WATCH ON YOUTUBE
Summary:
In this episode, Michael Easley and Kerby Anderson reflect on cultural shifts, global instability, and the role of the local church. Anderson highlights the pervasive anxiety among Americans and links it to a culture steeped in uncertainty and spiritual confusion. He emphasizes the importance of Christians understanding their unique callings—whether in politics, medicine, business, or parenting—as a faithful response to today’s challenges. Easley and Anderson lament the decline of theological depth in churches and the overcorrection toward relational, program-heavy models.
However, young people are hungry for meaning, structure, and authentic faith. They point to growing interest in liturgy, Reformed theology, and apologetics ministries as signs of revival. Both men underscore the value of low time preference—faithful, long-term ministry—even when cultural progress seems slow. Their message is clear: in a dark world, Christians must stay rooted in truth, reach their immediate circles, and trust God’s sovereign plan across generations.
Takeaways:
- Global instability—especially from Russia, China, and Iran—continues to raise valid concerns for national security and Christian engagement.
- Widespread anxiety is rooted in real threats, cultural confusion, and a growing disconnect from biblical truth.
- Christians should focus on their God-given callings—whether in politics, business, or family—to impact the culture.
- The decline of theology in favor of shallow “community” leaves churches spiritually weak and ineffective.
- Young people are increasingly drawn to structure, doctrine, and meaningful tradition within the Church.
- True cultural change begins with long-term faithfulness, not quick solutions—our role is to trust God and stay rooted in truth.
ABOUT KERBY ANDERSON
Kerby Anderson is the President of Probe Ministries. He holds masters degrees from
Yale University (science) and Georgetown University (government). He is the author of twenty books including Christian Ethics in Plain Language, Christians and Government, Christians and Economics, Technology and Social Trends, and Arts, Media, and Culture. He is the host of the two-hour daily “Point of View” radio talk show (over 200 radio stations) and does a daily radio commentary heard on over 600 radio stations.
Kerby is married and the father of three grown children and one grandchild. He and his wife Susanne reside in Allen, Texas.
LINKS MENTIONED:
Watch the highlights and full version of this interview on our Youtube channel.
For more inContext interviews, click here.