg, put in an annuity that gives me a guaranteed payment for the rest of my life, and then it'll be zero for my kids to inherit.
Andrew IskerThat has been a thing that has been actively sold to that generation is you worked hard your whole life and these lazy kids, they're going to take all of that and waste it.
Andrew IskerAnd so they've set the older generation against the younger generation as much as the younger generation is bitter towards them as well.
Andrew IskerI think it's a thing that's by design, and so that's another thing that we have to overcome.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerAnd it's, and it's not easy because if you're a young person and you're struggling and, you know, starting out with a family and working really hard and you're not getting any help from the older generation, really easy to get bitter toward them and resent them and you can't, like, normal life was not that way.
Andrew IskerLike, nor like the Bible talks about, a righteous man will leave an inheritance for his children and his grandchildren, and trash world says, no, go move to Arizona and go play golf and pickleball all day.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerThat's the.
Andrew IskerYeah, the John Piper thing, right?
Andrew IskerLike that's, that is like golf and pickleball for the 60 plus generation, right?
Andrew IskerThat's their Netflix and Marvel movies and everything else, right?
Andrew IskerThat's, that's their thing.
Andrew IskerThat's, that's, that's for the elderly bugman.
Andrew IskerAnd, and I know, and, and it's like, um, you know, uh, like you, you have to overcome it.
Andrew IskerMight, might be like they don't see it and they're not ever going to see it.
Andrew IskerAnd you need to not become that person when you are 60, 70 years old, because it'll, it'll be self replicating where it's like, I'm going to put money in my 401k my whole life.
Andrew IskerMost millennials don't think they're going to retire, but maybe you will maybe this house that you bought in 2019 will be worth $10 million someday, because I guess that's what's happening to housing.
Andrew IskerAnd you'll be able to sell it and live in Arizona or Florida and live the dream that your parents lived and then leave nothing for your kids.
Andrew IskerGive it all to Blackrock, and it's stuff that's by design to set father against son and mother against daughter.
Andrew IskerThey want it this way rather than the generations working cohesively together, parents supporting their children and their grandparents helping their grandchildren out and all of these things.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerYou have to begin when you're in your twenties and thirties thinking, and you just have your first baby, like, okay, all right, how am I going to do things differently that is completely 180 degrees contrary to the way of the world that's designed for us?
Andrew IskerThat will set my children up?
Andrew IskerI mean, some of it is.
Andrew IskerI mean, we've talked about homeschooling and things like that.
Andrew IskerThat comes at great cost, right?
Andrew IskerYou're losing another income, and you're not going to have all that retirement income that you would have otherwise had, that your wife would bring in, but you're setting them up for success in the world that you never got to enjoy.
Andrew IskerAnd it might be that maybe you'll go live with your kids when you are old, in a retirement age and preparing them for that reality that we spent our retirement raising you time for the payback.
Andrew IskerIt is.
Andrew IskerI mean, it's tough to think about even now about how to live in this way that is opposing the world that has been built for us, that is awful and destructive and horrible and facing these uncomfortable things and living in a way that might not be ideal, but otherwise is good and beautiful and wonderful.
Andrew IskerAnd that takes a every generation working together.
Will SpencerI agree.
Will SpencerCan I push back whatever you want to that?
Will SpencerSo my response to that is like, I agree.
Will SpencerAnd I'm big on masculine hierarchies, and I'm big on wise elders.
Will SpencerAnd I'm very bullish on the potential for old, wise men to properly channel, harness, and control the energies of young, enthusiastic men.
Will SpencerI've told the story multiple times that if you ever want to see the limits of masculine men's power, you put a whole bunch of braveheart dudes on a field of battle, painted faces, shaking their spears, cheering, and then do two things.
Will SpencerFirst, take a young, beautiful woman barefoot and just walk her across the field of battle, and you'll watch, you know what I mean?
Will SpencerPower down.
Will SpencerBut then the same is that if you take a, an old man with like a cane.
Will SpencerHe just crutches out there to the middle of the field.
Will SpencerHe just looks at him.
Will SpencerIt's like, I'm ashamed.
Will SpencerIt doesn't have to say a word.
