Britain at the Crossroads
A Christian examination of spiritual threats, historical resistance and modern decline
A Nation Historically Set Apart
Great Britain has long occupied a unique role in the spiritual and political landscape of the West. From the monastic fervour of Celtic Christianity, through the reformational stand of Elizabeth I, to resisting Hitler's totalitarianism in World War II, Britain has often stood alone, preserving a distinctly national Christian identity against waves of foreign or indigenous corrupting spiritual forces.
But the question today is not only what Britain once stood against, but whether she currently stands for anything at all.
21st century Britain seems to be no longer resisting spiritual takeover. She is welcoming foreign spirits and spirituality, often unknowingly, sometimes willingly, and increasingly structurally.
A Brief History
Celtic Christianity to Roman Catholicism (Synod of Whitby, 7th century)
Early Christianity in Britain was deeply shaped by Celtic spirituality, a tradition rooted in monastic life, local autonomy and evangelistic fervour (e.g., St. Patrick, St. Columba, St. Aidan). It was distinct in some practices from Roman Christianity (e.g., calculating Easter, tonsure style).
The Synod of Whitby (664 AD), convened by King Oswiu of Northumbria, decided that the Church in England would follow Roman rather than Celtic practices; a conscious move aligning with the authority of Rome and what would later become part of the Holy Roman Empire’s spiritual legacy.
This was not just a liturgical decision but a spiritual shift, a surrender of local Christian identity to a centralised, imperialised ecclesiastical authority. It foreshadowed centuries of English deference to papal Rome. Yet God preserved the missionary spirit of Celtic Christianity even as structures changed.
Odda and Anglo-Saxon Christianity (9th century)
Odda of Devon (d. 877), a lesser known yet devout noble during the time of King Alfred the Great, was part of a Christian Anglo-Saxon resistance against Viking invasions; many of which threatened both the land and the Christian faith in England.
Odda’s stand, particularly at the Battle of Cynwit, was not merely military. It was a defence of Christian civilisation against pagan conquest. It preserved a form of Christianity distinct from continental control, rooted in national and local leadership, rather than in the Holy Roman Empire.
Odda's faithfulness reflects how God raises up defenders of the faith in times of trial. His role shows the Church’s ability to resist not only paganism but also foreign domination when Christian truth is at stake.
Elizabeth I and the Protestant-Catholic Struggle (16th century)
After Henry VIII broke from Rome (1534), the English Reformation faced violent whiplashes under his children. Mary I restored Catholicism brutally (burning Protestants), while Elizabeth I reestablished Protestantism, under constant threat from Catholic Europe – especially Spain and the Holy Roman Empire.
Pope Pius V excommunicated Elizabeth in 1570, labelling her a heretic. Subsequently, the Spanish Armada (1588), sent by Catholic Spain to depose Elizabeth, failed, and has been regarded by many Protestants as an act of divine intervention. Meanwhile, the Babington Plot (1586) – a conspiracy to assassinate the Queen, along with other schemes, revealed deep ties between domestic Catholic sympathisers and foreign Catholic powers.
Elizabeth’s reign marked a watershed moment when English Protestantism resisted the pull of Catholic imperialism. It was not without compromise or sin, but it marked a national resolve to pursue Scripture-based faith rather than submission to Rome. God’s providence was seen in preserving England’s religious freedom.
Revolutionary - The Wesley/Whitefield Influence (18th century)
In the 1700s, Europe was roiled by revolutionary fervour, political upheaval and social unrest. Nations like France experienced violent revolutions, and the same economic inequality, urban poverty and disenfranchisement that fed unrest abroad were also present in England.
Into this climate stepped fiery men of God like John Wesley, his brother Charles, and George Whitefield. Through tireless itinerant preaching, hymn writing and organisational innovation, they brought the gospel directly to the working classes and rural poor, those often overlooked by the established Church. Their revival movement promoted moral responsibility, personal discipline and mutual support within emerging Methodist societies. By giving people spiritual purpose and fostering community solidarity, they helped redirect energies away from rebellion toward constructive personal transformation and social reform, influencing education, prison reform and abolitionist movements.
This episode illustrates how the gospel, faithfully proclaimed, can stabilise and renew societies under strain. Spiritual revival addressed the inner emptiness and moral drift that often fuel public disorder, demonstrating that God’s kingdom work is not only about individual salvation but also about shaping the moral fabric of a nation. Just as God used leaders in biblical history to turn the hearts of the people back to Him, so too He raised up these fervent revivalists to help preserve England from the violence and chaos that engulfed much of Europe.
World War II: A Spiritual War Beneath a Global Conflict (1939-45)
While WWII was primarily political and ideological, Britain stood as a Christian bulwark against the totalitarianism of Nazi Germany. Though Hitler’s Germany was not Catholic, the Vatican's political silence and broader continental spiritual decline made many Christians in Britain see the war in spiritual terms.
Winston Churchill, though not devout, recognised the war as a defence of ‘Christian civilisation’. C.S. Lewis, in his wartime broadcasts, warned of a "post-Christian" Europe, where Christianity had been replaced with secularism or twisted ideologies.
World War II can be seen as a moment where Britain stood alone, not just politically, but spiritually – resisting a European order increasingly divorced from God. Though Protestantism and Anglicanism had grown weak in places, the British people's resilience was undergirded by a Judeo-Christian moral code largely absent from Nazi Europe.
The Spiritual Threats Facing Britain Today
Secular Humanism: The New State Religion
Secularism, under the thin guise of neutrality, has become the de facto religion of government, education, media and even healthcare. It asserts that there are no moral absolutes, that all religions are equally valid or invalid, and that man is the measure of all things.
