The Michael Knowles Show - Merry Christmas: Let’s Talk About The End of the World - Michael Knowles & Bishop Barron EXPLAIN
Episode Date: December 24, 2025In this engaging and insightful conversation, conservative commentator Michael Knowles sits down with Bishop Robert Barron, the renowned Catholic bishop and founder of Word on Fire ministries, to unpa...ck the profound spiritual and theological meaning of Advent and Christmas. - - - Today's Sponsor: Hallow - Put your relationship with God first. Head over to https://hallow.com/knowles for three months free today! - - - DailyWire+: 🎄✨ DAILY WIRE CHRISTMAS SALE IS HERE! ✨🎄 🎁 https://www.dailywire.com/subscribe ⭐️ 40% Off DailyWire+ New Annual Memberships ⭐️ 50% Off DailyWire+ Annual Upgrade Memberships ⭐️ 50% Off DailyWire+ Annual Gift Memberships - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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It's Christmas Eve. We've reached the end of Advent. Christmas is upon us. We're all looking forward to
this very, very joyful, not only day, but joyful season. And so I thought this would be a great
opportunity to talk about the end of the world. And joining me is my friend, His Excellency, Bishop Robert
Barron. Bishop Barron, thank you so much for coming on the show. Michael, always a pleasure.
pleasure to talk to you. This has become an annual tradition, Your Excellency, where we come on
and you educate everyone about some of the misconceptions and popular themes of Christmas. And I said,
you know, this year, I don't know, maybe I'm just feeling a little salty or something like that.
But I want to get into some of the darker aspects of the Christmas story because you're actually
involved in this too. I was reading a book by Hans Erz von Balthazar, the 20th century theologian that
you cite quite a lot. I was reading a theology of history where he points out something basic
that hadn't really occurred to me, which is at Christmas, we commemorate the incarnation,
you know, the baby Jesus and the manger and the animals and the magos, that, but also we're
not just commemorating something that happened. In a very tangible way, we're looking forward
to the second coming. And we see images of this and figures of this. And that's going to be
about as dramatic as the first, frankly, maybe more so.
So could you talk a little bit about these, I don't know, the less saccharine aspects of the Christmas story?
Yeah, good.
I'm happy to talk about these kind of edgier sides of Christmas because the constant temptation, of course, the danger is we turn Christmas into a kind of harmless midwinter festival.
And in fact, it's about something, and Baltazar got this.
I mean, earth shattering.
One way to look at it is Advent, we look back, we look around.
and we look forward.
So the Adventist, the coming of Christ,
it happened 2,000 years ago.
We remember that.
Also, it's happening now
because at the heart of Christian spirituality
is Christ being born in us.
You know, when Paul says,
it's no longer I who live.
It's Christ who lives in me.
Or think of the little flower
in that wonderful little scene
in her book, her autobiography,
when on Christmas Eve,
the Lord is born in her in this decisive way.
So that appeals to anyone,
Christian now. But then also we look forward, as you suggest, to the second coming, when Christ
the Adventus definitiveus, you know, when he will come definitively at the end of time.
So all three are part of a healthy Christian spirituality. You know, all three are a little bit
unnerving, too. When he came, two thousand years ago, it said Herod tried to murder him and
all Jerusalem trembled. See, we overlooked that in our sentimentalized Christmas.
Christmas is a pretty dire business.
You know, the new king has come.
What did C.S. Lewis say, slipping clandestinely behind enemy lines, right?
Because the enemy was poised.
Think of that scene from the 12th chapter of Revelation when the woman is, you know, in labor.
And they said there's a dragon, a red dragon right there whose purpose is to devour the child.
Well, that's the prince of the dark powers, whose minions include people like Herod the
grade, who were trying to kill the baby. So there's a dire aspect to it long ago. A dire aspect to
it now, you bet. I mean, say, oh, Christ will be born in me. What a nice thing. Well, this sinner doesn't
like that. I mean, sin in me rebels against Christ coming to be born in me. You mean, if he's born in
me, I got to stop doing all these things I've been doing and I got to change my whole life. I don't want
that. So I resist him. And then the second coming, the ultimate coming, no, no,
know, the sinful world kind of likes the structures the way they are, and they don't want the
things summed up now in the risen Christ. So there's a dark edge to all of it. We want him to come,
and we don't want him to come. And to be honest about it, that's reflected in the scriptural text,
reflected in our own spirituality. Advent's a great time to look hard at that fact. Yes, I do want
the Lord to come, and I don't want him to come. And to come to terms with that resistance is
part of the meaning of Advent, I think. You know, one of my social media staffers here had an
Advent picture that he was going to put on social media. And he was writing what he thought were
the four traditional themes of Advent, hope, joy, I don't know, whatever the other two are.
