Dawson held that the European rejection of its religious tradition was unprecedented and, far from being beneficial, would be harmful to its unity and indeed its very existence if allowed to continue. He would not have been surprised at the recent arguments over whether to include a reference to Europe's "Christian" heritage in the European Union Constitution. That Christianity shaped Europe more than any other set of practices or beliefs is a simple fact of history. It is everywhere evidenced in the traditions, art, modes of thought, and languages of Europe.
Indeed, by its very interest in maintaining political unity and its concern for individual rights, the European Constitution bears at least an indirect relationship to the Continent's Christian foundations. Any attempt to deny this background presents the history of Europe in a misleading way, which can only harm the chances for real and lasting unity. In that light, the reluctance of the European Union to acknowledge Christianity's influence is a sign of a dangerous historical blindness.
There were two possibilities as Europe (and, by extension, all cultures influenced by Europe, such as the United States) passed through this secular phase. First,
the complete secularization of Western culture maybe followed by its gradual dissolution and by the reassertion of the traditional religion-cultures of Asia which have been temporarily overshadowed by the European world-hegemony.
Add Islam to that description of Asian religion-cultures, and Dawson has precisely anticipated the challenge facing Western cultures. With Christianity no longer binding Western societies together, they will instead be filled by other religious groups. We can see this already in the growth of revived pagan cults like Wicca, or more fanciful belief systems sponsored by the entertainment industry.
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The second alternative is more hopeful:
It may be possible that the process of secularization may be checked or reversed either by the coming of a new religion or by a revival of the old religion with which the culture was formerly associated.
While secularist sociologists believe this revival to be "incompatible with the law of progress," Dawson chided them for their short-sightedness. Christianity is highly adaptable, as examples from Byzantine Greece to Baroque Italy to Puritan New England demonstrate, and it is difficult for sociologists -- trained as they are that religion is merely an expression of material or economic forces -- to see real spiritual growth.