4.6 • 961 Ratings
🗓️ 4 January 2025
⏱️ 3 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Over the last few decades, the rapid rise of secularism, alongside the dissolution of traditional institutions, has left many feeling disconnected from deeper sources of meaning and purpose. This void has led to the emergence of new ideologies and movements that seek to provide meaning where religious traditions once did. From the rise of trans activism to the increasing influence of secular humanism, these new belief systems are born from the intellectual vacuum left behind by the decline of faith in established religious structures.
At the heart of this cultural shift lies the struggle to reconcile the material world with the deeper, intangible needs of the human soul. The material world, with its focus on immediate gratification, wealth, and success, offers little in the way of lasting fulfillment. In a society that increasingly values individualism and material success, questions of spiritual fulfillment and moral discernment often go unaddressed, contributing to a growing sense of confusion, anxiety, and fragmentation.
In a society where secular ideologies promise individual empowerment but often fail to address the complexities of human existence, faith-based frameworks may provide a meaningful path to address the deeper, non-material needs of spiritual well-being, which contemporary ideological frameworks tend to neglect. Religious practice can serve as an anchor, helping people navigate the uncertainties of modern life with greater resilience, compassion, and a deeper connection to universal truths such as justice, kindness, and community—principles that have sustained human civilization and fostered cohesion across cultures for millennia.
In this bonus episode for premium subscribers, Winston Marshall explores the transformative power of faith in overcoming personal struggles, noting a cultural revival of Christianity in intellectual circles as a response to the void left by atheism and the rise of ideologies like trans activism. He advocates for the enduring relevance of Christian principles (such as truth, resilience, and faith) along with values shared across mainstream religions emphasizing that there is something greater than the material world, especially in a society increasingly divided on social, cultural, and political issues.
Watch our full length episode with Winston Marshall: https://www.widerlenspod.com/p/episode-199
For instructions on setting up a private feed to listen to our premium content in your favorite podcast app, visit https://www.widerlenspod.com/p/how-to-listen-to-our-full-premium.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hi, widerlens podcast listener. What you're about to hear is a preview of one of our bonus episodes for premium subscribers. |
0:08.0 | If you'd like to hear the rest, head over to widerlenspod.com and sign up for any of our paid membership options. |
0:15.0 | Paid subscriptions allow us to continue to create high quality content for our listeners all around the world. |
0:20.0 | Now here's the preview of this week's exclusive content. to create high quality content for our listeners all around the world. |
0:23.7 | Now here's the preview of this week's exclusive content. |
0:29.5 | So there's an intellectual Christian movement, which is, I would say, a response to the new atheism movement or the shortcomings of the new atheism movement. |
0:33.4 | Basically, the new atheists failed in replacing, or they failed in squaring the David Hume is aught problem, |
0:44.5 | is that they came at it from a scientific point of view, but they weren't really able to explain the ought part. |
0:51.3 | How do we act? |
0:52.9 | And so, and I guess in our earlier conversation, we discussed |
0:57.8 | Me Too or we discussed, we've discussed trans. I think transid geology isn't actually a reaction |
1:04.5 | to new, it's one of the progeny of new atheism in the sense. It it's it's it's a surrogate religion with a |
1:13.3 | you know a set of all where do you think that comes from and yeah it's kind of a reaction to this |
1:18.5 | hyper rationalist robotic way of looking at the world that the new atheist put forward and it's an |
1:24.9 | attempt to reclaim the intangible transcendent spiritual. |
1:29.8 | I mean, I totally agree with that. |
1:32.0 | Meanwhile, they tend to be atheists also, but now they have this spiritual belief. |
1:36.5 | They think they're atheists, but they hold a gender spiritual belief. |
1:39.4 | But, yeah, so keep going. |
1:40.5 | That's very interesting. |
1:41.9 | Yeah, so there's an intellectual side there. |
1:44.4 | There's been this big reaction to new atheism. |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Sasha Ayad and Stella O'Malley, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Sasha Ayad and Stella O'Malley and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.