And I said, well, you know, in my understanding, the four traditional themes of Advent are the four last
things, which are death, judgment, heaven, and hell.
Sort of laughed about that. Seems like it's kind of the opposite.
No, really, they're not opposites. They actually go together.
But this idea that, yeah, it's the middle of the night, and there's this baby who is born in a cave,
placed in a manger, and you have foreigners coming who are following a star, who are probably
Zoroastrian or something like that, and they're there because they know.
they pass by Herod, they see that Herod means harm, they leave by another way, so significant that they encounter Christ and they go back by another way.
And to your point, Your Excellency, we want the incarnation, but we kind of don't.
And it seems to me we want the incarnation on our terms, on our personal terms.
But what the incarnation is, as what the Second Coming is, is a global event and the earth itself will shape.
Yeah, I mean, you're saying a lot there, and it's all right, you know.
Even like Luke's famous account, which is in the minds of most people when you think about Christmas,
but the church fathers saw has this very dark edge to it.
Why are Mary Joseph going to Bethlehem?
Well, they're being compelled to go there by this great imperial act of Caesar Augustus,
calling for a census of the whole world.
Well, that was seen in the Bible always as an aggressive act.
To take a census meant you could control, manipulate, draft.
your people. So this little couple is being kind of pushed around by this great power.
The wood of the crib, the father is long associated with the wood of the cross. The swaddling clothes,
they associate with the burial bands around the body of the Lord. He's placed in a manger where the
animals eat because at the culmination of his life, he's going to give his body and blood as food
for the world. Even the shepherds and the angels, I made this point, an angel in the Bible is a
fearsome creature. It's a high creature from a higher ontological plane. And so when one angel breaks
through, it's always a source of fear. But then we hear in that account that there's a army of
angels appear. Well, you're meant to remember at that point, oh, we began the story with Caesar
Augustus, who had the biggest army in the ancient world.
but the baby king has a bigger army, and it's signaling there's going to be a conflict.
The story of this child is going to be one of grace and redemption, all that, yes, but that involves
conflict. There's going to be a battle, a spiritual battle. It'll culminate on the cross.
Very important for us to see that dimension of Christmas, I think, lest we devolve into sentimentalism
about it. The fact that Herod and all Jerusalem are trembling with anxiety,
That's a very telling thing.
Our resistance to Christ, and all of us sinners have it.
We all feel it.
If I'm really serious about Jesus becoming the Lord of my life, that's a fearsome business.
That means a lot of rearranging has to be done inside of me.
The good news, this is Dorothy Day had this great insight that the messy, stable, stinky, smelly, full of animals.
and how wonderful she said because it means that Christ can be born even in a messy soul like mine.
Right, quite right. But once he's born in us, he wants to clean things up. He's the Lord Jesus,
not a nice exemplar from long ago. He's an active spiritual presence who's rearranging me from the
inside out. Well, that's a fearsome prospect. And then we say,
May this same Lord Jesus be the Lord of culture and of society and of politics and everything else.
That's a little unnerving.
And we're meant to the Christmas stories themselves convey it.
Even like the wise men you mentioned, the Magi, the beautiful quest to find Christ.
Yes, and it's in all science, all philosophy is looking for Christ ultimately.
But, you know, T.S. Eliot's famous line, a hardcoming we had of it.
the difficulty of crossing the desert to get there.
And then Herod, who's trying to kill the baby and trying to deceive them,
they opened the treasures of their hearts before the Lord,
but then as you say, they go back by a different route.
Fulton Sheen said that, you know,
no one comes to Christ and goes back the same way he came.
So it's always a change, it's something even wrenching about it.
