Cannibal rising

Mark Troughton  |  Features
Date posted:  1 Jul 2010
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Is it possible that the age-old taboo of cannibalism is going to fall — like others we could mention — things that were once considered socially deviant because morally repugnant, but which are now ‘part of the wallpaper’?

It seems that anything is possible in these days of moral anarchy. Simplistically put, we know that when people stop going to church they cease coming under the sound of God’s Word. They eventually turn from his absolutes towards absolutes of their own making, in our case relativism and hedonism. This is neither new nor surprising. Autonomous human beings in rebellion towards their Maker have always behaved so. The Bible calls it idolatry, for when people stop worshipping the true God, they end up worshipping their own (Acts 17; Romans 1.18ff).

Real threat?

But how real a threat is cannibalism? Surely no decent, civilised European would ever dream of endorsing this abhorrent deviancy? Granted. But moral degeneracy tends to be a slippery slope, rather than a plunge into the abyss.

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