The Empty Cathedral: How Europe Lost Its Faith and Its Nerve
By Lucas Almanza
For centuries, Europe was defined by a shared moral and spiritual vision - one sustained by faith, duty, and a sense of transcendent purpose. Today, its cathedrals stand intact while the beliefs that built them have quietly disappeared. The Empty Cathedral is a sweeping cultural history and philosophical inquiry into how Europe lost its faith, and with it, the confidence to defend its own civilization.
Lucas Almanza traces the long unraveling of Christendom - from the Enlightenment's triumph of reason, to the rise of secular ideologies, technocratic governance, therapeutic individualism, and post-moral relativism. As Europe abandoned transcendence, it embraced new moral substitutes: guilt politics, ideological fervor, bureaucratic dogmas, and identity-based belief systems that function as religions without God.
With clarity and historical depth, the book asks: What happens to a culture when its spiritual foundations erode? Can moral values endure without the metaphysical framework that once sustained them? And is a post-Christian Europe equipped to defend its heritage, freedoms, and identity in the face of internal doubt and external pressures?
Moving through philosophy, history, sociology, and contemporary politics, The Empty Cathedral offers both diagnosis and cautious hope - exploring emerging signs of renewal and the possibility of a post-secular Europe rediscovering meaning beyond materialism.
A compelling work for readers of Dominion, The Strange Death of Europe, A Secular Age, and The Abolition of Man, this book confronts one of the defining questions of the modern West: Can a civilization that no longer believes in transcendence survive on moral memory alone?
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