Will SpencerJust looks at him and like, oh, okay.
Will SpencerAnd then they all pack up and go home.
Will SpencerThat's the power of elders over young men.
Will SpencerBut I think the situation that we have now is that this, the.
Will SpencerA lot of the trash world system that we're living in was built.
Will SpencerOr at least there was a generation that was the turning point generation for the construction of it, right.
Will SpencerThe most enthusiastic builders of it.
Will SpencerAnd it's like, you guys were wrong.
Will SpencerLike, okay, even if we grant the point that you were a hyper engineer, but you were.
Will SpencerBut, like, there is something also to trash world being.
Will SpencerLike, it plays on people's sins.
Andrew IskerOh, yeah.
Will SpencerYou know what I mean?
Will SpencerLike, I didn't settle down and have kids in my early twenties.
Will SpencerLike, and I was making bad decisions.
Will SpencerBut you know what?
Will SpencerLike, as I go back and I search inside myself, like, you don't like the stuff.
Will SpencerDecisions that I was making to live outside of God's law.
Will SpencerSo there's, like, an accountability piece.
Will SpencerAnd I've tweeted this, like, if just one baby boomer man, pastor influencer, got up and said, you know what?
Will SpencerLike, we were wrong about all of it.
Will SpencerFeminism.
Will SpencerWe were super wrong about that.
Will SpencerWe were super wrong about Megan.
Will SpencerHe was super wrong about no fault divorce.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd just said that, like, there would be a wave of healing that would wash across the entire nation.
Will SpencerBut, like, they're not saying it.
Will SpencerThey're like, maybe I can run out the clock and, yeah, then good luck with that.
Will SpencerAnd I think that's contributing to the anger.
Will SpencerIt's like, look, we'll forgive you.
Will SpencerWe just want to hear that.
Will SpencerYou see?
Will SpencerIt's like, well, you know, Biden, I think he could do another four years.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerNo, no, I don't think that's even really a pushback.
Andrew IskerI think you're right.
Andrew IskerYeah, I think you're right that there hasn't.
Andrew IskerHasn't been a.
Andrew IskerAny contrition of any kind, really, from anyone in that generation whatsoever.
Andrew IskerI can't think of one example of anyone coming close to what you're describing.
Andrew IskerSo you're right.
Andrew IskerYou're absolutely right that they're not saying, yeah, we loved the world that we got.
Andrew IskerWe were born on third base, and we thought we hit a triple.
Andrew IskerAnd we.
Andrew IskerYeah, we really messed things up for younger generations.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerBecause it will always be.
Andrew IskerWhat always happens is they'll say, well, no, I didn't do that.
Andrew IskerI didn't do that.
Andrew IskerThose things.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, well, I know you personally didn't, like, make the economic decisions to create the world that we have, but you were happy to benefit from them, right?
Andrew IskerYou were.
Andrew IskerYou were more than happy to benefit from them.
Andrew IskerAnd because a lot of it, like, if you.
Andrew IskerIf you begin to say those things, if you're 70 years old, then people will say, well, why didn't you.
Andrew IskerWhy didn't you do anything before?
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerWhy didn't you.
Andrew IskerWhy don't you fight any.
Andrew IskerWhy don't you.
Andrew IskerIt's easy for you to say now, but, like, they're not even saying the easy thing to say now.
Andrew IskerAnd.
Andrew IskerAnd so I think a lot of it is there's a tremendous amount of guilt, especially when you hear young guys criticize the boomer generation.
Andrew IskerIt'll always be turned back to, you're just a bitter young guy.
Andrew IskerYou're just angry.
Andrew IskerYou need to respect your elders.
Andrew IskerAnd the reality is, it's like, no, because I look at it now, the things that are happening today that we are benefiting from, even in a minor way, 20 years, 30 years, it's going to be way worse for the kids that are born today than it is now.
Andrew IskerI don't get why you can't just say, because I can tell you about all the problems with the millennial generation and all the sins that they're given to collectively, generationally, and say, yeah, I was part of that.
Andrew IskerThese are the decisions I made that were poor and that were bad.
Andrew IskerYeah, yeah.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, I could do that.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerBecause it's easy to.
