The Hamilton Corner

January 2, 2025 · 49:16

("Best-of" Edition from 8/2/24) Jeff Shafer, Director of the Hale Institute at New St. Andrews College, steps into “The Corner.”

Marriage & Family

Show notes

0:00 - 15:00. 2 Corinthians 10:3-5. God’s divine power is available to destroy vain imaginations. 15:00 - 31:00. Jeff Shafer, Director of the Hale Institute at New St. Andrews College, steps into “The Corner.” 31:00 - 48:00. Marriage is a pre-political institution and is worth fighting for. To donate call : 877-616-2396

Phone lines mentioned

Full transcript Auto-generated · 8,468 words

Transcribed with OpenAI Whisper (base.en). Timestamps are approximate. Lightly cleaned for readability; quotations from on-air callers may include filler words. Use the audio player above for the authoritative recording.

  1. 0:00Darkness is not an affirmative force.
  2. 0:03It simply reoccupies the space vacated by the light.
  3. 0:06This is the Hamilton Quarter on American Family Radio.
  4. 0:10It should be uncomfortable for a believer to live as a hypocrite.
  5. 0:15Delivery people out of the bondage of mainstream media.
  6. 0:18And the philosophies of this world.
  7. 0:20God has called you and me to be His ambassador.
  8. 0:24Even in this dark moment.
  9. 0:26Let's not miss our moment.
  10. 0:28And now, the Hamilton Corner.
  11. 0:31Good evening, everyone.
  12. 0:34Welcome to the Hamilton Corner here on American Family Radio.
  13. 0:37My name is Abraham Hamilton.
  14. 0:38The third, I am the host of this program.
  15. 0:42We have J. Mac, the real J. Mac in studio.
  16. 0:46Again, for a change, not too scared to be in the line of clarity.
  17. 0:53But you may not know what you all don't see.
  18. 0:55It's a lot of roasting that goes on behind the scenes.
  19. 0:59and most of it is perpetuated by the silent assassin.
  20. 1:04Mr. McIntosh, y'all don't hear him that much on the air,
  21. 1:07but I'm telling you, he has lots to say.
  22. 1:14But thank you for tuning into the program.
  23. 1:16This evening at this very moment, many of you,
  24. 1:19if not most of you are making your transition
  25. 1:22from your part time jobs where you generate an income
  26. 1:24to your full time jobs where you cultivate an outcome.
  27. 1:27And as you make that move,
  28. 1:29want to encourage you to do so with intentionality.
  29. 1:32Understand in the primacy that God places on the family, refusing to allow the things that
  30. 1:36are swirling around our culture and the world nationally, international affairs to divert
  31. 1:42you from job one.
  32. 1:44And there's a lot of things happening very easy to be, it's very easy to be diverted in
  33. 1:49this time period.
  34. 1:51You know, it's, it's, it's astounding to me how the world is conveniently ignorant of the
  35. 1:56fact that Israel's taking out the Hamas leader and the Hezbollah leader followed the Iranian
  36. 2:08back terrorists launching rockets at the playground killing 12 Israeli children. We're kind of
  37. 2:15leaves that out of the calculus. It's from it shows remarkable restraint on Israel's part,
  38. 2:20frankly, that they executed these precision missions. They didn't bomb any towns. They
  39. 2:25in the tax of villains, they didn't, you know, do a widespread offensive.
  40. 2:30They were very precise and it shows remarkable capacity as well that they were able to get
  41. 2:35Hania, Hania, I don't know how he pronounce his name, in Tehran.
  42. 2:41But the world leaves out the part about the mangled bodies of dead children following all
  43. 2:47of things are transpired on October 12th.
  44. 2:49Nevertheless, we, I mean, October 7th, I'm sorry, not October 12th, October 7th.
  45. 2:55We nevertheless must remain focused.
  46. 3:01The primary means that God has established to cascade his remnant generationally is the
  47. 3:07family.
  48. 3:08This is actually something I'm looking forward to sharing with the Darbonne Church of Christ
  49. 3:14next week in Farmerville, Louisiana.
  50. 3:16And again, if you're in the area, you're welcome to come, but seating is limited, seating is
  51. 3:21limited.
  52. 3:22So I would encourage you to get there early.
  53. 3:24But we're going to talk about the centrality of family to God's plan for his kingdom, amongst
  54. 3:29other things.
  55. 3:30This is one of the things we're going to talk about.
  56. 3:32But as you're making your transition right now to your full-time job, understand that
  57. 3:39it is just that full-time commitment.
  58. 3:43I've said it before, and I'll say it again, one of the things Marie and I have found with
  59. 3:48interacting with our children, we found this to be true, that quantity of time gives rise
  60. 3:53to quality of time. Quantity of time gives rise to quality of time. One of the not so secret secrets
  61. 4:02of the discipleship relationship that parents and children should enjoy is that frequency
  62. 4:08of interaction creates peer expectation. You ever wonder why people just describe this as if this
  63. 4:14is an inevitable phenomenon of adolescent development. It's the Thanos of adolescent development.
  64. 4:20Oh, you know, children, they get to a certain age and they tune you out.
  65. 4:23Not necessarily.
  66. 4:24It's not an automatic that happens, what you're witnessing is the phenomena of peer formation.
  67. 4:31Simply put, the people who spend the most time with your children, their perspectives and
  68. 4:36opinions become the most important to your children.
  69. 4:39It's not as if all of a sudden your children are tuning you out, it's simply that they spend
  70. 4:43so much time away from you.
  71. 4:46They into it, they into it the awareness that the time that they're with you is so infrequent
  72. 4:52that it causes there to be a devaluation, so to speak, of the significance of your perspective
  73. 4:58in the reality of the everyday lives.
