A significant political effect of atheism and a general
decline in religious belief has been to facilitate a major power shift within
most democratic, nominally Christian countries.
Because Christian churches have been important social and
political power structures, their decline has led to a power vacuum which national
and international bureaucracies continue to fill, nook by nook, cranny by
cranny.
Taking the UK as our example, we once had significant dependencies
on ourselves, family and friends within a largely Christian milieu. Today, the
Christian influence has been extensively replaced by law and state-sanctioned
social norms, often with the connivance of fake charities set up for that
purpose.
This has created powerful, unidirectional political
pressures. Unless a political party is committed to the politics of the dependent
voter and state-sponsored social norms, it will not have the means to extend or
even consolidate its body of voters. This is the reality faced by the
Conservative party.
For example, unmarried mothers are semi-dependent voters. It
doesn’t mean they always vote in a particular way, but they will have a
tendency to vote in their own interests, as we all do. This does not imply
anything about the behaviour of specific unmarried mothers, it is merely the
logic of a political reality.
So for mainstream political parties in a modern welfare
state, it is politically beneficial to undermine the institution of marriage
and create as many unmarried mothers as possible. Again, this is merely the
logic of a situation facilitated by the decline in Christian social and moral constraints.
Politicians don’t necessarily “believe” in undermining
marriage, they are merely responding to political exigencies, step by step,
nudge by nudge. It is the logic of a situation.
We see the same logic operating in teaching, policing, drugs
policy, anti-smoking policies, the promotion of social norms and even concepts
such as motherhood and fatherhood. As religious influence declines in these
areas, there are political and bureaucratic opportunities for the extension of
official power and influence.
Golden careers have been built on fostering state-sponsored social
trends, so for many politicians and senior bureaucrats, atheism has genuine political
value. It reduces the power of potential opponents, particularly during the
manipulation of social trends.
This is not to say that atheists should go knocking on the
doors of the nearest church. We atheists are what we are, but we tend to be
naive about malign political trends facilitated by the decline of Christian
traditions.
Neither is it a suggestion that we should go back to where
we were, say fifty years ago or more - too many straw men lurk there. Yet in
losing one set of admittedly imperfect Christian values, we have gained a set
of malign political and social trends which promise to be considerably worse, and
where opting out is not an option.
As an atheist, it seems to me that traditional Christian
values here in the UK cannot be further eroded without a continued leakage of personal
freedom, sucked away by an ever more authoritarian state bureaucracy. Of course
many authoritarian atheists on the left welcome the consequences. Others seem
to live in hope that something will turn up.
Maybe something will turn up. Maybe an existing social power
structure will seize the opportunity of opposing the bureaucratic state.
Because it is an opportunity – the bungling, dishonesty and moral relativism make
it so. Who could make something of it though?
A revitalised Church of England? The Catholic Church? Islam?
If it does happen, it certainly won’t be libertarian atheists setting the social
agenda will it?
9 comments:
We assume that in the past nearly all were necessarily religious. My feeling is that this is fairly wide of the mark. For complicated reasons we had religious "revivals" from the late 18th through the 19th Centuries, allied to a strong Temperance Movement. During the Middle Ages there were bouts of religious mania. Are we due for one?
Demetrius - yes, it's difficult to assess religious influence. I think we can say it was far more pervasive than it is now though.
A revival seems quite likely to me because we seem to have a kind of moral power vacuum which may invite occupation. How that will pan out I've no idea.
Politicians don’t necessarily “believe” in undermining marriage
Them do, as a stated part of the narrative.
May I say ? What a sublime post.
Christianity will be usurped by something more strident - Islam. It is powerful not by virtue of truth but by untruth. The untruth of the host society's cowardice in being unable to state that we have moved on from medieval superstition.
How the Left reconciles the mysoginy, the homophobia, the oppression of individuality ...
The failure of Christianity in Britain is not a lack of belief in God (there are still plenty who believe in that - or who will give space for the possibility of that.)
The failure of Christianity is through the disbelief in the Devil and the need for salvation.
Without those two components Christianity loses its raison detre'.
Catholicism (despite appearances) is a matriarchal belief. It is not the priests or the cardinals who power it but the mothers and grandmothers - their fear of the Devil (and the saving of their children) is sincere and heartfelt.
James - now I think of it, I'm sure Neil Kinnock once said something to that effect. Can't remember his exact phrasing.
Kev - thanks! I have to say that even as an atheist I'm not repelled in any way by Christian belief, unlike the Dawkins crowd.
I know too many good people who are Christians. I'm sure your point about salvation is sound too.
I don't have any real experience of Catholicism, but what you say is consistent with what I have seen.
I agree with Electro-Kevin: a very fine post indeed.
I suppose I am an atheist, but I make sure that I don't define myself as such. That would mean allowing someone's agenda to run part of my life. My wife is a Christian (she will shortly be training for the ministry, in fact!)and we have perfectly amicable conversations about the meanings of religious terms and belief. Most of the Christians I meet (I sometimes attend the Cathedral with her, to help with the children and because where else can you hear live Tallis motets for free?) are very good people.
None of them has ever tried to tell me what to do, which is more than I can say for the Guardianistas and Equality & Diversity harridans that I am forced to work with...
Sam - thanks!
"I make sure that I don't define myself as such. That would mean allowing someone's agenda to run part of my life."
Yes, that's me too. I virtually never mention my atheism outside the blogging world.
I sympathise about the Guardianistas you work with. There is something very worrying about modern mores.
Good post. Yes, atheists end up acquiescing to malign political and social trends. The collapse of Christianity will mean less freedom for atheists. I don't have any good answers.
Roger - thanks. I don't have any good answers either and I'm not enthused by likely future trends.
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