“Thus says the LORD: Stand by the roads, and look, and ask for the ancient paths, where the good way is; and walk in it, and find rest for your souls.” (Jeremiah 6:16)
We live in an age that has torn down every pillar and painted ruin as progress.
Western civilisation—once braced by the twin columns of Christendom and reason—now teeters on the brink of collapse, seduced by ideologies that reject creation, order, and truth.
Yet, against all expectations, a quiet tremor is stirring beneath the rubble. A revival is unfolding, not in the megachurches of suburban comfort or the pulpits of progressive posturing, but in incense-choked sanctuaries, in the austere silence of monastic chapels, and in the disciplined lives of Generation Z men and women who, astonishingly, are choosing ancient paths over modern delusion.
This “Quiet Revival,” as the Bible Society has aptly called it, is no consumer-friendly rebranding of Christianity. It is a full-throated rejection of the fluid, feminised, and often faithless forms of modern religion. Across the Catholic, Orthodox, and confessional Anglican worlds, young people are not just showing up—they are bowing down, fasting, confessing, and committing to lives of sacrifice and structure. From Latin Mass altars to the Divine Liturgy of Byzantium, a generation taught to believe in nothing is suddenly building on something older, firmer, and far more costly.
The youth of the West have been raised in the vacuum left behind by postmodernism. Their education mocked tradition. Their media scoffed at virtue. Their governments promised safety while delivering surveillance and confusion. They’ve been handed participation trophies but denied purpose; given identity options but robbed of identity itself.
The pandemic years intensified this existential crisis. Locked behind screens, bombarded with propaganda, and severed from embodied community, Generation Z was left to wander a digital wilderness. But the Spirit of God moves even in deserts.
Amidst such devastation, the unchanging liturgy, moral clarity, and cosmic weight of traditional Christianity are not only appealing—they are necessary. As one convert put it, “Orthodoxy isn’t about us. It’s about God.” These young people, raised on self-affirmation and pixelated pleasure, are choosing repentance, hierarchy, and the Cross.
Perhaps the most jarring trend to secular analysts is the rise of young men returning to religion—particularly traditional expressions of faith. For decades, Christianity in the West has been feminised: emotive music, therapeutic sermons, pastel sanctuaries. Men found little challenge, no battle to fight, no kingdom to serve. But in Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, and confessional Anglicanism, they are discovering a vision of masculinity forged not in gym selfies or Andrew Tate monologues, but in St. Joseph’s silence, in St. Benedict’s order, in Christ’s suffering.
Consider the rise of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR) in Texas, where a former roofer turned priest, Father Moses McPherson, catechises men not with affirmations but with asceticism. Or the surge in male conversions at the University of Virginia Catholic chaplaincy, where Dominicans offer a faith that integrates reason, sacrifice, and obedience. These men are not escaping masculinity’s “toxicity”—they are recovering its telos: to lay down one’s life for others, to serve as priest and protector, to reflect Christ, the true Man.
It is not “absurd levels of manliness” these men are after, as the media mocks, but ordered, cruciform masculinity. In rejecting feminized spirituality, they are not scorning women—they are restoring the balance between Adam and Eve, headship and helpmeet, in a world that has poisoned both roles beyond recognition.
Some dismiss the “trad” revival as aestheticism or reactionary cosplay. But the conversions are too deep, the sacrifices too severe to be dismissed. These are not casual choices. They are covenantal. Converts are embracing lengthy catechism, fasting calendars, confession, and chaste courtship. Many are rejecting contraception, embracing large families, homeschooling their children, and forging domestic monasteries of faith within the crumbling ruins of suburbia.
In the Catholic world, this movement is transforming parishes, flooding OCIA (Order of Christian Initiation for Adults) classes, and prompting a 71% rise in attendance at the Traditional Latin Mass (TLM) during the pandemic. In Anglicanism, the conservative Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) has not only survived but surged, even as its liberal mother church—the Episcopal Church—sinks beneath the waves of theological revisionism. In Orthodoxy, parishes long considered mysterious outposts of Byzantium are now welcoming hundreds of new catechumens, many of them young men weary of sterile Protestantism and woke spiritualities.
