Dear Lord, in this world of palpable evil, give all people of goodwill the wisdom, the courage, and the means to resist and overcome it.
Read the rest, by Ira Katz, here.
Dear Lord, in this world of palpable evil, give all people of goodwill the wisdom, the courage, and the means to resist and overcome it.
Read the rest, by Ira Katz, here.
17-minute video.
6-minute video here.
Prussian style education. Video here.
And non-Christians too.
This young woman is wise beyond her years.
10-minute video.
Paraphrased quote from the book: There are only two kinds of people. Those who say to God: ‘Thy will be done’, and those to whom God says: ‘Thy will be done’.
In both cases, there are consequences.
Here’s a Grok summary of this book:
“Healer of the Nations: Biblical Blueprints for International Relations” (1987) by Gary North is a ~362-page book in the Biblical Blueprints series. It presents a distinctly Christian Reconstructionist/theonomic framework for foreign policy, international relations, and global order, arguing that the Bible provides explicit principles (“blueprints”) for nations, diplomacy, alliances, aid, and missions.
North contends that humanist approaches to international relations (whether internationalist, isolationist, or nationalist) are failing and inherently flawed because they reject God’s sovereignty and biblical law. Christians must reclaim a covenantal, decentralized, bottom-up vision of international order rooted in Scripture, aiming for progressive victory of God’s kingdom in history through ethical obedience, gospel expansion, and self-government under biblical law — not top-down bureaucracy or one-world statism.
The title draws from God as the ultimate “Healer of the Nations” (via the gospel and law), with the Church and faithful nations as instruments.
North wrote it quickly in 1987 amid Cold War tensions (e.g., references to Oliver North, Boland Amendment, and anti-communism). It is dense, heavily footnoted, polemical, and aimed at equipping Bible-believing Christians to challenge humanist dominance in foreign policy. It fits his broader work promoting dominion theology and Christian economics.
In short: The book calls Christians to reject both withdrawal and humanistic globalism, instead pursuing a faithful, law-based international order that advances Christ’s healing influence over the nations through evangelism, ethical living, and covenantal reconstruction. It remains a key text in Reconstructionist circles for its uncompromising biblical approach to geopolitics.
The full PDF is available for free on garynorth.com for those wanting the complete text.
Article by Vijay Jayaraj here.
Article by Hugh Ross.
Sean McDowell interviews Stephen Meyer.
Mention of someone who said that, after all insights, he still didn’t want it to be true. (At about 11 min.)