The latest episode of the Renaissance of Men podcast, hosted by Will Spencer, features an engaging conversation with Jon Harris, director of the documentary film "The 1607 Project" and host of the "Conversations that Matter" podcast.
The episode delves into the pervasive influence of social justice within the American evangelical church, tracing its origins and growth, particularly during Jon's seminary years. Jon shares his journey of exposing these ideologies in academia and the broader church community, highlighting the challenges and support he encountered.
The discussion also explores the historical and cultural significance of Virginia in shaping America, emphasizing the state's unique contributions to leadership and societal values. Through personal anecdotes and historical insights, the episode offers a critical look at the intersection of faith, culture, and politics in shaping contemporary Christianity.
Takeaways:
"A Legion of Devils" by Karen Stokes
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My name is Will Spencer and you're listening to one of the last episodes of the Renaissance of Men podcast.
Will SpencerThe shift is coming up quick.
Will SpencerI have an official release date and I'm thrilled to share with you the results at last.
Will SpencerMy guest this week is the director of the documentary film the 1607 project and the host of the Conversations that Matter podcast.
Will SpencerPlease welcome John Harris.
Will SpencerYou are the Renaissance.
Will SpencerI gotta tell you guys, it has been a trip watching the american evangelical church wake up to Wokeness.
Will SpencerBecause before becoming a Christian, I'd been living in wokeness for decades.
Will SpencerEven as far back as my senior year in high school, my classmates and I were joking that there was no way a white guy from Phoenix would get into Stanford, which is one of the reasons it surprised me most of all when I did my freshman year.
Will SpencerEveryone then began separating themselves into their various ethnic groups, which is how I ended up as the social chair of the Jewish Students Association.
Will SpencerI had never thought much about my family's religion, but everyone had to identify with something, right?
Will SpencerI didn't want to be left out.
Will SpencerAs many of you know, I also lived in Stanford's african american theme dorm, ujima, for two years.
Will SpencerThe african american, asian american, native american, and latino american theme dorms were all a product of the same critical racial consciousness we see around us everywhere today, being beta tested on a university campus in the nineties.
Will SpencerFast forward to 2013 and thats when I heard a man say check your privilege for the first time in a mens group of all places.
Will SpencerThe words felt like a whip crack.
Will SpencerI had no idea what they meant, just that they were supposed to hurt me somehow.
Will SpencerThey didnt.
Will SpencerBut they did stick with me as a moment when a man was attempting to use a very specific linguistic device to control me.
Will SpencerIt wasn't about the meaning of the words, but the feeling they were supposed to impart.
Will SpencerHe clearly expected my response to be an apology, perhaps because he'd tried that strategy before with success.
Will SpencerAnd I believe that around that time is when what we call wokeness fully began to enter public consciousness, though no one called it that.
Will SpencerAll of this is also what I had to deprogram myself from while traveling overseas.
Will SpencerNothing will scourge feminist beliefs from you faster than traveling to a latin american nation like Colombia, where traditional sex roles between men and women are as fundamental as gravity and just as widespread, not to mention celebrated on salsa dance floors.
Will SpencerSo I've been living and breathing wokeness for almost 30 years, which is again why it's been such an awakening to me to realize that christians, by and large, didn't really begin identifying it formally until 2020, when Covid happened.
Will SpencerHow could a faith that is so clear about the nature of men and women, guilt and shame, sin, salvation, justice, mercy, grace, confession, and redemption, fall prey to such an obviously counterfeit version of those transcendent principles?
Will SpencerMany are trying to unpack that fall even today.
Will SpencerBut for those who have been in the church for a long time, there have certainly been signs.
Will SpencerWhich brings me to my guest this week.
Will SpencerHis name is John Harris, and you may know him best from the conversations that matter podcast, where he hosts daily livestreams and interviews with christian leaders, influencers, and newsmakers about the headlines of the day.
Will SpencerBut what I didn't know is that John is also a documentary filmmaker, having recently produced the excellent 1607 project, which is about the clash of collectivist and individualist principles during the american founding.
Will SpencerThese manifested as cultural divisions between the north and south and crystallized in the unique culture of the state of Virginia, which existed long before the arrival of slaves in 1619.
Will SpencerSo think of the 1607 project as a very needed christian rebuttal to the 1619 project.
Will SpencerJohn is also an author, having penned two books on the influence of social justice on the christian church.
Will SpencerThese followed his experience in seminary, where he witnessed the slide of wokeness firsthand, his testimony of which literally catapulted him into the public eye.
Will SpencerPut all of this together, and it becomes clear why John is the influential voice he is having amassed almost 50,000 subscribers on YouTube alone, which is no small feat, especially for a podcast that describes itself exclusively with three small christian traditional, masculine a much needed voice.
Will SpencerWhich is why I'm grateful to have had John on the show.
Will SpencerIn our conversation, he and I discussed the origins of conversations that matter, how he caught wokeness infiltrating his seminary, how social justice spread through the church, why architecture wont give you orthodoxy revealing the fall of christendom, why feminism is the church, and finally getting the baby boomers to let go.
Will SpencerIf you enjoy this podcast, thank you.
Will SpencerPlease leave us a five star rating on Spotify and a five star rating and review on Apple Podcasts.
Will SpencerIf this is your first time here, welcome.
Will SpencerI release new episodes about the christian counterculture, masculine virtue, and the family every week.
Will SpencerJust a quick note, this podcast is available for advertising and sponsorship, so if you're an advertiser with a high integrity product or service looking to reach thousands of christian men, women, and families every month, please email infoenofmen.com for more information.
Will SpencerI'm thrilled at this podcast growth year over year and to find that people are listening literally around the world.
Will SpencerAnd with the rebrand coming up, plans are in motion to expand the show's reach dramatically without compromising the quality that makes the show unique in the podcasting world.
Will SpencerAnd to my listeners, I'm honored by your time and attention.
Will SpencerThank you so much.
Will SpencerYou're also going to start hearing more ads on the show, so if you, like me, prefer an ad free experience, check out my substack at will spencerpod dot substack.com and become a paid subscriber to to enjoy advertising free content in both audio and video every week.
Will SpencerAnd please welcome this week's guest on the podcast, the director of the 1607 project documentary and the host of conversations that matter, John Harris.
Will SpencerJohn, thanks so much for joining me on the podcast today.
John HarrisI do appreciate it.
John HarrisI'm looking forward to it.
Will SpencerI've really been enjoying a lot of the stuff you've been putting out.
Will SpencerI watched the 1609 documentary, and of course, you had me on your show a while back, and that's been really great to get to know your show after that point.
Will SpencerAnd so I've been just looking forward to this conversation to find out more about your story and some of the things you've got going on.
Will SpencerSo thanks for jumping on.
John HarrisYeah, thanks, Will.
John HarrisYeah, I've appreciated you.
John HarrisI mean, I haven't known about your work for, I guess, that long.
John HarrisI think the first time I talked to you was when we did our interview, which was maybe a year ago now.
John HarrisWas it?
Will SpencerWas it?
John HarrisWas it really a year ago?
John HarrisNo, it wasn't that long.
Will SpencerYeah.
John HarrisOkay.
John HarrisSo six months, whatever it was.
John HarrisAnd you are really knowledgeable on some of these things that I'm not as knowledgeable on some of these cults, and just there's a lot of, in my area, especially a lot of spiritism and stuff.
John HarrisAnd I just felt you were such a good resource, and I appreciate your humility and your love for the Lord.
John HarrisAnd so I'm looking forward to talking about, I guess, what I got going on.
Will SpencerYes.
Will SpencerWell, I first heard about your show because you had my friend David Edgington on, and so that was really cool.
Will SpencerI've just found my way into the reform world, and I found that there are people that have been exploring these topics for such a long time, and it's been such a wealth of information for me to dive into your channel and see the things that you've been talking about for a number of years and to have learned so much because I'm trying to figure out the reform world kind of is where it is today and how did it get here?
Will SpencerAnd so there's a lot happening now politically, there's a lot happening socially, and you've been tracking it for a long time.
Will SpencerSo that's been like, oh, okay.
Will SpencerThese are the steps that have been taken along the way.
Will SpencerSo I guess my first question would be, just for my own edification, what led you to start conversations that matter?
Will SpencerWhat was the inspiration behind it?
Will SpencerAnd kind of what has been the growth path that you've been on since you started the channel or the podcast?
John HarrisYeah.
John HarrisPersonal growth, I'm guessing.
John HarrisYeah.
Will SpencerOr the growth of the.
John HarrisThe numbers and everything.
John HarrisSo I did start it in early 20 January of 2019.
John HarrisAnd the reason I started the podcast was because I needed an outlet.
John HarrisAnd I was in grad school at the time.
John HarrisI had been, at certain times in my life, writing blogs here or there.
John HarrisAnd for me, writing blogs was more of a process that I underwent to understand something.
John HarrisI don't know if you have that, but I don't always understand or grasp something by reading something, including in scripture.
John HarrisI don't always understand directly by reading a passage.
John HarrisBut as I mull it over and I try to figure out what those words mean practically, I gain a greater understanding.
John HarrisAnd that's how my mind works.
John HarrisAnd so I didn't have time in grad school to write blogs anymore because I was writing all these term papers and things, and I thought, there's a lot of things I want to talk about, things in politics, especially things socially, that I can't really talk about it anywhere else.
John HarrisSo why don't I just start a podcast?
John HarrisThat'll save me time.
John HarrisTalking is easier than writing, and I can have a library of my thoughts on these things.
John HarrisAnd it was, I assumed, going to be more private because my blog didn't get a lot of hits.
John HarrisI think there was a few posts I made that might have gone semi viral, but to me, if I got 100 and people going to the webpage, I thought that was great, you know, so if I had a thousand, that was really big.
John HarrisWell, what happened was I did a podcast on my seminary experience, especially related to wokeness, social justice.
John HarrisI didn't know those terms and how they related quite at that point.
John HarrisI knew social justice was part of it, I suppose, but I didn't realize the full extent of what I had just underwent.
John HarrisI knew when I was there that it seemed marxist to me at some point level, but I just thought that the seminary was being disingenuous with students who would go there thinking southeastern.
John HarrisWhere I went was the great missions school, when in reality, when they get there, a lot of what they're going to be hearing in chapel, reading on the seminary blog at the time, even in some of the classes, is going to be focused on political or social activism.
John HarrisAnd I felt that people needed to know about this, and I thought that I had gone through the right channels while at the school to try to address those things and didn't really get anywhere.
John HarrisAfter some talking with some wiser men, I decided that this was the right thing to do.
John HarrisI put out an hour and a half podcast of me just relaying my experience, and it went semi viral, and it got picked up all around the Southern Baptist convention.
John HarrisWithin, I think, two days, I was at the g three conference, which I had not planned to go to at all.
John HarrisBut there was a filmmaker there who was doing a documentary called enemies within the church, and he called me up, wanted me to come.
John HarrisSo I went, and I was filmed for an interview with them.
John HarrisAnd then they said, would you mind going to different events across the country to promote this film?
John HarrisI said, sure, if my story helps.
John HarrisAnd so I started going across the country with them and supporting the film.
John HarrisAnd, of course, that made more connections.
John HarrisAnd I started talking more on my podcast about social justice, which it's funny, because I think the podcast before social justice was on hiking, you know, so it was supposed to be a very broad podcast about things I was interested in.
John HarrisAnd it became focused singularly on social justice and Christianity for about at least the next two or three years.
John HarrisAnd then 2020 happened, and I had already been talking about this issue, and there was a dearth of people talking about it from a christian understanding and especially exposing where it had made inroads in Christianity.
John HarrisAnd so my podcast gained a lot of traction at that point.
John HarrisI wrote a book that year I actually changed.
John HarrisI was going to write about the dutch history of New York, especially as the Dutch interacted with the Puritans, because a lot of people don't know this, but the Dutch didn't really care for the Puritans at first, and I wanted to write about that history, but I decided to change that all around and do one a thesis on social justice and Christianity in the sixties, seventies, and eighties.
John HarrisAnd that became eventually, I added some more things to it.
John HarrisBut my book, social justice goes to church, and I wrote the next year, I came out with Christianity and social justice, religions and conflict, two books on social justice and Christianity.
John HarrisAnd so that kind of pigeonholed me into like, this is what I do, this is what I talk about.
John HarrisThese are the kinds of things that you'll hear if you come to see me at an event and I had churches reaching out and conferences and that kind of thing for me to come and speak.
John HarrisSo that's how it's grown.
John HarrisI suppose I could tag on that.
John HarrisI did do some documentary film work as a result of this and I've continued some of that and a lot of talking behind the scenes with people, some people that are somewhat influential in various organizations and how dressing and advising and informing on how to approach this matter of social justice.
John HarrisAnd so it's taken me places I never thought I would go.
John HarrisAnd on a personal level, I'll just end with this.
John HarrisThe Lord, I think, has been behind all of this and he has allowed me to be in a position that I never would have been in had I not opened my mouth online.
John HarrisAnd if I had seen everything that would transpire, maybe I wouldn't have done it.
John HarrisI don't know, looking back, seeing cost benefit.
John HarrisBut I think that initially, not knowing what I was going to get into, the Lord knew and he had me at the right place and the right time for such a time as this.
John HarrisAnd people always say, ask me, how do you grow a podcast?
John HarrisThey say, I don't know.
John HarrisI just kind of fell into it.
John HarrisAnd I think the Lord was the one that put me in the place that I was.
John HarrisSo that's what I've been focusing on.
John HarrisI think more recently I've started to focus more on liberalism and other matters.
John HarrisBut typically what people think of when they think of me is social justice concerns in Christianity.
John HarrisHmm.
Will SpencerI mean, thank you for that background.
Will SpencerI have a couple different thoughts about that.
Will SpencerI think the first one that comes to mind is, so you just put out this podcast and then a couple days later you're at g three and then you're in a documentary film and then you're touring around the country.
Will SpencerWhat was that like you said, if you only had opened your mouth.
Will SpencerWell, you did.
Will SpencerAnd it's like you just got whisked away on this magical mystery tour very quickly.
Will SpencerWhat was that moment like?
John HarrisIt was weird.
John HarrisI was starting class, I think for, because it was January and the semester was starting like the next day or two.
John HarrisIt was an overlap.
John HarrisI'm trying to think.
John HarrisIt was like the first week of school that they had g three.
John HarrisAnd I talked to one of my professors.
John HarrisI think I missed a class, if I'm not mistaken.
John HarrisBut I said, I'm going down to g three.
John HarrisAnd at the time, I actually didn't even know it was g three.
John HarrisIt was a pre conference called, I think, social justice and the gospel, something like that.
John HarrisAnd it was the Dallas statement signers that were primarily speaking.
John HarrisAnd so that's what I was asked to go to.
John HarrisI was only there one day, but when I walked in, I remember James White was there, Vodi Baucom was there, and all sorts of other guys, some of them whom I did not know.
John HarrisI didn't know who Tom askel was at the time, as I remember.
John HarrisI didn't know.
John HarrisI certainly didn't know who Tom Buck was.
John HarrisSome of the other signers, I didn't know who they were.
John HarrisI knew who those James White and Vodi Baucom were.
John HarrisBut the weird thing to me was they all seemed to know me.
John HarrisAnd I remember James White was the first one who saw me.
John HarrisAnd he just stared at me and he said, I know you.
John HarrisI don't know.
John HarrisAnd I listened to James White.
John HarrisI didn't miss an episode for probably, like 15 years of the dividing line.
John HarrisAnd I just.
John HarrisIt was surreal.
John HarrisI thought, you know me, you know?
John HarrisAnd he's like, yeah.
John HarrisAnd I said, did you watch my video on Southeastern?
John HarrisHe goes, yes.
John HarrisAnd he told me he just lit up.
John HarrisAnd then he grabbed Bodie Baucom and introduced Bodhi Bakum to me.
John HarrisAnd I'm just kind of like, what is this?
John HarrisI don't understand.
John HarrisLike, I'm gonna pinch myself.
John HarrisThis isn't reality.
John HarrisTo go from kind of where I was to these guys know my name and know kind of what I said.
John HarrisSo.
John HarrisSo, yeah, it was interesting.
John HarrisAnd then to support the film, I just counted it a privilege.
John HarrisI wanted someone to take a whack at this.
John HarrisI had been in seminary for years watching this develop, and it seemed like no one cared in my mind.
John HarrisNo one was talking about it.
John HarrisIf it was brought up, people denied it was happening.
John HarrisAnd finally, there was a group of people, enemies within the church.
John HarrisCarrie Gordon, Judd, Saul, Trevor Loudon was one of the guys involved in that who were going to expose it.
John HarrisAnd I said, you have my sword.
John HarrisI'll do whatever I can.
John HarrisI'm just a little guy.
John HarrisI don't have resources.
John HarrisBut if my story's compelling, then it's yours.
John HarrisAnd that's how that all came to be.
Will SpencerSo it's kind of like you walked into the Jedi council meeting and they're like, oh, wait, come here.
John HarrisYeah.
John HarrisWell, a little bit, I guess.
John HarrisYeah.
Will SpencerSo what was it?
Will SpencerSo all this context is very, very helpful.
Will SpencerI came from the secular world, and wokeness doesn't even really have a name.
Will SpencerIt's just how the world works in that.
Will SpencerAnd so coming into the faith and finding it in the faith, it's like, oh, wow.
Will SpencerAnd so you kind of marinated in it in seminary, it sounds like, and you had the courage to speak up, like, hey, this is unbiblical.
Will SpencerIt's anti biblical, maybe even heretical in some cases.
