The argument: The future of the West hinges on whether fathers reclaim their role as spiritual leaders within the family.
WHY IT MATTERS
Fatherhood is not a side issue in our culture wars, and yet we continue to sideline the spiritual leadership of men. More and more, society treats fathers as optional and their roles as interchangeable. At the same time, young men aged 18–24 are returning to church in numbers that break with the pattern of recent generations. If we do not inspire them now to embrace fatherhood as a spiritual vocation, we will miss this moment for restoration.
The overbearing feminist narrative that has infiltrated our media presents patriarchal structures as the root of society’s ills, seeking to remove men from positions of authority—especially their leadership within the home. While the average family in the UK or US may not consciously subscribe to this ideology, its assumptions have quietly shaped domestic life. Mothers and fathers increasingly aim to “live equally,” dismantling the distinct roles that sustained the generations before us. What is being lost is a fundamental truth: fathers play an irrefutable role in transmitting the faith to the next generation.
A major demographic study examined patterns of religious practice across families and generations. In families where both mother and father attend church regularly, 33 percent of children will attend regularly, 41 percent irregularly, and 26 percent stop practicing altogether. If the father is non-practicing but the mother attends regularly, only 2 percent of children will attend regularly, while 60 percent abandon the faith. By contrast, where the father attends regularly and the mother is irregular, 38 percent attend regularly - and if the mother does not practice at all, that rises to 44 percent! These figures make one point unmistakable: when fathers model the faith, children follow.
Perhaps many women have stepped into the role of spiritual authority in the home because it was left vacant. But we cannot ignore the wider culture that has shaped this vacuum, nor allow its assumptions to reshape the Church herself. How can we expect men to commit to a faith in which the core of their identity is subtly contradicted, or their distinct role within the family dissolved? When men are visibly present in worship, they bring a moral weight and public seriousness that signals faith is a matter of consequence. This doesn’t just affect our churches, but the future of society as a whole.
“Fathers play an irrefutable role in transmitting the faith to the next generation.”
The erosion of fatherhood and their role as spiritual leaders disrupts the transmission of faith. Western civilization is sustained not by markets or constitutions, but by moral and spiritual inheritance handed down within families. The path forward is clear: we must stop neutralizing male vocation and once again preach sacrifice, duty, and spiritual headship without embarrassment. That requires rejecting the narrative that fathers are incidental to this journey and that their natural authority is a threat rather than a gift. If we internalize that story, we should not be surprised when faith, family, and inheritance continue to fracture.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Restoring the West will not begin in policy papers or media studios, but around our kitchen tables and in the steady rhythms of our family lives. We must allow men to step fully into the role God has given them, rather than shrinking it to fit agendas that only seek to destroy. If we want future generations to defend the faith, fathers must first be trusted, and expected, to lead it.
Daisy Inglese is Senior Editor of Faith & Family at Restoring the West by Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Follow her on X @daisymaeinglese.





This is absolutely spot on – and I have seen the terrible consequences of fatherlessness, and the lack of male leadership and healthy role models, in so many of the young people with whom I have worked.
Religion has little to do with human morality. It is just a way to deceive and force dependence on people. It has caused more harm and violence than wars. It strengthens religious authority and dispels human empathy and intelligence. It is deplorable that someone as brave and intelligent as Hirsi Ali has fallen victim of deception. My condolences and wishes for her to break free of authoritarianism.