  74. 5:00To say it in a different way, if you live, for example, I'll use my hometown, if you live
  75. 5:05in New Orleans, you're not necessarily going to be too focused on what people's opinions
  76. 5:11of you may be in Des Moines, Iowa.
  77. 5:14Why?
  78. 5:15you don't interact with them very frequently.
  79. 5:17They may have all kinds of opinions about gumbo,
  80. 5:20about crawfish a touffé,
  81. 5:22they may have all kinds of opinions about your habits,
  82. 5:24your dietary, consumption, your lifestyle,
  83. 5:27but because you don't interact with them that frequently,
  84. 5:30you're not really moved very much
  85. 5:32about what they have to say.
  86. 5:34It doesn't mean that if you become aware
  87. 5:36of what they have to say,
  88. 5:36it might not have a certain impact,
  89. 5:38but simply because they are not involved intimately
  90. 5:43and frequently in your daily affairs,
  91. 5:45Their perspective doesn't resonate with you the same way.
  92. 5:49The perspective of someone who interacts with you
  93. 5:52on a regular basis would resonate with you.
  94. 5:55That's all that's happening, you know?
  95. 5:59Where do children learn?
  96. 6:01And I experienced this myself growing up.
  97. 6:03Where do children learn Jordan's or shoes they should have?
  98. 6:05They learn that from peer groups.
  99. 6:08They didn't, most of the time,
  100. 6:09they didn't just decide, you know what?
  101. 6:11These new balances ain't working no more.
  102. 6:13I need to get these J's.
  103. 6:15Usually it's a product of peer formation.
  104. 6:18You have kids making fun of certain kids.
  105. 6:20You have the social hierarchy establishing.
  106. 6:22They're social group has determined
  107. 6:23these are the shoes you want.
  108. 6:25And parents often puzzled,
  109. 6:26why does my child wanna have this?
  110. 6:29Why does my daughter wanna have a Stanley Cup?
  111. 6:32You know, I have perfectly good cups
  112. 6:34and tumblers over here that are not Stanley,
  113. 6:36but why does it have to be Stanley?
  114. 6:37That doesn't come from home guys.
  115. 6:41And what we often feel to realize
  116. 6:43is by abandoning our children, let me say it differently,
  117. 6:49by sending our children to be, here's their favorite word,
  118. 6:53socialized away from us, what we're unintentionally doing
  119. 6:59is setting our children up to develop a perception
  120. 7:03of significance and importance of the people
  121. 7:08to whom we send them to.
  122. 7:10That's why it's not that they hit children here
  123. 7:12at a certain age and they don't want to listen
  124. 7:14of their parents is just that they realized over time they spend so little time with their
  125. 7:18parents that their parents perspectives begin to be less significant to them on a daily basis.
  126. 7:29This is why we as parents while we have our children under our authority and in our rules
  127. 7:33we should strive to be their primary influence, the primary influence in their lives because
  128. 7:42our commitment is to steer them in a God with direction, to rear them in the nurture and admonition
  129. 7:47of the Lord. To the word of God we go. 2 Corinthians 10, there was no charge for that, but that was
  130. 7:53free. I was like free, I don't want that, take that back. 2 Corinthians 10, I want to remind us of
  131. 8:01something here. Because I'll say it like Michael Jordan said it once. You miss every shot you don't
  132. 8:08take. It's too often in our country, particularly in our culture now, believers absent ourselves
  133. 8:21from significant discourse. And as a result, we lose the opportunity to be salt and light
  134. 8:31on many fronts because we allow the world to intimidate us from engaging in certain conversations.
  135. 8:35But the word of God says this, second Corinthians chapter 10, verses 3 through 5, a very familiar
  136. 8:40passage of scripture says this for though we walk in the flesh we do not war
  137. 8:46according to the flesh for the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh some
  138. 8:52translations there say they are not carnal for the weapons of our warfare are not
  139. 8:59of the flesh but divinely powerful for the destruction of fortresses some
  140. 9:08translations say there, for the destruction of strongholds, verse 5, for we are destroying
  141. 9:18speculations, and every lofty thing raised up against the knowledge of God. And we are
  142. 9:24taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.
  143. 9:32Hamilton Corner PSA, public service announcement, if you are in Christ, for though we live in
  144. 9:38our natural bodies. For though we walk in our natural bodies, we do not wage war according
  145. 9:45to naturalism. But though we walk in the flesh, we do not wage war according to the flesh.
  146. 9:54Spiritual warfare is a reality. It is not a warfare that is prosecuted in the flesh. And
  147. 10:02let me be clear, it's not that we don't do things naturally. The source of our potency,
  148. 10:08However, it's not of the flesh.
  149. 10:10The source of our stratagems, strategies are not fleshly originated.
  150. 10:18They do not stem from the flesh.
  151. 10:20There is spiritual wisdom that we receive that gives us marching orders that we execute.
  152. 10:27Naturally, I would argue one of them on a national level was seeing Roe vs. Wade overturned.
  153. 10:35There's no doubt that seeing Roe overturned was a feature of spiritual victory, spiritual warfare,
  154. 10:42victory, but it included a download of wisdom from God with practical strategy to implement
  155. 10:49that moved the court ultimately to see truth and wisdom.
  156. 10:56So when the scripture says the weapons of our warfare are not carnal and out of the flesh,
  157. 11:01it doesn't mean we don't do anything naturally.
  158. 11:03It means that we don't rely upon a strong over the flesh.
  159. 11:06It means we don't rely upon the genesis of our engagement is not the flesh.