This is not just a revival of worship, but of civilisation. These churches—rooted in tradition, united by doctrine, and sustained by sacrament—are once again becoming centres of culture, education, and family life.
Why is this happening now? Because tradition is the only thing left that has not bowed to the idol of the age. Because it costs something. Because it is not afraid to say no—to lies, to perversions, to softness, to the spirit of the age. Because it speaks not with the fragile voice of preference but with the enduring voice of authority.
In G.K. Chesterton’s words,
“The more I considered Christianity, the more I found that while it had established a rule and order, the chief aim of that order was to give room for good things to run wild.”
And indeed, within the rule of tradition, we see the wild flame of youth burning anew—not in rebellion against the faith, but in rebellion against rebellion itself.
This is the Spirit calling the remnant.
There is a message here for faithful Christians: Do not despise the youth. Do not underestimate what God is doing. What we are seeing is not nostalgia or moral panic, but a divine reset—a remnant being shaped, not by comfort, but by crisis. Like the young Daniel in Babylon, they are learning to pray with windows open toward Jerusalem. Like David, they are stepping into the fight while the old warriors tremble on the sidelines.
If you are a father, form your sons. If you are a pastor, preach with authority. If you are a teacher, give your students the tradition, undiluted. And if you are part of the “trad” movement, do not settle for aesthetics—pursue sanctity.
This revival is scaffolding for what must come next: a rebuilding of the Church, the family, and the moral imagination of the West. It will be hard. It will be long. But it is possible. Because tradition is not a dead hand—it is a living torch.
Let us carry it faithfully.
“They shall be called the repairers of the breach, the restorers of streets to dwell in.” (Isaiah 58:12)
Amen.
___
Originally published at The Daily Remnant. Image via Adobe.
Scaffolding in the Storm: Gen Z’s Quiet Revival Amid Civilisational Collapse
26 June 2025
4.3 MINS
Why Gen Z’s return to tradition signals a providential reversal.
We live in an age that has torn down every pillar and painted ruin as progress.
Western civilisation—once braced by the twin columns of Christendom and reason—now teeters on the brink of collapse, seduced by ideologies that reject creation, order, and truth.
Yet, against all expectations, a quiet tremor is stirring beneath the rubble. A revival is unfolding, not in the megachurches of suburban comfort or the pulpits of progressive posturing, but in incense-choked sanctuaries, in the austere silence of monastic chapels, and in the disciplined lives of Generation Z men and women who, astonishingly, are choosing ancient paths over modern delusion.
This “Quiet Revival,” as the Bible Society has aptly called it, is no consumer-friendly rebranding of Christianity. It is a full-throated rejection of the fluid, feminised, and often faithless forms of modern religion. Across the Catholic, Orthodox, and confessional Anglican worlds, young people are not just showing up—they are bowing down, fasting, confessing, and committing to lives of sacrifice and structure. From Latin Mass altars to the Divine Liturgy of Byzantium, a generation taught to believe in nothing is suddenly building on something older, firmer, and far more costly.
A Generation Rootless and Starving
The youth of the West have been raised in the vacuum left behind by postmodernism. Their education mocked tradition. Their media scoffed at virtue. Their governments promised safety while delivering surveillance and confusion. They’ve been handed participation trophies but denied purpose; given identity options but robbed of identity itself.
The pandemic years intensified this existential crisis. Locked behind screens, bombarded with propaganda, and severed from embodied community, Generation Z was left to wander a digital wilderness. But the Spirit of God moves even in deserts.
Amidst such devastation, the unchanging liturgy, moral clarity, and cosmic weight of traditional Christianity are not only appealing—they are necessary. As one convert put it, “Orthodoxy isn’t about us. It’s about God.” These young people, raised on self-affirmation and pixelated pleasure, are choosing repentance, hierarchy, and the Cross.
