Life Hacks for Polymaths

Multidisciplinary | Cross-Disciplinary | Interdisciplinary | Transdisciplinary.

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Welcome, Polymaths!

I’m Zigfred Diaz — polymath, independent scholar, &  lifelong learner integrating multidisciplinary, cross-disciplinary, interdisciplinary & transdisciplinary ideas through a broader theological meta-narrative that serves as my guiding interpretive framework. Feel free to explore.

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Too Heavenly Minded, Too Earthly Useless?- Why the Church Must Respond to the Issues Tearing Apart the Nation

May 22, 2026 by Zigfred Diaz 2 Comments

“What is this going to profit the body of Christ?” That question, asked in response to a theological paper on the ICC controversy and Bato dela Rosa’s arrest, reveals a deeper problem within the modern Church itself. Somewhere along the way, many Christians began treating justice, governance, abuse of power, and national moral responsibility as “too political” for the gospel. But Scripture tells a different story. The prophets confronted kings. John the Baptist rebuked rulers. Paul reasoned about justice before governors. The Church was never called to escape the world, but to bring every sphere of life under the Lordship of Christ. This article is a theological and prophetic reckoning with the burning issues tearing apart the nation, and a challenge to a sleeping Church that too often remains silent while society collapses around it

Filed Under: Hot trends, Miscellaneous Ramblings, Politics, Social issues & Current events, Theological meta-framework, Theology, Faith & inspirational Tagged With: Abraham Kuyper, Acts 24, Amos, Augustine, Bato Dela Rosa, biblical justice, body of Christ, Calvin, Christian political theology, Christian response to injustice, Christian scholarship, Christopher Wright, church and justice, church and politics, church and state, church silence, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, drug war, drug war victims, Duterte drug war, extrajudicial killings, Filipino Christianity, Filipino Christianity and politics, Filipino church, Filipino pastors, full gospel, gospel and justice, gospel and social justice, Hague, human dignity, hyper-spiritualized Christianity, ICC, ICC warrant, imago Dei, institutional accountability, interdisciplinary theology, International Criminal Court, Jeremiah, Jeremiah 22:16, John Howard Yoder, justice, Lordship of Christ, Luke 4:18, Micah 6:8, missio Dei, moral unraveling, multidisciplinary theology, nation and church, Nicholas Wolterstorff, Oliver O'Donovan, pastoral responsibility, Philippine Constitution, Philippine governance, Philippine politics, Philippine sovereignty, political theology, poor and marginalized, prophetic church, prophetic imperative, prophetic mandate, prophets and justice, Romans 13, Ronald Dela Rosa, sovereignty, theological mandate, theological reckoning, theology, transdisciplinary theology, war on drugs Philippines

The Hague Is Not The Way, Part 1: The Case, the Court, and the Question Nobody Is Asking

May 16, 2026 by Zigfred Diaz Leave a Comment

The ICC issued an arrest warrant against Senator Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa. Everyone has an opinion. Very few have a framework. Before we debate guilt or innocence, we need to ask the question nobody is asking: is the ICC even the right court? This series breaks down a 62-page scholarly paper into plain, accessible language that any reader can follow. For those who want the full academic treatment, the complete paper with all citations, legal analysis, and theoretical frameworks is available for free download at the end of each post. This is Part 1 of 7 of a multidisciplinary, cross-disciplinary, and normative transdisciplinary scholarly series examining the case through nine academic lenses integrated through a theological meta-framework. The answer may surprise you.

Filed Under: Anthropology, Criminology, Cross-disciplinary, Ethics, Hot trends, Interdisciplinary, International Relations, Law, Law, Law Practice, Law Education, Multi-Disciplinary, Multidisciplinary, My Life long learnings experiences, Political Science, Politics, Social issues & Current events, Sociology, Theological meta-framework, Transdisciplinary Tagged With: Article 127 Rome Statute, Bato Dela Rosa, complementarity principle, crimes against humanity Philippines, Dela Rosa Senate, drug war Philippines, Duterte drug war, dynastic politics Philippines, extrajudicial killings Philippines, forum shopping, ICC arrest warrant, ICC jurisdiction, ICC Philippines, ICC selective enforcement, ICC warrant Philippines 2026, international criminal law, international justice Global South, Judge Lordkipanidze, Life Hacks for Polymaths, Marcos Duterte conflict, multidisciplinary analysis, NBI arrest Senate, normative transdisciplinary, Philippine politics 2026, Philippine sovereignty, Philippine Supreme Court, polymath scholarship, Republic Act 9851, Rome Statute, Ronald Dela Rosa, The Hague Is Not The Way, theological meta-framework, transdisciplinary scholarship, Zigfred Diaz