Conversations That Matter

Jon Harris's "Conversations That Matter" podcast delves into Christian, traditional, and masculine views on theology, culture, and politics. It critiques social justice, CRT, and liberal theology's impact on Christianity. Featuring interviews and solo episodes, Harris scrutinizes news, books, and trends, often from a conservative Christian angle. The podcast, available on major platforms, tackles issues like abortion, sexuality, and race in the church, aiming to uphold biblical orthodoxy amidst contemporary cultural shifts.


Conversations That Matter

Key points from Inauguration Speech:

- America First
- End Weaponized Deep State
- Remember God
- Deport Foreign Criminals
- Fight Cartels
- Drill, Drill, Drill
- Less Taxes, More Tariffs
- Common Sense & Efficiency
- Stop Censorship
- Merit Based Society
- Recognize Gender
- End COVID Regime
- Peace Through Strength
- A New Manifest Destiny

1 day ago | [YT] | 217

Conversations That Matter

If you do an entire podcast based off of what some anon with less than 1,000 followers said about you, you might have internet derangement syndrome.

If you interrupt a meal to tweet something that came to your head, you might have internet derangement syndrome.

If you spend more than two minutes recounting a complicated social
media thread during an expository sermon, you may have internet derangement syndrome.

If people at the gym regularly ask you if you’re using a piece of equipment because you’re on your phone, you might have internet derangement syndrome.

If your best friends are online accounts you have not met in person, you may have internet derangement syndrome.

If it takes more than a minute to explain a meme you find hysterical to your wife or husband, you may have internet derangement syndrome.

If you think X represents what everyone is talking about, you may have internet derangement syndrome.

If you start or end most days doom scrolling, you may have internet derangement syndrome.

Know the signs of being chronically online and get help!

3 days ago | [YT] | 174

Conversations That Matter

If you talk a lot about the importance of natural relationships, but your primary in group preference is for internet group chats, you might have online derangement syndrome.

If you don’t have your wife’s respect but you spend time policing what random women online do and say, you might have online derangement syndrome.

If an organization you’ve never been a member of which holds no authority over you is your primary enemy and can do no right, you might have internet derangement syndrome.

If you consider yourself an expert on anything because you listened to podcasts and read X threads, you might have internet derangement syndrome.

If your anon account is more based than you are, you might have internet derangement syndrome.

If you have multiple anon accounts on one platform, you might have internet derangement syndrome.

If members of your family must regularly wait for you to put your phone down to be acknowledged, you might have internet derangement syndrome.

If you want to convert to Eastern Orthodoxy because of some memes you saw, you might have internet derangement syndrome.

Know some of the signs of IDS and get help if you have it!

4 days ago | [YT] | 154

Conversations That Matter

I know it takes a minute. But, it would be cool if by the end of the day there were over 1000 reviews on Apple Podcasts. Link: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/conversations-that-m…

1 week ago | [YT] | 60

Conversations That Matter

The regime approved evangelical response to wokeness was to channel it into enthusiasm for liberalism.

This is part of the reason I’ve said for years guys like AD Robles and I are never, and will never be, invited to the cool kids table of anti-wokeness.

We were both early. We’re both relatively young. We both wrote books about the subject that came out early and made piercing critiques of what was happening.

But, we were not atheists touting liberalism. We were not members of Greear’s church who defended the worst traffickers of wokeness in the SBC. We didn’t write books critiquing wokeness that extolled the virtues of the civil rights movement as the “Christian” alternative.

We defended statues, we attacked same sex attraction, we wanted cultural Christianity. We didn’t think soft complementarianism was the right approach. We weren’t assuming everything told to us by modern liberals about history was correct.

More could be said.

It doesn’t bother me for myself. I’m frankly relieved that I haven’t been invited to the big Whig anti-woke gatherings etc. even though a lot of those guys will talk to me behind the scenes. Knowing me I’d say yes and it’s not my thing. I probably wouldn’t enjoy it.

But, I think it’s worth stating that this is the way it’s been since 2019 at least- and I think I can speak for AD here- we’ve had a ball and still are.

1 week ago | [YT] | 243

Conversations That Matter

You can also subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts. Commenting helps the algorithm. podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/wesley-huff-thoughts…

1 week ago | [YT] | 32