Excerpt from an interesting article I read today by Johann Hari:
"And now congregation, put your hands together and give thanks, for I come bearing Good News. Britain is now the most irreligious country on earth. This island has shed superstition faster and more completely than anywhere else. Some 63 percent of us are non-believers, according to an ICM study, while 82 percent say religion is a cause of harmful division. Now, let us stand and sing our new national hymn: Jerusalem was dismantled here/ in England's green and pleasant land.
How did it happen? For centuries, religion was insulated from criticism in Britain. First its opponents were burned, then jailed, then shunned. But once there was a free marketplace of ideas, once people could finally hear both the religious arguments and the rationalist criticisms of them, the religious lost the British people. Their case was too weak, their opposition to divorce and abortion and gay people too cruel, their evidence for their claims non-existent. Once they had to rely on persuasion rather than intimidation, the story of British Christianity came to an end.
Now that only six percent of British people regularly attend a religious service, it's only natural that we should dismantle the massive amounts of tax money and state power that are automatically given to the religious to wield over the rest of us. It's a necessary process of building a secular state, where all citizens are free to make up their own minds. Yet the opposition to this sensible shift is becoming increasingly unhinged. The Church of England, bewildered by the British people choosing to leave their pews, has only one explanation: Christians are being "persecuted" and "bullied" by a movement motivated by "Christophobia." George Carey, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, says Christians are now "second class citizens" and it is only "a small step" to "a religious bar on any employment by Christians".
Really? Let's list some of the ways in which Christians, and other religious groups, are given special privileges every day. Start with the educational system. Every school in Britain is required by law to make its pupils engage every day in "an act of collective worship of a wholly or mainly Christian nature". Yes: Britain is still a nation with enforced prayer. The religious are then handed total control of 36 percent of our state-funded schools, in which to indoctrinate children into their faith alone."
5 comments:
Religion in schools works very well indeed. It put me off christianity for life.
E, you beat me to it, Johann Hari talks a lot of sense.
Yeah. That's precisely what I was gonna say. Nothing like the forced RS and assemblies with the tenuous connection to a current news story which could then be related back to a part of the Bible to put you off.
I did like the hymns, though. And I went to a Christian primary school with weekly trips to the church opposite that was built like 1000 years ago. But I'm still not religious. Poor Christianity.
Well, yes, Johann Hari mostly talks a lot of sense, and generally I agree with what he has to say, as in this piece. But he has a terrible blot on his CV that he will find it hard to get over, even though he admits he was in error, and that is his support at the time for the odious liar, T Blair, and his utterly unforgivable crime in supporting the destruction of Iraq. Among the many who marched against the war were Christians. So we ought not to forget that the best of us are not always right, even liberal free thinkers. And, equally, Christians, whether poor and confused or malicious power mad crazies, like Blair or Carey, are not invariably wrong—just mainly!
Thanks for your comment, AskWhy! I don't know why people thought the Iraq and Afghanistan invasions were good ideas at the time. You can't predict what will happen when you start a war, as we saw.
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