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Is there a “Religious Right” emerging in Britain?
Andy Walton looks at whether there is a "Religious Right" emerging in Britain
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Death by Civilisation
Review of Death by Civilisation: How to accidentally ruin a perfectly decent society (and how it still might be saved) by James Cary
Faith, Morality and Media
10th October 2008
The BBC Director-General, Mark Thompson, gives a robust defence of the Corporation’s engagement with religion in this transcript of his 2008 Theos public theology lecture.
Thompson states that the relationship between religion and the media is important "because, quite simply, religion is back. It's not just in the news, but often leads the news."
The assumption when he joined the BBC back in 1979, that the decline and marginalization of religion was a straight forward corollary of modernism and was inevitable, is in the process of being disproven.
Commenting on a speech given by the Archbishop of Canterbury in 2005 on the media, where he argued that news media often acted in ways which were "lethally damaging" to journalism's own reputation, Thompson defends the media and the BBC.
Claims that the BBC is anti-God are "not just too sweeping; they are not even directionally true", he argues, going on to outline his optimism for the future relationship between religion and the media.
The lecture was introduced by broadcaster Jeremy Vine, whose introduction forms the foreword to this transcript. Both Thompson and Vine bring thoughtful reflection and clearsighted direction to this complex but important topic.
The lecture was delivered at the Lewis Media Centre on 14 October 2008.

