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Eddie LaRow joins Will Spencer for a wide-ranging conversation about masculinity, rootlessness, and the collapse of moral authority in modern life.
Rather than reacting to headlines or personalities, this episode examines a recurring historical pattern: when men lose roots in family, church, and community, power rushes in to replace authority. Drawing on thinkers such as Max Picard, Robert Nisbet, Philip Rieff, and Augustine, Will and Eddie explore why Gen Z men are drawn toward radical politics — and why this crisis did not begin online.
The conversation moves through history, theology, and culture to clarify the difference between authority and power, how modern speed distorts the inner life, and why formation requires discipline, community, and time. This is a discussion about responsibility, rootedness, and how men can recover moral clarity in a disordered age.
Topics DiscussedEddie LaRow is an editor and writer whose work has appeared in First Things, Modern Age, and The American Mind. He writes on history, theology, culture, and Generation Z, with a focus on authority, community, and formation.
Eddie's LinksSubstack — https://eddielarow.substack.com/
First Things: — https://firstthings.com/archive/?_author=eddie-larow
The Will Spencer Podcast was formerly known as "The Renaissance of Men."
EXITING THE NEW AGE COURSEI spent twenty years in the New Age. This is what I learned on the way out.
13 chapters, study guide, practices inventory, 30+ book bibliography.
A new section on Christian apologetics to the New Age is in production. Buy now at $29 and get the upgrade free when the price goes to $49.
https://willspencer.co/exit
MENTORSHIP FOR MENI mentor men one-on-one through 12 weeks of biblical mentorship, with daily accountability.
If you've built something real but you're stuck at a transition that competence alone can't solve, book a free clarity call:
https://willspencer.co/mentorship
CONNECT
By Will Spencer4.6
229229 ratings
Eddie LaRow joins Will Spencer for a wide-ranging conversation about masculinity, rootlessness, and the collapse of moral authority in modern life.
Rather than reacting to headlines or personalities, this episode examines a recurring historical pattern: when men lose roots in family, church, and community, power rushes in to replace authority. Drawing on thinkers such as Max Picard, Robert Nisbet, Philip Rieff, and Augustine, Will and Eddie explore why Gen Z men are drawn toward radical politics — and why this crisis did not begin online.
The conversation moves through history, theology, and culture to clarify the difference between authority and power, how modern speed distorts the inner life, and why formation requires discipline, community, and time. This is a discussion about responsibility, rootedness, and how men can recover moral clarity in a disordered age.
Topics DiscussedEddie LaRow is an editor and writer whose work has appeared in First Things, Modern Age, and The American Mind. He writes on history, theology, culture, and Generation Z, with a focus on authority, community, and formation.
Eddie's LinksSubstack — https://eddielarow.substack.com/
First Things: — https://firstthings.com/archive/?_author=eddie-larow
The Will Spencer Podcast was formerly known as "The Renaissance of Men."
EXITING THE NEW AGE COURSEI spent twenty years in the New Age. This is what I learned on the way out.
13 chapters, study guide, practices inventory, 30+ book bibliography.
A new section on Christian apologetics to the New Age is in production. Buy now at $29 and get the upgrade free when the price goes to $49.
https://willspencer.co/exit
MENTORSHIP FOR MENI mentor men one-on-one through 12 weeks of biblical mentorship, with daily accountability.
If you've built something real but you're stuck at a transition that competence alone can't solve, book a free clarity call:
https://willspencer.co/mentorship
CONNECT
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