  160. 11:13But then the word of God explains to us not only the weapons of our warfare and not carnal
  161. 11:17out of the flesh, but they are divinely powerful. The potency of our spiritual weaponry is God
  162. 11:26Himself. See, it's not that we're waging. The scripture refers to the Word of God as the sword of the
  163. 11:33Spirit. It's a sword, but it's not wielded, carnally. It's not wielded by the flesh. It's the sword
  164. 11:41that the Spirit of God wields through us as His vehicles. The weapons of our warfare are so
  165. 11:50divinely powerful that they are sufficient for the destruction of fortresses, the destruction
  166. 11:58of strongholds, much of the destruction that has taken root in our day. The scripture diagnosis is
  167. 12:06perfectly for we are destroying speculations. King James there says we are destroying imaginations,
  168. 12:13vain imaginations. That terminology, that translation is rendered from the Greek phrase
  169. 12:21Lagismos, which is a Greek phrase that lends toward the English root word logic. We are destroying
  170. 12:32Lagismos, speculations, ideologies, much of the spiritual warfare that is transpiring.
  171. 12:40When we engage in spiritual warfare, we are combating demonic ideology.
  172. 12:46Why am I focused on ideology? Because as you heard me say numerous times,
  173. 12:49the great Francis Shafer said something very similar, ideas have consequences.
  174. 12:58Bad ideas create casualties. Antichrist ideas create eternally spiritual captives.
  175. 13:07ETERNAL CAPTIS to say it simply, a people that is gripped by a rejection of God, a rejection
  176. 13:19of Messiah, the consequences are ETERNAL damnation.
  177. 13:25You understand what I'm saying?
  178. 13:30Ideas are the driving force or the foundational mechanism for behavior.
  179. 13:40times past in America, you didn't have adults running around talking about, I'm a furry,
  180. 13:44put me in the suit, trying to bark.
  181. 13:46You didn't have adults trying to make a case for intimate relationships between children
  182. 13:51and adults.
  183. 13:53You didn't have adults running around trying to say, oh, let love is love.
  184. 13:59Went too long ago when homosexuality was diagnosed as a social pathology, a mental disorder.
  185. 14:07What's happened?
  186. 14:08Ideology in our culture has changed,
  187. 14:10which has resulted in a change in behavior.
  188. 14:15For make no mistake about it, the scripture says,
  189. 14:18that the weapons of our warfare are divinely powerful,
  190. 14:22no matter how strong and how entrenched certain
  191. 14:26loggies miles may be,
  192. 14:31they're not more potent than our God.
  193. 14:34So I simply want to encourage you,
  194. 14:37as I'm encouraging myself to study the show ourselves approved,
  195. 14:40to understand what we believe,
  196. 14:42to understand why we believe it, to be able to reasonably articulate it to the watching
  197. 14:46and dying world because eternity hangs in the balance.
  198. 14:51And the truth of the King of Glory and salvation and Messiah is worth fighting for.
  199. 15:00You've heard a lot about saving babies on this show.
  200. 15:03That's because it's important to me personally, and let me just be frank with you.
  201. 15:06We need to save them.
  202. 15:08That's why we've partnered with Preborn, the nation's leader in introducing mothers
  203. 15:12with unplanned pregnancies to their babies.
  204. 15:15And once she hears that heartbeat and sees that precious life growing inside of her,
  205. 15:19she is twice as likely to choose life.
  206. 15:22Now that's a miracle.
  207. 15:23But quite honestly, if we don't save them, who will?
  208. 15:27Preborn receives no government funding so their work is completely dependent on us.
  209. 15:32Preborn has rescued over 280,000 babies, and that's not all.
  210. 15:36They provide love, support, and counseling for up to two years for free, saving lives
  211. 15:42and souls.
  212. 15:43One ultrasound is just $28 or $140 helps to rescue five babies' lives.
  213. 15:49Abortion doesn't stop, so we can't.
  214. 15:52Together, you and I can save lives.
  215. 15:55Just dial pound250 on your cell and say the keyword baby.
  216. 15:59That's 250 baby or go to preborn.com.
  217. 16:03That's preborn.com.
  218. 16:04Oh, shining light into the darkness.
  219. 16:12This is the Hamilton corner on American family radio.
  220. 16:16Welcome back to the Hamilton corner.
  221. 16:18Abraham Hamilton the third here.
  222. 16:19I am delighted to have on the program of a brother in Christ who I had the privilege
  223. 16:24to meet at a, I guess I would call it a planning session to restore truth to our
  224. 16:31society and directly confront Obergefell versus Hodges, frankly.
  225. 16:35The brother I'm talking about is none other than Jeff Shafer,
  226. 16:40who is the Director of the Hale Institute at New St. Andrews College.
  227. 16:44He graduated with honors from the Regent University School of Law.
  228. 16:47Early in his legal career he operated a general practice firm in Cincinnati with a
  229. 16:51particular emphasis on criminal defense litigation.
  230. 16:54Thereafter he practiced in a law partnership focusing on elections law
  231. 16:58and civil constitutional cases. From 2005 to 2020
  232. 17:02He served as senior counsel with Alliance Defending Freedom at his Washington DC and
  233. 17:06Scottsdale, Arizona offices.
  234. 17:08Mr. Shafer has litigated public interest cases in federal and state trial and appellate courts
  235. 17:13throughout the United States, as well as developing academic and advocacy initiatives on matters
  236. 17:19of policy concern.
  237. 17:21Outside of the courtroom, he has addressed a wide array of audiences and academic and community
  238. 17:25venues in the U.S. and abroad on matters of legal and cultural interest.
  239. 17:30my guest is none other
  240. 17:31then jeff shafer jeff thank you for joining me here on the program
  241. 17:36yet that's great to be able to speak with you a ball much for having all the
  242. 17:39pleasures mind and i'll just say this right now
  243. 17:42uh... i wanted to have this conversation with you because your presentation
  244. 17:46was phenomenal
  245. 17:48and i i wanted to make sure that the hamilton corner corner audience
  246. 17:52got to benefit from your wisdom
  247. 17:54and i think it's it's timely in its profound
  248. 17:56and i'm i'm excited about being able to take on an issue
  249. 18:00that should have been addressed before but i'm grateful that we're dressing it
  250. 18:03now but before i get ahead of myself
  251. 18:05would you please share with the audience
  252. 18:07what the hail institute at new state andrew's college is
  253. 18:13it is a uh... relatively recent initiative of the college and uh... it's
  254. 18:19focused on matters particularly of jurisprudence
  255. 18:22uh... the hail institute comes from
  256. 18:26Well, it's named after Sir Matthew Hale, who is the 17th century jurist in England,
  257. 18:31of quite some renown and capability.
