The departure of The Guardian’s regular vicar-pundit, Giles Fraser, from his weekly slot as a commentator, chiefly on religious matters, is good news and bad. It’s good for readers of UnHerd, because he is now a columnist here and brings with him his stimulating intellectual liberalism – he may be the only Guardian liberal to have outed himself as a Brexiteer.
It’s bad, though, for readers of The Guardian, who have lost someone in their comment pages who undermines so many misconceptions about the clergy and Christianity generally – not least the smug secular assumption that God-botherers really aren’t very clever. Giles is.
His departure also reflects a dispiriting trend in contemporary British journalism, which is to treat religion as insufficiently important and interesting to merit proper coverage, which would entail specialist reporters and columnists with a particular interest in religion. The Guardian still has a designated religious affairs correspondent, Harriet Sherwood, but that’s for news rather than comment. The best of her recent predecessors, Stephen Bates, ranged across news and opinion slots and was heartily loathed by religious conservatives. But really did know his stuff, not least Vatican affairs and the CofE synod. Alas, that degree of expertise in mainstream media is now rare.
Yes, I know the BBC recently announced it would be devoting more, not less, time to religion – but that amounts to greater coverage of minority religions. And it’s vanishingly rare for its coverage of religion actually to cover religious belief, rather than subjects on which the world faiths generally differ from mainstream secular opinion; Sunday religious programmes dispiritingly often discuss issues such as homosexuality and transgenderism which are moral as much as religious and on which people of little faith are also divided.
There’s also a defensiveness about the way in which organisations such as Tony Blair’s Faith Foundation promote religion as something which has never been more important than now: the rather obvious subtext is, we’d better try and understand Islam, because Muslims may try to blow us up on account of their religion. It is a mildly dispiriting take on the subject to say the least.
Here at UnHerd we take religion, and religious literacy, seriously. In that spirit, I would like to share some of the interesting sites that I visit.
RealClearReligion is an American site with an abundance of useful links. It carries a range of articles from other journals on the subject of religion, from Standpoint to The Atlantic and The Smithsonian and its range of interest is vast: current article titles range from Do We Have Souls? to an analysis of President Trump’s decision to shift the US embassy to Jerusalem, as well as an essay on Buddhism and science.
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