Where do we go when the light fades away?
For centuries Western civilization lived with a shared framework of meaning—moral boundaries, transcendent truth, and the assumption that reality itself had an order we didn’t invent.
But something changed.
Many today celebrate the idea that we have finally thrown off the restraints of the past. We are told we are free now—free to define truth, free to construct identity, free to determine our own moral path.
But beneath the celebration, there is a growing sense of unease.
Because when every voice becomes its own authority, something strange begins to happen: the ground beneath us starts to move.
A Warning from an Ancient Book
The Bible describes a similar moment in Israel’s history. The book of Judges ends with a haunting summary of the culture at that time:
“In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.”
— Judges 21:25
At first glance, that might sound like freedom. No king. No authority. Everyone deciding for themselves.
But the stories leading up to that verse tell a darker story—violence, chaos, moral collapse, and communities unraveling.
The problem was not simply political leadership. The deeper issue was the loss of a shared moral reference point.
When everyone becomes their own authority, there is no longer a common compass.
Nietzsche’s Madman
In the 19th century, the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche wrote a famous parable that feels eerily relevant today.
In The Gay Science, he describes a madman running into a marketplace carrying a lantern in the daylight, crying out:
“I seek God! I seek God!”
The crowd laughs at him. Many of them already believed God was irrelevant.
Then the madman delivers a shocking declaration:
“God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him.”
But the point of the story is often misunderstood. Nietzsche was not celebrating this moment.
He was warning about its consequences.
The madman continues:
“What did we do when we unchained the earth from its sun?
Whither is it moving now?
Are we not plunging continually?”
Nietzsche saw something coming that many people around him did not yet recognize: if the foundation of transcendent truth disappears, the moral and philosophical structure built on top of it cannot hold forever.
In other words, once the sun is gone, the darkness eventually follows.
Freedom Without Form
This is where the Christian philosopher Francis Schaeffer spoke with remarkable clarity.
In his book How Should We Then Live?, Schaeffer argued that Western culture was gradually embracing what he called “freedom without form.”
People wanted absolute personal freedom—freedom from moral limits, freedom from inherited truth, freedom from external authority.
But Schaeffer warned that freedom without form cannot sustain itself.
Without a structure of truth to guide it, freedom begins to collapse inward.
When every individual becomes their own source of truth, society does not become more stable—it becomes more fragmented.
Soon the question shifts from “What is right?” to “Who has the power to decide?”
And that is when freedom slowly begins to disappear.
When the Light Fades
We may not carry lanterns through marketplaces like Nietzsche’s madman, but many people today feel the same unease he described.
The old moral landmarks seem to be disappearing. Institutions that once provided stability feel uncertain. Even the idea of truth itself is often treated as negotiable.
So the question returns:
Where do we go when the light fades away?
The answer may not lie in inventing new truths or constructing new moral systems from scratch.
Instead, it may require rediscovering something older—something that was never ours to create in the first place.
Because if the light did not originate with us, it also means its source has never truly disappeared.
The real challenge is whether we are willing to look for it again.
My attempts to capture this in a song-
So this is my 3rd time and in some ways I feel like it keeps failing- maybe too philosophical-
1st try: The Madness
2nd Try: Lamps in the Light
And they didn't quite work...
so I turned it more into a story.
3rd try- The Lantern ManThe song Lantern Man (A Parable) pushes this question one step further.
In the story, a man walks through a small town carrying a lantern in broad daylight. The people laugh at him. They mock him. Some ignore him completely. To the town, he looks like a fool—an odd relic clinging to something that no longer makes sense.
But the lantern is not for the daylight.
It is a warning about the darkness.
In many ways, that image echoes the strange calling of the Old Testament prophets. When God spoke through them, they often did things that seemed bizarre or embarrassing in order to wake people up.
Ezekiel, for example, was commanded to perform actions that must have looked absurd to those watching:
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He lay on his side for hundreds of days to symbolize Israel’s coming judgment (Ezekiel 4).
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He cooked food over a fire made from dung as a sign of coming hardship (Ezekiel 4:12–15).
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He shaved his head and beard with a sword and divided the hair to represent the fate of Jerusalem (Ezekiel 5).
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At one point he was even told to pack his belongings and dig through a wall to leave the city in front of everyone, symbolizing exile (Ezekiel 12).
To the surrounding culture, the prophets must have looked strange—maybe even ridiculous.
Yet their actions carried a message: something was wrong, and people needed to wake up.
In a similar way, sharing the message of Christ in our time can sometimes make us appear just as strange.
When we speak about truth in a world that believes truth is relative…
When we talk about sin in a culture that prefers affirmation…
When we point people toward Christ as the source of life and meaning…
we may look a little like that lantern carrier in the marketplace.
Out of step, unfashionable, perhaps even foolish.
But if Nietzsche’s warning was correct—if a culture really can unchain itself from its moral sun—then the question becomes unavoidable:
Are we willing to carry the lantern anyway?
Because without a source of truth beyond ourselves, we are not truly navigating the world.
We are simply wandering through it.
And without direction, we are not enlightened—we are just stumbling in the fading light.
Send me a note- which one did you like the best?
Verse 1 In an old backwoods town Where the roads run thin and dry There’s a man who walks the market With a lantern in broad daylight. Children laugh and trail behind him, Men just shake their heads and grin, “Still searching for your God out here?” They shout as he walks in. Chorus Where do we turn when the lights burn out? When the stars we trusted fall? What still holds when the noise dies down When there’s no clear voice at all? He keeps walking through the laughter and the strain— That quiet Lantern Man. Verse 2 They say he’s been here years now, Ever since the mill shut down, Since the preacher left the pulpit And the truth left this town. One day someone asked him laughing, “What are you trying to prove?” He said, “You tore the sky from meaning— Now tell me how you move.” Chorus Where do we turn when the lights burn out? When the stars we trusted fall? What still holds when the noise dies down When there’s no clear voice at all? He keeps searching through the dust and shifting sand— That stubborn Lantern Man. Verse 3 One night when the crowd had drifted And the square was standing still, I asked him why he carried Fire against their will. He said, “Freedom without form breaks apart, It bends until it frays. Doing what is right in our own eyes Leaves us lost halfway.” Bridge “Not every truth arrives in thunder, Not every answer roars. Some restore the shape of things By whispering what matters more.” Final Chorus So where do we turn when the lights burn out? When the night outlasts the day? What still leads when the ground gives way And the old paths fade to gray? He said, “You don’t need thunder to call you back— Just a voice that stays.” Outro Now sometimes when the town goes dark And the road runs out of plan, I swear I see a lantern glow In the hand of that old man. No firestorm, no shaking ground— Just a quiet light again. Walking slow through the silent streets, That steady Lantern Man.








