Posted on 11/27/2007 1:55:10 PM PST by Mr. Silverback
On the eve of the new millennium, the prestigious Economist magazine published what amounted to an obituary for belief in God.
Fast forward to November 2007: The cover story of a recent issue of the magazine is titled, In Gods Name. In it, the editors admit that they were wrong eight years ago and tell their readers that religion will play a big role in this centurys politics.
What happened to change their minds? For starters, they began looking through the correct end of the telescope.
In 1999, the magazine cited the many different conceptions of God as possible evidence that, instead of man being created in Gods image, it was the other way around. They mocked Gods supposed concern for the diet of the Jews and the fact that Hindus depicted him as a blue-faced flute-player with an interest in dairy-farming.
They opined that for one of infinite knowledge, he was strangely careless how he spread what bits of it to whom. To some he dictated the Bible; to Muhammad the Koran.
Thus if God seemed to be passing into history, at least in the West, perhaps this passing was largely his own fault. So concluded the Economist.
This bit of hubris was explicable, if hardly justifiable: It came at the end of a decade that had seen the collapse of the Soviet Union and a global economic boom. Democratic capitalism appeared to have triumphed so completely that there was talk of the End of History.
While a few writersfor example, Samuel Huntingtonwrote about the upcoming clash of civilizations between Islam and the West, the Economists writers were too busy writing about money to take notice.
Then came September 11. It was a painful reminder that secularized global elites, who live as if God does not exist, were a tiny minority. Outside of what the magazine itself called the rarefied world of thinkers, few people doubted Gods existence or His relevance to our lives. On the contrary, they believed that He has definite ideas about how we ought to live.
Today, the magazine agrees with Philip Jenkins that religion will probably be the prime animating and destructive force in human affairs in the twenty-first centuryreferring, as he does, to Islam. What people believe about God will guide their attitudes to political liberty and obligation, concepts of nationhood and, of course, conflicts and wars.
What they wrote in 1999 was as substantial as the dot.com-driven stock prices that fueled their hubris.
But because it took September 11 to make the magazine take notice, the special report skews toward religion as the source of conflict: both armed conflict and in the political arena. So, like Christopher Hitchens and his bestselling book, God Is Not Great, they grudgingly acknowledge that belief in God is alive and well. It is just if there is this God, He is the source of all evil. That is as wrongheaded as saying God was passing into history.
Tomorrow, I will tell you about what the magazine calls the new wars of religion and how you and I need to respond. I suppose it is good, at least, for the time being that the Economist admits its mistake: Man is, you see, inescapably a religious creature, and the failure to understand this is the worst kind of hubris and very dangerous.
There are links to further information at the source document.
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The most profound fruit that our Judeo-Christian roots have produced is our love for freedom and individual liberty. We are a nation governed by the rule of Law and as Americans, we are granted the inalienable right to govern ourselves. Self-government and a government of the people, by the people and for the people has been the basis of Western Civilization and we must do all we can to ensure its longevity.
The combined intelligence of all men on this Earth is about the level of an ant compared to His intellect.
Thinking a bit much of ourselves, are we?? /sarc
Nicely put.
“It is just if there is this God, He is the source of all evil.”
Wow. They still have way too much hubris. People who don’t believe just don’t get it. The secular left will and does hate Christianity, but the idea of fighting for truth of any kind is even more repugnant to them. They are still fighting God. Not surprised.
A little (okay,well, a lot off the subject) but the above line reminded me of a short, sweet little "explanation" I heard many moons ago.
To wit:
The Almighty did indeed create man in His own image. Man can not see this in either himself or any one else. But animals, esp. the ones we keep as pets, can detect a trace of this in us. This is why your dog or cat or horse or bird will sometime look at you the way he does. B/c for that brief moment he sees that spark of the Creator in you.
btt
I’ll bet He’s writing a rebuttal to the Economist right now.
“Ill bet Hes writing a rebuttal to the Economist right now.”
If He can stop laughing. ;)
But seriously, let’s hear what He has to say about this:
Matt 12: 35 A good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things: and an evil man out of the evil treasure bringeth forth evil things.
36 But I say unto you, That every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment.
37 For by thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned.
KJV
Maybe it’s just me, but I find Jesus’ words in verses 36-37 the most frightening in the Bible.
Yeah...and then some!
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