The Christmas stories are beautifully clear on all that,
and they resist sentimental interpretation.
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To your point on Christ is the Lord of Politics, too, you know, ultimately. Obviously,
their principalities and powers and spiritual wickedness in high places. But ultimately,
you know, Christ is in command of everything. And you see politics play such a role in the Christmas
story. I'm not the first to observe that at the time that you have Caesar Augustus on the
the prince of peace on the throne in Rome, you have the true prince of peace being born within the
Roman Empire. You have Caesar Augustus being called Phileus Devi, son of the divine, because of the
comment that heralded the death of Julius Caesar, and you have Phileus Dei born in Judea.
You know, all of these parallels.
Even the fact that Caesar Augustus claims authority over the whole world, because he can
institute this tax.
Same with Christ.
And so I wonder how we make sense of the role of the Christian in this polity, knowing that,
you know, the political forces are so evil.
so often and are so often arrayed against the truth. I think there's an impulse to just run away to
the desert and go be hermits or something, but I don't think that's exactly what we're called.
How do we think about it? No, and you're raising a really good and complex question, but you can
see the seeds of the answer in the scriptures themselves. So yes, the wickedness of Rome, and there's
no question in their minds about that. And from Caesar Augustus to Pontchus Pilate, I mean,
they notice that, to be sure. At the same time, the church fathers and Paul himself noticed
something that is precisely the orderliness and the relative peacefulness of that Augustin period,
the sort of Pax Romana that was beginning at that time, and the technological advances of Rome,
most importantly, the Roman road system, all of that made the spread of Christianity possible.
If we were back in the chaotic time, you know, with Mark Anthony and Octavian fighting and Cleopatra
and the Battle of Actium, if that was the period, it would have been,
chaotic. But at the time, there was the beginning of this Roman peace, however corrupt it was,
and yes, indeed it was, but there was a relative peace that enabled the Christian message to get
out. Moreover, that it happened, as you say, in a corner of the Roman Empire. But to say Roman Empire
was to say much of the known world in the West at the time, which enabled Paul, once he sees
the risen Lord, to go from Damascus to Jerusalem, back to Tarsus.
and then all through Asia Minor, and then finally to Greece, and then finally to Rome itself.
What enabled that? Well, the fact that it was all part of one great empire.
The Acts of the Apostles ends with Paul under arrest in Rome, kind of a house arrest,
but yet declaring the kingdom of God to everybody.
Well, see, to say Rome would say the center of civilization of the time,
and that's where the Christian faith was planted.
So that's the positive side of it, that they took advantage of the sophistication,
of ancient Rome and of the relative peace of ancient Rome to propagate the gospel, even as they were
intensely aware of how corrupt Rome was. Now, fast forward a couple centuries, and you've got Augustine's
great city of God. And it's a similar dynamic, right? Augustine is a Roman really to his bones. He's born in a
Roman culture, loves it, laments in many ways the fall of Rome. Of course he does. At the same time,
noticing, well, you know, the reason you fell, it wasn't because of Christianity,
it was because of all kinds of vices that were grounded in the false worship of ancient Rome.
So Augustine has that typical sort of love, hate, reverencing what was worth reverencing
in Rome, even as he was critical of it.
And calling for Christ indeed to be the Lord of the political arrangement, which is not
satiocracy.
That's a, you know, we can have a long discussion about that.
Yeah, yeah.
But it does mean that morally and spiritually there's a lordship of Jesus over every aspect of life.
And Augustine would have called that the city of God, right?
But it's that point about the ambiguity, the good and the bad within the Roman polity.
Yeah, I love the distinction you make too because today people who don't know any better,
or maybe they do know better and they're just being cynical, they'll say that any government that is in any way infused with religious principles is a theocracy.
Theocracy is government by clerics.
It's like hiero-a-racats, you know.
And a government that is infused with religious principles is just known as a government.
It's just what all governments do, whether they're religious or irreligious.
A very important point on, especially for our own day, where so many people, you know, we love our country instinctively.
We currently, those of us in America are living in the global empire.
There's certainly a big parallel to Rome.
It goes all the way back to the federalist papers in this.
That was kind of the point.
And yet we recognize this manifest corruption all around us.