Will SpencerIs that kind of some of the things that you were experiencing, like, what stands out from your time in seminary that you're like, that's really bad?
John HarrisWell, I.
John HarrisIn 2014, when I first started attending southeastern, I noticed that there was a lot of chapel speakers who came and either didn't focus on the Bible, or if they did, it was pretty weak.
John HarrisAnd it surprised me.
John HarrisCause I thought this was a school that was big on expository preaching and oftentimes not even being affiliated directly with the Southern Baptists, which I also thought was odd, but they would be talking about racial justice.
John HarrisI think that was the first thing to get its foot in the door.
John HarrisIt wasn't the homosexual stuff or the feminist stuff as much.
John HarrisAlthough now, looking back, I realize there was a default kind of complementarian, weak complementarian idea there.
John HarrisBut what we think of as associated with the hash metoo movement and Black Lives Matter and the modern lgbt stuff, that wasn't really present.
John HarrisWell, I should say that wasn't present, with the exception of some of the BLM narrative.
John HarrisAnd I remember I wrote a blog later on about my experience in 2014 hearing some of these things.
John HarrisAnd I think I just called it the gospel of racial reconciliation, because that was the term they often used.
John HarrisBut I realized that what they were doing was they were ascribing all this guilt to people who weren't really guilty, and then saying the way to rectify this and even using the term gospel to headline what this rectification would look like.
John HarrisBut the way to rectify it was to diversify your churches and your theological books that you read and the speakers you listen to and the leadership.
John HarrisAnd in doing so, you would be fulfilling not only what revelation says about every tribe, tongue, and nation around the throne of God, but you would be fulfilling the reconciliation that Jews and Gentiles are to have in Christ.
John HarrisAnd it just struck me that that was so wrong.
John HarrisIt just hit me.
John HarrisI knew at the time, hearing that kind of stuff, that that was just wrong.
John HarrisNo one had to really tell me, but it wasn't a huge, huge deal because it was mostly in chapel.
John HarrisIt wasn't in my classes that I was taking at that time as much.
John HarrisAnd I ended up.
John HarrisMy seminary story's a little bit non traditional.
John HarrisI ended up leaving seminary.
John HarrisI got married.
John HarrisI came back in 2017.
John HarrisWhen I came back, it was like everything had changed for the worse.
John HarrisI remember in the fall of 2017, there were three statements that either originated at or were heavily supported by the faculty and administration at the seminary that were denouncing Donald Trump or the alt right.
John HarrisAnd, you know, the thing that bothered me was that I couldn't locate in the previous eight years of Obama one statement that they had been as enthusiastic about.
John HarrisAnd I remember the whole Paige Patterson thing that was not too long after that, where you might not know what this is, and it's a little too complicated to probably get into all the details, but they.
John HarrisMe too.
John HarrisBasically a conservative guy in the convention, and they set up a safe space thing at the school.
John HarrisI remember those pamphlets for safe spaces, and I saw the me too stuff now getting in, and there started to be a heavier concentration on abuse.
John HarrisSo not only was there, I would say, a heavy CRT adjacent focus, and I could get into some details on that if you want.
John HarrisThere's a lot of examples to pull from, please.
John HarrisBut there was also a me too stuff coming in and a hint of some of the soft pedaling of LG, or I should say homosexual orientation and that kind of stuff.
John HarrisSo the train was starting to make its way in, and I didn't see anyone.
John HarrisI'll just say this one thing.
John HarrisI talked to a few professors, and I couldn't really get anywhere with anyone completely, but the one professor who was actually sympathetic to, and he saw what was going on.
John HarrisI remember he wanted me to close the door, and he kind of whispered at me.
John HarrisYou know, it was kind of like the Gestapo might hear us or something, or the stasi.
John HarrisAnd he was just kind of like, what's going on is a travesty.
John HarrisLike, he was so against what was happening, but he's like, if I say anything, I'm going to lose my job.
John HarrisAnd this is a guy who had been there forever, and I just.
John HarrisIt shocked me.
John HarrisAnd he was basically like, keep your head down.
John HarrisDon't say anything.
John HarrisThat was his advice, and that was very hard for me.
John HarrisThis is wrong.
John HarrisBut I tried to follow that to some extent.
John HarrisWhen I left, though, I'm not a student anymore.
John HarrisAnd I thought, well, if no one's gonna say anything, if the faculty is not gonna say anything.
John HarrisAnd I know about faculty members who tried to do something kind of, but no one was willing to go to public opinion or to talk to the people actually funding the school who are the Southern Baptist convention members.
John HarrisNo one was willing to inform them about what was happening at their institution.
John HarrisAnd so I said, you know what?
John HarrisI'm gonna do it.
John HarrisAnd that went viral, and that also got me a lot of hate.
John HarrisI even remember not long after I came out and started talking about what was happening, I remember a death threat, and I remember thinking, I never gotten one.
John HarrisSo I remember, like, it was in my inbox, and I'm looking at it, and I'm like, so do you call the police?
John HarrisLike, what do you do?
John HarrisSomeone's saying, he's gonna kill me.
John HarrisBut I didn't know who it was.
John HarrisIt was anonymous.
John HarrisAnd now I'm realizing that's not a very uncommon occurrence with public figures.
John HarrisBut at the time, I wasn't a public figure.
John HarrisSo I thought, what do you do with this?
John HarrisAnd that was in the christian community.
John HarrisI can't imagine.
John HarrisLike, what?
John HarrisLike, who's saying this?
John HarrisSomeone's very concerned about christian institutions.
John HarrisReally?
John HarrisWeird.
John HarrisYeah.
John HarrisSo that was kind of my thinking.
John HarrisSomeone needed to say something.
John HarrisNo one was doing it, so I'll do it.
Will SpencerWell, I'm glad you did, because more needs to be said.
Will SpencerOf course.
Will SpencerI'm reading Meg Basham's book right now, and it just seems like a very long, slow slide.
Will SpencerAnd I wish I could say that the way that you describe it and shepherds for sale describes it, I wish I could say that it sounds like a slow frog boil, but it kind of doesn't in some ways.
Will SpencerIt sounds like it just kind of started happening overnight, and everyone just kind of just went along with it.
Will SpencerLike, okay, well, this sounds about right.
Will SpencerAnd that's the part that doesn't make any sense.
Will SpencerI mean, I guess in some sense it does, right?
Will SpencerBecause people don't like to pop their heads up, and that's not uncommon.
Will SpencerBut it just seems like everyone.
Will SpencerIt was just pushed on everyone all at once, and everyone's like, well, okay, I guess it sounds like the gospel.
Will SpencerI mean, was that kind of your experience?
Will SpencerBecause I had to deprogram myself of stuff that I had been marinating in for years, but instead it sounds like in the christian world, it just kind of all landed quite quickly somewhere in the 2010s.
John HarrisYeah.
John HarrisThen it's a complicated question.
John HarrisI've thought about this a lot, and.
John HarrisCool.
John HarrisI think you are onto something.
John HarrisWhen you say it happened immediately I think for a lot of people, they felt they were hit by a truck, and 2020 was the year that they felt that way.
John HarrisOf course, for me, it happened years before that in seminary.
John HarrisBut when it finally filtered down into the promotional pamphlets and policies of various organizations like Crew or Samaritan's purse or World vision or these big christian organizations, I think that's when people finally realized there's a problem.
John HarrisWhat they're saying sounds exactly like what the Democrat party is saying.
John HarrisBut this had been going on behind the scenes before that, and that's important to point out.
John HarrisIt was a more gradual thing, I think, in the halls of power than it was with the populations that actually funded these halls of power.
John HarrisSo there's a populism that reacted against this.
John HarrisAnd we're seeing that in places like, well, Megan Basham's audience, I would say, like, it's composed of a lot of people on even x.
John HarrisIf you're following that, when Megan Basham has someone oppose her, she ratios them something bad, you know, the people are with her.
John HarrisWell, that's not something that was present at all in 20 19, 20, 20, 20 21 even, really.
John HarrisAnd some of that could have been Twitter controls and all of that.
John HarrisBut I know of a bunch of people that I can think of off the top of my head who at that point were buying into some of the woke garbage, and now they've rejected it.
John HarrisAnd so I think the train had to hit them.
John HarrisThe train, it had to get personal, possibly.
John HarrisIt had to affect their local church.
John HarrisThose are the people that I see as most ardently against it are the ones where it affected their business or their church directly.
John HarrisAnd they saw it rip everything apart like a tornado coming through.
John HarrisBut yes, it is important to know that this was going on in the background for a long time.
John HarrisAnd one of the things I write about in social justice goes to church.
John HarrisActually, I didn't realize.
John HarrisI have a copy of that right here.
John HarrisI write about it in this book.
John HarrisIs that in the seventies there were a lot of people who thought, well, observers, I should say, who paid attention to these kinds of things, who thought evangelicals would wind up on the left.
John HarrisIf you remember, Jimmy Carter was promoted as an evangelical.
John HarrisThere was a document called the Chicago Declaration in 1973.
John HarrisAnd it was a social justice declaration.
John HarrisYou can look at it.
John HarrisIt sounds like it was written in 2020.
John HarrisThere was before Jimmy Carter, there was an evangelicals from a governed group.
John HarrisAnd it seemed like the evangelicals could be open to Democrat party politics.
John HarrisBut it wasn't a broad thing.
John HarrisIt wasn't like the evangelicals were lining up for this.
John HarrisIt was more academic types and people who would later become the founders of organizations and people teaching at schools, more elite types that were attracted to the leftism.
John HarrisOne of the things that I try to point out, and maybe you could even say it's the thesis of the book in some way, is that these figures, and I'm talking about people like Ron Sider, people like Jim Wallace, Tim Keller.
John HarrisI have a whole section on Tim Keller.
John HarrisPeople like Richard Mao.
John HarrisI mean, there's a lot of figures I talk about.
John HarrisThese guys ended up gaining influence kind of behind the scenes.
John HarrisAnd as the religious right, which was a populist movement, gained traction in the eighties, these guys didn't go away.
John HarrisThey were still in the backgrounds.
John HarrisThey were still.
John HarrisAnd they had people who followed them who were gaining positions in influential places.
John HarrisAnd Russell Fuller will tell you, who's a former Hebrew professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, that there were a lot of liberals that he even worked with and knew were liberal.
John HarrisThey did not have orthodox theology that ended up at conservative places because they needed a job.
John HarrisAnd so the southern Baptists like to talk about how they purged in the eighties and early nineties, they purged themselves of liberals at these schools.
John HarrisBut Russell Fuller will tell you that's not entirely accurate, that a lot of these people ended up staying, and they ended up people who were influenced by that first crop of social justice activists and evangelicalism.
John HarrisThey ended up gaining more influence.
John HarrisAnd so I think, I know that's a long way of saying it, but I think what happened in the 2010s is with organizations like the gospel coalition and others.
John HarrisWe like to use them as, like, the focal point.
John HarrisBut Christianity today, I would say, had been on this train even before that.
John HarrisThey ended up with these popular leaders who used mass media, who used the Internet to get their message out.
John HarrisBut these guys had already been somewhat influenced.
John HarrisAnd I'm talking about guys like David Platt.
John HarrisI talk about him in that book.
John HarrisThere's a picture of David Platt and Russell Moore, and Ron Sider is in between them, and it's on Instagram.
John HarrisAnd I don't remember who posted it, but it says that one of our heroes influences these guys that were basically socialists, ended up impacting the people who became popular preachers, two popular audiences in 2010.
John HarrisSo it escaped the LAPD.
John HarrisIt got out of the more elite circles, and it got into the popular circles in the 2010s.
John HarrisIt started mostly in the seminaries, and then in 2020, that's when it really jumped to filtered down to the congregational level, and I knew that would happen.
John HarrisThat's one of the things.
John HarrisI probably said it in 2019, in January, when I made my first video that we are going to see in the next few years, as the graduates from these institutions make their way into churches, they will split them up.
John HarrisThat is exactly what's happened.
John HarrisThey have gone into these churches, and they have split them up, and it's terrible to see what's happened.
Will SpencerThat makes a lot of sense.
Will SpencerThat makes a lot of sense to see the way the seminaries and the institutions were infiltrated at the highest level.
Will SpencerThe men went underground.
Will SpencerThey had some rising popularity, but then through the eighties, they went underground.
Will SpencerThey trained the next generation of pastors who emerged into the public, and then they started bringing it to the congregations.
Will SpencerAnd then it all kind of happens in 2020, crystallize everything, where for the first time, the general churchgoer can see and feel something that's been building for 50 years.
Will SpencerThat's when it finally surfaced to the everyday average.
Will SpencerOkay, that makes sense.
John HarrisI think that's exactly right.
John HarrisYeah.
Will SpencerOkay.
John HarrisAnd I don't know where all the lines are.
John HarrisI mean, sometimes you see evidence of lines.
John HarrisYou know they're there, but it's more private.
John HarrisBut I do trace a number of lines in that book, and I.
John HarrisI talk about a lot of modern examples of pastors and influential christians who will say things in their own writings or their own speeches commending the work of the guys that I told you about.
John HarrisI guess you could call them the new left evangelicals from the seventies.
John HarrisThey had a profound influence that we're feeling now.
John HarrisIt was a delayed impact, though, so we don't know where it came from.
John HarrisThat's one of the ways to look at it.
Will SpencerSo are those people still influential?
Will SpencerAre they still.
Will SpencerOkay, great.
Will SpencerOkay, well, not great, but what do we do to dislodge them?
John HarrisTim Keller's the most.
John HarrisHe's not with us anymore, but he is the most popular name that he truly is from that group of evangelicals.
John HarrisHe didn't have the prominence of Iran Sideror Richard Mao, although he was influenced by Richard Mao, but he was there.
John HarrisHe talks about, to use Tim Keller as an example, he talks about in 1970, there was an intervarsity event called Urbana, and there was a guy named Tom Skinner who gave their keynote at the Urbana Youth conference.
John HarrisAnd in that keynote, Tom Skinner gives a plea, he gives a call for activism, social activism.
John HarrisAnd he says that the social gospel guys from the early 20th century, they had a social gospel, but it was incomplete because they didn't have the personal gospel.
John HarrisHe talks about the fundamentalists then, and he says, well, the fundamentalists, they didn't have the whole gospel either because they just had the personal gospel without the social gospel.
John HarrisSo he says, what we ought to do is we need the whole gospel.
John HarrisWe need to combine these things.
John HarrisSo you have the social gospel, you have the personal individual gospel, and only then will evangelicals regain their witness and be the light of the world and all these kinds of things.
John HarrisThey'll be successful and they'll obey Christ's commands.
John HarrisTim Keller says that he listened to that speech, I think he says three times because it had such a profound impact.
John HarrisAnd he was a mandehead that was, you know, basically he was on the hippie train and he was on the left on issues like, you know, racial justice, the Vietnam war.
John HarrisI think those were the two main things.
John HarrisBut, you know, I think even if I remember correctly, even like some of the patriarchal stuff.
John HarrisAnd he just didn't like that.
John HarrisChristianity wasn't saying anything about this.
John HarrisThe more conservative, you know, Christianity wasn't saying anything.
John HarrisThey weren't opposing Vietnam and out there in the streets protesting, where are they?
John HarrisOnce he listened to that speech, it changed him.
John HarrisAnd he got involved with inter varsity.
John HarrisAnd then.
John HarrisAnd I go through.
John HarrisI have a whole biopic basically of him, of showing how he went from where he was to where he eventually was when he passed away, of getting influenced more and more by guys who were on the left.
John HarrisAnd in Christianity, part of that new left crew, you know, Tom Skinner was one of them.
John HarrisBut also Harvey Khandhe played a big.
John HarrisHad a big influence on him at Westminster.
John HarrisGave him a hermeneutic that I would say is pretty similar to a liberation.
John HarrisThe.
John HarrisIn fact, it might even be the same really of a liberation theology hermeneutic as a way of reading scripture.
John HarrisIt's very similar, like an evangelical version of it.
John HarrisHe talks about Carl Ellis and Carl Ellis really allowing him and his wife to see that they had white privilege.
John HarrisHe doesn't use the term because the term hasn't come around yet, but that's the concept he's talking about.
John HarrisHe didn't think he was racist, but then Carl Ellis, or I think it's actually Elwood Ellis.
John HarrisThere's Carl Ellis and there's Elwood Ellis.
John HarrisBut he shows him that, no, you actually are racist because you have this privilege.
John HarrisAnd through no choice of your own, the world just bends to you.
John HarrisI go through all of that stuff and show Tim Keller was influenced by these guys.
John HarrisThen he becomes a popular author and pastor.
John HarrisAnd now who has he had a profound impact on?
John HarrisEveryone.
John HarrisMost of my seminary classmates, I would say, respected Tim Keller on some level.
John HarrisSo he was the one who carried the water for people who, they're names you never would have heard of unless you probably read my book or studied the issue more.
Will SpencerI think the thing that surprises me to hear about this, while it makes sense and there's something very human about it, I spent a long time living in a world with no objective standards.
Will SpencerI didn't have the word of God.
Will SpencerOne of the things that surprised me is to see the deference paid to people who are sliding off of God's word into directions that seem to want to appeal more to the mainstream.
Will SpencerThat particular phenomenon and how much resistance there is to call that out.
Will SpencerI get it.
Will SpencerIt's a very human instinct.
Will SpencerAnd coming from the secular world where no one has any basis to do that, well, I guess that's just their path.
Will SpencerIt's like, well, no, there's the standard here that we're supposed to be listening to.