  258. 18:35And it was in the common law heritage in which he was operating.
  259. 18:40And of course, one of the things raiming to emphasize is the virtues of that system.
  260. 18:44But the general pushes to kind of think carefully about the precepts of law that are necessary
  261. 18:50and important to a well-structured and virtuous society.
  262. 18:54So we go about doing that in various and sundry ways, hosting speakers and conferences and
  263. 19:00symposia, producing various forms of writing and other presentation.
  264. 19:07We have courses that we teach within the college itself.
  265. 19:10So all oriented toward and appropriate, we might say remedial view of the law, which is
  266. 19:15suffering these days.
  267. 19:21That is amazing.
  268. 19:22Thank you so much for sharing that.
  269. 19:24new st. Andrews colleges is that in Moscow Moscow idol.
  270. 19:28I know it is up in the Pacific Northwest in the beautiful
  271. 19:33pollution.
  272. 19:34Wait you in the beautiful would you say beautiful.
  273. 19:38Pollute.
  274. 19:39Oh okay.
  275. 19:40Yes the rolling hills of northern idol.
  276. 19:43Yes.
  277. 19:44Yes now for those who may not be aware of what the common law
  278. 19:48tradition is would you just explain that briefly and share
  279. 19:51what that is briefly.
  280. 19:53The common law was developed in England and ended up being our birthright of sorts.
  281. 19:59Here it was transferred across the Atlantic with the colonists and it's the legal system
  282. 20:04that we inherited and of course with that transfer there were also some adjustments along the
  283. 20:10way but it is the system understood by the founders and so much of the US Constitution
  284. 20:16is based on precept and understanding resident in the common law itself which is one of
  285. 20:21reasons i think it is vital that we kind of return to restore and understand its
  286. 20:26historical dimensions so that we better understand our own constitution and legal
  287. 20:30system
  288. 20:32now what one of the great uh... detriment to my view that that that that we've
  289. 20:36we've suffered
  290. 20:37uh... and in our country is this
  291. 20:40really a severance of our constitution from the principles of the declaration of
  292. 20:44independence
  293. 20:45to where
  294. 20:47uh... we we moved away from kind of a a black stonian
  295. 20:51ethic and and what i would
  296. 20:54would
  297. 20:54positive that
  298. 20:57so will you mail
  299. 20:58would have
  300. 20:59ascribed toward
  301. 21:01uh... for more legal positivistic route do you do you see that as being a
  302. 21:05country contribute contributing factor
  303. 21:08to our detriment of josephredential stand-up currently
  304. 21:12that that's that's quite right yet it really has been a
  305. 21:16flip
  306. 21:16from the prior understanding of
  307. 21:19of the law is something given
  308. 21:21is in a sense
  309. 21:23received by us and and resident within the created order
  310. 21:27instead it becomes exclusively the mechanisms of those who are in power
  311. 21:32and so rather than honoring pre-existing truths of existence
  312. 21:37they are uh...
  313. 21:38merely uh... opportunities that is those who are operating the law are taking
  314. 21:43advantage of opportunities to manipulate the world
  315. 21:46in ways of their choosing
  316. 21:49which unsurprisingly results in people like i don't know
  317. 21:53mister biden presenting his desire to reform
  318. 21:57the court
  319. 21:59uh... with his latest uh...
  320. 22:02pronouncement in that regard
  321. 22:06bhi i'm not sure so sure that that was going to get off the ground
  322. 22:10uh...
  323. 22:11but it's
  324. 22:11you know a kind of posturing that's revealing his
  325. 22:15and i suppose his administration dissatisfaction with some of the
  326. 22:18development that have emerged from the Supreme Court recently.
  327. 22:21Sure.
  328. 22:22And I don't expect it to get off the ground either, but it's really
  329. 22:25them basically saying the not so quiet part out loud, which has
  330. 22:29been the desire of not only the current administration, but really
  331. 22:32people prior to this current administration when court
  332. 22:36decisions don't go the way they want them to go.
  333. 22:40Quite right.
  334. 22:40Yes.
  335. 22:41Now this brings me to the crux of the conversation I really wanted
  336. 22:45to have with you.
  337. 22:46And I was so moved by your presentation.
  338. 22:47because at the event that I described, I discussed the fact that marriage is a pre-political institution.
  339. 22:56God is the designer and ordainer of marriage, and as a result, he alone defines marriage,
  340. 23:04and it frankly doesn't matter to me what a five-four majority said in 2015 in the Burgofel vs. Hodges decision,
  341. 23:12that decision is just as abhorrent and aberrant from its genesis as the Roe vs. Wade decision was.
  342. 23:21And because it is God's institution, he alone is its definer, it's worth fighting for.
  343. 23:29And so for far too long, many Christians have basically ceded territory or simply refused to even consider,
  344. 23:36you know, Obergefell is not an unassailable decree from a monarch.
  345. 23:40it's something that should be confronted.
  346. 23:42Your presentation described something that is so profound,
  347. 23:46in my view, that a lot of people are assuming things,
  348. 23:52using Obergefell's adjustification,
  349. 23:54but assuming things that Obergefell did not say.
  350. 23:59Where would you like to begin your discussion,
  351. 24:02our discussion now with confronting the fact
  352. 24:05that there are lots of things that Obergefell didn't say
  353. 24:07and that our society needs to be confronted with the fact
  354. 24:10that none of that has any bearing in Supreme Court president.
