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Episode Title: James Webb — The Warrior Who Never Left Vietnam
Date: January 6, 2026
Length: 54:17
Series: Kingdom People in the Pages of History (Robert Timberg’s The Nightingale’s Song)
Previous Episode: John Poindexter — “The Sub-Driver”
Focus Figure: James Webb (Marine infantry officer, Vietnam veteran, author of Fields of Fire, public servant)
Episode Big IdeaSome men come home from war… and some never fully do. In this final character study from The Nightingale’s Song, Matt Geib explores James Webb as “the Marine’s Marine”—a warrior marked by Vietnam, shaped by loyalty to his men, and unwilling to let the nation forget the real cost of war. The episode builds a powerful contrast: Webb the truth-telling, grief-carrying warrior versus Oliver North the meaning-making, mission-driven warrior—and then brings it all under the searching gaze of Psalm 8: “What is man?”
Opening Moment (00:00–03:30)Webb is presented as:
Key line of the episode: Vietnam didn’t just end—it followed men home into politics, families, and old age.
The Telescope Contrast + The Psalm 8 Question (07:30–10:30)Shared ground:
Where they diverge (the heart of the episode):
James Webb — “The reflective warrior”
Oliver North — “The meaning-making warrior”
Memorable framing:
Matt pivots from Vietnam to the Bible’s warrior framework—especially Joshua 1:9:
He defines courage as more than brute strength:
Psalm 144:1 is used as a “warrior psalm”:
Matt expands the phrase into a spiritual mirror:
Core diagnostic question:
A rapid-fire set of anchors:
Theme: Your strongest season was never meant to be your permanent address.
Closing Reflection + Prayer (47:30–54:17)James Webb didn’t experience Vietnam as a theory—he carried it home in his bones. In this final character study from The Nightingale’s Song, Matt Geib explores Webb as the “Marine’s Marine,” contrasting him with Oliver North’s need for mission and meaning, and bringing the whole series under the searching question of Psalm 8: “What is man that You are mindful of him?” This episode is a call to courage, honesty, and learning how to leave the “field of fire” without letting it leave you imprisoned.
By The Kingdom Corner : MATT GEIBEpisode Title: James Webb — The Warrior Who Never Left Vietnam
Date: January 6, 2026
Length: 54:17
Series: Kingdom People in the Pages of History (Robert Timberg’s The Nightingale’s Song)
Previous Episode: John Poindexter — “The Sub-Driver”
Focus Figure: James Webb (Marine infantry officer, Vietnam veteran, author of Fields of Fire, public servant)
Episode Big IdeaSome men come home from war… and some never fully do. In this final character study from The Nightingale’s Song, Matt Geib explores James Webb as “the Marine’s Marine”—a warrior marked by Vietnam, shaped by loyalty to his men, and unwilling to let the nation forget the real cost of war. The episode builds a powerful contrast: Webb the truth-telling, grief-carrying warrior versus Oliver North the meaning-making, mission-driven warrior—and then brings it all under the searching gaze of Psalm 8: “What is man?”
Opening Moment (00:00–03:30)Webb is presented as:
Key line of the episode: Vietnam didn’t just end—it followed men home into politics, families, and old age.
The Telescope Contrast + The Psalm 8 Question (07:30–10:30)Shared ground:
Where they diverge (the heart of the episode):
James Webb — “The reflective warrior”
Oliver North — “The meaning-making warrior”
Memorable framing:
Matt pivots from Vietnam to the Bible’s warrior framework—especially Joshua 1:9:
He defines courage as more than brute strength:
Psalm 144:1 is used as a “warrior psalm”:
Matt expands the phrase into a spiritual mirror:
Core diagnostic question:
A rapid-fire set of anchors:
Theme: Your strongest season was never meant to be your permanent address.
Closing Reflection + Prayer (47:30–54:17)James Webb didn’t experience Vietnam as a theory—he carried it home in his bones. In this final character study from The Nightingale’s Song, Matt Geib explores Webb as the “Marine’s Marine,” contrasting him with Oliver North’s need for mission and meaning, and bringing the whole series under the searching question of Psalm 8: “What is man that You are mindful of him?” This episode is a call to courage, honesty, and learning how to leave the “field of fire” without letting it leave you imprisoned.