Andrew IskerBecause everyone wants to blame millennials and young people for their laziness and their lack of work ethic and all the things that seem obvious, but it's like, okay, well, like, turnabout is fair play.
Andrew IskerLike, what?
Andrew IskerOkay, what did you guys do wrong?
Andrew IskerAnd.
Andrew IskerNope, nothing.
Andrew IskerI did everything right.
Andrew IskerI worked hard.
Andrew IskerI got my house in 1983, and I paid.
Andrew IskerDon't you know that I paid a 15% mortgage on that?
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, yeah, the house costs like $20,000, right?
Andrew IskerLike, okay, I paid that whole thing off.
Andrew IskerIt's like, well, don't you think, like, there's anything collectively, like, as a generation you did, that was not good or wrong?
Andrew IskerNo, no.
Andrew IskerWe were totally righteous and everything.
Andrew IskerSo you're right.
Andrew IskerAnd there.
Andrew IskerAnd, yeah, I mean, if there was one that just said, no, we were wrong about these things, like, we destroyed our entire society and we thought we were righteous in doing it.
Andrew IskerI think, I think that's the big thing is circling back to so much of this is the civil religion that dominates everything.
Andrew IskerYou are a righteous person if you believe it.
Andrew IskerYou're a righteous person if you believe egalitarianism in all its forms, and you're a bad person if you disagree with it.
Andrew IskerAnd so any form of contrition would imply that those things actually maybe are bad and they're not going to do that.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like self reinforcing because the decisions they made and the things they were happy to agree with, all the social changes that took place, it confirms their own sense of righteousness.
Andrew IskerAnd so they would have to say that, no, the sixties and seventies generation, we were bad, we messed up everything.
Andrew IskerAnd, and that, that I don't think, I don't know if they can, I don't know if they can do that.
Andrew IskerAnd it's hard.
Andrew IskerSo, I mean, I, but I think understanding that, that they're not gonna do those things, we still can't be bitter at them, right?
Andrew IskerWe still, cuz I think what that will do.
Will SpencerYes.
Andrew IskerIs, is the, like, the way that you honor your parents is going to be how your, your children treat you and like, because you're modeling that for them.
Andrew IskerAnd, and if you're, if your parents have, and there's a lot of people where they're, they had rotten parents, really terrible parents.
Andrew IskerAnd if you respond to their sin sinfully, you model that for your children.
Andrew IskerSo when you sin against them, they're going to respond in the same way.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerAnd so I look at it that way where if you're modeling honoring people that even don't deserve it, right?
Andrew IskerThey don't, they don't.
Andrew IskerThe boomer generation does not deserve honor by their own merit, but they deserve honor from their office, right?
Andrew IskerThat they, yeah.
Andrew IskerAnd so I look at it along those lines where you can be honest about, here's where their faults are, here's where they really messed up and not give yourself over to this bitterness and resentment of them.
Andrew IskerAnd that's how you end up healing.
Andrew IskerBecause it's like, I mean, it's kind of like back to the, you know, the late thirties girl who's, who missed out on her chance to have a family, right?
Andrew IskerYou can't go back and reverse the clock.
Andrew IskerEven if she's repentant now, even if she's like, oh, I see what I did wrong, but like, okay, well, you're not 22 years old.
Andrew IskerAgain, the same thing with the intergenerational dynamic.
Andrew IskerYou're not going to be able to go back and redo the 1960s and so.
Andrew IskerAnd do it right this time.
Andrew IskerAnd so what it means is only going forward, what does the next generation do?
Andrew IskerAnd it has to be all right.
Andrew IskerHere's where the previous generation did things wrong.
Andrew IskerWe'll honor them despite not deserving it, because we want the subsequent generations to honor us rightly, and we'll do things the right way.
Andrew IskerThat has to be the mindset, I.
Will SpencerThink I appreciate you linking it to the feminist argument as well, because that's.
Will SpencerThat's huge.
Will SpencerThat's huge.
Will SpencerLike, do you have the strength to admit at age 37 that you were wrong?
Will SpencerYeah, you were wrong.
Will SpencerYou know, and that's.
Will SpencerI did.