Will SpencerAnd so to have seen the same pattern take place within evangelicalism makes me even happier to know that people have been calling it out because it should be called out.
Will SpencerIt must be called out.
Will SpencerSo thank you for highlighting all this for me, because I see now that a lot of people are on board the train now, post 2020, everyone can see how destructive these things were.
Will SpencerBut to have made the call pre 2020, you know, it took real courage, it sounds like.
John HarrisYeah, somewhat.
John HarrisYeah.
John HarrisIt was not something that my, let's just say it probably caused my wife some stress to see her husband taking these very controversial stands very publicly.
Will SpencerWhat?
Will SpencerNo.
John HarrisAnd I had to think through things.
John HarrisDo I really want to say this?
John HarrisDo I really want to do this?
John HarrisBut like I said before, it came down to the fact that no one else was going to do it.
John HarrisPraise God.
John HarrisThere were a few people.
John HarrisI remember.
John HarrisJames White and then John MacArthur were some prominent, more prominent names that started to tackle some of these things.
John HarrisBut even when James White was talking about my seminary, he was talking about a guy named Walter Strickland who teaches there, and liberation theology that was present there.
John HarrisI remember listening to him saying, yes, someone saying something, but I remember also thinking, like, he doesn't know 95% of it.
John HarrisYou know, he's.
John HarrisHe's seeing some of these things that are happening, but it's just so much worse.
John HarrisIt is so much worse.
John HarrisAnd, you know, it is.
John HarrisIt's crazy.
John HarrisI didn't even realize until I came out.
John HarrisSo maybe there was some ignorance there.
John HarrisI didn't know the risk I was taking fully that this was all over evangelicalism.
John HarrisI thought it was mostly my seminary.
John HarrisAt first I thought I got a weird seminary, and the other seminaries are probably not like this.
John HarrisAnd then when I started getting people from all over the country saying, keep going.
John HarrisKeep saying what you're saying.
John HarrisIf I were to say it, I'd lose my job.
John HarrisBut my seminary is the same way, in prominent names.
John HarrisI mean, I can't betray secrecy, confidentiality, but I had some prominent people reach out to me and encourage me, people that, because of their position there, and they can't say anything because it's all about relationships.
John HarrisAnd I get that.
John HarrisI just thought, someone's got to say something that poor people funding these institutions don't know.
Will SpencerIt must have been quite a thing to say that.
Will SpencerAnd then you have a whole bunch of people come to your side, and you're kind of brand new in this world.
Will SpencerYou've just graduated, and so you have James White and Vody Baucom.
Will SpencerExcited to meet you.
Will SpencerThere must have been a large number of people who, I mean, you mentioned you got death threats.
Will SpencerThere must have been a large number of people that you felt that as a young man just graduated, suddenly you've got a big target on you and.
Will SpencerYeah, I can imagine that's.
Will SpencerI mean, it's pretty frightening.
Will SpencerThere's really no other word I can think of.
Will SpencerIt must be scary.
Will SpencerYou didn't think this was on your first day of seminary.
Will SpencerYay.
Will SpencerFirst day of seminary.
Will SpencerAnd then, like, you graduate, and then you're immediately.
Will SpencerImmediately targeted in some ways.
John HarrisWell, you're a millennial.
John HarrisI think I'm a millennial.
John HarrisRight.
Will SpencerSo Gen X.
John HarrisAre you Gen X?
Will SpencerMm hmm.
John HarrisOkay.
John HarrisAll right.
John HarrisYou must be barely Gen X then.
John HarrisSo.
John HarrisBecause you look young.
John HarrisSo I think this goes maybe for Gen X too, though.
John HarrisBut as a millennial, the Internet wasn't real, right?
John HarrisWe could say stuff online, and it didn't seem to.
John HarrisThat wasn't real life until it was.
John HarrisAnd I think that I was on that.
John HarrisLike, that transition kind of happened because 2020 is the year when so many people are canceled, and, like, you couldn't say certain political things online.
John HarrisBefore that, it seemed like you kind of could.
John HarrisThere were some examples of people who got in trouble, but it wasn't, like, a big thing.
John HarrisAnd so I probably didn't fully know all the risks I was taking, but I found out pretty quickly, and that made me all the more motivated to do what I was doing because I realized that this was a need that people.
John HarrisPeople really did need to see what was happening.
John HarrisIt needed to be exposed and explained and, yeah, so I'm grateful again.
John HarrisGod is the one behind all this, in my opinion.
John HarrisHe's the one.
John HarrisAnd he chooses the weak things to shame the strong.
John HarrisThat's one of the things that God does.
John HarrisHe also will give grace to the humble.
John HarrisAnd I think, you know, not to toot my own horn, that as soon as you start saying you're humble, you're not, right.
John HarrisI have my own pride.
Will SpencerI am so humble.
John HarrisI'm so humble.
John HarrisI'm so humble.
John HarrisI really was, though, someone without a lot of, like, ambition in Christian, in Big Eva.
John HarrisAt one point, I wanted to be big in the Southern Baptist convention, and I realized after going to seminary, I do not want to even be in this denomination, I don't think.
John HarrisAnd so there wasn't any, like, ambition there for gaining a place, a seat at the table.
John HarrisThere wasn't.
John HarrisAnd I was weak.
John HarrisI was.
John HarrisI was a small potato.
John HarrisLike, no one knew who I was.
John HarrisYou could have squashed me like a bug at first, I think, like, I just didn't have any platform, any defense.
John HarrisI had nothing.
John HarrisNow I have more.
John HarrisBut there were no resources.
John HarrisAnd so for me to just turn on a webcam, it wasn't even a webcam.
John HarrisIt was my cell phone.
John HarrisI think I just held my cell phone, you know, to turn on my cell phone and just start talking to it about this, these issues that was.
John HarrisI think the Lord is the one that had to take that and make it something powerful and big and meaningful in people's lives.
John HarrisAnd it really has been, I know for a fact, based on private correspondence and even just some public things, things would not look the way they do now if it wasn't for the fact that I spoke out.
John HarrisAnd I'm not taking credit for everything at all.
John HarrisThis was a team effort.
John HarrisBut there's a reason Megan mentioned me in the book.
John HarrisAnd it's not because she needed me for her research.
John HarrisIt's just because I knew where a lot of the skeletons were buried, and I was able to give her information if she asked for it and help her to see.
John HarrisSee things that were harder to see if you hadn't been paying attention.
John HarrisAnd, yeah, I mean, like, one of the examples, there's so many I could think of, but one of them that I'm really proud of, I guess, is we did a documentary called paint the wall black of a guy named Juan Riesco who was canceled.
John HarrisHe was a christian business owner.
John HarrisCanceled.
John HarrisHe had the number one restaurant on Yelp in 2020 in Chicago.
John HarrisAnd overnight, they.
John HarrisThousands of people showed up to protest him because he wouldn't post a black square because he didn't agree with BLM.
John HarrisAnd it seemed like Christians didn't even want to tell his story.
John HarrisI found out from a blog, and then I think TbN had done a little piece with him or something.
John HarrisBut I talked to him on the phone, and he actually, I mentioned him on podcast.
John HarrisHe reached out.
John HarrisI talked to him on the phone, and I said, where are the teams of filmmakers that are lining up?
John HarrisYou have such a compelling story.
John HarrisJuan, what happened to you is incredible.
John HarrisYou former homosexual children of immigrants, you know, he just.
John HarrisHe fit the woke kind of social justice, like what they're looking for, the intersectionality, you know, bent.
John HarrisIt was in his favor, and I.
John HarrisAnd he was hated, and he was canceled.
John HarrisHis business basically destroyed.
John HarrisAnd so we told his story.
John HarrisI never made a documentary film before.
John HarrisWe made paint the wall black.
John HarrisI went out to Chicago, someone I had never worked with before, another Christian who supported the podcast, said, you do some film work.
John HarrisWhat can we do here?
John HarrisAnd it really got his story out there far and wide.
John HarrisAnd it exposed BLM, in my opinion.
John HarrisIt also exposed christians who don't seem to, who seem to shy away from him.
John HarrisI mean, he talks about this.
John HarrisHe talks about people from, I think it was moody Moody Bible institute out there in Chicago, people showing up who had been, you know, moody students to protest him during BLM.
John HarrisI mean, it's just.
John HarrisIt's surreal.
John HarrisBut he's a cheerful guy.
John HarrisHe's a happy guy.
John HarrisAnd for him, who cares about the business?
John HarrisI've been saved by Jesus Christ.
John HarrisThat's what really matters.
John HarrisGod loves me.
John HarrisHe's going to protect me.
John HarrisStory of faith.
John HarrisAnd I'm just glad I could have never made that documentary.
John HarrisI could have never made the 1607 project or any of the other things we've done if it wasn't for the fact that he initially opened my mouth and had a little bit of courage to say, hey, there's something bad going on at Southeastern.
John HarrisSo I see all these blessings coming from that initial step.
Will SpencerMm hmm.
Will SpencerYeah, praise God.
Will SpencerVery much so.
Will SpencerAnd you're right.
Will SpencerLike, God is behind all of it.
Will SpencerYou couldn't.
Will SpencerYou couldn't if you had gotten on your phone.
Will SpencerLike, I'm gonna say something that's gonna go viral.
Will SpencerLike, it doesn't work that way.
Will SpencerYou know what I mean?
Will SpencerIt just.
Will SpencerIt's impossible.
Will SpencerIt's a gift and a blessing.
Will SpencerAnd if you.
Will SpencerI believe if you act in integrity, you speak truth.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerThe consequences that come from that are also him.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd so you're just.
Will SpencerYou're offered an opportunity, a path to walk, and you could walk it.
Will SpencerIt was lawful to walk it, and you chose to walk it.
Will SpencerAnd I think the impacts are speaking for themselves.
John HarrisYeah, yeah, yeah, I agree.
Will SpencerSo just a quick question then.
Will SpencerSo I'm hearing about these pastors and seminary professors and even the everyday believers who take these ideas in.
Will SpencerNow, again, my journey was the other way.
Will SpencerI just lived in these ideas and using Christianity.
Will SpencerAnd in part because of encountering Christianity, I was able to unwind them from myself.
Will SpencerIn fact, the black squares thing actually played a role in my conversion to Christianity, at least from my subjective experience, where I could feel the weight of shame.
Will SpencerBecause I had traveled for a while, I had instagram with all my travel photography, and everyone wanted to take this travel photography page, which I had curated, and just dump a black square on there.
Will SpencerI'm like, no, I'm not going to put a black square on this.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerWith this thing that I try to curate and take good care of.
Will SpencerAnd I could feel the weight of shame and exclusion and being cast out of the tribe and understanding the kind of grip that it was trying to get on me.
Will SpencerOnce I encountered christianity and started understanding the notions of original sin and redemption, I was like, oh, this is playing on some of the same themes.
Will SpencerSo Christianity wipes all this away.
Will SpencerAnd so it was through that experience, in part, that I was able to understand some very deep things about Christianity.
Will SpencerBut to see people within the faith who travel the opposite direction, they grow up in the faith, and then these very seductive ideas begin wrapping themselves around the axle of people's identity.
Will SpencerI don't exactly understand how that happens.
Will SpencerThat's not to say there isn't a good reason for it.
Will SpencerAnd I know that some percentage of them are just going along with it.
Will SpencerThey're keeping their head down, or they don't have the courage to speak up.
Will SpencerAll those things are true, but it seems like it starts to wrap itself around people and they become true believers.
Will SpencerHow does that happen?
Will SpencerAnd does that happen because of social pressure?
Will SpencerWell, my pastor, he believes it, so therefore I should.
Will SpencerOr do people actually believe the scriptural arguments that are made in favor of this, or maybe all of the above?
John HarrisYeah, I think there's a lot that goes into that.
John HarrisWe have a basically watered down kind of Christianity anyway.
John HarrisThat's the default Christianity in America.
John HarrisWe don't have to talk about the social justice thing.
John HarrisI think to totally understand this, you can look at the.
John HarrisI'm just saying, before social justice stuff, you can look at the kinds of things churches were doing.
John HarrisSo I went to southeastern.
John HarrisObviously, Southeastern is considered a conservative, biblical, some would even say fundamentalist kind of school.
John HarrisIt's not Princeton seminary, it's a Southern Baptist school.
John HarrisAnd the church plants that are like the people who graduate and then want to go on and plant a church.
John HarrisAnd the way you're even encouraged, I think, to think about church is to look at it as a social organization that obviously has an important role to play in your spiritual life.
John HarrisBut there's a lot of focus on reconciling that organization with modernity in some way.
John HarrisAnd so what I mean by that is, you know, and I want to phrase this the right way because I understand there are people who are in strip malls because that's where you could get a space to worship the Lord.
John HarrisAnd there's no shame and nothing wrong in that, let me say that.
John HarrisBut the preference for strip malls, the preference for the ideal, is we should not have christian symbols.
John HarrisWe should have corporate looking symbols, and we should call our buildings and our organizations something that does not sound like a church.
John HarrisIt should be liquid or the river or some kind of odd name that doesn't clue you into the fact that this is actually even a religious organization.
John HarrisSteeples.
John HarrisI'm looking at architecture.
John HarrisWe're not going to have graveyards.
John HarrisThat's too sad.
John HarrisAnd you walk in your experience, oftentimes it's all about you.
John HarrisWe want you to have a good experience.
John HarrisGet a free coffee if you're a visitor.
John HarrisThe pastor is not very formal, and I'm not legalistic on this.
John HarrisI don't think it's a sin to be casual.
John HarrisI think, though, the motivation behind much of that was, again, a reconciliation with trying to make Christianity palatable and comfortable for people who don't like traditional church settings.
John HarrisThe problem is the people who often don't like traditional church settings aren't.
John HarrisThey're not as winnable as we think.
John HarrisWhen we do win them, oftentimes we don't win them to Christianity so much as we do.
John HarrisThis is my theory, obviously.
John HarrisI think we win them to community, we win them to a show, we win them to other things.
John HarrisBut I don't think we win them to true Christianity because true Christianity will always point you towards the good, and it'll point you towards God.
John HarrisIt'll point you up and it's supposed to have.
John HarrisThere's a loftiness to it.
John HarrisThinking about death, thinking about eternity should be on the front of your mind as you're looking at true biblical Christianity.
John HarrisThere is definitely a hierarchy involved in Christianity.
John HarrisThere's definitely the exaltation of good taste and there's a formality to it in how you approach the Lord.
John HarrisI mean, I'm talking about true Christianity.
John HarrisAll of those things play into how we approach the Lord.
John HarrisAnd they say something about who God is, I think so we've, in a large part, we've dropped a lot of these things.
John HarrisThere are still obviously churches who keep some of these things and they're legalistic and you don't want to go in there and it's dead man's bones.
John HarrisAnd I understand that.
John HarrisThat's often the retort.
John HarrisThat's also true because those things in and of themselves, architecture won't give you orthodoxy in and of itself.
John HarrisI could show you a lot of beautiful buildings and nothing spiritual is going on in there.
John HarrisBut my point though is that we orientated ourselves away from heaven and eternal life and towards temporal life.
John HarrisAnd so when you have a political movement come in like wokeness or it could have been any political movement, I think we were already weak enough to buy into it because we are in this reconciliation posture, reconciling ourselves to whatever the world is putting out there.
John HarrisAnd the world of course, being not just what John, obviously there is what John talks about, the lust of the eyes, lust, the fetch, boastful pride of life.
John HarrisBut I'm talking about powerful institutions, I'm talking about the media, academia, Hollywood, education.
John HarrisAll of these things are lined up against Christianity.
John HarrisAnd the way to neutralize it, the way to accommodate it, the way to try to live within it has been to not be the church anymore, not look like a church, try to be the kind of Christian that proves to everyone else that overturns the stereotypes they have of christians and proves that christians are actually good people and we have social good.
John HarrisI think I give you so many examples.
John HarrisThey're just flooding into my mind of people who have done this.
John HarrisBut those are the architects.
John HarrisThat's at least what the architects of our current demise, I think have given that to us and that weakened us in my opinion.
Will SpencerThis is so interesting because I had never thought about this before, but it's something that I've observed the churches in the strip malls like, yes, okay, if you have to meet there, you have to meet there.
Will SpencerBut I had never thought, but I can see it now, that there's a preference for that.
Will SpencerThere's a preference for churches without christian sounding names, with very secular kind of appearing logos and all.
Will SpencerThere's nothing overtly christian about it.
Will SpencerIt seems profoundly watered down.
Will SpencerI had never really thought about that as a strategy to reconcile with the world.
Will SpencerI thought about non denominationalism, I thought about Baptist, Presbyterian, I thought about all that stuff.
Will SpencerBut I've seen so many of these churches and I'd never thought of it that way.
Will SpencerIt's been a big question in my mind of, like, what's.
Will SpencerWhat's going on there?
Will SpencerLike, I think I understood on the surface what it was not trying to do, but I didn't understand, like, it was trying not to be traditionalism or legalism or whatever.
Will SpencerIt's trying not to be, you know, your father's church or your grandfather's church.
Will SpencerLike, I guess I understood that.
Will SpencerBut for the age that we're in, you know, that wants to seem modern and innovative.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerMaybe that's the way that I thought about, like, we're innovating on church, which maybe is just a euphemism for, like, we want to reconcile with the world.
Will SpencerI never thought about that because there's lots of those in Phoenix.
John HarrisIt's really.
John HarrisSo, yeah, you could say reconciled to the world, reconciled to elite institutions.
John HarrisYou could also say reconciled to modernity.
John HarrisCause all those things are very modern.
