Thinking of the UK as 'post-Christian' is surprisingly helpful.

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  • Social brain
  • Spirituality

You may have noticed the media have recently been interested in the question of whether Britain is a Christian country. The story went something like this:

Prime minister David Cameron let it be known that his famously unreliable celestial radio reception has improved and not only does he 'do God' but suggests that more of us should do the same: "I believe we should be more confident about our status as a Christian country, more ambitious about expanding the role of faith-based organisations, and, frankly, more evangelical about a faith that compels us to get out there and make a difference to people's lives."

The President of the British Humanist Association, Professor Jim Al-Khalil writes a well crafted and succint letter supported by notable signatories suggesting that the Prime Minister's remarks were inappropriate: "At a social level, Britain has been shaped for the better by many pre-Christian, non-Christian, and post-Christian forces. We are a plural society with citizens with a range of perspectives, and we are a largely non-religious society."

The commentariat then explored the question and most sensible people realise that 'to some extent', 'depends what you mean' and so forth are the only credible answers, which is hardly a huge surprise, but still leaves a lingering sense of discomfort that the question hasn't quite been answered.

This weekend, the former Archbishop of Cantebury, Rowan Williams stepped in with a subtle but very helpful distinction:

"If I say that this is a post-Christian nation, that doesn't mean necessarily non-Christian. It means the cultural memory is still quite strongly Christian. And in some ways, the cultural presence is still quite strongly Christian. But it is post-Christian in the sense that habitual practice for most of the population is not taken for granted...A Christian nation can sound like a nation of committed believers, and we are not that. Equally, we are not a nation of dedicated secularists. I think we're a lot less secular than the most optimistic members of the British Humanist Association would think."

This basic analysis seems sound to me, and the way the story above unfolded makes much more sense when you see it through a post-Christian lens. More generally, I find the 'post-Christian' framing useful, because it captures the sense that the UK is culturally Christian, but not exclusively or exhaustively so and makes sense of various attempts to move 'beyond' Christianity, while still being rooted in it.

A post-Christian country:

  • Includes people wanting to reassert the importance of the underlying faith and defending certain aspects of the creed as non-negotiable; and others who want to re-indentify with aspects of their forgotten heritage, and to reclaim some of the better aspects of what feels lost or misplaced.
  • Amounts to a spiritually and religiously plural country, where Christianity may have a predominant influence relative to other faiths due to history and population, but always in ways checked by democratic processes.
  • Includes a large community of atheists who position themselves in critical if not hostile relationship to Christianity, using a free press to challenge perceived abuses of power or vested interests.
  • Comprises a large broadly 'agnostic' group who may even be the silent majority but currently lack cohesion and voice. As Andrew Marr once put it: "many people, perhaps most people…live their lives in a tepid confusing middle ground between strong belief and strong disbelief"
  • All these parts of a post-Christian country will regularly reflect and debate on the nature of Christianity's ongoing cultural contribution; manifest in debates over the appropriateness or not of the Church having representation in Parliament and the ongoing "Let your knees pay the fees" controversy surrounding Church schools.
  • Such a country would also feature lots of people like your scribe who think of themselves as 'culturally Christian', especially at Easter where they find valuable emotional and psychological truth in the story, without feeling the need to decide on whether it's factually 'true'.
  • A post-Christian country also positively welcomes nascent and inspiring enterprises like The Sunday Assembly For instance, one of the co-founders, Pippa Evans, put it at an RSA workshop:"I realised I didn't miss God, but I did miss church", which is a quintessentially post-Christian statement. ( Relatedly, the Writer Julian Barnes also famously said: "I don't believe in God, but I miss him.")

Finally, I realise now that  when I wrote the seminal piece for the RSA projectSpirituality, Tools of the Mind and The Social Brain, I was thinking in a post-Christian manner:

"...Being spiritual can mean safeguarding our sense of the sacred, valuing the feeling of belonging or savouring the rapture of intense absorption. And then there is the quintessential gratitude we feel when we periodically notice, as gift and revelation, that we are alive...Such experiences do not depend upon doctrine or on institutional endorsement or support(...)But it is unfortunate that those who value spiritual experience and practice are often suspiciously quick to disassociate themselves from belief in God and religion, as if such things were unbearably unfashionable and awkward, rather than perhaps the richest place to understand the nature of spiritual need."