Will SpencerThat's a tweet that I have that's going kind of viral right now that I'm getting a response on.
Will SpencerIt's like, look, it's.
Will SpencerOkay.
Will SpencerLook, I.
Andrew IskerLook, me.
Will SpencerWill.
Will SpencerI was wrong.
Will SpencerI was wrong for many years.
Will SpencerRight?
Will SpencerRepented for.
Will SpencerThat was grueling.
Will SpencerIt's terrible.
Will SpencerThey're, like, penalty paid to, you know, by Christ.
Will SpencerConsequences.
Will SpencerReal.
Will SpencerRight?
Will SpencerAnd so.
Will SpencerAnd so I was wrong.
Will SpencerAnd so, and so encountering the same dialogue with women who are showing up, you know, 35, 37, 39.
Will SpencerLike, I'm baptized.
Will SpencerWhere's my husband?
Will SpencerIt's like, yeah, it's not that simple.
Will SpencerLike, you were wrong for 1517 years of your life.
Will SpencerIn fact, there's a woman I was.
Will SpencerI was chatting with on Instagram who was like, no, having kids for the first time at 40 is fine.
Will SpencerIt's like, no, it isn't.
Will SpencerIt isn't.
Will SpencerAnd so my response to that is, okay, let's say that it is like, what should you be doing for 20 years of your life between, like, age 20 and age 40?
Will SpencerShould you be getting married?
Will SpencerIf yes, why not having kids?
Will SpencerIf no, not getting married.
Will SpencerWhat are you supposed to be doing?
Will SpencerPlease make a biblical case.
Will SpencerThere isn't one.
Will SpencerRight?
Will SpencerAnd so it's like, look, just admit that you're wrong.
Will SpencerBut, like, there's.
Will SpencerThat I just can't.
Will SpencerIt's like, well, that's the kind of anchor that drags you really far down, which is the sad part, right?
Will SpencerThat anger goes all the way down to the bottom.
Will SpencerAnd that's the part that's so difficult, is offering people the gift of repentance because it is a gift, and then they just reject it.
Will SpencerLike, I have nothing to repent for.
Will SpencerWell, the book says otherwise.
Will SpencerYeah.
Will SpencerThat's where we are in many ways.
Will SpencerOkay, so we've been at this for a long time.
Will SpencerThere is one last question that I wanted to ask, and actually, it was one of my favorite parts of the book.
Will SpencerIt was the very, very end.
Will SpencerThe very, very end where you thanked your wife, Kara, who is somehow more thrilled about this book going to print than I am.
Will SpencerAnd I just thought that that was such a great way to end the book.
Will SpencerSuch an anti trash world statement just in that, in and of itself, like, hey, everything that I've talked about that I'm opposed to, you know, what you have in the.
Will SpencerAnd then the things that I look forward to, the very end of the book, it's like, yeah, no, I actually.
Will SpencerI live this.
Will SpencerI wonder if you can just speak.
Andrew IskerYeah, well, I mean, I don't really want to toot my own horn or anything, but.
Andrew IskerBut, no, I mean, it's okay.
Andrew IskerIt is.
Andrew IskerI think, like, just even bringing up my own example, even, like, with, like, weightlifting and things like that, is like, there's nothing remarkable about me personally or anything like that.
Andrew IskerI'm just a regular guy like everyone else.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's possible to have a good life.
Andrew IskerIt's possible for us to pursue the things that God wants for us.
Andrew IskerIt's possible to have a good wife.
Andrew IskerAnd by God's grace, I have one.
Andrew IskerRight?
Andrew IskerI have an amazing, awesome wife and fully supportive of all the things that.
Andrew IskerThat I'm doing.
Andrew IskerAnd it's, you know, a lot of the time, I don't even think about it, because you're just so, you know, you're just so used to it.
Andrew IskerIt's like, of course, of course my wife is on my team, right?
Andrew IskerWhy wouldn't she be like, you don't.
Andrew IskerYou don't realize that that's not the case for a lot of people.
Andrew IskerI remember at one point, maybe I mentioned in the book, I can't remember if I did or not, but I had some buddies from my gym over one time, and we were going to watch the NFL draft or something.