John HarrisThere's a practical atheism almost at play in it, where they don't want to actually think too much about eternal things.
John HarrisThe only eternal things that you need are the more therapeutic things.
John HarrisSo the pastor, the office, or the role of the pastor ends up being more of a life coach, a therapist, or a social activist.
John HarrisThat's where.
John HarrisAnd of course, social activism today and the social justice movement is really just building a utopia.
John HarrisIt's finding heaven on earth.
John HarrisAnd I think there's an attraction to that because we've gotten rid of the idea of heaven after death.
John HarrisWe hardly talk about when was the last time.
John HarrisI mean, you probably go to some good churches, but maybe for people listening, when was the last time you heard your pastor talk about hell or heaven?
John HarrisThey probably talk about heaven.
John HarrisMore therapeutic way to comfort you, and it should be used to comfort.
John HarrisBut the idea of orienting our lives, though, towards heaven, towards the eternal, towards the good, towards goddess, and looking at that realm for guidance, I don't think that's at play in most churches.
John HarrisNot prominently.
John HarrisI think there's a big focus on a personal relationship that you have with Jesus.
John HarrisAnd then I think when you focus on that too much, to the detriment, I should say if you focus on that to the detriment, because you can't really focus on that too much, but to the detriment of these other things.
John HarrisAnd it's just about you and God and not the corporate ness of the church as the bride of Christ, not the formality of who you're actually approaching, who God actually is, but it's more of a buddy casual kind of thing, then that is going to leave some things unaddressed in your human nature because we should be orienting ourselves to some kind of moral vision.
John HarrisSo if you get rid of that in the church, where are you going to find it?
John HarrisYou're going to find it in social activism, you're going to find it in other places, I think.
John HarrisAnd the social justice movement, I argue, is kind of a christianized heresy.
John HarrisIt is because they do have their own holy books that you can't question, which are press perspectives.
John HarrisThey do have missionaries who are essentially their professors and elites in society.
John HarrisThey have at every step, I mean, they have their penance, the born again experiences, getting woke.
John HarrisI mean, it's all there.
John HarrisIt's all there like the augustinian structure of wokeness and social justice.
John HarrisSo if you're already hungry for that and your church doesn't really fulfill those things, then you're going to try to integrate that into the church to fulfill what's missing.
John HarrisAnd I think it'd be better if we just went back to the way things, the way churches used to be.
John HarrisYou don't have to have like some super specific brand that you have to come up with that looks like every other brand out there to convince people that you're not a church.
John HarrisLike you can just build a building that looks like a church.
John HarrisYou can sing songs that are appropriate for church dressed in a way that is suitable for a church, and act like this actually matters, and act like God's actually going to come back and judge things instead of pretending like he's just there as your life coach.
John HarrisI don't know, I guess to enrich your life a little more, he will enrich your life.
John HarrisBut those other attributes of God can't be suppressed.
Will SpencerThat really lands because I'm putting myself back in the shoes of when I was still secular and I can see the churches that have that branding as something that would be more appealing to me and would feel safer.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd that's not necessarily a good thing, but like, oh, I can step in the doors here rather than something with a scary word like orthodox, you know what I mean?
Will SpencerOr with all the families dressed nicely, that might be too much, but I can walk into a big gray box and with sort of a modern style logo with a name that's vaguely maybe spiritual sounding and that would be safer.
Will SpencerBut it makes me wonder what low expectations a church like that would set for its believers, right?
Will SpencerLike, if you have someone come in the door and you don't ever make any sincere effort to mature them in the faith, right?
Will SpencerWhat are you expecting?
Will SpencerLike, people are just going to stay there because it's pleasurable, but the real believers will end up leaving.
Will SpencerMaybe they will actually get saved and they will want to grow up in the faith and they will look around and say, hey, can we start talking a little bit more about orthodoxy?
Will SpencerLike, yeah, the pastor read this, but then I found this other passage I was reading on my own.
Will SpencerAnd so it seems like a losing strategy.
Will SpencerBut I can also understand if you've lost thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Will SpencerIf you've lost a sense of a church having that mission, the social justice ideology will plug right into that spot, bringing about a utopia, a utopian vision that doesn't align at all with God's plan for the world.
Will SpencerAnd so this now a lot of sense why they catch on.
John HarrisThere's sacrifice, there's judgment.
John HarrisThese are things that we don't like to talk about in church.
John HarrisBut the social justice movement has those things.
John HarrisSo if you're lacking that and, you know, I think we all know deep down inside we have sinned, we are guilty.
John HarrisAnd there does need to be some kind of rectification of that.
John HarrisNow, of course that's the gospel.
John HarrisBut if you have a weak gospel and the social justice movement comes in and says, we're gonna punish the bad guys, there's gonna be a reckoning and we're gonna, you know, be part of the judgment with us, which is basically what they're doing.
John HarrisWe're going to cast people out in the outer darkness who are bad and racist and sexist and all that.
John HarrisThat's called canceling them.
John HarrisThere's something about that that does resonate with human nature and it fulfills, it gives you purpose in your life.
John HarrisAnd for all the talk that a lot of modern settings, modern churches, they'll use words like purpose.
John HarrisI mean, it's almost like, like there's a, what do they call those focus groups, you know, that are finding out what words do people like to hear and stuff.
John HarrisI would have.
John HarrisI have no doubt that there are probably focus groups that are being used to figure out church growth strategies and all of that kind of thing.
John HarrisThere's firms, I come across a few of those.
John HarrisI remember first Baptist Naples, when we did a documentary on them, because that was a whole story.
John HarrisBut anyway, one of the things, the.
Will SpencerNew pastor from the SBC, was that the one in Meg bash book?
John HarrisYep, yep, yep.
John HarrisSo I was the one who was, you know, I talked to the people there and kind of set it up.
John HarrisSet.
John HarrisSet them up to have a documentary.
John HarrisI went there and I was screening everyone who was going on camera for that.
John HarrisAnd that one of the things that happened was they brought in a group to this megachurch to give them advice.
John HarrisAnd it was called Oxano.
John HarrisThat was the group.
John HarrisAnd some of the advice that they told me this group gave was, in my opinion, just awful.
John HarrisBut it was along the lines of what I'm saying, like, you need to get rid of these programs.
John HarrisYou need to instead do this.
John HarrisAnd really with, I think underlying it, the idea of we need to diversify the church, so make it attractive to.
John HarrisIt's too white, it's too old, or it's too this or that, right?
John HarrisSo we need to have the United nations in the church.
John HarrisAnd so that means changing the way we do church to attract them.
John HarrisWe need so this focus on diversity and equality and all of these kinds of things.
John HarrisAnd those actual ministries who are doing good, some of them, well, they're draining resources from the church.
John HarrisWell, what is the church supposed to be doing, though?
John HarrisThis is one of the big questions.
John HarrisThe church doesn't exist for itself as far as a local church is not an institution that exists just to perpetuate itself.
John HarrisAnd it doesn't care about people, it doesn't care about the church around the world.
John HarrisIt's just its own church, its own institution, its own success.
John HarrisThat's a really bad way of looking at church.
John HarrisBut that's how a corporation would look at itself, right?
John HarrisThat's how a business might look at itself.
John HarrisAnd so I think we've taken these principles from business and the corporate world and inserted that into church.
John HarrisAnd it's to our own peril, really.
John HarrisWe may be able to.
John HarrisI'm open to the idea that we may be able to get more people in the door for some things, but what are we really giving them?
John HarrisAre they really growing in Christ?
John HarrisIf one of the points of diversity in your church, and I can say that this is common, is that we not just.
John HarrisIt's not just that we need other races, every race present, but we also need Democrats and Republicans sitting next to each other without any offense.
John HarrisAnd we need homosexuals there, and they shouldn't be offended.
John HarrisYou know, if that's your idea of diversity, which is how it is now, uh, then you're just watering down the message more and more and more and more, which is what we have.
John HarrisWe have a watered down message.
John HarrisIt doesn't really help people much.
John HarrisIt might give them a pep talk, but it's like, uh, hearing a TED talk every week and being part of small groups that might help you gain connections in a world that's otherwise disconnected.
John HarrisSo there, you know, there's.
John HarrisThere's the social purpose it serves.
John HarrisBut I think as far as the things that traditionally a church is actually there for, which is to worship God in spirit and truth, to do it corporately, to really come before him and know what he requires of you, and then conform your lives to that and pledge together to be accountable, to do that with each other.
John HarrisWhere is that in the modernization, most modern church settings?
John HarrisI don't see it.
John HarrisIt's hyper personally focused, too.
John HarrisIt's not this idea of corporately pledging to each other, confessing sins to one another.
John HarrisI don't see much of that myself.
John HarrisSo I think there's been a weakness, and the malady the church is going through is not social justice related.
John HarrisAnd I had to come to this, by the way, over time, I did think.
John HarrisI think initially I was more thinking that social justice killed it.
John HarrisRight.
John HarrisLike, the church was going along its merry way, doing pretty well.
John HarrisAnd then this.
John HarrisThis woke stuff came.
John HarrisAnd for some individual churches, that does appear or feel like the way it happened.
John HarrisAnd it might be.
John HarrisI think overall, though, the broad picture of this whole thing is there were some really bad things that were happening before social justice ever was popular.
John HarrisYou know, the fall of the church preceded 2020.
John Harris2020 just revealed, I think, what was already there.
John HarrisAnd I think there were a lot of christians caught off guard because they thought, similar to how I thought, that things weren't actually that bad, that things were going along pretty decently, and especially in the young, restless, reformed world.
John HarrisThe reformed world obviously thought, we have really good theology on soteriology, and I'm not even so sure we had good soteriology, to be quite honest.
John HarrisWhen everything's a gospel issue and you widen the gospel to be like, you're already playing into the whole social gospel stuff when you start doing that.
John HarrisBut let's just say, hey, we got predestination right?
John HarrisWe got tulip, right?
John HarrisMan.
John HarrisThere's so many things beyond tulip that we need to get right, I think in order to have a good, functional church.
John HarrisAnd a lot of the guys who were popular because they were resurrecting tulip, they had a lot of those other things wrong.
Will SpencerYes.
Will SpencerI saw a tweet about that two, three weeks ago that what the young, restless and reformed had revealed was that they brought forward some of the soteriological doctrines of the reformers and they left literally everything else.
Will SpencerAnd that lack is being revealed right now, including in the reformed church.
Will SpencerI've got Zach Garris, honor thy fathers.
Will SpencerHe's going to be coming on the show.
Will SpencerHe's talking about it.
John HarrisI love him.
Will SpencerYeah, I can't.
Will SpencerHis book, Masculine Christianity, that's on my recommended reading list for sure.
Will SpencerIt leaves no room for doubt.
Will SpencerAnd it seems to me that that's the sort of stuff that was completely left out in the young, restless and reformed.
Will SpencerIt was almost like, and I'm sure that this much thought didn't go into it.
Will SpencerIt was almost like a movement was crafted specifically to ignore social issues.
Will SpencerLike, we're going to focus so heavily on this, so don't pay attention to the man behind the curtain.
Will SpencerMaybe that's the case.
Will SpencerI don't think so.
Will SpencerI think that's probably outside conspiratorial thinking, even for me.
Will SpencerSo.
Will SpencerBut it does have that effect.
Will SpencerLike, wow, what's the stuff that we can leave out that people will really need to know?
Will SpencerLet's leave that stuff out just real quick.
Will SpencerThere's something that I heard that's happening here in Phoenix, and I think this speaks to the phenomenon that you're describing.
Will SpencerAnd now I don't know if this is happening, but someone had, someone had said they had heard about it.
Will SpencerSo take this for what it's worth, but they said that there are a lot of churches around the valley that are failing, which is not an unusual thing, and that all of those churches now are being bought up by a church conglomerate.
Will SpencerSo they're all being rolled into one mega church kind of corporation with all these different essentially franchises.
Will SpencerAnd so it speaks to the corporatization of the church worship experience.
Will SpencerAnd you can imagine, like, I don't even know what the name of the organization doing the buying is, but you can imagine that like something of that size and scale with that kind of economic or scale ambition anyway, is probably not going to have the healing kind of doctrines that people are going to really need in their lives.
Will SpencerAnd it's really, when I heard about that, well, first of all, that makes a lot of sense because so many churches are failing.
Will SpencerAnd it goes without saying that people would see that as a business opportunity in some ways.
Will SpencerSo, I mean, I don't mean to call it exclusively a business opportunity, but it's like you can kind of see that, well, what is this church doing?
Will SpencerAre they really like, we're going to bring, you know, true, strict biblical truth, or are we going to bring some of the model that you've been describing, which is like, ted talk, social gospel, feel good, you know, easy kind of stuff?
Will SpencerIs that what's actually going to be spreading?
Will SpencerAnd it seems like logically that it would.
Will SpencerSo all these pieces really fit together and help me identify things that I've been seeing, but I haven't really been able to explain.
John HarrisYeah, I have not heard of what you're saying.
John HarrisThat's interesting.
John HarrisAnd the concern, without knowing anything else about it, I would have is that once you become a franchise, I guess you end up having to respond to market forces, and that's going to do.
John HarrisAnd it's not just market forces you're responding to.
John HarrisThe bigger you get, the more you're noticed by governing authorities.
John HarrisAnd so you end up having to respond to pressure from governing authorities as well.
John HarrisI think this is why denominations at the highest levels, you see the most compromise, and it's your local church pastor in usually smaller churches that tend to be more solid and stable.
John HarrisAnd there's very few megachurches that I can say that have good pastors that seem like they have good character and they're not corrupt and they're not compromised on social justice or other issues.
John HarrisSo that would make me nervous.
John HarrisJust the scale of it.
John HarrisIt could be a great, I don't know what you would even call that, but it could be a great organization.
John HarrisBut just the scale of something like that and having churches, then it's not a denomination.
John HarrisIt sounds like that would be a major concern.
John HarrisIn my mind, it seems like smaller churches did much better in 2020.
Will SpencerI think so.
Will SpencerI think so.
Will SpencerI mean, finding small, faithful churches that stayed open and that were, that had to be less aware, let's say, of market forces that had less visibility, that it's a small local, almost an underground congregation, kind of expect them to draw the ichthus fish sign to signal that they're still open.
Will SpencerBut that's the feeling.
Will SpencerAnd this also helps me understand why the pushback on reformed theology specifically.
Will SpencerBecause this is a world like literally just warp speed through the faith.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerIn reformed theology.
Will SpencerYeah, this is great.
Will SpencerFrom the apology of membership class that I took, like, oh, fantastic.
Will SpencerAnd so as that has been kind of spreading out into the christian culture more broadly, particularly in the past couple, few years, the pushback that's being received within Christianity around that, that hasn't made any sense to me either.
Will SpencerAnd so now all these pieces are kind of clicking together like, oh, okay, this is now the larger.
Will SpencerOf course, yes, I'm aware of the national posture towards Christianity, negative world like, I'm aware of that.
Will SpencerBut reformed theology specifically embedded in a larger church culture.
Will SpencerThe response of that larger church culture to reform Christianity has been somewhat baffling to me.
Will SpencerI mean, I have assumed that there's old reasons for it, but now this makes a lot more sense because it's actually two different models.
Will SpencerIt's two very different models.
Will SpencerYou have something that's more responsive to the world in both economic and social and political terms versus responsive to.
Will SpencerWhat does the actual book say?
Will SpencerAnd so those worldviews would be very much conflict.
John HarrisYeah, yeah.
John HarrisAnd I don't want to downplay the.
John HarrisI mean, it's good that reformed theology kind of made a comeback there for a little bit, I think, like at least soteriology.
John HarrisBut yeah, I wish that we would have been.
John HarrisThat was the emphasis.
John HarrisRight.
John HarrisAnd it seems to me like the solas are more what we needed.
John HarrisAnd perhaps even now Stephen Wolf's bringing this up quite a bit.
John HarrisBut the order of loves, really understanding, hierarchy, structure, responsibility, duty before God, those are things that we didn't really have as much.
John HarrisAnd, you know, it's a cure.
John HarrisI don't have the answer to why.
John HarrisThat kind of got popular for a while.
John HarrisThe Calvinism was kind of.
John HarrisIt was cool to be a Calvinist, right.
John HarrisLike, it was the thing.
John HarrisI was part of that to some extent.
John HarrisLike, I really thought if you got that right, you got everything else right.
John HarrisAnd now I realize, wow, okay, there's some.
John HarrisSome of the biggest, you know, calvinist churches were some of the biggest woke churches, too.
John HarrisThey learned to marry those things together.
John HarrisBut.
John HarrisBut yeah, we have a weak church.
John HarrisAnd really this is the.
John HarrisSo what I've done is I've tried to educate, I've tried to expose, I've tried, you know, I'm trying to, like, hold people's feet to the fire and show this is the direction I think we should go.
John HarrisAnd the next book, I'm finishing it up now.
John HarrisI'm giving some positive plan, both politically but also in the church, ecclesiastically, where I think we should go, but ultimately I think as christians we need to remember that in the end the church belongs to Christ and we need to be on our faces before the Lord, pleading with him that he would do something and not being passive, because I wanted to preface it the way I did.
John HarrisI'm not passive about any of this, but I'm open to the Lord using me, and you will, as the means to accomplish some of these things.
John HarrisBut we need to be on our face before him to raise up godly leaders.
John HarrisWe are lacking in faithful leaders with character so much in the church today, and we need that.
John HarrisAnd we need men who orient their lives to heaven, to the divine.