Much more could be said, but it seems to me that the 'post-Christian' framing is helpful in lots of ways. In response to Rowan Williams's timely intervention I therefore say, Amen!


 

Dr Jonathan Rowson is Director of the Social Brain Centre at the RSA and tweets here.

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  • I don't really have any answers on this post-Christian issue
    - but a lot of questions! J

    Questions which might tend to suggest that the number of people
    who go to Church might be rather unhelpful as a pointer towards whether we are
    *really* Christian, in an authentic sense.

    I’d be happy if compassionate, authentic and spiritual Christianity was growing – even if
    the more superficial and exoteric
    aspects of Christianity are waning away…

    Some questions and comments:

    ** As RSA lecturer Guy Claxton told us recently, 50-60% of
    people have had ‘Glimpses’ of authentic reality, accompanied by deep feelings
    of benevolence and pro-sociality which often leave them transformed. Maslow
    called them ‘peak experiences’. But those who have them usually feel they
    should keep them to themselves. Are the number of Glimpsers going up or down?
    (These transformational experiences are far more important than how often one
    sits uncomfortably on a church pew IMHO).

    ** Many people these days seem to find themselves on a
    spiritual search – which can of course end up feeling a bit superficial, as in
    New Age or ‘cafeteria spirituality’. Yet people who take their search
    seriously, and change deeply, often seem to find themselves eventually returning
    to their Christian roots – after interesting detours into the more exotic and
    Eastern offerings. (Jung talked about this need to return, I think). Are many people making this return, I wonder?

    ** Deeply transformative ‘spiritual’ practices such as ‘Centering
    prayer’ have made a powerful resurgence lately.

    ** Even in a seemingly secular liberal organisation like the
    RSA, your spirituality project lectures have been popular – and the parallel
    meeting partly led by Fellows was popular and appreciated too: http://rsafellowship.com/group...
    - hopefully it will continue…

    ** I once spent an hour or more in a private meeting talking
    with Bishop of London about Ken Wilber, spirituality etc. He talked a bit about
    what some esoteric-sounding ‘Deep Church’ groups were up to. When I tried to
    follow up on them afterwards, they seemed to be so esoteric that I couldn’t find
    a single trace of them! Maybe they’re making powerful changes behind the scenes…
    ;-)

    ** The spiritual guru GI Gurdjieff argued that we are usually
    so tied to our automatic and unconscious natures that we shouldn’t even imagine
    that we are ready to try to be true Christians yet! I would argue that
    developments such as the fast spread of Mindfulness meditation bring us a
    closer to a point where we could be such authentic Christians. (More on
    Gurdjieff: http://www.bardic-press.com/th....

    ** The ‘Alternative Service’-style church services offer something that can be very appealing. ‘The
    Nine O’Clock Service’ in Sheffield’s earth-based, rave-based Christian spirituality
    caused quite a revolution, and was popular. Though its charismatic leader Chris
    Brain ruined it all, of course. But it perhaps shows that there are wellsprings
    waiting to be tapped into… (I went a few times to an altenative service called ‘Vaux’,
    despite not being a Christian. A friend who was a member of the Greater London
    Authority came along too). I even did a Spiral Dance with Starhawk in St James’
    Church, Piccadilly once. Keep an eye on the growing edge, like St James’ – not the
    ‘average’ Christian. Even the growing atheist Sunday Assembly meetings are often
    led by Christians!

    The short version of what I’m saying is that if more people
    are having ‘Glimpses’, if more people are engaging with more transformative
    spiritual practices etc, then it puts in perspective what happens with the mass
    of people who mostly only followed the more superficial and exoteric aspects of
    Christianity.

    Perhaps I’m saying – via Prof Kegan - that ‘Self-authoring’ and ‘Self-transforming’
    Christianity needs to be distinguished from the established Christianity of the
    conformist ‘Socialised’/traditional mind.

    I certainly find when reading a Christian like Fr. Richard
    Rohr feels that he has a good grip on where we’ve been and where we might be
    going that could appeal to anyone who’s on the same quest. As people wake up to
    their own humanity/spirituality, they will become interested in people like
    Rohr…

    Matthew Mezey

    (RSA Online Community Manager)

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