What of the future? (Bulldog for October)

John Appleby  |  Features
Date posted:  1 Oct 1998
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As the clever professor said on the BBC one Sunday recently: 'Religion has become relatively unimportant in this society.' And he is right, isn't he? Our society is going further and further from God, with increasing speed. No longer is there even a nominal understanding of Christian things to which we, as Christians, can relate.

We can now boast the highest level of unmarried teenage mothers of any developed country. Abortions are performed here at something like 500 a day! We have the largest prison population of any European country. An estimated million of our young people are using drugs. The great city of London is advertised in America by our Tourist Board as 'the gay city of the world' - and they don't mean that it is a city full of mirth. I needn't go on, for you can add more and more facts like those yourselves. Religion is relatively unimportant in our society.

Yes, I know that we have also become very clever: we know how to play around with genes; we can make babies in test-tubes; we know how to walk on the moon; no longer do missionaries in jungley places have to wait months and months to communicate with home - they can do it now at the speed of light. Science rules, OK?

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