The evangelist always known as J John (it was difficult for
him to anglicise his Greek Cypriot name Iouannes Iouannon any more
conventionally) has laid out what he thinks has happened to ‘British values’;
his use of five alliterative points is one of the tools of his trade.
Amnesia. He is an
evangelist, so he begins with knowledge that people have simply forgotten Christian
roots. We don’t remember what shaped our
values in the past. We don’t therefore
have access to the tradition which could challenge or renew our values
now. I suspect others would suggest that
present religious illiteracy isn’t just about what is no longer known but is
also about what people think they do know (which is that Christian values are backwards
and judgemental and thus not worth attention).
Adolesence. I might
have come up with four of his five points myself, but I hadn’t seen this one
coming. We actually admire immaturity (his
prime example of ‘cultural adolescence’ is the popularity of the behaviour exemplified in Top Gear). We actually despise sophistication (so a
politician is suspect if he quotes Shakespeare rather than parades pretended
support for a ‘favourite’ football team).
He teaches me that the French for ‘dumbing down’ is ‘la cretinisation’.
Acquisitiveness. It
isn’t just that we want things for ourselves, but it is more fundamentally that
greed has somehow been legitimised; I’m reminded of Mark Clavier’s recent book
on Rescuing the Church from Consumerism
where the thesis isn’t that we happen to behave in a consumerist way some of
the time but that our assumptions (including what he sees as the illusions of personal
choice and fulfilment) have become fundamentally consumerist. ‘It’s very difficult,’ J John says,’ to
instil a sense of charitable values in a country with a mind-set that looks at
everything in terms of balance sheets and potential profit.’
Apathy. Here he is
really talking about disregard for the needs of others: ‘with remarkable
exceptions there are very few people seriously concerned about the plight of
the poor, the abused and the trafficked’.
It is difficult to gainsay him when in the week I read elsewhere that its
acting Leader attributed lack of election support for the Labour party to the
fact that ‘it raised issues such as zero hours contacts, the living wage and
food banks’ so that she is instead ‘urging the party to choose the leader who
will best connect with voters in 2020, rather than make Labour members “feel
glowing about our principles and values”’.
Arrogance. Here he is
really talking about self sufficiency:
‘God has been marginalised not because people have adopted a version of
atheism or agnosticism bit simply because we want to be in charge of our own
lives’.
This all also reminds me of F S Michaels’ recent book Monoculture where the thesis is that inhabiting
one overarching story controls what you expect and limits what you want - and, just as the overarching scientific story
made us expect solutions and shaped us mechanistically, the overarching economic
story makes us victims of market forces and limited choices and defines us as
isolated and self-interested.
So, where would one go from here? I’d already thought that our ‘sales pitch’
might have to become become ‘here is the tradition you have forgotten’ – some alternative gems
to catch the imagination. What Michaels suggests
is that it is the nurturing of such ‘parallel possibilities’ which is the only
way to grow stories which challenge the monoculture.
The picture is goes back again to visiting Holton-cum-Beckering
church.
2 comments:
...religious illiteracy isn’t just about what is no longer known but is also about what people think they do know (which is that Christian values are backwards and judgemental and thus not worth attention).
...or perhaps, is about people genuinely do know (which is that the values espoused by Christians are backwards and judgemental, and therefore discredit the whole edifice).
These are, sadly, spot on Peter. Christian values and mores are long forgotten or have been deemed to be worthless to the 21st century citizen. Everyone knows better these days it seems. I find this list heartbreaking and causes me great concern for my two grandaughters about to leave school and move out into the world of College. Their parents are atheists through and through and asked me long ago not to "preach" to them. Though we do have discussions each week when they come to tea after school.
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