Among many other things, this has led to:
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The legal redefining of marriage (2013);
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The censorship of biblical truth (e.g., street preachers arrested for quoting Scripture);
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The sidelining of Christian chaplaincy in prisons, hospitals and schools;
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Growing suspicion toward parents who hold ‘traditional’ beliefs
Radical Islamism: A Parallel Civilisation
It’s essential to recognise that by no means all Muslims are radical. Nevertheless, radical Islamism has taken root in parts of Britain through. We’ve seen this happening through No-go zones, where Sharia overrides British law; Grooming gangs (in e.g., Rotherham and Telford), which have been covered up for decades; and in the growth of Islamist schools and charities teaching anti-Western ideology.
Rather than integrate into British Christian culture, parallel legal and social structures have been permitted to flourish, eroding national cohesion and moral consensus.
Cultural Marxism & Identity Politics: The New Moral Absolutism
The rise of identity-based activism (race, gender, sexuality) has created a hostile environment for Christian ethics; institutions afraid to defend truth for fear of offending ‘protected groups’; and an inversion of morality; where tolerance is demanded, but not extended to Christians.
Government & Civil Service Failures: Complicity or Blindness?
Education: Indoctrination, Not Formation
Over 50 years, British education has moved from teaching the biblical foundation of Western civilisation, to embracing, among other things, moral relativism, anti-colonial guilt and radical individualism.
Today, schools teach gender fluidity, critical race theory and sexual autonomy as unquestionable dogma; all undermining both Christian doctrine and family authority. Ofsted has penalised Christian schools for ‘failing’ to promote LGBT ideologies, even when those schools comply legally.
Law Enforcement: Politicised and Paralysed
In recent years, we’ve seen police forces prioritising ‘hate crime’ tweets over actual violent crime. In Rotherham, both the police and social services allowed the ‘grooming’ and gang-rape of 1,400+ girls over decades because they feared being called racist. Street preachers have been wrongly arrested, despite clear freedom of speech protections. These are not isolated incidents, but signs of an institution morally confused and spiritually blind.
Parliament and Policy: Progressive Capture
Across decades and party lines, Labour and Conservative governments alike have supported policies undermining biblical values (abortion liberalisation, same-sex marriage, assisted suicide proposals). Christian MPs are mocked, marginalised, or pressured to compromise, while the Civil Service, under ‘diversity and inclusion’ mandates, has adopted a post-Christian moral framework.
This is not merely incompetence; it is often a conscious ideological shift, even if many participants are spiritually unaware of its consequences.
Mapping the Path: How We Got Here (1975-2025)
Decade |
Key Events/Policies |
Spiritual Impact |
1970s |
EU membership (1973), abortion laws, rise of humanism. |
Beginning of moral drift, loss of sovereignty. |
1980s |
Thatcherism, cultural liberalisation, Section 28 (1988). |
Resistance to LGBT ideology begins, but materialism rises. |
1990s |
Blair’s ‘Cool Britannia’, Human Rights Act (1998). |
Legal secularism becomes entrenched. |
2000s |
9/11, rise of Islamism, faith schools’ debate. |
Fear of ‘offending’ Islam curbs free speech. |
2010s |
Same-sex marriage, social media, Brexit. |
Nation divided; moral chaos accelerates. |
2020s |
COVID authoritarianism, gender ideology in schools, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) in government. |
Spiritual confusion institutionalised. |
Are These Threats Engineered or Accidental?
A great many strategies have been consciously brought into being. For example:
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Legal secularisation has been pushed intentionally through courts and policy.
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International organisations (EU, UN, WHO) have steered Britain toward progressive moral frameworks.
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Civil service ideology is often deliberately post-Christian, advancing ‘progress’ while rejecting faith.
Meanwhile, some of the shift has been unconsciously undertaken, such as:
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Politicians and Leaders often being ignorant of the Gospel and are biblically illiterate.
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Cultural Elites genuinely believing Christianity is oppressive, having only seen a caricature of it.
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The Church of England’s Progressive Compromise having removed the only prophetic voice that might have corrected the drift.
The Hope that Remains: God's Remnant and Sovereign Hand
Despite spiritual decline, God is not absent from Britain's story. Remnant churches, faithful to Scripture, are growing, even underground. Immigrant Christian evangelists, often from Africa and Asia, are reviving dead parishes. Many of the younger generation (especially 18-24 year-olds) are beginning to question the lies of culture and to return to truth.
Britain has faced spiritual darkness before; Viking paganism, Catholic empire, Nazi tyranny. Each time, a remnant stood. Now is another such climactic time.
A Legacy of Resistance and Preservation
Throughout its history, Britain has repeatedly been exposed to European religious domination:
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From Celtic roots to Roman orthodoxy;
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From national Christian kings like Odda to the Holy Roman Empire’s growing shadow;
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From Reformation gains to Catholic reconquest attempts;
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From modern secular threats to a preservation of Christian values amid European collapse.
Yet in all of this, God’s hand has preserved a remnant. The British Church, though fractured and weakened today, bears a unique legacy of resisting empire when empire compromised the Gospel.
A Call to Watchfulness and Repentance
As Jesus warned the Church in Sardis (Rev 3:1-6), a reputation for life means nothing if the Spirit is absent. Britain’s past glory is not a guarantee of future blessing. The nation must repent, beginning with the Church. A faithful remnant must preach truth boldly in love; expose lies and corruption; rebuild families and schools on the Word of God, and refuse to bow to modern idols.
If judgment begins with the house of God (1 Pet 4:17), then revival must also begin there.
Nick Thompson, 14/08/2025