John HarrisAnd it sounds maybe a little mystical, and I don't mean it to sound overly mystical, but I do think there's an element to Christianity that we can't quite quantify, that there should be an element, almost mystical element, of communing with God and understanding from the word, obviously his plans, but then through circumstance and as we walk with him, the specific ways in which we fit in, how our good works that were preordained by him fit into this whole thing.
John HarrisAnd so I would just say to people listening out there, really pray for the church, because ultimately God has to do something.
John HarrisAll our efforts at reforming and all these things, they can fail.
John HarrisAnd that's been the lesson of the last 15 years is these guys who thought young, restless reform guys, they were reforming the church and bringing it back to orthodoxy.
John HarrisThey did some, there were some good things, but it has, the harvest has not been good, in my opinion.
John HarrisAnd so we need to pray to the Lord of the harvest to really reform us in the way that we actually need and not to be afraid of the world.
John HarrisI think that's going to be the number one barometer going forward that we will use to evaluate leadership in the church.
John HarrisAnd whether a church is compromised or not compromised is how afraid of the world and the power structures that be, that love, sin are they?
John HarrisAnd what do they respond to that pressure?
John HarrisOr do they say, you know what, when the world comes by and says you're a bunch of bigots because you believe a, b and c is the response, well, you don't understand, let's have a cup of coffee, come to one of our services, it's so great.
John HarrisIt's not going to offend you like you think, or we're going to cushion it somehow.
John HarrisNo, let's just be unapologetic about it.
John HarrisNo, this is what the word of God says.
John HarrisWe're not backing down from it.
John HarrisIn fact, we're going to emphasize it even more because apparently you need it, you know, not, not as jerks, but we need to contrast even more so with the world.
John HarrisAnd that's what I want to see.
John HarrisWe just got to pray that the Lord raises up people to do that.
Will SpencerI like that answer.
Will SpencerCan I push on it in a particular spot?
John HarrisYeah, absolutely.
Will SpencerOkay.
Will SpencerSo one of the things that is kind of going around today is just how many, just how left leaning young women are.
Will SpencerI think it's 25 to 44.
Will SpencerIs the demographic right that they are just so hard to the left and they're leaving churches as well.
Will SpencerAnd so it would seem, and the opposite phenomenon is happening with young men.
Will SpencerYoung men are getting more conservative and are returning to church.
Will SpencerSo it would seem on this particular point that if we were to really lean in to being gracious but firm.
Will SpencerRight on this is what the book says that it could and maybe even will and maybe even is drive away an entire generation of women specifically.
Will SpencerAnd so what do we do about that?
Will SpencerI mean, that's where I want to push because that seems to be something that it's not quite happening yet, but it might happen real soon.
Will SpencerSo what's the response to that?
Will SpencerI mean, I have my response to it, but I'd like to hear what yours would be.
John HarrisYeah.
John HarrisWhat were you pushing back on?
John HarrisI don't know if I disagree with the.
Will SpencerWell, so if we're supposed to really lean in, if we're supposed to really lean into the gospel, really lean into what the word says, and that specific leaning.
John HarrisOh, the consequence of it accelerates a.
Will SpencerTrend of specifically women fleeing.
Will SpencerWhat do we do about that?
John HarrisI mean, my answer is going to be pretty simple.
John HarrisJust do it anyway.
John HarrisI don't really.
Will SpencerThat's a good answer.
John HarrisYeah, I don't have anything to expand on there.
John HarrisI was just preached this last Sunday on the verse that says first Thessalonians 514, that we are supposed to help the weak.
John HarrisWe're supposed to be patient with all men, right?
John HarrisWe're supposed to encourage the.
John HarrisNow it's kind of weird because I had this whole memorized that was like two days later, and I'm like, what did I preach on?
John HarrisEncourage the faint hearted.
John HarrisAnd I did this all backwards and admonish the unruly.
John HarrisIt starts with, admonish the unruly, encourage the faint hearted, help the weak, patient withal.
John HarrisThat's how it goes.
John HarrisSo I reverse engineer it there.
John HarrisBut when it comes to women who are in the church, that are thinking of leaving because it doesn't match, I guess, an egalitarian standard they have or something, a feminist idea.
John HarrisThen you have to triage it and you have to, on a case by case basis, I think, look at the circumstance.
John HarrisAre these women, you never shy away from the truth.
John HarrisAre these women unruly?
John HarrisIf they're unruly, then I guess you turn up the volume a little bit.
John HarrisYou actually admonish you correct.
John HarrisThat doesn't mean punish.
John HarrisThat means you correct the thinking.
John HarrisBut if they're weak, if it's a circumstance, I can think of a circumstance where it's a woman who just, maybe they're a bit deceived.
John HarrisThey're open, humble, but they don't like the patriarchy stuff, and that just puts a bad taste in their mouth because of whatever reason.
John HarrisThen I think that maybe there's even a personal thing in their own lives.
John HarrisTheir father was terrible.
John HarrisThey had a bad boyfriend.
John HarrisThen I think if they're faint hearted, then you have to encourage them.
John HarrisYou're not going to approach them in the same exact way.
John HarrisIt's amazing to me how many girls, too, they're raging feminists.
John HarrisYou've probably seen this phenomenon, or a girl who's more on the feminist side.
John HarrisBut then they get married and it like, I think it like their worldview changes.
John HarrisIf it's a good man, you know, they start seeing things differently.
John HarrisThat's what we would hope would happen, you know, that some of these people who are deceived because that's what it is, would realize that they're the error of their ways.
John HarrisBut how are they going to realize it unless you say something?
John HarrisSomething has to be said at some point.
Will SpencerPoint, yeah, I've called it elsewhere, civilizational brinksmanship.
Will SpencerBe nice to us, or we'll just withdraw from civilization and we'll just let it all collapse.
Will SpencerI've seen women say that on Twitter and all of that.
Will SpencerIt's quite odd, really.
John HarrisI've never seen that.
Will SpencerOh, yeah, there's a whole cadre of conservative female influencers, I don't know how many other Christian, but they're saying conservatives are really mean, and if you're not nice to us, we'll just go vote Democrat.
Will SpencerAnd I have seen that.
Will SpencerAnd it's quite odd.
Will SpencerIt's quite odd to see.
Will SpencerThere's a spitefulness to it.
Will SpencerIt's particularly, some of it centers around the abortion issue.
Will SpencerSome of it centers around the real questions that conservatives have over, for example, the 19th Amendment.
Will SpencerAnd we don't have to unpack that right now.
Will SpencerBut my stance on that is just that when you set men and women as opposition groups in a voting bloc, you immediately cut the population in half.
Will SpencerYou're going to get chaos.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerThat's how I see that.
Will SpencerBut that's a much longer discussion.
Will SpencerSo they say, well, you have to be nicer to us, and you have to essentially trying to move the goalposts on feminism.
Will SpencerWe want the conservative party to be more accommodating to feminism.
Will SpencerAnd when you have men who say, no, that's wrong, and we can't do that, and we have now 60 years plus of history to say why all these things are a bad idea.
Will SpencerThe girls fold their hands and say, fine, well, we'll just go vote Democrat then.
Will SpencerAnd it's like, well, yeah, exactly.
Will SpencerBut it's the, but within a church context, within a church context, it's like it shows up there as well.
Will SpencerAnd so I think that's what I mean by the civilizational brinksmanship.
Will SpencerThere's a resistance to any amount of masculinity.
Will SpencerIt tries to pick away at it.
Will SpencerIt's bizarre in my mind.
Will SpencerBut when it comes to, like, if.
John HarrisYou'Re in a church, you're part of a, an organization that by definition has a male hierarchy.
John HarrisAnd that male hierarchy does it.
John HarrisWell, biblically speaking.
John HarrisAnd traditionally speaking.
Will SpencerI got a dozen lady pastors that disagree with you.
John HarrisWell, they can call that a church, but that's, you know, they're out of step.
John HarrisSo they're, and that's a pretty fundamental thing.
John HarrisI would say that elders should be men.
John HarrisBut you worship a God who presents himself in scripture using male pronouns.
John HarrisAnd there is certainly Jesus himself being masculine and his disciples all being men, all the authors of scripture being men.
John HarrisYou're entering a religion that is, and I don't think I have to shy away from saying this.
John HarrisIt's dominated by men, and that doesn't mean there's not a place for women in it.
John HarrisThere's a very special, prominent place for women in Christianity, but it's not being in charge of where the direction of a church, not directly in charge.
John HarrisSo that's the thing you have to assess, I guess.
John HarrisDo you really want to be part of a church?
John HarrisIt doesn't sound to me like someone who has the attitude you're describing is really interested in being part of that organization.
John HarrisSo if they're gonna go vote democrat, that sounds like a much better organization or like it's an organ, not better, but it suits their assumptions about reality.
John HarrisSo the problem who I fault with a situation like that is the church.
John HarrisYou know, where did the church, whether it's a local church or a denomination, where did they ever give the impression to a woman who thinks the way that you're saying that this organization is somehow accommodating to you or you would be a good fit for this like that?
John HarrisOr your ideas can be at home here?
John HarrisThat's ridiculous.
John HarrisYou know.
John HarrisYou know, Amy Bird needs to know that the OPC is not her home.
John HarrisLike, this is not, you know, to pick, you know, I don't know enough about Amy bird.
John HarrisI'm assuming.
John HarrisI just hear people say things, so I'm assuming, and I've seen some of her quotes that seem to be go along with what you just said.
Will SpencerSure.
John HarrisLike, it just doesn't sound like that's the organization you're interested in, so you're gonna go find another one.
John HarrisAnd we can't bend over backwards to change our organization.
John HarrisOtherwise, we fundamentally change it, and it's no longer a church.
John HarrisIf you really take that to its conclusion, it's no longer a church.
Will SpencerI agree with you.
Will SpencerI agree, and I'm glad.
Will SpencerAnd I'm glad you said that, because I think that there does come a point where, again, you have to be gracious but firm and say, this is what it says, and this is not what we do around here.
Will SpencerAnd if that's what you're looking for, there's a better organization for you, and I wish you blessings to go towards it.
Will SpencerAnd I think that's a really important stance to take.
Will SpencerIt doesn't need to be angry.
Will SpencerIt doesn't need to be vindictive.
Will SpencerIt doesn't need to play into the victor victim kind of dynamic.
Will SpencerBut to say that, hey, the bitter fruit of feminism is we have.
Will SpencerI mean, the numbers are there.
Will SpencerIt's generational rebellion from God, right?
Will SpencerAnd this goes right along with awokeness.
Will SpencerIn fact, I see it as the root of all the wokeness.
Will SpencerAnd so, like, if that means that there's going to be an entire generation that walks away from the church, that it expects to bow down to their needs, like, well, you're just going to have to walk.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd so that's why I'm glad you said that, because I think that in many ways, that's just in the air, right?
Will SpencerThat's just in the air.
Will SpencerIn the conflict around the election, around abortion and all this different stuff.
Will SpencerYou have a specific set of the population, half of it, in some sense, that's demanding things be done on their terms.
Will SpencerIt's like, well, in the secular world, that's certainly one thing, but when it comes to the word of God, this is God's word.
Will SpencerNot a whole lot of wiggle room in some of these things, particularly around lady pastors and stuff like that.
Will SpencerAnd if you don't like it, yes, it's very good.
Will SpencerIt's great.
Will SpencerAnd it's difficult.
Will SpencerThe Chesterton quote, it's been found difficult and not tried.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd so that's why I ask, is because I think all of us, in many ways, many of my listeners, male and female, and I hear this a lot from women especially, which is why I talk about this, is women who deal with rebellious women in their own lives, say, well, the word of God says this.
Will SpencerAnd so I submit to.
Will SpencerTo my husband and then the vicious attacks that they get from the women around them.
Will SpencerSo to hear you say that, there does come a point where a clear line must be laid, and if people fall on one side or the other, bless them in that.
Will SpencerAnd I think that's really important, that.
John HarrisThere are two groups that matter.
John HarrisI just thought of.
John HarrisThere are groups because I think almost every girl who's raised in America at this point has a bit of feminism in them somewhere.
John HarrisOr at least people have tried to inject it somewhere.
John HarrisLots of men, too.
John HarrisAnd men, yeah.
John HarrisThrough, whether it's through media, through education, through, I don't know, like, oftentimes, parents and relatives.
John HarrisAnd I do think that there are women like that who have a bit of feminism.
John HarrisThey're not full, you know, they're not the purple hair, you know, raging about abortion, but they are, like, they do, let's say they see marriage as a 50 50, you know, like, they're not really the helpmate of the husband.
John HarrisThey think of it as a project, that they're on an equal setting in the sense of, they are equal in the sense of worth, but I'm saying equal in the sense of, like, they should be able to call the shots in the marriage 50% of the time.
John HarrisI mean, this is a very common thought, and many of these people go to churches with good, orthodox statements of faith that have, uh, pastors who are preaching the Bible.
John HarrisAnd, um, I think what will happen is if, when they're exposed to truth in the scripture, they will bend.
John HarrisThat's really the key thing, is, like, it's not to.
John HarrisI don't want to vilify people just because they have feminist tendencies.
John HarrisUh, I I think that I would be more concerned about someone, uh, who, let's say they're only two inches off, like, or two, two clicks off from the biblical view, but they were unwilling to bend.
John HarrisI have less hope for that person than I do the purple hair raging feminist who's willing to bend a scripture, you know?
John HarrisSo I think that's the first thing.
John HarrisThe second group, though, I was thinking of is there are people who, and I've met them, who legitimately, I think, probably have gone through some abuse and possibly in the church in some cases.
John HarrisThe pastor was a hyper patriarchal, very assertive figure, but who was unfortunately abusive and sinful.
John HarrisAnd so they have an incorrect picture.
John HarrisAnd I think of it, I don't remember what shooting it was.
John HarrisI mean, the NRA does this a lot, but there was a shooting, and the NRA came out and basically said, the only thing that can stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.
John HarrisAnd I think of the same thing in this context.
John HarrisLike, the only thing that can really stop a bad pastor from doing evil things is a good pastor.
John HarrisLike, you have to.
John HarrisYour alternative is not just get rid of pastors, just get rid of male leadership.
John HarrisMen shouldn't run anything.
John HarrisI'm going to run to a female pastor, or I'm going to do my own thing with the Lord.
John HarrisThe solution to that is find a pastor who also takes initiative, but is actually good, cares about his flock, obeys those commands.
John HarrisSo throwing out the baby with the bathwater is something I see.
John HarrisAnd I've seen this all too often with some of the people raised in the most conservative fundamentalist type churches can be the most raging social justice warriors partially because of this.
John HarrisThere's another dynamic at play, too, I think, that causes this.
John HarrisBut that is one of the things I think often that happens is they saw things that they think they don't like, and then they overreact to it and just say, well, I guess these pagans over here who really hate what I grew up in, they must have the truth or something.
John HarrisAnd some of them, they find out pretty quickly that the pagans are.
John HarrisThe grass was not greener.
Will SpencerGrass is brown.
John HarrisYeah, interesting.
John HarrisI didn't think we were going to go down this rabbit hole, but this is interesting.
Will SpencerYeah.
Will SpencerI mean, I appreciate you saying that about bending to scripture, because I think that's a really important thing, that the social justice world wants to bend you to its gospel.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd it's very effective at doing that.
Will SpencerAnd I think we've all been enculturated in that.
Will SpencerAnd in the same way, like, we can hold the word and say, no, you're supposed to bend to this, and this bends the social justice gospel.
Will SpencerThis is what it's supposed to do.
Will SpencerSo I appreciate you framing it that way, because I think that's really important for both men and women, because being bent to the word of God is.
Will SpencerI don't know how to phrase this, but it's a great privilege in a way.
Will SpencerMaybe that's not the right word to describe it, but it's a gift, and to treasure that gift for men as well, so that you don't have to be a law unto yourself so that you can have a law to guide you.
Will SpencerWhat are you as a man using to guide yourself, if not God's law?
Will SpencerYour own.
Will SpencerDon't do that.
Will SpencerThat's not going to work out so well.
Will SpencerScripture warns you about that.
Will SpencerAnd the world is full of men who follow, who are a law unto themselves.
Will SpencerAnd so to say that to treasure the experience of being bent to God's word I is something that a lot of young men right now are discovering, because maybe they grew up fatherless or maybe they had absent father or whatever, all kinds of different reasons why young men are finding their way into various churches, multiple different denominations, not only reform theology.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerSo.
Will SpencerBut I'll take it.
John HarrisYeah.
Will SpencerAnd at the right, and at the same time, being bent to God's word is something that is documented to be very unpopular with women.
Will SpencerAnd so that's why I brought it up, because this is what's in the headlines today.
Will SpencerThis is what we're looking at in November.
Will SpencerAnd so I'm grateful to hear you say, like, no, we have to hold to these principles in God's word for how we shepherd our flock for who comes into our community.
Will SpencerWe can't bend our entire community to this person because this is what they're looking for.
Will SpencerThis is the book that we follow.
Will SpencerAnd to give christians the courage to stand up for that, discovering what sounds like the courage to stand up for that after God's word was the one that was, so to speak, was bent.
Will SpencerIn your experience in seminary, et cetera?
John HarrisYeah.
John HarrisThat seems to be the biggest dividing line.
John HarrisAre you willing to bend to God's word, or do you bend God's word to your own thinking and your own preferences?
John HarrisSo we need, obviously, men, as you said, that are convictional.
John HarrisAnd I think you're right.
John HarrisI think there is a stirring going on.
John HarrisI feel something gurgling up, and we just got to pray that the Lord nurtures this and that older men don't.
John HarrisOne of the things I noticed about the boomer generation, they tend to hold on to their positions for a very long time.