I think it leads some people to say, well, if I'm going to be a true Christian, I need to get out of politics.
I need to get out of history and the particulars.
And yet I can't help but notice particularity entering into history and even into political society is at the very heart of the incarnation story.
Right.
And there are some people throughout our history who are called to that kind of hermetical, like,
and radically away from society.
Think of in the fourth century,
and I include Augustine here in his younger days.
Almost every great figure in the fourth century
wanted to get out of town and go to the hills.
And this is Jerome, this is John Christosom
in his early days.
Augustine, certainly.
Many were inspired by Anthony of the Desert
because the biography written by St. Anthony,
by St. Athanasius had just come out.
So there are people called to that.
And in fact, the whole monastic tradition
in a way enshrines that move.
But that's not everyone.
Not everyone's called to that.
In fact, most people are called to an active involvement in the world.
I think Michael, I'll speak as an American and as a Catholic bishop,
the genius of the First Amendment, I think, is it holds that tension very creatively.
We don't want an established religion.
So the anti-establishment clause, right, that Congress will make no law regarding an establishment
of religion.
That would be a sort of theocracy or a,
sacred public square.
That's Richard John Newhouse.
He didn't want the naked public square, which means a public square denuded of religion.
But at the same time, I don't want a sacred public square either.
One that's just, you know, where as you said, the clerics are running things or an officially
Catholic country or Jewish country or whatever.
No, we don't want that.
But at the same time, the First Amendment.
But the free exercise of religion, which doesn't just mean private worship,
It means a public exercise of religion where I can preach and teach, seek to influence society
on the basis of my religious convictions.
Right.
That's not a violation of the Establishment Clause.
On the contrary, that's an enactment of the Free Exercise Clause.
And I think part of, we'll give Madison credit there, the great genius of that First Amendment
is that it holds that together very creatively.
Now, in our history and our jurisprudence, we often get that wrong.
We'll oscillate between those two things.
In my lifetime, we oscillated away from free exercise, it seems to me,
toward an over-reading of the non-establishment clause.
So I'd say, let's go back to the First Amendment and all of its healthy tension.
That's a good space to be in.
And the roots of that are indeed in the Bible and the church fathers.
So much of, I don't know, modern life, I guess, seeks to just get rid of that.
tension. Maybe it's not modern. Maybe it's just an impulse and fallen man generally. I notice it's more
prominent in women. My wife and I talk about this a lot, this desire to resolve kind of apprehension
and tension. But men have it too. And yet, you know, we have the story. We know how the story
begins. We know the turning of the story, which is in the incarnation. We even know how the story
ends. And yet we're in this suspended time of history where we're supposed to do something,
and we're trying to figure out precisely what to do.
So then for the people who are considering Advent to be penitential,
they're considering death, judgment, heaven, and hell,
they're taking this time seriously.
And they're looking ahead to the second coming,
which will come sooner than some people think, probably.
You know, we don't know the day or the hour.
It can come by surprise.
Not even the sun, but only the father knows.
What should we be doing, you know, as the hours of Advent Wayne into the Christmas season,
which is a day, it's not a season. What actively should we be doing to prepare ourselves?
We should live as the church. So Jesus says, you're Peter, upon this rock, I will build my church.
The gates of hell will not prevail against it. The church represents the sort of planting of the seed of the Christ's life in the world.
So Christ comes, the incarnation. By the incarnation, we're saved. I'll say that now as a Catholic, not just the cross.
That's the culmination of it in a way. But by the whole of the incarnation, we're saved.
What's the perpetuation of the incarnation across space and time?
Again, this is a Catholic perspective.
It's called the Church.
So it's through the official teaching of the Church, through the sacraments of the Church,
especially the Eucharist, through apostolic authority, and all these through the great saints.
The Christ's life is perpetuated.
Go back to the Acts of the Apostles, the Ascended Christ, who ascends not to go away.
Up and away, goodbye Jesus.
It's not that.
It's more like a general taking a point advantage on the heights so we can survey the whole field of battle.
The ascended Christ sending his spirit into the church now to remake the world.
See, the incarnation is all about God's remaking of his creation.
We don't play a platonic game.
Christians are not platonists who would say, well, the fallen world or Gnostics.
It's just bad, matters bad.
