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But what is interesting to me is that everything about these accounts is both of our time and runs against the assumptions of our time. The search for meaning is not new. What is new is that almost nothing in our culture applies itself to offering an answer. Nothing says, “Here is an inheritance of thought and culture and philosophy and religion which has nurtured people for thousands of years.” At best the voice says, “Find your meaning where you will.” At worst it is the nihilist’s creed: “All this has no meaning.” Meanwhile politicians — seeking to address the broadest range of people — speak so widely and with such generalities as to mean almost nothing. Almost nowhere is there a vision of what a meaning-filled life might be. The wisdom of our time suggests that education, science and the sheer accessibility of information must surely have knocked such urges out of us. And the divide can be staggering.

At the opening of his 1986 work The Blind Watchmaker Richard Dawkins wrote: “This book is written in the conviction that our own existence once presented the greatest of all mysteries, but that it is a mystery no longer because it is solved. Darwin and Wallace solved it.” This passage highlights the gulf that now exists between the accepted secular-atheist worldview of our culture and the reality of how people live and experience their lives. Because although Dawkins may feel that he has solved our mystery — and although science has indeed solved part of it — the fact is that we do not feel solved. We do not live our lives and experience our lives as solved beings. In the same way, no intelligent person could reject what we know to be our kinship with the animal kingdom. Yet few people would rejoice in being referred to as a mere animal. Being described as “mammalian” may shock and even stimulate for a bit, but to live as though we were animals would be — we know — to degrade ourselves. Whether we are right or wrong in this, we do feel that we are more than this. In the same way, we know we are more than mere consumers. We rebel when we are talked of as mere cogs in some economic wheel, and some people will even vote Green as a result. We rebel not because we are not these things, but because we know that we are not only these things. We know we are something else, even if we do not know what that else is.

I know that non-religious people do not like talk like this. And I know that religious people find it frustrating because for real believers the question will always be, “Why do you not just believe?” Yet this latter question simply ignores the probably irreversible damage that science and historical criticism have done to the literal truth-claims of religion and ignores the fact that people cannot be forced into faith. Meanwhile the non-religious in our culture are deeply fearful of any debate or discussion which they think will make some concession to the religious and so allow faith-based discussion to flood back in to the public space.

This seems to me to be an error, not least because it encourages people to go to war with those who are supported by the same tree. There is no reason why a child of Judaeo-Christian civilisation and Enlightenment Europe should spend much, if any, of their time warring with those who still hold the faith from which many of their beliefs and rights spring. In the same way there is little sense in the products of Judaeo-Christian civilisation and Enlightenment Europe who have managed to come to a different settlement deciding that those who do not literally and actually believe in God are now their enemies. Between us we may yet face far clearer opponents not only of our culture but of our whole way of living.

Unless the non-religious are able to work with, rather than against, the source from which our culture found meaning it is hard to see any way through. It is not as though we are going to be able to invent an entirely new set of beliefs — though at times like these many charlatans will try. But without this it is not just that we lose our ability to talk of truths and meaning, we lose the ability even to speak in metaphor.

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Robert Randles
August 27th, 2015
2:08 PM
The Judeo-Christian religion of the Western cultures made a strong distinction betweem Right and Wrong. This provided a strong moral compass on which to base decisions. By adopting Moral Relativism instead we abandon this moral compass. This seems to be the way the Western world is going, and if we fail to do something about it we will be at grave risk of destruction.

Anonymous
July 19th, 2015
9:07 AM
Douglas, you are a spirit, you have a soul (thinker,feeler,chooser)and you live in a body.The problem for you is you've elevated your soul (intellect) and worship it - you've eaten from the tree of the life of knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden. But, like God says that'll never be enough. He created you to live in communion with Him via your Spirit, which is the part of you He indwells. If you live through your Spirit and elevate it above your soul you will be eating from the Tree of Life, (Jesus), which is the way He intended all of us to live by - including Adam and Eve who chose the wrong tree. There were two trees in the Garden. We all get to choose which we will live life by. Why don't you listen to ravizachariasministries - it'll stimulate your thirst for knowledge through Gods spirit, whilst billjohnson ministries will ignite your spirit. You sound as if you need some excuse to believe in God again

amcdonald
June 18th, 2015
12:06 PM
LIETKULTUR The Unrecorded Man in Japan makes a perceptive comment. Zizek`s " We need to create our own leading culture...a higher leading culture that regulates the way in which the subcultures interact...Pussy Riot are all part of the same struggle. If not then we can all just kill ourselves." (Spiegel online international, March 31) In the islamified Middle East are the Kurdish Army and Israeli Army now the military wing of this `leading culture` ? To what extent is it already here mass-media/technologically ? And, for starters, in Zizek`s conception of the Holy Ghost?

