Carl R. Trueman

Filter Results:
Filter by Type:
Filter by Topic:
Filter by Issue:
Filter by Author:

When I was preaching week by week to the same congregation, one of my fundamental convictions was that I needed to keep politics out of the pulpit. Perhaps I should express that more precisely: I needed to keep party politics out of the pulpit. I was—and still am—convinced that how an individual votes at the […]

Carl R. Trueman
Friday, July 30th 2021

Timon Cline interviewed Professor Carl Trueman on his latest book, The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self: Cultural Amnesia, Expressive Individualism, and the Road to Sexual Rev­­olution (Crossway, 2020), which includes a foreword by Rod Dreher. TC: Although there’s a lot packed into The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self—and it’s not short—could […]

Carl R. Trueman
Timon Cline
Monday, March 1st 2021

The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self: Cultural Amnesia, Expressive Individualism, and the Road to the Sexual Revolutionby Carl R. TruemanCrossway, 2020432 pages (hardcover), $34.99 “For all intents and purposes, I am a woman.” That was Bruce (now Caitlyn) Jenner, the 1976 men’s decathlon Olympic gold medalist, announcing in a 2015 interview with Diane […]

Timon Cline
Carl R. Trueman
Friday, January 1st 2021

The last two hundred years have seen a revolution (and not a happy one) in how God is understood. The God of the classical creeds and confessions—impassible and immutable—has been replaced by a God who changes in relation to his creation, dynamic and reciprocal in how he relates to his creatures. There are numerous reasons […]

Carl R. Trueman
Thomas Weinandy
Tuesday, December 1st 2020

There’s a lot packed into this book—and it’s not short—but can you provide a brief thesis or synopsis? It is a study of how the conditions have emerged in our society that allow people to regard the statement ‘I am a woman trapped in a man’s body’ as coherent and to see its positive affirmation […]

Carl R. Trueman
Timon Cline
Friday, November 27th 2020

However complicated the genealogy of modern morals might be, it seems a sad but unavoidable conclusion that all the nuances and subtleties of thousands of years of ethical reflection on the human condition have culminated in a morality that increasingly operates in terms of two simple categories: love, and its antithesis, hate. Front yards are […]

Carl R. Trueman
Monday, November 9th 2020

Most teachers are familiar with the kind of student question which begins “What do think will happen if/when….?” History teachers like myself have the perfect answer: “I am paid to explain the past, not to predict the future. The latter is the preserve of lunatics, con artists, and those who think far too much of […]

Carl R. Trueman
Monday, February 10th 2020

Christ the Heart of Creation By Rowan Williams Bloomsbury, 2018 304 pages (hardcover), $35.00 I have always had a somewhat ambivalent attitude to Rowan Williams. I find his own positive theology to be of the banal liberal variety that causes damage to the church. His time as archbishop of Canterbury was, in a sense, the […]

Carl R. Trueman
Rowan Williams
Friday, November 1st 2019

In Book Three of his work, The Gay Science, Nietzsche begins with a legend of how, years after the Buddha’s death, his shadow, large and terrifying, appeared on the wall of a cave for all to see. He uses his now notorious phrase: God is dead. So begins the series of aphorisms which demolish both […]

Carl R. Trueman
Tuesday, February 26th 2019

The Enlightenment, if not quite dead on arrival, began to fall apart very shortly thereafter. The French Revolution offered a bloody testimony to the limits of reason as a foundation for building a new society. The Romantics pointed to the ineradicable importance of the deeper longings of the human heart. Hegel identified a key flaw […]

Carl R. Trueman
Tuesday, January 15th 2019

Two particular events have shaped my approach to writing: the first was a lecture I attended as a schoolboy in the early 1980s, given by Terry Jones of Monty Python fame. The topic was not dead parrots or the unexpected nature of the Spanish Inquisition but Chaucer’s “Knight’s Tale” on which he had just published […]

Carl R. Trueman
Tuesday, December 4th 2018

For nearly three decades, Camille Paglia, Professor of Humanities and Media Studies at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, has been one of America’s most controversial and consistent public intellectuals. Her writings have covered topics ranging from Aeschylus to Madonna; from Baroque art to liberal Presbyterian attitudes to human sexuality. A truly independent thinker, […]

Camille Paglia
Carl R. Trueman
Monday, December 3rd 2018

Debates about the distinctions between male and female lie at the heart of much political discussion in the USA today, so it is not surprising to find that John Piper was recently asked whether gender roles apply outside of marriage. Many pastors will have faced the same; and it was disappointing to read his answer, […]

Carl R. Trueman
Monday, November 26th 2018

Of all the questions I asked myself last week, “Is Tim Keller a Marxist?” was not one I anticipated considering. This is a charge I have heard on more than one occasion and, I am told, has recently been repeated in the aftermath of his op-ed in the New York Times. While we should initially […]

Carl R. Trueman
Monday, October 8th 2018

A specter is haunting the West. The ghostly presence of Karl Marx is at once unwelcome and unexpected. For Europeans of my generation, the fall of the Berlin Wall marked the definitive end of a seemingly invincible empire. We blithely assumed that its intellectual architects, among whom Karl Marx held the place of highest honor, […]

Carl R. Trueman
Monday, September 17th 2018

“Modern Reformation has championed confessional Reformation theology in an anti-confessional and anti-theological age.”

Picture of J. Ligon Duncan, IIIJ. Ligon Duncan, IIISenior Minister, First Presbyterian Church
Magazine Covers; Embodiment & Technology