The
rage against God
Peter Hitchens
Continuum; 2010, £16.99, Hardback, 168p.,
ISBN 9781441105721
After reviewing the autobiography of former Fleet Street journalist
Tom Davies in an earlier issue, it was interesting to turn to this recent
book from another member of the journalists' profession who has found
his way back to the Christian faith by an interesting route.
Peter Hitchens, currently a columnist on the Mail on Sunday, describes
his early public school upbringing and how he rejected the Christian
faith of his childhood, even to the extent of publicly burning his copy
of the Bible as an expression of his new-found unbelief. He goes on to
explain that for many years he was a Trotskyist and a dedicated opponent
of religious belief. A period as a foreign correspondent in Moscow, however,
in the early 1990s, caused him to question the claims of the Communist
system, and other philosophies that seek to create a perfect society
on earth.
The book contains an interesting chapter on the realities of life in
the Soviet Union during the dying days of the Communist regime and looks
back at atrocities committed during the earlier days of Lenin and Stalin.
This part of the book reminded me of the writings of the late Malcolm
Muggeridge, whose disillusionment with the Soviet system while working
as a foreign correspondent, also prepared the way for a return to Christianity
in later life.
The author is the brother of Christopher Hitchens whose book God
is Not Great spearheaded the recent “new atheist” attack on
religious belief. Peter Hitchens responds to some of his brother's arguments
in the present book, while acknowledging that, on a personal level, relations
between the two brothers are better than they have been for many years.
In particular, he questions his brother's argument that the the excesses
of the Soviet system only occurred because Marxism is itself a quasi-religious
system.
The author tackles a number of other questions raised by the new atheists.
For example: Are conflicts fought in the name of religion really conflicts
about religion? Is it possible to determine what is right and wrong without
God?
The Rage Against God makes a powerful plea for the followers of Christopher
Hitchens, Richard Dawkins, et al to re-examine their assumption that
non-belief is the only sensible option for intelligent people. It should
be recommended to anyone interested in the current debate about the role
of religion in society.
Contributed by:Graham Hedges, Hon. FCLIP, MCLIP, who
is the Secretary of LCF and works for
the
public library service in the London Borough of Wandsworth.
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