It's a mess.
Let's get away from it as quickly as we can.
That is not biblical spirituality at all.
Biblical spirituality is the God of creation has never given up on his world, and he wants
to save it.
He wants to heal it.
He wants to restore it.
And then to raise it to the highest pitch of perfection.
The incarnation is the means by which God is affecting this great healing of the universe.
The church, the mystical body of Jesus, now continuing that work in the world.
Now, as we wait for the final culmination, we call that the second coming, that lovely Greek term, it's in Paul, but the fathers loved it, Anakephaliosis.
Cephaliosis, rolls right off the tongue.
It does. It's a lovely word, anacephaliosis.
And it's why it's rendered in Latin as Reh capitulatio, Kaput head, right?
So what sums everything up under the headship of Jesus, that's anacephaliosis.
That's Recapitulatio, Recapitulation.
St. Iranaes loved that idea, but it's right in Paul.
Aquinas loved it too.
That's the second coming, if you want, is this moment of all things coming together in their healed, redeemed form under the headship of Jesus.
So to your question, what do we do in the meantime?
Well, we live as the church.
We live as the city of God operative in the world, waiting for him.
We're not going to make this happen.
but we under the prompting of his spirit live according to his purposes.
That's what we do in the meantime.
One last question on this point is you make a great observation about the new age, Gnostic religions.
There's some way like the old age Gnostic religions, you know, that say matter is bad,
the physical world is bad time and history are bad, and so we just have to get away from the ick,
you know, and abstract ourselves into the ether or something.
And that's certainly not Christian.
it's entirely contrary to the incarnation.
But what about the tension also between universality and particularity?
Because I think there's also this desire, especially in the modern world, to universalize everything and say that particularity, particular nations, particular individuals, particular religion, particular anything, is an error, you know, and everything just has to be kind of universal and gray, you know, whether we're talking about sex,
or peoples or ideas or anything like that.
And in Christ, we have the universal king of everything and a particular man.
How do we make sense of that?
Yeah, it's one of the great philosophical questions, and they call it the scandal of particularity.
The more recent forms go back to the Enlightenment.
And to be fair, you know, the wars of religion, ravaged Europe, 17th century,
most of the great thinkers.
And it's Kant, Hegel, it's Schleermacher, it's Leibniz, it's Spinoza.
Most of those great people wanted to deal with that problem.
And they, okay, look, the religions are fighting and this particular form of Protestantism
against another form of Protestantism.
They're all against Catholicism and blah, blah, blah, blah.
We're all fighting, fighting, fighting.
Can't we find, read Rousseau on this too, can't we find some universal form of religiosity
that goes beyond the particular battles that can all bring us together?
That whole idea of it, can't we come together?
They did it through an appeal to the universal.
So look in someone like Schleiermacher, who's the founder of modern liberal Protestantism,
it's the feeling of absolute dependency.
I don't care whether you're Buddhist, Hindu, Christian, Jew, non-believer.
We've all got that, don't we?
Or in Kant, it's the categorical imperative.
It's the great moral imperative.
Don't we all have that in common no matter what our background?
Look in the 20th century theologians, you know, people like Paul Tillick, is the,
the breakthrough of the unconditioned, that no matter where you are, everyone experiences something
like that.
So that's the great fantasy in a way of liberalism, is to find this universal experience.
But here's the paradox, I think.
Truth, yes, is always universal.
I can't have Michael Knowles' truth and Bishop Barron's truth.
Truth is truth.
Truth is universal.
Two of two, two, it goes four for everybody.
Okay.
So truth is always universal.
However, access to truth is often particular.
And the modern mistake, I think the Enlightenment mistake, was to say the route of access to truth has to be as universal as truth itself.
So let's find it in this one great experience of absolute dependency or something.
Where in fact, it's often the particular that is the route of access to truth.
So I would say, you know, Jesus of Nazareth, this very particular first century Jew who led a very peculiar life, it ended in the most horrific way imaginable, and then a claim is made that is practically impossible to believe.
Okay, that's the particularity of Christianity.