John HarrisThey don't like to, they don't like to retire as much as other generations.
John HarrisAnd my grandfathers, both my grandfathers, they retired, I don't know, in their maybe like when they were late seventies, 80, I don't know.
John HarrisI think seventies for one.
John HarrisBut what did they do for the rest of their lives?
John HarrisThey were your grandpas, like the normal grandpa.
John HarrisThey weren't trying to hold on to a position in control for a long time.
John HarrisAnd so my hope is that these young guys you're talking about, that they are nurtured, helped along, encouraged by older men who are in churches and christian organizations, the solid ones who do existential, and that there's not a clash there that they're welcomed in, even if their ideas are a little different.
John HarrisLike that both can come around the word of God and say, what does the word say and how should we apply it?
John HarrisAnd I think if that's the humility and the posture, we can really get through anything.
John HarrisI mean, as far, like any serious issue at least, like, we can really come up with solutions.
John HarrisAnd we don't need to be shooting at each other or I crossing swords.
John HarrisLike, there's a lot of unity, I think, that we can have, and I think we're still waiting to get there.
John HarrisI don't, I mean, hopefully, and I don't think this is the case.
John HarrisX social media is not necessarily the greatest barometer for this.
John HarrisYou know, if you looked at X, you would think that there's not a lot of unity right now.
John HarrisChristians are just fighting with each other all the time, sometimes solid brothers.
John HarrisBut I think that, and my hope is that actually there's a stirring going on, though, beyond that.
John HarrisPeople who aren't even on social media and stuff are discovering what the word of God teaches about all kinds of things that conflict with our modern understandings.
John HarrisAnd I hope that there's older people there to nurture, to guide, and then to place them in positions of authority, because that's what we need more than anything else, is male, solid male leadership in the church.
Will SpencerSo you actually mentioned something that a friend, I said, I'm interviewing John Harris from conversations that matter.
Will SpencerDo you guys have any questions?
Will SpencerAnd someone actually did give me a very interesting question.
Will SpencerHe asked, what can we do?
Will SpencerBecause there is a generational divide between the boomers who have been holding on for a while, and this younger generation that wants to try doing things in a new way, kind of scripturally all things being equal, there seems to be a sort of power struggle where it's like, hey, grandpa, with great respect, thank you very much for your time of service.
Will SpencerIt's time to let go and let the next generation come in and take over.
Will SpencerAnd it feels like in lots of different ways, all across the board, in America, perhaps even worldwide, there's a reluctance to let go and a holding on past the time.
Will SpencerAnd so what my friend was asking is, what can the younger generation and the ones younger than the boomers do to maybe try to get the boomers to let go a little bit and like, hey, you gotta pass this on now.
Will SpencerLike, we're grateful for you, and, like, you know, we need the keys.
John HarrisYeah, yeah, yeah.
John HarrisHow did Kamala Harris become the nominee?
John HarrisMaybe that's what we gotta.
John HarrisWhat was the strategy there?
John HarrisNo, I think the first thing that comes to mind for me is this is related to social media, but we can't slam each other.
John HarrisWe can disagree if we want to model good christian disagreement.
John HarrisThat's one thing I do see far too much slamming of, and I'm one to, I will slam people who are, in my opinion, belligerent fools, people who aren't necessarily even christians, but posing.
John HarrisI built my platform, I guess, on social media, a lot of it not knowing I was building anything.
John HarrisBut that's how it got built, uh, really going after some of these social justice compromised pastors.
John HarrisUm, and, uh, and sometimes I can be pretty strong with it.
John HarrisLike, what you're doing is wrong, your ideas are evil, whatever, but.
John HarrisBut I think when it comes to those who are, um, you know, they're not heretics.
John HarrisThey're, um.
John HarrisLike you just said, like, maybe it's just grandpa's holding on to the keys too long and he needs to stop driving.
John HarrisLike, I don't think we slam grandpa, and I don't think grandpa should slam us.
John HarrisThat's a really big turn off when grandpa starts, you know, he needs to be willing to give the keys up at some point and just enjoy his grandkids.
John HarrisI don't know.
John HarrisIt's a hard thing.
John HarrisI haven't thought about it, like, too deeply.
John HarrisI do see something, though, and without naming specific organizations, I do see that there are young guys who are starting organizations, I think, part, and churches, I think, partially because those opportunities are not being open to them in places where they perhaps should be open to them.
John HarrisAnd it seems to me, like, in the organizations, I'm being so careful here, aren't I?
John HarrisNot to name organizations, but in the organizations, some of which I am very familiar, where it's basically an industry built around a guy, a boomer, who's had a successful ministry of some kind.
John HarrisThe people who are filling those ranks tend to be, they tend to be people who follow the party line.
John HarrisThey're not necessarily the guys you want in leadership.
John HarrisThey are the people that you put in management positions.
John HarrisThey're managerial elites, is what they are.
John HarrisThey're riding the coattails of a guy who had success.
John HarrisAnd so there's really, when boomers end up dying and their organizations or their churches are left without them, it does leave a big hole.
John HarrisAnd so I'm leading up to this, but I think that if you're a boomer and you've had a successful ministry, you got a church, you got an organization.
John HarrisIf you're listening to this, please be thinking about the next generation and who is going to take your place when you're gone, and then start making that transition.
John HarrisStart giving them more authority.
John HarrisDo whatever you need to do to train them.
John HarrisBut they may be different than you in some ways.
John HarrisTheir leadership style may be different.
John HarrisThey're going to be ministering to a different kind of world in some ways.
John HarrisObviously, the essential, the core things are still going to be there.
John HarrisBut start doing that transfer and locate that person.
John HarrisDon't leave it up to people to figure out after you're dead or you have a heart attack and you didn't think you were going to die, don't.
John HarrisAnd don't just give it to people who are there because you're their bread and butter.
John HarrisYou know what I mean?
John HarrisLike, it's hard to explain this, but the christian institutions I've been at, there are just a lot of people that I know for a fact they probably would not be that successful outside of that hierarchy.
John HarrisIt's the only place that they feel they have authority and they've managed to work themselves into a position, I think, because they know what things to say to the person in charge.
John HarrisRight.
John HarrisAnd there's just.
John HarrisI don't know if it's a boomer thing.
John HarrisI really haven't thought about it deeply enough.
John HarrisI've wondered if it is, but when they die, it's like the organization's gonna die with them.
John HarrisLike, they just don't have great.
John HarrisThey don't have someone there to take their place for a great transition.
John HarrisOftentimes it's.
John HarrisI'm thinking of, like, either that movie the Hobbit, or, I guess there are three movies, but the one who's the guy, not wormtongue, that's from Lord of the Rings.
John HarrisBut the other, like, there's the king, and then there's that guy who, like, tells the king whatever he wants to hear, and he's, like, sort of in second command.
John HarrisI can't remember the name of the Hobbit character.
John HarrisYou haven't seen him?
Will SpencerNo.
John HarrisOh, man.
John HarrisBummer.
John HarrisOkay, so.
John HarrisBut, you know, like, it's the character who's kind of like, I guess in the world they would call it a suck up.
John HarrisI hate using that term.
John HarrisBut, like, someone who's a ladder climber but doesn't actually have the requisite character, virtue, ability to lead.
John HarrisWhen it comes to down to it, they're cushioned in a structure that allows them to operate with some authority but does not expose them to the dangers of actually being at the wheel of the ship.
John HarrisThat kind of person.
John HarrisDon't let those people near the steering wheel.
John HarrisAnd that takes some discernment, I suppose.
John HarrisBut just because someone flatters you, I mean, there's a lot of warnings in scripture about this.
John HarrisA flattering tongue.
John HarrisThat's not someone you should necessarily listen to.
John HarrisYou need to listen to somebody who's going to tell you the truth.
John HarrisAnd so choose your leaders wisely and start making that transition.
Will SpencerAmen.
Will SpencerSo you mentioned the documentary film work you've done.
Will SpencerAnd I wanted to get a chance that I know, like, we know from way downtown, so I wanted to get a chance because I watched your.
Will SpencerWe've already set up, upset a bunch of people, so let's upset a bunch more.
Will SpencerSo I wanted to talk to you about the 1609 documentary, which I watched and I actually really enjoyed.
Will SpencerLike, I can already feel the impact that that is going to have on my.
Will SpencerOn my thinking about american history and all of that.
Will SpencerSo maybe we.
Will SpencerMaybe we can talk about that for a little bit.
Will SpencerWe've let the boomers have their fun.
John HarrisYeah.
John Harris1607 project.com dot yeah.
John HarrisYeah, it's fine.
John Harris1607 is when the settlers of Jamestown came.
John HarrisFirst permanent english settlement in the new world.
John HarrisAnd this is obviously before 1620, when the pilgrims came, which is often what people think of when they think of the settlement of the United States.
John HarrisAnd we had a lot of significant things that happen in this country.
John HarrisChurches were built, communities were established up and down the James river.
John HarrisYou had the first, really the first elected representative government in the western hemisphere in the house of Burgesses in 1619.
John HarrisYou had the first.
John HarrisThanksgiving was 1619.
John HarrisThat's a year before the pilgrims came.
John HarrisAnd the pilgrims were trying to get there.
John HarrisThey wanted to go to Virginia.
John HarrisStorm blew them off course.
John HarrisSo we recenter Virginia in that story as the origin, as the headwaters of America, and then as the state that has probably contributed more to the american character, culture, ethos than any other state.
John HarrisAnd so we talk about political tradition, cuisine, music, all kinds of things, and hopefully leave people with a sense of pride, even if you're not from Virginia, a sense of, this is what America is.
John HarrisThis is what.
John HarrisEven if you're someone who's immigrated to the United States, this is what I'm tapping into.
John HarrisThis is the story that I'm part of.
John HarrisAnd we don't want to forget some of the true and valuable things that I think have been somewhat overlooked.
John HarrisSo that's what the 1607 project is about.
Will SpencerSo what were some of the things, I mean, from having watched the documentary, understanding the role that Virginia played in the american founding and the specific culture of Virginia, the kind of men that it cultivated and then its encounter with, I'm guessing the north or a more northern culture was like, oh, this is very interesting because I grew up in Arizona, and so we're out here in the west, and I think in some sense, kind of a little bit disconnected from what it's like on the east coast.
Will SpencerI probably very disconnected.
Will SpencerBut certainly I could see from my own education the way that the emphasis tends to be on more of the actors in the northern part of the story and less on the influence of the south.
Will SpencerWe don't really talk about that part.
Will SpencerAnd so I found it really interesting to sort of have all the men that you interviewed lay out the case like.
Will SpencerNo, particularly virginian culture and southern culture as well, played a much bigger role in America up to a particular point than I think we realize.
John HarrisYeah, I think it's seven of the first 13 presidents, or twelve presidents were from Virginia.
John HarrisGeorge Washington, obviously, Virginia.
John HarrisAnd Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence, was really behind the american education with the University of Virginia.
John HarrisHe was a pioneer in that he wrote the bill of religious toleration in Virginia.
John HarrisHim and James Madison.
John HarrisJames Madison, we call him the father of the Constitution.
John HarrisHe's Virginian.
John HarrisPatrick Henry's Virginian.
John HarrisThe Revolutionary War, the war for Independence ends in Virginia.
John HarrisAnd that's where Cornwallis is.
John HarrisOr now I'm free.
John HarrisYeah, Cornwallis is defeated.
John HarrisYou have even the first president of the articles under the articles of Confederation.
John HarrisPeyton Randolph is virginian, first Supreme Court justice.
John HarrisJohn Marshall is virginian.
John HarrisSo Virginians had an outsized influence on the country's beginnings.
John HarrisAnd so just a few things you had asked of the important, true and valuable things that come from Virginia.
John HarrisWell, I think you have, as you rightly already said, a leadership model that comes out of Virginia that is very unique.
John HarrisYou see more the management type, managerial business, modern model, I think come more out of New England, and there's more development with factories and infrastructure and those kinds of things.
John HarrisBut in Virginia, you have more of an older, more medieval, I would say, type of leadership model.
John HarrisIt's more cavalier.
John HarrisAnd the family, the family lives on the farm or the plantation.
John HarrisIt's managed in connection with the family.
John HarrisAnd there's not a disconnection between your labor and yourself.
John HarrisYou are part of the land that you're living in.
John HarrisAnd Virginians very much saw their political duties when they went into political office as part of their social duties and part of their family duties.
John HarrisThese things were all connected.
John HarrisOf course, I'm going to serve in a political position, and I'm not going to take pay for it because this is my duty.
John HarrisAnd so duty was very important to people like George Washington and Robert E.
John HarrisLee that affected the way they even did warfare, this total war stuff that you get in the civil war from General Sherman.
John HarrisUnfortunately, some of the things we even have done in World War Two.
John HarrisAnd since then, you don't see that in the south as much.
John HarrisThere's an honor code.
John HarrisThere's a hierarchy.
John HarrisThere's an honor code in some ways.
John HarrisAnd I've said this before, I've gotten in trouble for it with people because they think, well, they had slaves, so you can't say this, but I have said they were kind of the high point of christian civilization.
John HarrisAnd what I mean by that is that they had in their society, it was so ingrained with biblical virtues.
John HarrisBiblical thinking doesn't mean that there weren't sins.
John HarrisIt doesn't mean that there weren't.
John HarrisSometimes they were out of step with all societies have their problems, but I think more so than other societies.
John HarrisThey had reached a point of trying to honor what the Bible taught as far as the relationships between men and women, the relationships between those in authority, in labor, and those who slaves or not even slaves, just people who worked for you.
John HarrisThere was a respect there for people.
John HarrisAnd it's people.
John HarrisThey're not numbers.
John HarrisThey're not machines.
John HarrisThey're people.
John HarrisSo I think Virginians can teach us how to live.
John HarrisI think the music, that's one of the aspects we talked about music and cuisine.
John HarrisI mean, we get barbecue from the south.
John HarrisAnd we had Lance Nadihara, culinary chef, talk about that in the documentary and we get really all forms of american music traced back to Jamestown in some way, according to Tom Daniel, who is a professor of music, who talked a lot about that, and I found that fascinating.
John HarrisThere's more I can share on that because we obviously talked a lot that didn't, things that didn't make it into the documentary, but a lot of these things that confer identity to us, like.
John HarrisLike art, like social mores and habits and ways to interact with each other, these.
John HarrisAll of these things, I think, are under attack in America.
John HarrisI was just seeing an article the other day that guys don't even know how to approach girls.
John HarrisLike, they don't even know what to say.
John HarrisThey're afraid.
John HarrisYou've probably covered this with your masculinity stuff.
John HarrisWell, there was a society at one point in this country we can stretch back and remember that had very firm guidelines.
John HarrisMen knew exactly what to say, exactly what to do.
John HarrisThose are the social codes, social mores, those kinds of things.
John HarrisAnd we see a lot of that.
John HarrisI think in Virginia, it was medieval in a way.
John HarrisThere were lords and ladies, like I said before, hierarchy.
John HarrisI think the federalism, we focus on that quite a bit in their political tradition is very important.
John HarrisThis idea that local communities have the right to govern themselves and decide what's best for them without the interference of those outside their communities.
John HarrisAnd so this really did give us the federal compact that 13 states could live separately and differently and still have a shared government and a shared I alliance on things like trade and immigration and war.
John HarrisI think that that localism that is most often associated with Thomas Jefferson still exists not just in Virginia, but across the United States, across even the Midwest and other places where small towns, they will even change their zoning laws and things to keep things the way that they are.
John HarrisA conservative posture.
John HarrisAnd Virginia is also more traditional.
John HarrisThey're more christian than what eventually happened to the north.
John HarrisAnd so the south has been able, they're called the Bible belt.
John HarrisThey've been able to hang on to traditional values and orthodox doctrine.
John HarrisSo, I mean, I could probably go on and on, but these are all things, looking back, that we get from Virginia.
John HarrisThey weren't aggressive abroad, the Virginians.
John HarrisThey wished to be more or less left alone to themselves.
John HarrisI think there's just a lot of wisdom that we can glean, but we don't because we tend to center everything on New England, and that's the story of America, and that's not the story of America.
John HarrisSo we wanted to kind of right the ship.
Will SpencerIn all of my travels the sense that I've gotten that the three most misunderstood parts of the world are eastern Europe, Mexico, and the american south.
Will SpencerI think those are.
John HarrisWow, really?
Will SpencerYep.
John HarrisI'm kind of curious about Eastern Europe and Mexico.
Will SpencerYeah, I mean, I think because Eastern Europe is kind of between two worlds, right.
Will SpencerIt's between Russia, former Soviet Union, and Western Europe and that whole region of the world.
Will SpencerIt's not really well understood, kind of who they are, what they're about.
Will SpencerMaybe we've heard about some wars and stuff that are happening there.
Will SpencerBut what is eastern european culture?
Will SpencerI don't think it's well understood.
Will SpencerIt's just that people don't usually go there.
Will SpencerThey're not big travel destinations.
Will SpencerIt's like this part of the world that played a really central role in some ways in the 20th century, and then everyone just kind of forgot about it.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd Mexico, because Mexico is one of those countries that's trying to.
Will SpencerThat's trying to kind of assert itself on the world stage and is struggling with some very deeply ingrained social, political issues.
Will SpencerFor example, the drug trade, for example.
Will SpencerThat's just an example, but it's struggling with who it's trying to be.
Will SpencerAnd so the worst parts of Mexico get highlighted to the world when in fact, there's lots of beauty in the country as there is in lots of Latin America.
