The Hegelian Revolution
The Hegelian revolution completed a long philosophical shift that began with Descartes: reality and truth were relocated from God and creation to the human mind. For Hegel, reason itself became sovereign, and what the rational elite declared to be true became reality. God was effectively replaced by human consciousness, and the state was elevated as the incarnation of reason on earth.
This worldview reshaped modern life. It fueled statism, feminism, Darwinism, Marxism, and modern spirituality, all built on the idea of humanity evolving toward freedom from limits law, morality, family, history, and even God. Churches absorbed this thinking by retreating into vague “spirituality,” rejecting God’s law, and surrendering culture, education, and politics to the state.
The result has been liberation without truth: lawless sexuality, moral relativism, and politics without justice. Hegel’s promise of freedom has instead produced bondage and judgment. True freedom, Scripture insists, is found not in human reason or the state, but in repentance, regeneration, and submission to the living God.