Andrew IskerI just do normie stuff together.
Andrew IskerWere sitting down and, like, my wife made us sandwiches, and they were.
Andrew IskerThese guys are married at the time anyway, and she comes over, you know, she brings the sandwiches of her.
Andrew IskerOh, do you guys.
Andrew IskerYou guys need anything?
Andrew IskerCan I get you a beer or something?
Andrew IskerAnd their jaws are on the floor.
Andrew IskerLike, she's making us sandwiches.
Andrew IskerAnd.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, oh, kara, could you get me this other thing?
Andrew IskerCould you grab this thing for me?
Andrew IskerAnd they're both like, wow, if we were at your house.
Andrew IskerYour wife would be like, go get it yourself.
Andrew IskerAnd I didn't think anything of it, right, because it's just, this is normal life for us.
Andrew IskerLike, honey, could you grab this?
Andrew IskerAnd they were just shocked, and not in a bad way.
Andrew IskerThey were thinking, like, what is going on here?
Andrew IskerThis is like, I've never seen anything like this in my life.
Andrew IskerA wife that is, like, doing stuff for her husband just.
Andrew IskerCause this is astounding.
Andrew IskerAnd for me, it was just normal life.
Andrew IskerIt was just, oh, honey, could you grab this thing for me?
Andrew IskerSure.
Andrew IskerHey.
Andrew IskerAnd she'll be like, hey, could you go do this thing?
Andrew IskerPick something up at the store for me?
Andrew IskerSure, I'd love to.
Andrew IskerWe don't think anything of it, but it actually is really remarkable for most people that, like, we, um.
Andrew IskerWe love each other.
Andrew IskerAnd she.
Andrew IskerShe, like, she'll do things in the house to support me, to serve me.
Andrew IskerOh, my goodness.
Andrew IskerOh, you can't.
Andrew IskerOh.
Andrew IskerA wife serving her husband.
Andrew IskerOh, my goodness.
Andrew IskerI mean, it is funny, like, the anecdote that I shared, you know, it's like she literally made us sandwiches, and I can't remember if she was pregnant and barefoot at the time or nothing.
Andrew IskerShe might have been, but it was.
Andrew IskerYeah, it was.
Andrew IskerI'm sure they probably thought this is, like, some kind of fever dream out of the 1950s or something, but no.
Andrew IskerYeah, exactly.
Andrew IskerUnder his watchful eye, yes.
Andrew IskerBut no, she is.
Andrew IskerShe's phenomenal, amazing, a wonderful wife, and you can have a life like that, and she loves her life.
Andrew IskerIt's funny.
Andrew IskerIf any of the feminists are watching, they probably think, oh, it must be a horrible life for her.
Andrew IskerAnd she's grueling away all day long, and she loves her life.
Andrew IskerOne of the things that.
Andrew IskerThat, you know, I knew about.
Andrew IskerWe knew each other in college, and one of the reasons why I'm like, oh, I should marry Kara.
Andrew IskerShe's great.
Andrew IskerWas.
Andrew IskerAll through college, she's like, I just want to be a mom and have, like, ten kids.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm like, yeah, that sounds good.
Andrew IskerLet's.
Andrew IskerI should bury her.
Andrew IskerAnd this is the life she's always wanted, is to have to be a mom with lots of kids and changing diapers and having babies and taking care of them all day long.
Andrew IskerShe loves it.
Andrew IskerShe thinks it's great.
Andrew IskerAnd so it's not something where you just wake up and you can have it anymore.
Andrew Isker100 years ago, that was probably true.
Andrew IskerWhere this is how all of life is, is all around you, is formed and shaped, and this is just what everybody, by virtue of existing does.
Andrew IskerYou have to go out of your way to pursue these things, and you have to find someone like that.
Andrew IskerThey don't grow on trees.
Andrew IskerBut it's not impossible either.
Andrew IskerIt's not impossible to have a life that is good and is wonderful where you have a wife that is.
Andrew IskerIsn't opposed to you all day long and living a contrary or parallel life from you, but you're actually a unit, you're a team.
Andrew IskerYou're one flesh.
Andrew IskerYou're united and together, actually, in reality.
