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Rumors move fast; context moves truth. We kick off with a listener question about Alexander Hamilton and follow the paper trail from a single 1976 claim to the everyday realities of 18th‑century life. Sharing beds in crowded inns, the language of friendship in an older era, and the difference between primary sources and agenda-driven readings all change how the story lands. We also revisit the Reynolds affair, weighing Hamilton’s own pamphlet, the consensus of historians, and the role of James T. Callender, a serial scandalmonger who colored early American headlines.
From there, the conversation shifts to a different kind of context problem: how American Christianity drifted over the last century from making disciples to counting conversions. We talk about counting the cost, fruit as evidence, and the habits that actually form a follower of Jesus—Scripture, prayer, and community. This isn’t about earning salvation; it’s about living it. The fastest way to recognize God’s voice is to know God’s word, and the fastest way to hollow out faith is to reduce it to a formula. No wonder so many young adults are seeking catechesis, liturgy, and moral clarity—they’re tired of spiritual vagueness and want a faith that builds a sturdy life.
History and faith meet at the same crossroads: discipline over hype, evidence over rumor, formation over slogans. If you’ve wondered what Hamilton really wrote, why myths stick, or how the church can recover depth, this conversation brings receipts and practical next steps. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves history or cares about spiritual growth, and leave a review telling us the one idea you’ll put into action this week.
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By Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green4.8
21322,132 ratings
Rumors move fast; context moves truth. We kick off with a listener question about Alexander Hamilton and follow the paper trail from a single 1976 claim to the everyday realities of 18th‑century life. Sharing beds in crowded inns, the language of friendship in an older era, and the difference between primary sources and agenda-driven readings all change how the story lands. We also revisit the Reynolds affair, weighing Hamilton’s own pamphlet, the consensus of historians, and the role of James T. Callender, a serial scandalmonger who colored early American headlines.
From there, the conversation shifts to a different kind of context problem: how American Christianity drifted over the last century from making disciples to counting conversions. We talk about counting the cost, fruit as evidence, and the habits that actually form a follower of Jesus—Scripture, prayer, and community. This isn’t about earning salvation; it’s about living it. The fastest way to recognize God’s voice is to know God’s word, and the fastest way to hollow out faith is to reduce it to a formula. No wonder so many young adults are seeking catechesis, liturgy, and moral clarity—they’re tired of spiritual vagueness and want a faith that builds a sturdy life.
History and faith meet at the same crossroads: discipline over hype, evidence over rumor, formation over slogans. If you’ve wondered what Hamilton really wrote, why myths stick, or how the church can recover depth, this conversation brings receipts and practical next steps. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves history or cares about spiritual growth, and leave a review telling us the one idea you’ll put into action this week.
Support the show

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