
The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg Desecration, Not Disenchantment | Interview: Carl Trueman
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Mar 23, 2026 Carl Trueman, professor of biblical and religious studies and author of books on religion and modernity, discusses how modernity attacks the sacred. Short, sharp conversations cover Nietzsche and value-creation. They probe technology’s moral perils, reproductive tech and personhood, rising antisemitism and transgression, and the role of local religious life in resisting cultural desecration.
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Cultivate Consecration Locally Not Nationally
- Build consecrating institutions locally rather than legislating religiosity from above.
- Trueman urges religious communities, especially local churches, to embody human meaning because consecration must arise from the ground up.
Prioritize Local Community Influence
- Focus civic energy on influencing local communities and everyday relationships rather than only pursuing national legislative fixes.
- Trueman and Jonah endorse bottom-up change: dorms, dinner tables, townships and churches are where durable norms form.
Technology That Rewrites Human Nature
- New technologies differ: some extend human life without altering personhood while others let us remake human nature itself.
- Trueman, citing Hans Jonas, warns CRISPR and transhumanist aims challenge norms about what humans are.