Andrew IskerAnd, yeah, it is.
Andrew IskerYeah.
Andrew IskerI wasn't thinking of reflecting on this today, but it's worth it.
Andrew IskerI just did a wedding, too, last week, and so part of the liturgy is.
Andrew IskerOf the wedding.
Andrew IskerLiturgy is for married couples to witness this and reaffirm their own marital vows.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerAnd it's like, no, it's good.
Andrew IskerIt's good to continue to do these things, right?
Andrew IskerTo continue to reflect on just what a good life you have.
Andrew IskerAnd definitely, like, with the book, I couldn't have done it without her.
Andrew IskerRight.
Andrew IskerWriting a book's hard.
Andrew IskerI used to think it was easy.
Andrew IskerI used to think like, oh, these authors that write stuff, it's the easiest thing.
Andrew IskerIt's like you're talking like, we just did a podcast for 3 hours or whatever, and it's like talking and just writing it down.
Andrew IskerYou can just talk about whatever, but no, it takes a ton of work, a ton of effort, ton of thought, and.
Andrew IskerAnd she was instrumental in doing all of it because, yeah, the thing that I'm writing about, it's not like some theoretical idea of living a life opposed to trash world.
Andrew IskerIt's actually what we're doing.
Andrew IskerIt's what we're doing every single day.
Andrew IskerAnd I couldn't possibly do it without her.
Will SpencerAmen.
Will SpencerAmen.
Will SpencerThank you for that.
Will SpencerBut what a blessing, brother.
Will SpencerI really appreciate all the wisdom and all the insight that you've had to share.
Will SpencerYou've actually brought a lot of clarity to me and a lot of these issues that I've been thinking through, so I'm very grateful for that.
Andrew IskerYes, thank you.
Andrew IskerThank you for having me.
Andrew IskerThank you for your time as well.
Andrew IskerIt's fun to chat.
Andrew IskerLet me just go off on tangents all day long.
Will SpencerNo, this is a joy for me because this is the opportunity to hear, articulated a lot of thoughts that I've dimly had.
Will SpencerBut the way that you articulate them, they're very clearly in focus.
Will SpencerYou spend a lot of time thinking through these issues, including writing books, a couple books.
Will SpencerBut you see very clearly, from a perspective that I don't have and that I don't think a lot of people do have, it's like there's a wayfinder kind of characteristic to many of the things you're saying, and I appreciate that greatly because I think a lot of men will feel the same because it's not hard to see a lot of the problems in their surface manifestations, but to see the details of them, to show the way that they show up across time and into the future is incredibly important.
Will SpencerSo this has been a real blessing.
Andrew IskerAwesome.
Andrew IskerThank you.
Andrew IskerThank you so much.
Will SpencerWill, where would you like to send people to find?
Andrew IskerWell, yeah, I do a podcast every week with my friend CJ Engel, who is a writer for Chronicles magazine.
Andrew IskerAnd our podcast is Contra Mundum.
Andrew IskerIt's on YouTube, is where people can find it, or contramundompodcast.com on.
Andrew IskerThey'll take them to Substack, where it's also hosted.
Andrew IskerAnd I'm on Twitter and gab at bonifaceoption so people can find me in those places as well.
Andrew IskerI post a lot and a lot of the same things that you talk about.
Andrew IskerAnd in the podcast, we'll talk about a lot of these kinds of things, a lot of political and social and cultural ideas that are really worth talking about.
Andrew IskerWe try to dig into a lot of these things and have different guests and provide a lot of commentary on the world that and say things that not a lot of other people are saying.
Andrew IskerAnd to be able to, like you said, bring clarity to a lot of these issues that are really murky and cloudy that no one really wants to talk about.
Will SpencerVery important.
Will SpencerI'll be sure to send everyone.
Andrew IskerThank you.
Will SpencerThank you so much.
Andrew IskerThanks for listening to this episode of the Renaissance Men podcast.
Andrew IskerVisit us on the web at Wren.
Will SpencerOf Men.com or on your favorite social.
Andrew IskerMedia platform at Ren of men.
Will SpencerThis is the renaissance of men.
Will SpencerYou are the Renaissance.