Hour 2 – 03/31/20: Amity Shlaes (continued)
Amity Shlaes continues her conversation about the Great Society and how that particular program by the Johnson administration has played out through the decades in America.
Amity Shlaes continues her conversation about the Great Society and how that particular program by the Johnson administration has played out through the decades in America.
Amity Shlaes, chair of the Coolidge Foundation, was in the studio with Eric several weeks back and discussed an important moment in American history, LBJ’s “Great Society.”
Greg Laurie tells how a poor boy from Arkansas became the legendary Johnny Cash, and how the troubled musician navigated the rocky road of redemption with the help of an ostrich — no kiddin’! (Encore Presentation)
Keith Getty joins Eric in the bunker to share his weekly Facebook-Live Family Hymn Sing; then, Thann Bennett of the American Center for Law and Justice focused on how what we do in life reflects upon a “higher power.”
Greg Laurie tells how a poor boy from Arkansas became the legendary Johnny Cash, and how the troubled musician navigated the rocky road of redemption — with the help of an ostrich (no kiddin’)! (Encore Presentation)
Katherine Schwarzenegger Pratt brings a powerful message of how forgiveness opens us up to healing, hope and a new world of possibilities, which are part of personal accounts from her book, “The Gift of Forgiveness.” (Encore Presentation)
It’s another installment of “Ask Metaxas,” where listeners write in with hopes that Eric will give their queries an informed and wise response — or at least make up a quasi-believable answer.
John Zmirak is back in the bunker to talk about the Coronavirus — is it “nature’s revenge”? And, have we been “hoaxed” by the media when it comes to what they allow and don’t allow to be “newsworthy”?
The Alliance Defending Freedom is fighting a lot of cases in the courts these days, and Senior Counsel Jeremy Tedesco joins Eric in the bunker to discuss the Southern Poverty Law Center’s latest shenanigans.
In these troubled times, Robert Jeffress (by way of Skype a few weeks back) brings a message of hope and encouragement, drawing on concepts found in his newest book, “Courageous.”