London Telegraph
 
 
Richard Dawkins is moving towards Christ 

 
 
 
By _Damian Thompson_ 
(http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/author/damianthompson/)  _Religion_ 
(http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/category/religion/)   
Last updated: May 24th,  2014



_1540 Comments_ 
(http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/damianthompson/100273071/richard-dawkins-is-moving-towards-christ/#disqus_thread)
  
 
 
 
What an extraordinary thing _Richard Dawkins has just said at the Hay  
Festival_ 
(http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/hay-festival/10853648/Richard-Dawkins-I-am-a-secular-Christian.html)
  (which the Telegraph is sponsoring): "I 
am a secular Christian, if  you want to call me that.” 
Now, I've said some jolly rude things about the professor in the past. But 
he  did ask for it. _For  example (from 2009)_ 
(http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/damianthompson/100014886/richard-dawkinss-latest-attack-on-the-catholic
-church-is-vicious-and-crazy-the-man-needs-help/) : 
Richard Dawkins's latest attack on the Catholic Church is worthy of a  
dribbling loony on the top of a bus. He calls the Church "the greatest force  
for evil in the world", "an institution where buggering altar boys pervades  
the culture" and describes it "dragging its skirts in the dirt and touting 
for  business like a common pimp".
Forgive the amateur psychology, but this sort of crazed invective (his, not 
 mine) so often conceals a troubled fascination with the object of one's  
hatred.... Anyway, Dawkins also said today that he still values "the  
ceremonial side of religion" while not believing in miracles – a position not  
far 
removed from that of Christians such as the great missionary-cum-organist  
Albert Schweitzer and indeed hundreds of latitudinarian Anglican clerics. 
His comments may explain claims from friends in Oxford that they've seen  
someone looking remarkably like Richard Dawkins sneaking into services. But 
he  goes a bit further. As our science correspondent Sarah Knapton reports: 
Dawkins, 73, also said that he believes humans are destined to take a  
certain path in life, and that if they veer from it a “magnetic pull” will  
bring them back to their fate.
Gosh. Is this "magnetic pull" explained by the theory of evolution through  
natural selection (which I accept completely, by the way, having been 
convinced  by Dawkins's brilliant Blind Watchmaker 30 years ago)? It doesn't  
strike me that way. It sounds as if it's inspired by the Christian teaching 
that  human beings are endowed with a conscience. 
No wonder Dawkins's fellow humanists find him such a trial. First he  
embarrasses them by denouncing faith with the zealot of a fundamentalist. Then, 
 
quietly, he reorientates himself towards the very things he's denounced. 
As they say, a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single  step.

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