Locale of Meaning
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In “Locale of Meaning” (Chalcedon Report No. 172), Rushdoony argues that the decisive shift of the modern age was the relocation of meaning from God to events themselves. Whereas biblical faith locates all meaning in the sovereign Creator—whose eternal decree gives purpose to every atom, moment, and event—modern thought claims that meaning arises from the relationships of events, human experience, or social processes. This shift necessarily transfers authority from God to man: if meaning is not given by God, then man must create it, and with it, law. Hence law becomes logic, experience, class power, or social consensus rather than divine revelation. Rushdoony contends that this is the essence of humanism and that many Christians unwittingly adopt it by seeking salvation from Scripture, meaning from sociology, and law from the state—thereby hollowing out the gospel itself. Against this, he insists that God alone determines meaning, law, and history; obedience to His law-word defines the meaning of events, while rebellion brings judgment. Meaning does not emerge from history—it governs history because it proceeds from God.