Paul Harvey’s 1965 radio broadcast “If I Were the Devil” has been shared for decades, but today it feels unsettlingly accurate. Listening now, it no longer sounds like speculation — it sounds like reflection. In the broadcast, Harvey imagined how the Devil would destroy a nation not through violence, but through slow corruption from within. He spoke of quiet persuasion, shifting morals, weakened faith, and a gradual loss of personal responsibility. At the time, many heard it as dramatic commentary. Today, many hear a warning fulfilled.
Harvey described telling people to do as they please, convincing the young that faith was outdated, removing God from schools, courts, and even churches. He warned of families divided, distractions replacing purpose, pleasure replacing wisdom, and truth becoming merely “opinion.” Freedom, he suggested, would be redefined — not as responsibility, but as indulgence.
When Harvey spoke those words, it was 1965. There was no internet, no social media, no smartphones. Yet he described a society where morality would be mocked, conscience replaced by comfort, and authority shifted away from faith toward government and self-interest.
Back then, listeners heard a clever monologue. Today, many hear a mirror. Some call it political. Others call it spiritual. Most agree on one thing — he saw something coming. People don’t share this speech because it’s nostalgic. They share it because it feels true.
Paul Harvey once said, “Self-government won’t work without self-discipline.”
Perhaps that’s the warning we forgot.
Some voices echo long after they’re gone — because they were never speaking only to their time.