THE RESOURCE LIBRARY

Read What They Actually Said.

Moral clarity requires more than headlines, clips, commentary, and secondhand summaries.

This library gathers the Scripture passages, constitutional documents, legislation, court opinions, government reports, research, speeches, and historical records used in Moral Clarity episodes.

The goal is simple: give you the source so you can examine the evidence for yourself.

Source Before Spin

WHY SOURCES MATTER

Conviction Should Rest on Evidence.

Public debate often asks people to react before they understand. Headlines summarize. Clips remove context. Commentators frame the facts. Political organizations select the evidence most useful to their side.

Moral Clarity returns to the original material whenever possible.

Read the document. Examine the context. Test the claim. Reach an informed judgment.

RESOURCE CATEGORIES

The Sources Behind the Conversation

As new episodes are released, this page will grow into a searchable library organized by topic and episode.

01

Scripture

Biblical texts examined in literary, historical, theological, and canonical context.

Resources coming with the relaunch.

02

Constitutional Documents

The Constitution, amendments, founding-era writings, Federalist Papers, speeches, and related historical documents.

Resources coming with the relaunch.

03

Legislation

Bills, enacted laws, legislative summaries, voting records, and official congressional or state materials.

Resources coming with the relaunch.

04

Court Opinions

Majority opinions, dissents, concurrences, legal holdings, and official case records.

Resources coming with the relaunch.

05

Government Reports

Agency reports, audits, public data, executive actions, official investigations, and policy documents.

Resources coming with the relaunch.

06

Research and Data

Academic studies, datasets, surveys, institutional research, and original statistical sources.

Resources coming with the relaunch.

07

Speeches and Statements

Full speeches, transcripts, interviews, official statements, and public testimony.

Resources coming with the relaunch.

08

Historical Documents

Letters, proclamations, records, biographies, archival material, and other historical sources.

Resources coming with the relaunch.

BUILT AROUND EACH EPISODE

Every Conversation Will Have a Source File.

Each relaunch episode will be supported by a dedicated collection of links, documents, quotations, references, and recommended reading.

01

The Moral Question

The central issue examined in the episode.

02

Key Scripture

The biblical texts that establish the moral framework.

03

Primary Documents

The laws, reports, records, rulings, and statements discussed.

04

Supporting Research

Studies, statistics, and additional evidence used in the analysis.

05

Further Reading

Books, articles, historical material, and related resources.

THE RESEARCH STANDARD

Primary Sources First.

Moral Clarity distinguishes between original evidence and commentary about that evidence.

Secondary sources can provide valuable reporting, analysis, and context. They should not replace the original document when the original is available.

Where sources conflict, the disagreement will be identified rather than concealed.

We Ask:

  • Who created the source?
  • When was it created?
  • What does it say in full context?
  • What evidence supports the claim?
  • What important information may be missing?
  • Has the information changed or been corrected?
  • Can the claim be independently verified?

THE LIBRARY IS GROWING

Episode Resource Files Are Coming.

The resource archive will launch alongside the new Moral Clarity episodes. Each file will make it easier to review the evidence, continue the conversation, and conduct your own research.

MC

RESOURCE FILE 01

In Preparation

Scripture, documents, reports, research, and recommended reading will be added when the first relaunch episode is published.

DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH

Do Not Outsource Your Judgment.

Read beyond the headline. Watch beyond the clip. Examine the source. Ask better questions. Test every claim.

An informed conviction is stronger than a borrowed opinion.