Masculinity Resurrected
Perhaps the most jarring trend to secular analysts is the rise of young men returning to religion—particularly traditional expressions of faith. For decades, Christianity in the West has been feminised: emotive music, therapeutic sermons, pastel sanctuaries. Men found little challenge, no battle to fight, no kingdom to serve. But in Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, and confessional Anglicanism, they are discovering a vision of masculinity forged not in gym selfies or Andrew Tate monologues, but in St. Joseph’s silence, in St. Benedict’s order, in Christ’s suffering.
Consider the rise of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR) in Texas, where a former roofer turned priest, Father Moses McPherson, catechises men not with affirmations but with asceticism. Or the surge in male conversions at the University of Virginia Catholic chaplaincy, where Dominicans offer a faith that integrates reason, sacrifice, and obedience. These men are not escaping masculinity’s “toxicity”—they are recovering its telos: to lay down one’s life for others, to serve as priest and protector, to reflect Christ, the true Man.
It is not “absurd levels of manliness” these men are after, as the media mocks, but ordered, cruciform masculinity. In rejecting feminized spirituality, they are not scorning women—they are restoring the balance between Adam and Eve, headship and helpmeet, in a world that has poisoned both roles beyond recognition.
A Cultural Rebellion, Not a Religious Fad
Some dismiss the “trad” revival as aestheticism or reactionary cosplay. But the conversions are too deep, the sacrifices too severe to be dismissed. These are not casual choices. They are covenantal. Converts are embracing lengthy catechism, fasting calendars, confession, and chaste courtship. Many are rejecting contraception, embracing large families, homeschooling their children, and forging domestic monasteries of faith within the crumbling ruins of suburbia.
In the Catholic world, this movement is transforming parishes, flooding OCIA (Order of Christian Initiation for Adults) classes, and prompting a 71% rise in attendance at the Traditional Latin Mass (TLM) during the pandemic. In Anglicanism, the conservative Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) has not only survived but surged, even as its liberal mother church—the Episcopal Church—sinks beneath the waves of theological revisionism. In Orthodoxy, parishes long considered mysterious outposts of Byzantium are now welcoming hundreds of new catechumens, many of them young men weary of sterile Protestantism and woke spiritualities.
This is not just a revival of worship, but of civilisation. These churches—rooted in tradition, united by doctrine, and sustained by sacrament—are once again becoming centres of culture, education, and family life.
The Call of the Ancient Church
Why is this happening now? Because tradition is the only thing left that has not bowed to the idol of the age. Because it costs something. Because it is not afraid to say no—to lies, to perversions, to softness, to the spirit of the age. Because it speaks not with the fragile voice of preference but with the enduring voice of authority.
In G.K. Chesterton’s words,
And indeed, within the rule of tradition, we see the wild flame of youth burning anew—not in rebellion against the faith, but in rebellion against rebellion itself.
This is the Spirit calling the remnant.
Rebuilding the Ruins
There is a message here for faithful Christians: Do not despise the youth. Do not underestimate what God is doing. What we are seeing is not nostalgia or moral panic, but a divine reset—a remnant being shaped, not by comfort, but by crisis. Like the young Daniel in Babylon, they are learning to pray with windows open toward Jerusalem. Like David, they are stepping into the fight while the old warriors tremble on the sidelines.
If you are a father, form your sons. If you are a pastor, preach with authority. If you are a teacher, give your students the tradition, undiluted. And if you are part of the “trad” movement, do not settle for aesthetics—pursue sanctity.
This revival is scaffolding for what must come next: a rebuilding of the Church, the family, and the moral imagination of the West. It will be hard. It will be long. But it is possible. Because tradition is not a dead hand—it is a living torch.
Let us carry it faithfully.
Amen.
___
Originally published at The Daily Remnant. Image via Adobe.
About the Author: George Christensen
Australia / COMMENTARY / Faith / Good News / Prayer / World
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