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Great Minds with Michael Medved Podcast with In Depth Conversations about Timeless Topics
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Seeing Purpose in the Lives of Washington and Lincoln | Michael Medved with Stephen Meyer

Episode
16
With
Michael Medved
Guest
Stephen C. Meyer
Duration
00:21:10
Download
Audio File (48.5 mb)
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The focus in this episode of Great Minds with Michael Medved is on a pair of giants, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, who dazzle the student of our country’s history with evidence of a special guidance at work at numerous key junctures in their lives. The outcome of two great conflicts, the Revolutionary War and the Civil War, seem to have turned, in remarkable ways, upon bizarre providential twists. The consequences have been profound not just for the United States but for the world.

An Electrifying Mind

Michael Medved is a nationally syndicated radio talk show host and bestselling author. His daily three hour show reaches 200 stations across the country and an audience of more than 4 million placing him, for nearly two decades, on the Talkers Magazine list of the top ten political talk shows in the United States. Born in Philadelphia, Michael attended public schools in San Diego and Los Angeles before starting Yale at age 16 as a National Merit Scholar. He majored in American History and graduated with honors, before attending Yale Law School, where his classmates included Bill and Hillary Clinton.

Video

Show Notes

Timestamps more closely approximate the audio than the video.

  • 00:45 | Providence and the Invisible Hand in Washington’s first inaugural address
  • 01:45 | George Washington’s survival in the Battle of the Monongahela at 23
  • 02:12 | Samuel Davies sermon foreshadowing Washington’s auspicious future
  • 04:18 | The one indispensable, indestructible man of the 18th century
  • 05:50 | The twin pillars in the worldview of the Founders
  • 06:58 | The single greatest creation by committee in history
  • 07:39 | The only successful revolution in human history
  • 08:37 | A common commitment to ennobling principles
  • 08:50 | A sense of “doing the Lord’s work”, of partnership
  • 10:05 | Lincoln’s self-understanding of being an instrument
  • 10:45 | A deepening of faith in White House
  • 11:05 | A spooky coincidence between the sons of Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth
  • 12:30 | Lincoln’s death on Good Friday
  • 12:36 | Lincoln’s dreams, and taking dreams seriously
  • 13:42 | Lincoln’s (controversial) last words
  • 14:17 | The Emancipation Proclamation and waiting for a sign
  • 17:15 | “With this paper, I can beat Bobby Lee.”
  • 18:04 | Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address
  • 19:40 | Lincoln’s theodicy, offering a reason for the suffering of the Civil War

References and Resources

Stephen C. Meyer

Director, Center for Science and Culture
Dr. Stephen C. Meyer received his Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge in the philosophy of science. A former geophysicist and college professor, he now directs the Center for Science and Culture at the Discovery Institute in Seattle. He is author of the New York Times-bestseller Darwin’s Doubt (2013) as well as the book Signature in the Cell (2009) and Return of the God Hypothesis (2021). In 2004, Meyer ignited a firestorm of media and scientific controversy when a biology journal at the Smithsonian Institution published his peer-reviewed scientific article advancing intelligent design. Meyer has been featured on national television and radio programs, including The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, CBS's Sunday Morning, NBC's Nightly News, ABC's World News, Good Morning America, Nightline, FOX News Live, and the Tavis Smiley show on PBS. He has also been featured in two New York Times front-page stories and has garnered attention in other top-national media.
Tags
Abraham Lincoln
America
George Washington
History
Providence
Season 1

Discovery Institute