  355. 24:13Oh, dear.
  356. 24:14Well, maybe as a means of getting started here, we could contextualize the discussion and
  357. 24:20the urgency in it by first discussing a bit of the background or the significance of this
  358. 24:25historically unprecedented and monstrous notion of same-sex marriage so-called.
  359. 24:31Though obviously in the brevity of our discussion today, I think the best we can do is so to
  360. 24:35speak put a toe in the pool rather than take a real swim, as there is just so much that
  361. 24:41could be and I would say should be covered in a subject like this due to the enormity
  362. 24:46that is implicated when our legal cultural authorities renounce in spite the created order
  363. 24:53that you were just speaking of, of the marital norm, the significance of male and female.
  364. 24:58In all of this, of course, affects the rule of law itself, or of authority or truth transcending
  365. 25:03the judge or legislator in the first place.
  366. 25:06So I'd like to say that what is at stake in scandalizing marriage is the, how would we
  367. 25:13put it, elimination of the publicly accepted conceptual predicates, that anchor recognition
  368. 25:19of the integrity of the family as a real given created institution with its own authority,
  369. 25:25independence, and special calling that holds and represents human meaning.
  370. 25:31When the law is hijacked to install a lie about human nature and relationality, a radical
  371. 25:40lie about the family, the whole society is subjected to disorder with all the injustices
  372. 25:47and upheavals that attend to that.
  373. 25:50The dynamic that's now operable is that the very idea, father, mother of child, the family
  374. 25:56is denied and as a result, imperiled in law.
  375. 26:00no social order worthy of the name would allow this sort of thing.
  376. 26:05But we've had some specifics that have arisen that might be helpful for flushing out this
  377. 26:09idea.
  378. 26:11After Obergefell's ruling on a purported right to a civil marriage licensed by same-sex couples,
  379. 26:18numerous courts as well as executive agencies and certain legislatures have extended out what
  380. 26:24they took to be the logic of the court's ruling.
  381. 26:28is what you were alluding to before, to suggest that the ruling means much more than giving
  382. 26:34civil marriage licenses to same-sex couples.
  383. 26:36It also is they insist something that silently renovated huge swaths of historic state family
  384. 26:42law standards.
  385. 26:44So for instance, lower courts have ruled, as has the Supreme Court itself, that a state
  386. 26:50must convert a child's original birth certificate from a vital record that documents the child's
  387. 26:56progenitors, his mother and father, into instead, what should we call it, a parentage status
  388. 27:03coupon, given as a benefit to a same-sex partner who is unrelated to the child.
  389. 27:09This deviance means that a birth certificate is gutted of its genealogical purpose, thus
  390. 27:14redefining the document to erase any record of the child's father or perhaps mother, replacing
  391. 27:20that erased father or mother with the name of an unrelated adult, so as to dignify her
  392. 27:25or homosexual relationship.
  393. 27:27So this is the way things have been going.
  394. 27:29Genealogy itself thereby is falling victim
  395. 27:32to the so-called equality imperative
  396. 27:35as this birth certificate is redefined
  397. 27:37and we might say redesigned itself.
  398. 27:41I mean, what is on the certificate anymore is changing.
  399. 27:44And of course, in the process,
  400. 27:45the newborn infant is converted into a statement
  401. 27:47impulated pawn to be placed with whatever adult
  402. 27:51that officials deemed to merit the government benefit
  403. 27:53of child custody.
  404. 27:54This same sort of thing is going on, you know, when I say this thing, I mean like child as a
  405. 28:00government benefit for distribution. It works out also in the context of same-sex divorce proceedings.
  406. 28:07When, you know, the woman who gives birth to the child that was conceived by artificial
  407. 28:12insemination or IDS during the course of the quote marriage at the time of the divorce proceedings,
  408. 28:19that mother then wants to challenge the claim to the child of her former female
  409. 28:24partner. Yet courts have consistently ruled in favor of that unrelated woman
  410. 28:30as being an automatic parent and thus with the equal legal right to custody or
  411. 28:35visitation after her divorce in relationship with this child who's
  412. 28:40actually the child that's the mother who she's departing from. So why is it that
  413. 28:45the courts are doing this because they explain under the historic state law
  414. 28:51treating husband wife marriage the husband of the birthing mother is
  415. 28:55robotably presumed to be the father of her child
  416. 28:59so post-oburgafel equality they say requires a woman who is so-called married
  417. 29:06to the birthing mother must also be presumed the father of the child
  418. 29:11except with the now androgynous twist of calling her that parent
  419. 29:15of the child you follow i do follow and and and i i've long said
  420. 29:19uh... that people who sometimes
  421. 29:22uh...
  422. 29:23i would say uh...
  423. 29:26pigeonhole themselves and saying well there's a a toxic war on
  424. 29:29uh... war on toxic masculinity or there's a war in femininity with the reality is
  425. 29:33it's a demonic war on the michael day
  426. 29:35to reduce
  427. 29:36that complementarily distinct maleness and femianist into an amalgamated indes
  428. 29:42undistinguishable human goo
  429. 29:45That is it is core and effort to put a finger in the eye of the creator of mankind
  430. 29:53Yes, yeah, that seems to me exactly right these courts are taking what is a morally and
  431. 30:00anthropologically-frated
  432. 30:02physiological reality of procreation a
  433. 30:05Profundity of procreation and converting it into an exclusively legal status of custodial function
  434. 30:12which means their existence is not, as you said before, a pre-existing truth of being,
  435. 30:18but it's only a concoction of political power, which means the family is a state invention
  436. 30:24full stop. It's not a separate jurisdiction with a divinely created order of human existence,
  437. 30:29as you were mentioning before. And what do you suppose the consequence of that principle might
  438. 30:34be when serving as a dogma of constitutional law?
