Britain's broken society is caused by lack of religion, says Chief Rabbi

13 April 2012

Sir Jonathan Sacks: A decline in collective religious belief has led to the spread of social problems


The root cause of Britain's broken society is the loss of religion, the Chief Rabbi said yesterday. 

Sir Jonathan Sacks pointed to the collapse of faith as the key factor behind the failure of relationships, the weakness of marriage and the fragmentation of communities.

He said declining religious belief has led to the spread of depression, stress, eating disorders and drug and alcohol abuse.

In a speech to the bishops of the worldwide Anglican communion meeting at the Lambeth Conference Sir Jonathan appealed for Christians, Jews and people of other faiths to work together.

Sir Jonathan is the first Orthodox Jewish leader to be invited to speak to the conference, which is staged once every decade.

His call for unity was delivered to Anglicans who have fallen out among themselves in a row over gay rights.

The Chief Rabbi said that a country which lost its religion lost 'graciousness'.

'Relationships break down. Marriage grows weak. Families become fragile. Communities atrophy. And the result is that people feel vulnerable and alone,' he said.

Sir Jonathan added that the effect is that mankind is now 'living through one of the most fateful ages of change since Homo sapiens first set foot on earth.'

He said: 'The sanctity of human life is being desecrated by terror. The integrity of creation is threatened by environmental catastrophe. Respect for diversity is imperilled by what one writer has called the clash of civilisations.'

The Chief Rabbi told the Anglicans that the failure of religion was hastened by 'conflict between faiths, and sometimes within faiths'.

He reminded the 670 bishops of the history of persecution of Jews by Christians and said he could not speak honestly without opening the 'book of Jewish tears'.

But, he added, the past could be redeemed. Sir Jonathan said that since the foundation of the Council of Christians and Jews by the Church of England and the Chief Rabbi in the 1940s members of the two faiths met as 'beloved friends'.

He called for the extension of the same friendship to people of other faiths including Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims.

'Because though we do not share a faith, we surely share a fate,' Sir Jonathan said. 'Religions should not fight each other but work together to face the challenges of poverty, hunger, disease and environmental disaster.'

The bishops meeting in Canterbury are trying to put together a scheme to save the 400-year-old worldwide Anglican communion from schism.

Already more than 200 bishops have boycotted the summit in protest over the American appointment of a gay bishop.

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