Will SpencerIt's just that Mexico's problems have been blown out to such a large proportion, really, in terms of scale and in terms of impact.
John HarrisBut real quick side note, because I was in Mexico, I went to, you know, I did the typical thing.
John HarrisI went to Cancun, right?
John HarrisBut then I.
John HarrisWe drove, but we did a lot of driving while we were there.
John HarrisWe went to Chichen Itza and, you know, drove, drove back through some small towns and stuff.
John HarrisSo I was just going to say, it's funny because I think there was like a cartel, like a shooting or something that happened that week.
John HarrisAnd there were people in our family who were kind of like.
John HarrisOr maybe it was their friends.
John HarrisIt was friends, I guess, but they were like, oh, you're like, hey, be careful down there.
John HarrisAnd I'm thinking, we are so safe.
John HarrisYou know what I mean?
John HarrisLike Mexico.
John HarrisYou're right.
John HarrisI realized that when I was there.
John HarrisThis is nowhere near or like the border towns where the violence is going on.
John HarrisSo anyway, sorry, continue.
Will SpencerNo, that's exactly.
Will SpencerIt is that Mexico is such a complicated country, but its problems are magnified because of its problems being so related to America.
Will SpencerDrug trade, mass migration, et cetera.
Will SpencerIt taps into the american media system that then broadcasts it around the world, because America exports news, we don't import it.
Will SpencerSo we're exporting all this bad news about Mexico.
Will SpencerBut I think the country is much, much more than that.
Will SpencerBut usually people don't explore it to that degree.
Will SpencerAnd the third one is the American south.
Will SpencerAnd I think the American south has gotten such a terrible reputation.
Will SpencerIt's been slandered, really, in the media as a result of lots of long, old hurt feelings over slavery, that people don't understand what the American south was about.
Will SpencerThey don't understand what it is about.
Will SpencerAnd it's really a shame because as I've discovered for myself and as your documentary speaks to the south is an important part of american history, american independence, early american history, and that the focus of everything since the 18 hundreds has been exclusively on this one problem, taking an anachronistic viewpoint on it, holding people to a moral standard 200 years ago that they didn't hold it papers over this entire region.
Will SpencerNot to say that it's all sunshine and rainbows there, obviously, it has its own problems.
Will SpencerGuess what, so does the north.
Will SpencerGuess what?
Will SpencerSo does the Midwest.
Will SpencerGuess what, so does the Southwest.
Will SpencerSo to watch the documentary and to get that view into the American south and Virginia during these formative times was like, it was very eye opening.
John HarrisOh, I'm so glad.
John HarrisI mean, that is one of the reasons that we made it, was to challenge people's assumptions about Virginia and the south in general.
John HarrisAnd you're so right.
John HarrisI remember when my wife and I moved down to North Carolina, and then we went to Virginia and lived there for a few years.
John HarrisShe had been raised up in, she was in a country area, but with a very standard viewpoint that those are where all the racists live that hate black people, hate anyone different than them.
John HarrisThey're bigots on everything.
John HarrisThey're just bigots.
John HarrisAnd she thought, well, I'm going to just see a lot of that when I go down there.
John HarrisAnd she was just shocked.
John HarrisShe was shocked that overturned all the stereotypes for her.
John HarrisAnd it's a very common story.
John HarrisAnd I remember one of my first jobs in New York was working with a bunch of older italian guys out of town.
John HarrisAnd I would hear a lot of language that was just racially insensitive at times.
John HarrisAnd I remember those same guys, though, and they would trash the south.
John HarrisYou know, the south is racist.
John HarrisThe south, they're lazy.
John HarrisAll the, every time they were going to go on vacation, where did they all go?
John HarrisThey went to South Carolina.
John HarrisThey went to Georgia.
John HarrisThey went to North Carolina.
John HarrisAnd obviously, on one level, this is propaganda that you have to repeat.
John HarrisYou have to believe.
John HarrisOn another level, I think that people don't really believe it.
John HarrisThey know that there's something not true about that narrative.
John HarrisAt least it's a cartoon.
John HarrisIt's overly simplistic, I'll say.
John HarrisAnd so that's one of the things we were hoping to point out, was that we do talk about slavery, but we talk about some of the.
John HarrisI mean, I mentioned barbecue before.
John HarrisI mean, this is a positive contribution.
John HarrisThere's a lot of things to be proud of that all Americans can take pride in musical genres like jazz and blues.
John HarrisI mean, we wouldn't have some of the stuff we have if it weren't for the interaction with peoples from Africa who came here, whether as slaves or later on, freemen who were able to gain their freedom and make contributions.
John HarrisSo I dont think we need to be guilty about it.
John HarrisVirginia, in particular, was one of the first colonies trying to outlaw the slave trade, penalizing the slave trade.
John HarrisIt came very close at one point to outlawing slavery, as I recall, and doing.
John HarrisWe didn't.
John HarrisI don't think this part made it into the documentary because we, you know, you have to choose what you're going to keep and not.
John HarrisBut it was.
John HarrisI believe it was the Nat Turner rebellion that was a big.
John HarrisIt made a big impact in the legislature because it scared every.
John HarrisThat was one of the things, too, in context, there's.
John HarrisDuring the federal period in american history, a lot of southerners were afraid that the northern abolitionists were going to cause slave insurrections and these kinds of things.
John HarrisAnd so they didn't want to encourage or fan the flames of that.
John HarrisBut you do see the moral will in the south to end this institution on multiple levels.
John HarrisYou see it in the confederate constitution.
John HarrisThey outlawed the slave trade.
John HarrisIn that document.
John HarrisYou see it in 1865, at the end of the war, Jefferson Davis signed a law that said slaves, if they fought for the Confederacy, could gain their freedom.
John HarrisAnd unfortunately, there wasn't enough time for that to do much for the Confederacy, unfortunately for Davis.
John HarrisBut the moral will to do some of these things was there.
John HarrisThere was just, I think, a sense in which this was an inherited thing, and to end it, it needed to be ended responsibly.
John HarrisAnd the way the abolitionists wanted to approach it was just not a responsible way to end the practice.
John HarrisAnd it ended up, honestly, in the worst possible scenario, with a war torn region and about a million slaves, it's estimated, starving or getting diseases and dying from it.
John HarrisAnd that's a sobering thing.
John HarrisI mean, every other country in the world seemed to be able to end this without a war, and the United States is the exception.
John HarrisEvery other western country, at least.
John HarrisSo we did focus on that somewhat.
John HarrisWe focused on the christianization of the slaves.
John HarrisI mean, that's another positive thing.
John HarrisI mean, people like Samuel Davies really did a great missionary work among the slaves, teaching them Christianity, things that they did not know they would not have been exposed to in Africa.
John HarrisI mean, this is one of the greatest.
John HarrisI don't even know what you want to call it.
John HarrisIt's a missionary.
John HarrisIt wasn't meant to be a missionary effort, but it became a means by which the Lord gave the gospel to a people group.
John HarrisAnd so, if I remember correctly, I think we do talk a little bit about the slavery conditions and some of the misnomers about what slavery was like and that kind of thing, but it's not really meant to be an apologetic for Virginia's participation in slavery or anything like that.
John HarrisIt's really more just to give you a sense of, like, you know, good, bad, ugly.
John HarrisThis is who we are.
John HarrisAnd that us, that we.
John HarrisThat possessive pronoun is what we want to give to people.
John HarrisThat you have a story, we have a story.
John HarrisThis is part of that.
John HarrisYou're not told this part of it, but this is part of that story.
John HarrisIt makes sense of some of the things that you're seeing today in your country.
John HarrisAnd because of that, because it belongs to us, we ought to preserve it.
John HarrisWe ought to gain lessons from it.
John HarrisAnd we shouldn't be tearing down all these monuments.
John HarrisWe've torn down hundreds of them in this country.
John HarrisAnd it's evil, it's wrong.
John HarrisAnd I think people hopefully walk away after seeing something like that, and they realize that people like Robert E.
John HarrisLee, these were upstanding, good men with a lot of noble things to learn, that we could learn from them today.
Will SpencerNo, thank you for saying all that.
Will SpencerOne of the things that has been happening since 2020 is everyone has been questioning everything.
Will SpencerBecause 2020 was like, for a lot of people who were awake, it's like, now would be a good time to start asking questions about everything.
Will SpencerAnd one of the things that hasn't been happening is people will go through and they will debunk some mainstream narratives, and then they'll think that that's the end of the process, and then they won't go any further to try and actually determine what did happen.
Will SpencerIt's like, well, that's not true.
Will SpencerAnd so everything I've been told is lie.
Will SpencerThrow it all out.
Will SpencerIt's like, well, hold on.
Will SpencerWhy don't you try taking that a few steps further?
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd so it's possible to look at an institution like slavery and say, like, the picture was more complicated than that because the debunking would say, like, oh, no, I'm just being an apologist for it.
Will SpencerLike, no, no, no.
Will SpencerI'm not being an apologist for it.
Will SpencerI'm trying to paint the picture that when you have millions of people inside the country, maybe you have to propose other ways to liberate them other than a war that devastates both the north and the south and everyone caught up in it.
Will SpencerMaybe there was another way to handle that problem that would have had less of a devastating impact on all involved.
Will SpencerAnd I think that that's a completely okay question to ask, but it makes people really upset.
John HarrisWell, I can tell you why.
John HarrisI.
John HarrisI think this is my theory.
Will SpencerPlease.
John HarrisI think, well, if you've, let's say you've devoted your life to something, right, and then you find out in the end it was all worthless, or there was a better way to go, right.
John HarrisYou're going to be awfully defensive about the work you put in.
John HarrisThere's six, over 600,000 men that gave their lives in that conflict, not to mention everyone who, in the south, because they're the ones left in the ruins, died, civilians who died as a result of the total war policies that strip the land of.
John HarrisI mean, it's horrible.
John HarrisSome of the things that happened strip the land of the crops and the animals, and there was nothing to eat.
John HarrisAnd you ever want to read books on that, read like, Karen Stokes has a book on what happened when Sherman's army got into Columbia, South Carolina.
John HarrisIt's called legion of devils.
John HarrisAnd, I mean, ripping the earrings out of slaves, earth women's ears, raping slaves.
John HarrisI mean, there are some horrific stories about what Sherman's army did.
John HarrisAnd this has caused, I think, also a lot of the political problems that we have today in regards to race and so forth, because now you have a class of people who are used to relying on their masters for their economic means, and now that relationship is cut.
John HarrisIt doesn't exist anymore.
John HarrisAnd instead, now they're relying on essentially politicians that the freedmen's bureau, the Union League.
John HarrisI mean, there was these organizations we only hear about the Klan, but you had these other organizations that existed in the south that were the Freedmen's bureau especially, that were trying.
John HarrisThey presented themselves as the ones who were going to help these former slaves.
John HarrisBut what ended up happening was there was a dependency created, and that dependency is with us to this day.
John HarrisWe still have that dependency.
John HarrisWe still have a political party, basically, and now couple it with generational welfare and everything, and how bad that's gotten.
John HarrisYou're left without dignity in many of these urban communities where the men don't work and they don't know anything else, this is what they've been raised with.
John HarrisAnd in slavery, at least in the best case scenario, and Fogel and Ingram say 60% to 80% of the slave narratives, they say that they don't say negative things, which is kind of eye opening to people today.
John HarrisHow could that happen?
John HarrisBut in the best case scenarios, there was at least some dignity in work, and you don't even have that with welfare.
John HarrisAnd so I'm not saying that in every way, welfare is worse than slavery or anything like that, but what I'm trying to say is that we've gotten into a position where race relations were poisoned after that war and dependency was created, and we've never recovered from it.
John HarrisThis has always been a sore point of contention in the country, and so I'm just pointing that out to say that I think what you said is 100% right.
John HarrisThere were other ways of approaching this, and I think southerners have been blamed for every problem related to this when it's just not accurate.
John HarrisIt was northeasterners who brought the slaves here.
John HarrisThey were the merchants.
John HarrisThis is an american problem that has been created, and a lot of, frankly, not great decisions that have brought us to this point.
John HarrisAnd it's not like the south should have to be the ones that are blamed for the whole entire thing.
John HarrisAnd Virginia stands out to me not only because of its significance, but because of its moral sense.
John HarrisIt was the cavalier culture that existed there as being a particularly noble place for a long time.
John HarrisAnd even when it came to the civil war, Virginia, when they entered the civil war, you can read their document and their secession document, and their declaration says that they are seceding because of an invasion.
John HarrisEssentially, they're going to defend the states that are being.
John HarrisThat are, well, there's a call to arms.
John HarrisVirginia said, we're not supplying troops.
John HarrisWe're going to defend the lower south because we don't want to live in that.
John HarrisAnd so they always had, I think, a high sense of duty, a high sense of justice, and also prudence mixed in with that.
John HarrisWhat is possible, so what is right and what is possible.
John HarrisAnd this came from a very mature, I would say, class of men in the planner aristocracy.
John HarrisAnd we just don't even know what that looks like today.
John HarrisWe don't have leaders like that today that are so concerned with the well being of their families, of their people, and including, even if they had slaves, they're slaves.
John HarrisAnd not just their humans, the humans that they knew in their lives, but their animals, their crops, their land.
John HarrisWe need to get back to that.
John HarrisWe need, I think, men who take their stewardship, the dominion mandate and stewardship very seriously.
John HarrisAnd that's one of the things that the documentary highlights.
John HarrisI think that I really was proud of men like I mentioned Robert E.
John HarrisLee, but I think also men like Thomas Jefferson and very prudential man, people like Lewis and Clark, very brave in their exploration of the west.
John HarrisThey're Virginians and men like George Washington, who also exercised a lot of prudence.
John HarrisSo anyway, I could ramble on, but that's really the documentary.
John HarrisThat's what we're trying to communicate.
John HarrisAnd on the subject of slavery, there's no exception there.
John HarrisThe Virginians seem to have cooler heads, in my opinion, about the whole thing and hotheads around them.
John HarrisBut I don't know exactly how we get back.
John HarrisBut I know the first step to getting back to that leadership class is letting people know that it once existed.
Will SpencerI think one of those steps would be like, the north has driven the agenda, and maybe now would be a good time.
Will SpencerThe north says, okay, so if I were from the north, I would say, okay, all of this noble virtue, value, stewardship is great, and they treated human beings as property.
Will SpencerAnd so what they're saying is, that's hypocritical.
Will SpencerRight?
Will SpencerSo that's hypocritical.
Will SpencerOkay, cool.
Will SpencerSo I'll grant the point, but now why don't we take a look at the ways the north is hypocritical, which are multifarious.
Will SpencerSo if we're going to with a measure that you measure, it'll be measured back to you.
Will SpencerAnd I think now, in the same collectivist, we need the big hand of government to solve all problems, which was kind of the big coming out party of the civil war, is to say, okay, so now we see this great concern and compassion and empathy for humanity, and you have homeless fentanyl zombies walking around in your streets.
Will SpencerRight?
Will SpencerLike, how compassionate.
Will SpencerHow compassionate is that?
Will SpencerRight?
John HarrisI mentioned before, though, the north, the northeasterners are the ones who brought the slaves.
John HarrisAnd the worst conditions of all of slavery was during the middle passage on the slave boat.
John HarrisSo if you want to talk about treating people like property and the conditions being horrific.
John HarrisI would say the north probably bears more blame even in that.
John HarrisAnd I'm not about spreading blame, but I'm just saying if you're going to make the accusation, you at least need to consider that and then also consider what some even called wage slavery, where a lot of immigrants coming into the north really were forced into conditions that would be worse than the average slave in the south.
John HarrisAnd there's many foreign observers that actually said as much that when they would travel north, travel south, that the slaves on average, seem to have a better life than many of the wage slaves in the north who, it's great.
John HarrisYou have freedom.
John HarrisYou can go anywhere you want.
John HarrisGuess what?
John HarrisThere's nowhere to go.
John HarrisAnd the conditions that you're working in are subhuman.
John HarrisI mean, they are just monotonous, long hours, child labor.
John HarrisI think some of these notions, I understand some of these notions.
John HarrisBut like, slavery, and this is not about.
John HarrisI know this whole thing's not about slavery, but I would just say this.
John HarrisSlavery has been around since, until modern times.
John HarrisEvery civilization has had slavery, and every civilization, they would look at you in ancient times like you had two heads.
John HarrisIf you went to them and be like, I can't believe human or humans are property.
John HarrisThey'd say, our children are property.
John HarrisYou know, they would like, they belong to us, not to you.
John HarrisRight?
John HarrisThat's right.
John HarrisThey saw the dependency was everywhere.
John HarrisIn pre modern societies, we didn't have a modern state that just gave you a safety net.
John HarrisAnd so now what we have, just to put things in perspective, we have this modern state that gives you the safety net.
John HarrisGuess what else this modern state does, though?
John HarrisIt has a prison system, which is basically slavery.
John HarrisThey get work from you and they don't have to pay you.
John HarrisWhat would they give you?
John Harris$1 an hour in some of the.
John HarrisBut you can't go anywhere.
John HarrisYou're in prison.
John HarrisRight.
John HarrisThat's very.
John HarrisThat's not really biblical.
John HarrisIt's not a biblical model.
John HarrisAnd obviously the 13th amendment leaves that out because that's the kind of slavery they allow.
John HarrisYou also have, obviously, sex slavery.
John HarrisThere's a few films that have finally focused on this going on.
John HarrisYou have the fact that when we go into Walmart's or targets, hopefully we don't go into targets, but they have the clothing and stuff we buy.
John HarrisSome of that is sweatshop labor.
John HarrisI mean, it might as well be slave labor.