  439. 30:37I'll tell us.
  440. 30:40Anyway, you see, this is why I want to insist that we take every available opportunity to
  441. 30:45resist the unjustified extensions of Obergefell.
  442. 30:49Yes.
  443. 30:50So to insist not just on working toward its overruling, but in the interim limiting it to
  444. 30:57the strict boundaries of the actual ruling itself rather than extending it out in the
  445. 31:01waste that I'm mentioning.
  446. 31:04so important that this is done and by and large this territory has largely been
  447. 31:10seeded you know and you have judges and certain instances who want to be known
  448. 31:15for being advocates for equality, progress, etcetera, etcetera who sometimes take the
  449. 31:23bait if you will to stretch far beyond what Obergefell says and be the
  450. 31:29progenitors of the next iteration of what they view as inevitable consequences of
  451. 31:33of the burgofell but that's just not law
  452. 31:37and nor is it true
  453. 31:39and it must be contended
  454. 31:40right
  455. 31:42yes that's right you know there are two different ways that we ought to approach
  456. 31:45this discussion
  457. 31:46one is
  458. 31:47the recognition of the cultural annihilation that's implied in the idea
  459. 31:54unprecedented historically of same-sex marriage
  460. 31:58there is no stopping
  461. 32:01no stopping the outworking of the concepts that are lodged within that deviant idea.
  462. 32:07Okay, and I want to pick up on that because we're coming to want on a break,
  463. 32:11but I'd like to pick up right there when we get to the other side of the break.
  464. 32:15Why it's important to arrest, hinder, and ultimately work toward overturning a burgofell,
  465. 32:23but we have to stop the encroachment
  466. 32:26societally from these deviant and aberrant ideas
  467. 32:31because it becomes normalized.
  468. 32:33Ideas have consequences, bad ideas create casualties,
  469. 32:37and we are literally dislodging our entire society from truth.
  470. 32:41And that has inevitable detrimental consequences
  471. 32:46to sit that way.
  472. 32:47And if that is not an understatement,
  473. 32:48I don't know what an understatement is.
  474. 32:50You are listening to the Hamilton Corner.
  475. 32:51My guest is Jeff Schae for Director of the Hale Institute at New St. Andrew's College.
  476. 32:56Stay with us.
  477. 33:04The stand provides a Christian perspective on current issues that are important to your
  478. 33:08family.
  479. 33:09Produced by the American Family Association, this monthly magazine is full of articles and
  480. 33:13stories about people who are making a difference in their community and around the world.
  481. 33:18Sign up today and receive a free six month subscription.
  482. 33:21Visit thestand.net or call 1-800-326-4543.
  483. 33:33Hamilton Quarter podcast and one-minute commentaries are available at aFR.net
  484. 33:38back to the Hamilton Corner on American Family Radio.
  485. 33:42Welcome back to the Hamilton Corner. Abraham Hamilton III is my name. My guest
  486. 33:47is the director of the Hale Institute at New St. Andrews College, Jeff Shafer. And
  487. 33:50before we went to the break, Jeff, you were explaining why it's important that we
  488. 33:56place the proper perspective on what should be viewed as a restrained ruling in decision
  489. 34:05from the Supreme Court in the Obergevav versus Hodge's case of 2015.
  490. 34:09Right.
  491. 34:10Yes.
  492. 34:11During the break, we were chatting that there is a real vital distinction between the cultural
  493. 34:15disaster of accepting the deviance of something called same-sex marriage on the one hand and
  494. 34:20on the other the significance of the Supreme Court ruling like Obergeviel in the context
  495. 34:25of the American constitutional system.
  496. 34:27are two very different things. And so with respect to the latter, there are a number of points
  497. 34:32that we might register about Obergefell. I mean, a long list, but let's just pick some off
  498. 34:39here. First of all, a Supreme Court ruling is not the law of the land, and please let us
  499. 34:46stop saying as much. Article 6 of the Constitution tells us what the law of the land is, which
  500. 34:51includes the Constitution itself, along with congressional statutes and treaties that are
  501. 34:55and keeping with it, but it does not identify Supreme Court decisions as the law of the
  502. 35:00land.
  503. 35:01And the historic understanding of court rulings in our Anglo-American common law legal tradition,
  504. 35:05which would have been well understood at the time of the drafting and the constitution,
  505. 35:09was that judicial rulings were evidence of law, not law itself.
  506. 35:14Profound to think of...
  507. 35:16Yeah, very important distinction.
  508. 35:18Yes.
  509. 35:19Justice Gorsuch wrote a magnificent concurring opinion in the recent Loper-Brite case that
  510. 35:23came down a little over a month ago that elaborated this important point.
  511. 35:27But indeed, links just like other judicial decisions are often mistaken demonstrably so,
  512. 35:33and thus are frequently overruled by the court.
  513. 35:36And this has happened hundreds of times at the Supreme Court itself.
  514. 35:39Court rulings have no binding authority over the Supreme Court except insofar as it contains
  515. 35:44a persuasive influence for the court to treat as the law of the land.
  516. 35:50And obviously, erroneous and made-up decision like Obergefell that barely pretended to be
  517. 35:55interpreting the Constitution is in effect to give the court or five justices on it, the
  518. 36:00power to amend the Constitution.
  519. 36:03Not only is that not a feature of Article III's judicial power, it's also a violation of Article
  520. 36:08V of the Constitution that establishes the mechanism for constitutional amendment.
  521. 36:15But more fundamentally or simply, in addressing Obergefell's incompetence as a vehicle to
  522. 36:20overthrow the family law systems of the several states is the limited nature of the Supreme
  523. 36:26Court's Article III judicial power to begin with.