But we say the word, the word, capital W, became flesh.
the universal was given we were given access to it by means of this very particular fact right
that's the paradox and we try to resolve it but when you say quite correctly when you try to
resolve it too universally it becomes this bland gray religiosity or to give it to contemporary
I'm not religious I'm spiritual see that's an appeal to the bland no no you're you're as
particular as the bloody cross of Jesus on that grubby hill outside of Jerusalem in the year
30 AD.
We're as particular as that.
Where as particular is we ate and drank with him after his resurrection from the dead.
I think breathtaking line from Acts chapter 10 when St. Peter, you know, blithely telling the
story of Jesus.
And then, oh, you know, we ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.
He's not talking about some myth or some grand universal thing.
talking about this guy that we knew, this Jesus from, you know, Nazareth, you know, up in Galilee,
that's how particular he is, right? But he knows that's the way into the most universal truth.
Christians have to keep insisting upon that. Yes, when I think about eating and drinking with him,
you know, he broils the fish. And I think, you know, in one of their bites of fish, there was probably
like a little bone. And in one of their bites, it was a little, like, it was, the, the, the, the, the,
The particularity goes even down that far, like when you remember a good meal, though there
was more that was memorable about the meal than the fish. And our access to truth, even coming by way of
a particular teacher, it's not just that teachers give us insight. It's, you know, Mr. So-and-so
from the 11th grade. The idea that we get access to a particular YouTube video even, I'm not
even being glib. Or where do we first get our access to learning and truth? It's the particular
mother who bore us. How fitting then that the truth himself would be born of a mother?
Right. You remember in the letter, first letter of John, where he says, I want to talk to you
about the word of life. Okay, the word of life. Boy, this guy is the highest philosophical level.
Then he says, which we looked upon with our eyes and our hands have touched. Now there's the
Christian difference. The word of life became available to them in this most particular way.
this word-made flesh, whom they could see and touch.
Well, see, look at the church.
That's why we worry about, like, building beautiful churches
and why we have sacraments that you can see and you can taste and touch,
and they're grubby and the oil.
I think that after a confirmation, when they have to bring a lemon over to me
so I can wipe the oil off my hands,
and I've been smearing that on the kids' foreheads,
that's the sacramental life of the church.
It's grubby in particular, you know?
But that tension is super important.
And there's always the Gnostic temptation to resolve that problem, to flee from it, to flee from particularity.
We often want to flee from it, especially in our sort of scandalized modern world.
And yet, there it is.
There's the Christmas manger.
Nevertheless, we're confronted with this undeniable fact of the pivot on which the world turns.
Your Excellency, that clears it.
it makes me a little less scared, though perhaps even more in awe of the end of the world
as we look ahead to it at the incarnation. I hope you've had a blessed Advent. I'm sure you have.
I have. It's always a busy time for a bishop. You're running all over the place to liturgies.
And I was at a women's prison about a week ago doing a Guadalupe ceremony for the women there.
So yeah, it's an interesting time of the year.
You know, I'm a mere layman. I'm not even a bishop. And I'm already exhausted by.
Advent. All I'm doing is stuffing my face with cookies and wine. So that's, uh, that's,
you talk to your spiritual director about that.
Bishop Barron, thank you for being here. Wonderful to see you. Wonderful to see all of you.
We'll catch you next time. God bless you. Thanks, Michael.
What was it like, Merlin, to be alone with God? Is that who you think I was alone with?
I knew your father. I am yet convinced that he was not of this world.
All men know of the God.
Great Taliesin.
Who am I, Father?
That the gods should war for my soul.
Princess Garris, saviour of our people.
I know what the bull god offered you.
I was offered the same.
And?
There is a new pirate work in the world.
I've seen it.
A god who sacrifices what he loves for us.
We are each given only one life singer.
No.
We're given another.
I learned of Yazoo the Christ.
And I have become his follower.
He's waiting on Earth, and I think you can give him one.
Trust in Jesus. He is the only hope for men like us.
Fate of Britain never rests in the hands of the great life.
Great light, great darkness.
Such things mattered to me then.
What matters to you now, mistress of lies?
You, nephew, are the High King.
How many lives must be lost before you accept the power?
the power.
You were born to wield.
So clinging to the promises of a God who has abandoned you.
I cannot take up their sword again.
You know what you must do.
Great life, forgive me.
The time has come to be reborn.
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