The Unrecorded Man
June 5th, 2015
2:06 PM
I live in Japan, which is not a Judeo-Christian nation, yet in many ways the Japanese knock westerners into a cocked hat when it comes to 'western values'. This is why I am not unduly bothered by the question of whether or not western society can survive the demise of the religion that gave rise to its morality. That morality is alive and well in a present-day non-Christian country.

amcdonald
May 26th, 2015
3:05 PM
Zizek is right to propose that the islamist jihad nutters have an inferiority complex. They are scared of western culture.They are scared of western women. Voters faith in the Tory Party has resulted in a tory victory. The Left may now be extinct but there`s no guarantee the Tories are fit for purpose. The Chinese Communist Party are the best `managers` of global capitalism and its culture. The ancient Chinese philosopher Lao-Tzu wrote " the universe is inhumane and treats men and women like sacrificial straw dogs." Politics and religion mimic Nature. Mecca is now a goldmine of property development,sharia shopping malls and hotels. No support or even a mention is given from the Left or Right to the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain. No exit from islam/jihadist ideology is promoted by the Tories or BBC. The Tories have won a battle but not the war. When Zizek states that the 20th century is over he means new intellectual coordinates are needed. Philosophy (philosophising not ideology spouting) in the 21st century will blossom in culture. Anthony Gormley`s sculptures are competent but vacuous. Akiane Kramarik`s paintings,books (and life) remain astonishing and eternal. And totally independent of whatever meaning or meaninglessness the global artmarket sells. The Cob Gallery,London now has works by Sarah Maple,Stella Vine and Miriam Elia (and orgy prints and cups by Fee). All signs of the advance of a lively english culture by exceptionally talented individuals. And it`s all on the internet 24/7. `British Values` ? `God`? The lot.

David Soward
May 20th, 2015
8:05 PM
A bit wordy, it has to be said, but a refreshing article which draws attention to the shallowness of much modern-day atheism. It needn't be shallow, as Murray shows, but our 21st century dualism tends to divide people into camps, far more than it should. Quakers have a point, when they include theists and non-theists in their ranks, and refuse to sign up to creeds or doctrine. Can we persuade you, Douglas, to join us at www.wychwoodcircle.org. some day?

Bruce Charlton
May 19th, 2015
1:05 PM
What is the point of saying that we are painted into a corner without checking whether we really are painted into a corner? What is this nonsense about the probably irreversible damage that science and historical criticism have done to the literal truth-claims of religion? Honestly, people really need to be able to distinguish between metaphysics and wissenschaft. Science and historical criticism exclude religion by assumption, therefore they can have nothing to say - and say nothing - about the truth claims of religion... etc Commented at: http://charltonteaching.blogspot.co.uk/2015/05/the-big-problem-and-solut...

Anonymous
May 13th, 2015
10:05 PM
Thousands of people have become Christians over the last 40 years, many of them through the Alpha course. The personal accounts they give are very similar to those Douglas Murray has heard Muslim converts describe.

Julian Bailey
May 13th, 2015
9:05 PM
Thankyou for this fascinating article Mr Murray. It is interesting how many of us have lost our fascination for knowledge and solutions to hard problems and have abdicated responsibility for these decisions. The Big Bang Theory may be interesting as a theory regarding the start of the world but it speaks of nothing concerning basic human needs.

Paul Simmmons
May 7th, 2015
11:05 AM
Douglas Murray’s appraisal (Is the West’s loss of faith terminal? May 2015) that western culture in its broadest and deepest sense is drifting, dislocated from acknowledgment of, let alone respect for, its Judaeo-Christian roots – and that this matters and is dangerous because it opens the door to cultures and attitudes inimical to humane, enlightenment values - is a profoundly significant and welcome one. The ferocity and cold-bloodedness of parliamentary opposition to the mildest attempts to mitigate the precarious position of the unborn in our brave new world demonstrate this. Mr. Murray’s calls for efforts to mend the “split” between the “thin and shallow” world-view of contemporary liberal democracies and this cultural heritage, and the call, so astutely made, deserves a response. We might begin with the photograph of the silhouetted figure looking out to the horizon which accompanies the article, Antony Gormley’s “Another Place” – described by Mr. Murray as an artwork “which brings to the fore the image of resurrection which lies at the heart of our culture”. For many, I suspect, the artwork is more subtle than an image of resurrection, but instead brings to the fore as part of its enigmatic appeal the question of resurrection - is there a resurrection? Is there “another place” and, if so, who inhabits it? What has happened to our ancestors and where will we find ourselves in our turn? Is the man on the foreshore hopelessly trapped in such issues, or does he transcend them? Whatever one’s intuition as to the answers to these questions, it is encouraging that an artwork of such surpassing quality is popular: the British public are perhaps not, after all, so shallow as to be wholly satisfied with a diet of fried battery-chicken and Strictly, and remain capable of appreciating fundamental questions subtly posed. A work such as ‘Another Place’ cannot be reduced to the level of an ‘illustration’ of philosophical/ religious questions, but it is nevertheless a response in some measure to the very “split” Mr. Murray identifies. If the man looking out to the horizon is everyman (as he surely is) how does resurrection apply to him? In the Judaeo-Christian tradition, resurrection to life rather than to judgment requires salvation as a prelude. Is everyman really so corrupt in his nature that he faces only either annihilation or resurrection to a withering judgment without this salvation? Are the thoughts and intentions of his heart really and in truth “only evil continually” as was the case, apparently, with those wiped-out in the deluge in which only those in Noah’s ark – an unmistakable symbol of the cross – were saved? Personally, I think not, but it is in asking such questions that the split begins to be bridged.

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