  524. 36:30Unlike the legislative power, which is not just in the several states but in the Congress
  525. 36:35at the federal level under Article I, the Supreme Court exercises only judicial authority
  526. 36:40which under Article III engages and operates only upon the existence of a case or controversy
  527. 36:47that is filed in court, which entails that the court's authority also extends only to the
  528. 36:53parties before it, who have been made parties to that case or controversy, either as plaintiffs
  529. 36:58or drawing in defendants.
  530. 37:00This was well recognized throughout our legal history until we collectively forgot it around
  531. 37:05the second half of the 20th century, but earlier it's not so.
  532. 37:09You remember Abraham Lincoln's observation that the Supreme Court's reprehensible ruling
  533. 37:16in the Dred Scott case.
  534. 37:17He registered the idea that while it was binding on the parties before the court in that case,
  535. 37:22it did not extend beyond them to other officials or to the nation at large.
  536. 37:27Recall, he mentioned in his first inaugural, if the court, just by resolving a dispute between
  537. 37:34parties, thereby makes policy for the entire nation, we've kind of lost our entire constitutional
  538. 37:42system in the process.
  539. 37:45And as since we'd be upending our system into some sort of unrecognizable form, having
  540. 37:50nothing to do with the Constitutional acknowledgement of separated and distinct departments of authority,
  541. 37:55subject matter, distinction, and so on and so forth.
  542. 37:58So that's kind of a big picture that there's just in the first instance judicial rulings
  543. 38:06themselves are very limited.
  544. 38:08They do not make policy.
  545. 38:09The Supreme Court's opinions are not pieces of legislation.
  546. 38:13shouldn't be reviewed as if they were.
  547. 38:18By the way, I guess I should say, you know, in view of the fact that we've seen something
  548. 38:23of a public shift on the authority of the Supreme Court, we really do now have a Supreme Court
  549. 38:30majority that is much more sophisticated on these kinds of issues and willing to talk
  550. 38:35about them.
  551. 38:36Yes.
  552. 38:37You know, there were a number of cases that came down from the court this last term in June,
  553. 38:42which the justices showed a rather punctilious attention to the nature and limits of judicial
  554. 38:47authority.
  555. 38:48So they were emphasizing the circumscribed reach of constitutional grants of authority,
  556. 38:56of the court to issue injunctions, whether the court will rule on legal claims that don't
  557. 39:02implicate a sufficient harm to the claimant, whether the court's case law can overcome
  558. 39:06supreme authority, the constitution itself and so on and on.
  559. 39:09So these questions about judicial authority in the Supreme Court itself are really getting
  560. 39:13a lot more attention from certain justices in particular, but my suspicion is that there
  561. 39:19is a majority on the court now that really is sensitive to the reach of its own decisions
  562. 39:26and would be open to arguments about the limitations of cases like Obergefell.
  563. 39:30Yeah, I agree with you.
  564. 39:32And it's the judicial acknowledgement that we are a nation constitutionally that we have
  565. 39:37separate powers but not co-equal branches of government.
  566. 39:41We don't have the same role nor domestic potency
  567. 39:45in terms of determining national policy
  568. 39:49and it's a proper constitutional balance,
  569. 39:52which is necessary in order to instruct the nation
  570. 39:55as to how we as the governed
  571. 39:58who delegate to our elected representatives
  572. 40:01via our consent a proper conforming to constitutional norms.
  573. 40:06Yes, well put. You know, there's some really fascinating scholarship that's emerging on
  574. 40:15these kinds of questions. I think a prominent figure here is Jonathan Mitchell, who was the
  575. 40:23driving force, the author behind Texas, the SB8 statute. But he's written a fascinating
  576. 40:29piece in explaining that Supreme Court justices cannot strike down or invalidate any laws. It
  577. 40:37can only enjoy government officials who are made parties to the case
  578. 40:42uh... requiring they not enforce the law of the court teams on constitutional
  579. 40:46that is to say the laws themselves are not affected it's just the prerogatives
  580. 40:50of the officials who are defendants in the case in it's for that reason that we
  581. 40:54need to make clear that obergo felt that exactly nothing
  582. 40:58to wipe state marriage laws off the books
  583. 41:01and then again yes please one more time for the ball the way in the back
  584. 41:07yeah in my state of residence which is i don't like yours in the city
  585. 41:11there is no same-sex marriage recognized in law
  586. 41:15the relevant provisions of the state constitution statutes
  587. 41:18make plane that marriage is a union of man and woman
  588. 41:22and the inept vote of five justices in the uberghal case
  589. 41:25which by the way did not involve i don't know i should add
  590. 41:29did not could not do anything to i don't know marriage law
  591. 41:33it's not even clear what
  592. 41:35for self-speakable language in the case merely stated that state laws are invalid to the extent
  593. 41:42they exclude same-sex couples from civil marriage.
  594. 41:46But that's a ruling that has been universally ignored, as it means that husband-wife marriage
  595. 41:51laws are invalid.
  596. 41:52Though precisely those laws have been in nonstop operation in states across the nation since
  597. 41:57Obergefell is announced.
  598. 42:00But in all events, was Idaho, was Mississippi, were they parties to this case?
  599. 42:03that they present arguments as to the nature and the virtues of their family law systems,
  600. 42:09no and no.
  601. 42:12The Supreme Court's ruling only was addressed to the parties in that case and it did nothing
  602. 42:17to the laws of the states implicated.
  603. 42:20It only issued a kind of injunction against officials from enforcing laws in a particular
  604. 42:27way.
  605. 42:28That's a longer conversation, but I just wanted to flag it as one that's of moment
  606. 42:33for the discussion that we're having.
  607. 42:35Yeah.
  608. 42:36So what would you submit needs to be done in order to advance?
  609. 42:43I would say probably the two-pronged approach first,
  610. 42:47limiting the metastasizing application
  611. 42:51of or what some might view as inevitable consequences
  612. 42:55of a burgafell.
