Both atheism and Christianity growing?

The Wall Street Journal carries an opinion piece today giving still more attention to the already media saturated Christopher Hitchens & company of atheist authors. I wouldn’t pay it any further attention, given the overabundance of that already, but consider this point Peter Berkowitz wraps into his conclusion:

Mr. Hitchens is by far the most erudite and entertaining of the new new atheists. But his errors and his excesses are shared by the whole lot. And these errors and excesses have pernicious political consequences, amplifying invidious distinctions among fellow citizens and obscuring crucial differences among believers world wide.

That’s an important warning, that this ideology is “obscuring crucial differences among believers world wide.”

Playing into the anger and enmities that debase our politics today, the new new atheism blurs the deep commitment to the freedom and equality of individuals that binds atheists and believers in America. At the same time, by treating all religion as one great evil pathology, today’s bestselling atheists suppress crucial distinctions between the forms of faith embraced by the vast majority of American citizens and the militant Islam that at this very moment is pledged to America’s destruction.

That’s a tactic of the more radical secular progressives, to make a moral equivalence between strong religious beliefs, to make faith-based Christian believers as dangerous in the public mind as…not faith-based Muslim believers…but radical jihadists who follow the most militant form of Islam.

In Europe, where the latter have established a menacing presence, a new awareness of Christian roots is spreading. It’s about time.

Late last year, a Swedish hotel guest named Stefan Jansson grew upset when he found a Bible in his room. He fired off an email to the hotel chain, saying the presence of the Christian scriptures was “boring and stupefying.” This spring, the Scandic chain, Scandinavia’s biggest, ordered the New Testaments removed.

In a country where barely 3% of the population goes to church each week, the affair seemed just another step in Christian Europe’s long march toward secularism. Then something odd happened: A national furor erupted. A conservative bishop announced a boycott. A leftist radical who became a devout Christian and talk-show host denounced the biblical purge in newspaper columns and on television. A young evangelical Christian organized an electronic letter-writing campaign, asking Scandic: Why are you removing Bibles but not pay-porn on your TVs?

What a good question. See how letter-writing can make a difference?

Scandic, which had started keeping its Bibles behind the front desk, put the New Testament back in guest rooms.

“Sweden is not as secular as we thought,” says Christer Sturmark, head of Sweden’s Humanist Association, a noisy assembly of nonbelievers to which the Bible-protesting hotel guest belongs.

After decades of secularization, religion in Europe has slowed its slide toward what had seemed inevitable oblivion. There are even nascent signs of a modest comeback. Most church pews are still empty. But belief in heaven, hell and concepts such as the soul has risen in parts of Europe, especially among the young, according to surveys. Religion, once a dead issue, now figures prominently in public discourse.

Young Europeans will help the older generations not only re-discover it, but build on the foundations that have always been there.

0 Comment

  • It is good to know that removal of bibles is a step too far in a country where 3% attend church. It seems to me like this has hit the limit of what people are willing to eliminate from their lives. It makes the modern world a little too sterile somehow. I tend to think that it is more of a romantic notion of Christianity and historical tradition that was threatened by bible removal than were searchers hungry for the scriptures.

  • Yes much has been written about this debate…but I find the WSJ article among the best…certainly from the secular media…and would recommend it highly to all. (nice piece from secular/traditional press to send to folks seduced by this current madness!)

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