From First Things <[email protected]>
Subject Best of 2023: Erasmus Lecture with Carl R. Trueman
Date April 19, 2024 7:59 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
View this email in your browser ([link removed])
[link removed]
[link removed]

Dear Reader,

Contributing editor Carl R. Trueman wrote his first article for FIRST THINGS in May of 2013. Delivering the thirty-sixth annual Erasmus Lecture in October, then, was a fitting capstone to his decade of outstanding contributions to FIRST THINGS, especially since his lecture synthesized many of the arguments he has made in the pages of FIRST THINGS over these ten years.
[link removed]

Trueman’s lecture, “The Desecration of Man,” was published in the January 2024 issue of FIRST THINGS. Click here to read it in full. ([link removed])

This year marks the eightieth anniversary of the lectures that became C. S. Lewis’s book The Abolition of Man. Speaking to an audience at the height of the Second World War, Lewis identified the central problem of the modern age: The world was losing its sense of what it meant to be human. As man’s technological achievements were once again being used to destroy human life on an industrial scale, Lewis pointed to the dehumanization that was occurring all around. And as the war continued, the Final Solution and the atomic bomb served to reinforce his claims. Yet modern warfare was not the only problem. As Lewis argued, the intellectual and cultural currents of modernity were also culpable. The war was as much a symptom of the problem as a cause. Modernity was abolishing man. It represented nothing less than a crisis of anthropology.

Sociologists have proposed a number of concepts that characterize the modern age. These provide a useful backdrop to Lewis’s observations. Perhaps the most influential is the Weberian thesis of disenchantment. Whereas once the local god or saint kept the water supply fresh and sweet, now the local water purification plant does the same. Village life has been replaced by the anonymity of the city. People have come to be valued not for themselves but for their earning potential or their consumption. And disenchantment has worked its way into every corner of life: Whereas once love was a serendipitous force that culminated in a lifelong bond between two people, now we swipe left or right on our apps for the next hookup.

These changes bring with them a sense of loss. Modernity has shunted religion and the supernatural to the margins, at the cost of stripping the world of its mystery . . .
Click here to keep reading ([link removed])

Yours,
R. R. Reno
Editor, FIRST THINGS

P. S. To make possible flagship FIRST THINGS programs like our Erasmus Lecture (this year featuring novelist Paul Kingsnorth!), make a tax-deductible gift today.
Make my 2024 gift ([link removed])
Logo

Copyright © 2024 First Things, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in at www.firstthings.com.

Our mailing address is:
First Things
9 East 40th Street, 10th Floor
New York, NY 10016
USA
unsubscribe from this list ([link removed]) update subscription preferences ([link removed])
Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp
[link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: First Things
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: United States
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • MailChimp