  613. 42:56What would need to be done in order to accomplish that?
  614. 42:59What we need to see is states with a measure of backbone
  615. 43:03refusing to do anything beyond,
  616. 43:07I mean, I think it would be reasonable for states
  617. 43:10to simply say we're not going to abide
  618. 43:12by the decision in the first place
  619. 43:13because we were not parties to that case.
  620. 43:15Now of course, that's going to invite litigation
  621. 43:18that will have to be fought out and so on.
  622. 43:20And obviously, Supreme Court precedent
  623. 43:22is going to have substantial influence
  624. 43:25on the outcomes that obtain in that subsequent line
  625. 43:29of litigation.
  626. 43:30So let's set aside the question of Obergefell's
  627. 43:33licensing ruling and just move over to the questions of whether states should hold on
  628. 43:40to its laws that say on our birth certificate templates there is mother and father and there's
  629. 43:46nothing else.
  630. 43:47There's no changes to be had there.
  631. 43:50No Supreme Court decision has addressed whether the law in Mississippi or the law in Idaho
  632. 43:56on that question is valid or invalid.
  633. 43:58the question about child custody, whether the adoption laws continue to be operational in
  634. 44:05our states rather than being overborn by same-sex partners who want to have automatic access
  635. 44:10to his or her partner's child.
  636. 44:13You follow me?
  637. 44:14All of these kinds of natural family dimensions that are just getting steamrolled in a number
  638. 44:20of contexts.
  639. 44:22I think states and attorneys general for states really need to be refusing to do anything or
  640. 44:28permit an incursion into state law in any way
  641. 44:31that is arguably an extension of a burger felt but in fact was never ruled
  642. 44:36upon in that case
  643. 44:38now i i know what we're talking about the technical legal realities uh... but
  644. 44:43what why do you surmised that the steam rolling
  645. 44:46of the basically the family structure at the state level is is taking place
  646. 44:49what why do you think that's happening
  647. 44:52i i don't know i mean i find the whole thing astonishing
  648. 44:56I mean, states typically are so jealous of their prerogatives in their historic law.
  649. 45:01So, if this were a matter of, let's say, water rights or a boundary dispute between states,
  650. 45:07something along these lines, you know perfectly well that your attorney general's office.
  651. 45:12Across the country, we'd see the same thing, this fervent resistance to any kind of additional
  652. 45:17expansion of a principle that's unlike.
  653. 45:21But for some reason, we have all just laying down flat before this kind of juggernaut as
  654. 45:28if it's irresistible.
  655. 45:30And so no resistance has been put up to it.
  656. 45:32Why that is the case?
  657. 45:33I have no idea.
  658. 45:35But what makes, we might say, aggravates that concern is there are so many bases upon which
  659. 45:42to resist.
  660. 45:45I'm certain not many people have even considered it, and it very well could be because of the
  661. 45:53political nature of it.
  662. 45:55What Attorney General wants to be found, sticking their neck out to oppose the cultural juggernaut
  663. 46:01that is sexual deviance and perversion.
  664. 46:06The sexual revolution is one of the most profound, perhaps the most profound sort of revolution
  665. 46:12in human history.
  666. 46:15imperative is visible all around us. Obviously, there's penalties that are, you just alluded
  667. 46:21to this, penalties that would be extended to anyone who resists its ministrations. So,
  668. 46:27yes, it would really take a sturdy state group of officials and litigators to stand up to
  669. 46:37this in the way that I'm suggesting. But it's only civilization that's at stake. So maybe
  670. 46:42we could go ahead and drum up some integrity within our ranks and do something about this.
  671. 46:47Yeah, and I just want to invite you just to expound that a little bit. It's only civilization,
  672. 46:52that's a state, and it is something that provoked a chuckle from me because of how true and obviously
  673. 46:59true it is. Would you just take a few moments and articulate why you can say with such conviction
  674. 47:05that it's only civilization that's a state? Well, you know, all of life, both explicit and
  675. 47:12implicit. I'm talking both on the cultural side of things as well as the legal side of things,
  676. 47:18is operational kind of on the basis of an understanding of what the human being is.
  677. 47:27So throughout history we have acknowledged that male and female are significant given
  678. 47:34features of human life and they're coming together in marriages, the basis of civilization,
  679. 47:39basis of the social order. This is how we have children emerging into the world. And so there's a
  680. 47:45kind of reality and significance to us as persons that's tethered to our being male, being female,
  681. 47:53being familial. And when I say, you know, the law itself is built on this, there's all kinds of
  682. 48:01presumptions that go back through the ages that in which the state differs to the reality of the
  683. 48:07family. It has not treated it as some sort of utilitarian concoction. It has instead kind
  684. 48:14of recognized it as being a truth of existence. And now we are in this revolutionary overthrow
  685. 48:20getting away with doing off with that idea. And that truth, I guess I should say. And in
  686. 48:28the process of doing so, one of the things that's happening to the law is it is reconceiving
  687. 48:33itself as being beholden to nothing outside of the wishes of those in the corridors of
  688. 48:40power.
  689. 48:41The law no longer is understanding itself as submitting to a pre-existing order of truth.
  690. 48:47It is instead the exercise of coercion.
  691. 48:50And that's why it's so important that those persons who like particular ways of life would
  692. 48:56get their hands on the levers of power, so as to be able to manipulate things.
  693. 49:00But this is a conception of law that's new on the scene, and I think it's ultimately very
  694. 49:05destructive."
  695. 49:08The views and opinions expressed in this broadcast may not necessarily reflect those of the American
  696. 49:13Family Association or American Family Radio.

Transcript indexed for search. Open the panel to read along.

Share this episode


Subscribe and never miss an episode.

Pick Your Platform All Episodes
Call (888) 589-8840 Book Abe