John HarrisWe have a welfare system that has generational dependency.
John HarrisI mean, just look around you at all the things that would be in many ways morally similar or equivalent or economically similar to slavery.
John HarrisAnd they're everywhere.
John HarrisWe have civil slavery that we're worried about now, really.
John HarrisWe have an all powerful federal government that views you as a number.
John HarrisAnd as they increase their power over your life and take care of your healthcare and everything else, you become a slave to them.
John HarrisI mean, that's essentially what happens.
John HarrisI mean, proverbs even says debt slavery.
John HarrisHow much debt is the average American in and how much is our national debt?
John HarrisSo you see what I'm saying?
John HarrisIt's just to take this one thing and say, well, that's the only, as if that's the only version of slavery that exists.
John HarrisAnd it was unique to this one region.
John HarrisAnd that's why they're uniquely horrible people.
John HarrisAnd that's why we can just dismiss christians because that was the Bible belt.
John HarrisYou have to ignore everything you're living around.
John HarrisYou're living around trash world, you know?
John HarrisAnd so I don't have patience for that anymore.
John HarrisI get in trouble for saying these kinds of things with some people.
John HarrisBut it's like the question I have at the bottom of it is like, do we actually care about people and their condition?
John HarrisKnowing we live in an imperfect world and not everyone's going to have, we're never going to reach equality in the sense of like, not everyone's going to have the same economic income or ability to get an income like that.
John HarrisWe're just never going to happen.
John HarrisSo, granted, we live in that world with differences between peoples and different situations that arise at different historical times.
John HarrisDo we care about people's conditions or do we care about their status?
John HarrisSo it's condition versus status.
John HarrisAnd the Virginians, I think they uniquely cared about people's conditions.
John HarrisYou see that sense even in letters that you read from any of the pick any famous Virginian and Patrick Henry and when he would travel and his concern for back home and how is everyone doing?
John HarrisHow were the slaves?
John HarrisThere was just such a responsibility that he took over what he believed God had given him to steward.
John HarrisSo their condition meant something to him.
John HarrisJefferson, the same thing with his slave.
John HarrisJohn Randolph, same thing with his slaves.
John HarrisThey were very concerned about their condition, whereas I think in the north you had developing, and now we're all living in this to some extent, an obsession with status, that we can all be equally free and miserable and destitute.
John HarrisAnd that's just fine because at least we're all equal.
John HarrisAt least we all can vote.
John HarrisAt least we all have the same rights, even if it's a dismal situation, then the status seems to be more important.
John HarrisI'm hoping in the project, when people watch the documentary, they can walk away and they get a sense of what Virginia was like, what the people there valued, what their priorities were in life, that they could smell the roses, enjoy the.
John HarrisThe finer things of God's gift, because they had you, their humanity.
John HarrisAnd it wasn't just about ideology, abstractions, nuts and bolts, and gaining a profit of some kind, a numerical value.
John HarrisIt was really more just about enjoying a good life and what's the best way we can enjoy that good life in the order that God has set up for us.
John HarrisThat's how I try to measure my life.
John HarrisI study these men because I want to be like them in those ways, even though they came from a very different time with different conditions.
John HarrisAnd I wouldn't have agreed with all the different relationships they had set up, but I want to understand a sense from them of how to live and how to manage things and how not to lose myself in a very task oriented mindset, which is, I think, what we have today a lot.
John HarrisBut to really see deeply into the purpose behind things and value people for.
Will SpencerPeople, it makes me think that there's something very important about the men of the south in a way that can inform american men today.
Will SpencerLike, these men are part of who you are, too, right?
Will SpencerThis papered over part of american culture, american history.
Will SpencerWhat's actually been hidden is what you just described.
Will SpencerWho were the gentlemen of the south?
Will SpencerAll we hear is that, oh, they just own slaves, so they're absolutely moral abominations in every possible way, and don't ever go looking again.
Will SpencerBut in fact, the honor that was held in the south, I think it issues from a scotch irish kind of thing.
Will SpencerWhat I've heard is that in the early american founding, there were actually old european and british social divisions that were informing a lot of that.
Will SpencerI think Brett McKay, who runs art of manliness, that podcast and blog, he did a great book called what is honor?
Will SpencerAnd there's a section in that book about where the southern sense of honor came from.
Will SpencerAnd I think he said it came from the Scotch Irish.
John HarrisAnd like, where, yeah, cavalier.
John HarrisBut the south is a mix.
John HarrisYou know, in Appalachia, you have Scots Irish, and they have an honor culture, and.
John HarrisAnd then the cavaliers also have their own honor culture, a very high sense of hierarchy in that honor culture.
John HarrisSo there was a dashingness and just, I don't know how you would describe it, but like a regal's probably too strong a word, but they had a command, you know, when they entered the room, they had a certain command to them and a sense of orderliness and decency, and they were dashing.
John HarrisI don't know how else to say it.
John HarrisLike, you don't have the same figures as much in the north, at least by the time you get to the civil war period, as much.
John HarrisAnd I think when we go from.
John HarrisReally, you could see this from the knight to the cavalier to the cowboy.
John HarrisThat's sort of the.
John HarrisBecause the cowboy, too.
John HarrisI know you're in Arizona, so you're probably more familiar in some ways.
John HarrisI don't know if there's still kind of a cowboy culture out there in Phoenix area.
John HarrisI mean, you're in an urban setting.
John HarrisBut cowboys always were portrayed, at least in popular media, as having an honor code.
John HarrisAnd that really comes from the cavalier and then the knights before that, there's chivalry.
John HarrisJust the north didn't have it as much.
John HarrisEven the dueling culture, you know, which is often very misunderstood, too, that came from a sense of a high sense of honor and that there were some things worth fighting and dying for, you know, so it wasn't something you entered into lightly.
Will SpencerAnd I thought that was one of the inspiring parts of the documentary, was to paint the picture of the average southern man.
Will SpencerLike, cowboys were many things, but they're not usually, like, dashing.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerCowboys are, like, strong.
John HarrisThey're rugged, right?
Will SpencerYeah, rugged.
Will SpencerYeah.
Will SpencerLike, stoic.
Will SpencerYou know, I don't know if they'd ever describe themselves that way.
Will SpencerBut the dashing southern gentlemen, like, gone with the wind rhett.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerLike something like that.
Will SpencerThat is an american, exclusively american archetype that doesn't exist in our culture anymore precisely because of the overemphasis on the historical conditions of slavery.
Will SpencerAnd so Americans are cut off from their own, part of their own history before the civil war to understand this is part of who we are.
Will SpencerAnd so that's what I mean when I say, like, it's just a very misunderstood part of the world.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd maybe some of I haven't spent that much time in the south.
Will SpencerI have been to Virginia.
Will SpencerIt's beautiful.
Will SpencerBeen to Raleigh and driven through the countryside.
Will SpencerIt's one of my favorite drives ever.
Will SpencerSun was setting this golden mist in the air.
John HarrisI was like, oh, where were you coming from?
John HarrisFrom Virginia to Raleigh.
John HarrisYou were driving, so from something?
Will SpencerYeah, yeah, something like that.
Will SpencerWhere was I?
Will SpencerI was visiting.
John HarrisNo, I'm wondering if you were, like, on the Blue Ridge parkway or, you know, like, by the Shenandoah mountains or something.
Will SpencerI've driven the Blue Ridge Parkway.
Will SpencerYes.
John HarrisOh, that's stunning.
Will SpencerYeah, yeah.
Will SpencerAnd so, like, it's just.
Will SpencerIt was one of my favorite parts.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerOf the country.
Will SpencerAnd so.
Will SpencerAnd so when I was driving through that area, working on my own documentary, actually.
John HarrisOh, I didn't know you had one.
Will SpencerYeah.
Will SpencerSo the renaissance of men was originally supposed to be a multi part documentary series.
John HarrisOh.
Will SpencerOh, yeah.
Will SpencerI can send you.
Will SpencerI did a trailer and a whole break.
Will SpencerYeah.
Will SpencerI'm very proud of the work that I did there.
Will SpencerAnd of all the men that I interviewed, I think interviewed.
Will SpencerIt was a 20 in 2021.
Will SpencerI drove, what, 14,000 miles across the country.
Will SpencerYeah.
Will SpencerAnd did 21 interviews, 108 days.
Will SpencerI didn't come home for 100 days.
Will SpencerAnd so.
Will SpencerBut I did all these interviews, and then one by one, all the men that I interviewed, you know, had these major personal crises, so God spared me from putting out this documentary with my name on it.
Will SpencerExcuse me.
John HarrisOh, my goodness.
Will SpencerYeah, yeah, I'll send.
Will SpencerIt's awesome.
Will SpencerSo that's pretty fun.
Will SpencerSo, anyway, so I got to drive, as I was driving through that area, and that was my experience.
Will SpencerI'm like, that was confirmation for me that this part of the country is very misunderstood.
Will SpencerAnd to bring out that cavalier spirit, to bring out that tradition, to bring out that honor, there's something in that for american men today that we're so forced with the New York mindset, the New York, DC, Boston kind of way of being.
Will SpencerWell, what is it?
Will SpencerIn a more rural, traditional, honorable setting, like Jeff Wright from backwoods belief.
John HarrisOh, yeah, yeah.
John HarrisWell, let me give you, like, just a real, real quick story.
John HarrisI was out in the middle of nowhere, Virginia, in the Shenandoah Valley, and someone asked me there.
John HarrisI was in someone's house, and they said, okay, so you're probably used to when you're somewhere in the south, generally, it's where you're from.
John HarrisIn the northeast, it's, what do you do for a living?
John HarrisAnd in California, it's, what's your hobby?
John HarrisRight.
John HarrisLike, what do you like to do?
John HarrisThese are like, I've lived in all three areas, and that's what I notice.
John HarrisAnd it's like, your identity is confirmed through these things.
John HarrisIn California, it's hobbies.
John HarrisSo, anyway, I was in this rural area in Virginia, and the guy asked me, who are your people?
John HarrisWhich is a little different than where are you from?
John HarrisBut it's kind of getting at the same thing.
John HarrisBut he said, who are your people?
John HarrisAnd I turned to my friend.
John HarrisMy friend had been raised in the Shenandoah Valley, and I said, well, I mean, I'm not from here.
John HarrisAnd I was like.
John HarrisAnd so after we left, I said, what did he mean by that exactly?
John HarrisAnd he.
John HarrisHe goes, well, he's like, you know, your name is Harris, and there's probably some harrises that have settled in that area, but he wants to know, like, are you with those harrises?
John HarrisLike, there's a few different last names, and they have reputations, you know, they have.
John HarrisAnd so, like, I don't know.
John HarrisIt just kind of threw me.
John HarrisI was like, wow, that's what a wonderful thing to.
John HarrisAnd what a beautiful thing to ask someone, who are your people?
John HarrisYou know?
John HarrisAnd what a sad thing.
John HarrisProbably for some people, it'd probably be a hard thing to answer.
John HarrisLike, you start realizing.
John HarrisYou start to.
John HarrisThat starts merit, like, setting in.
John HarrisYou're like, I don't know.
John HarrisI don't know if I actually have a people.
John HarrisBut I think southerners have typically had a strong sense of that, that they do have a people that they are responsible for.
John HarrisAnd when it comes to manliness, I just thought of Jeb Stewart and Turner Ashby, but Jeb Stewart in particular, a cavalry officer in Robert E.
John HarrisLee's army.
John HarrisProbably the reason that Lee, some people think, lost Gettysburg, Washington, you know, Stuart was out gallivanting around and in the cavalry, and he should have been with Lee.
John HarrisBut anyway, Stuart, though, had this big, like, plume on his hat, you know, and just drinks.
John HarrisHe dressed to the nines.
John HarrisYou know, he was very.
John HarrisWell, he was dashing and, you know, his beard, even in the paintings, his beard is, like, curated and everything.
John HarrisAnd I think that for men, like, there is this also model of manliness that's, like, you can't really be to put together because that's girly and, like, having a plume in your hat, like, that's gay or something.
John HarrisI don't know.
John HarrisBut.
John HarrisBut, like, no, like, there are actually some men who were, like, they were very well dressed.
John HarrisThey knew style.
John HarrisYou know what I mean?
John HarrisLike, they knew how to put a suit on and what it would look like.
John HarrisAnd, like, that's something, too, that I hope we can get back to somehow is I'm probably not the greatest poster child for that at all, but I would like to dress better, and.
John HarrisAnd that says something about who you are.
John HarrisVirginians were very well dressed.
Will SpencerWell, I will connect you to my friend Tanner Guzzi.
Will SpencerAnd that's what he does.
Will SpencerHe does men's, men's style coaching.
Will SpencerAnd he's been a big impact on my life, helping me learn how to dress better.
Will SpencerAnd he talks about this, his whole line on Twitter especially.
Will SpencerIt's a joke.
Will SpencerIt's meant to be ironic.
Will SpencerReal men don't care what they look like because that's the line that a lot of men apparently say today.
Will SpencerAnd he'll post all these ornate, tribally decorated men and suits of armor and samurais and guys with plumes in their hats.
Will SpencerReal men used to care very much what they look like, and there wasn't anything effeminate or gay about it at all.
Will SpencerIt was like, this was how men, and this was Tanner's angle on it.
Will SpencerThis is how men project power.
Will SpencerThey project power with their clothing.
Will SpencerAnd now sort of adopting the Silicon Valley tech ethos, where the way that you project power is, you appear like you don't have any power at all.
Will SpencerThe Mark Zuckerberg and the hoodie and the blue jeans.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerAnd so Tanner's like, no, that's ridiculous.
Will SpencerYou can learn how to dress.
Will SpencerYou can learn how to dress for your tribe, for your people, for your community, for your own personal style.
Will SpencerMatt Reynolds from barbell logic works with him a lot as well.
Will SpencerSo he's in.
John HarrisI'll have to check him out.
John HarrisI need help.
Will SpencerYeah, maybe he'll teach you to dress like a modern southern gentleman, a modern virginian.
John HarrisWell, I do have, I do have a seersucker, so I do have that.
John HarrisBut forget about.
John HarrisI tried to tie a bowtie.
John HarrisIt took me an hour, and it looked awful.
John HarrisI got so impatient with it.
Will SpencerRight.
Will SpencerWell, I really appreciate you highlighting the need to bring that spirit of manhood back, especially in America.
Will SpencerIt's not really a devil may care attitude because that's not it.
Will SpencerBecause I don't know that you can have a devil may care attitude and be a Christian Mandeh this idea of a swagger, a style, a groundedness in yourself, a knowledge of who your people are.
Will SpencerAnd you bring that forward into the world, and you upset the people that don't want you to have it.
Will SpencerAnd so there's an aspect of being a man today that's very much like, no, this is who I am, and I'm going to embody who I am, and you're not going to like it.
Will SpencerAnd I really don't care.
John HarrisI think I'm inspired to go to Macy's tomorrow and start is, I don't know if maybe, maybe that's too, maybe I'm giving away that, that's too, like, low class or something.
John HarrisI don't know.
John HarrisBut that's where I would go to get a nice suit or something.
Will SpencerNo, I'll connect you.
Will SpencerYou can talk with Tanner first, and.
John HarrisHe'Ll talk with Tanner.
John HarrisOkay.
John HarrisOkay.
John HarrisI guess I need help.
John HarrisI guess that's brother.
Will SpencerWe all do.
Will SpencerWe all do.
Will SpencerNo learning.
Will SpencerSo the shirt that I'm wearing right now, this shirt is by a maker called batch batchmen.com.
Will Spencerand they just make these really nice button up shirts.
Will SpencerAnd Tanner introduced me to them.
Will SpencerAnd so now anyone who's watched my podcast basically for.
Will SpencerYeah, thank you.
Will SpencerSo it basically has seen me wearing batch shirts.
John HarrisOkay, so you want to see my shirt?
John HarrisHold on.
Will SpencerHarris is against Harris.
John HarrisYeah, that's my shirt right now.
Will SpencerI don't know.
Will SpencerI'll give you some points for that one, I think.
John HarrisThank you.
John HarrisThank you.
Will SpencerThat's pretty good.
Will SpencerNo relation to Kamala?
John HarrisNo, no.
John HarrisShe's.
John HarrisMaybe she's a crazy old aunt somewhere that I didn't know about.
Will SpencerPray?
Will SpencerNo.
Will SpencerPray?
Will SpencerNo.
John HarrisYeah, I hope not.
Will SpencerWell, John, this has been an outstanding conversation.
Will SpencerI've really been grateful for the chance to get to know you and your work and all the documentary work that you've done in the podcast and the overview of the church.
Will SpencerLike, I've gotten a lot of this conversation.
Will SpencerThank you so much.
John HarrisYeah, likewise.
John HarrisI appreciate it, Will.
John HarrisAnd, yeah, contact me anytime.
John HarrisHopefully we can do this again, some point.
Will SpencerWill do.
Will SpencerWhere would you like to send people to find out more about you and what you do?
John HarrisWell, I think 1607 project.com is number one to see that documentary, but for me, johnharrispodcast.com comma, you can find all my socials.
Will Spencer16 God@johnharrispodcast.com dot thank you very much and God bless you.
Will SpencerGod bless you, sir.
Will SpencerThank you so much for the time you spent with a.
John HarrisGod bless you, too, Will.
Will SpencerThanks for listening to this episode of the Renaissance of Men podcast.
Will SpencerVisit us on the web@renofmen.com or on your favorite social media platform at Ren of men.
Will SpencerThis is the renaissance of men.
Will SpencerYou are the Renaissance.