Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Brexit: Leaving EUtopia
Brexit: Leaving EUtopia
Jan 31, 2026 12:35 PM

History’s worst tyrannies began as attempts to create utopia. This longing to inaugurate the heavenly kingdom on earth – to “immanentize the eschaton,” in William F. Buckley Jr.’s memorable phrase – empowers politicians who promise peace and prosperity in exchange for power. The Brexit vote shattered one such imitation kingdom, according to Stephen F. Copp in an insightful and scholarly new essay for the Religion & Liberty Transatlantic website.

“Brexit has profound implications for those who care about religion and liberty,” he writes.

In a sweeping historical and theological essay Copp, an associate professor of law at Bournemouth University in the UK, traces the history of failed utopias. He clearly distinguishes how human nature as revealed in the Western, Judeo-Christian tradition has thwarted would-be utopias from ancient Babylon, to the Soviet Union (with a nod to Yuri Slezkine’s new book House of Government), to Nazi Germany. These plans inevitably concentrate power and decision-making powers into the hands of a distant few who pel others to obey their will.

One of the distinctive facets of human nature standing in the way of collectivist utopian schemes is free will – which, Copp writes, is deeply rooted in economics:

Taking a key issue in utopianism – poverty – the Biblical framework includes respect for human dignity, property rights, and the fulfilment of promises. It provides a first-rate model for how prosperity can be generated but nonetheless makes relieving poverty a matter of individual conscience. (Compare Matt. 26:10-12 with 19:21.) Christian society is not an abstract, top-down vision of a perfect world ultimately based pulsion, but one of transformed individual choices made within a framework of the rule of law, recognising the imperfection of the world.

The EU, he argues, has fallen prey to self-aggrandizing views: that the EU political union generated all European peace and prosperity into existence and, through an “ever-closer union,” can will them to continue. By blotting out Christianity in its House of European History, the supranational body implies that Europe is more indebted to Brussels than Bethlehem. The UK vote to leave the EU shatters that utopia, Copp writes.

In “God, Brexit, and EUtopia,” the first article of a two-part series, Copp explores “how Judeo-Christian theology resolves the clash between the utopian dreams for the EU and UK national self-determination, and sets out the basis for a non-utopian Christian vision of Europe.”

The EU’s self-image, he writes, “is an honourable vision based on sincere beliefs.”

The key protagonists of the early European project in the 1950’s included some no doubt who shared an explicit moral/religious vision for its future. As Nick Spencer of the British think tank Theos has observed, they were overwhelmingly Catholics from Christian Democrat parties. Frank Furedi’s Populism and the European Culture Wars (Abingdon: Routledge, 2018) identifies several important statements by key figures in the history of the EU who sought to put Christianity at the heart of the European vision. For example, Robert Schuman in 1958 justified a democratic model of governance that was “deeply rooted in Christian basic values,” whilst Jacques Delors in 2011 recognised the major role of Catholicism and Christianity in Europe’s constitution (p. 14).

However, the EU first separated and then placed into opposition the historic moral values of the West from a nebulous category of “European values.”

Furedi identifies how dramatic the change from that earlier vision has been. Specifically, he argues that in the run up to a 2012 European Parliament debate, policymakers portrayed the new Hungarian Constitution’s references to its national and Christian traditions as dangerous (p. 12). Guy Verhofstadt, noteworthy for his antagonism as the European Parliament’s lead Brexit negotiator, demanded a report be drawn up to investigate whether there was a breach of “our values.” Others insisted that Christianity was alien to the EU’s values. One French MEP went so far as to declare that “European values are not Christian values.”

What are these European values? Copp makes a forceful case that, as propounded by EU officials, they – and the institution they reflect – are vacuous. In this he writes, he is following Margaret Thatcher who “concluded it was empty. If empty, it is a vacuum which has yet to be filled – and history sets dangerous precedents for this.”

Copp’s immaculately documented and well-reasoned article brings a new depth to the ongoing Brexit negotiations. In this light, they are not merely wrangling over a “divorce bill,” the Irish border, or post-Brexit trade conditions, but over whether human nature is perfectible and whether an entire continent of fallen creature can be regimented into this new vision from afar.

Read his full article here.

Public Domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Samuel Gregg: Benedict XVI and the Pathologies of Religion
Over at Crisis Magazine, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg has an analysis of a recent, and little noticed, article that Pope Benedict XVI published on, among other things, “the Relation of the Church to Non-Christian Religions.” Gregg writes: This message isn’t likely to be well-received among those who think religious pluralism is somehow an end in itself. Their fort, however, doesn’t lessen the force of Benedict’s point. The context of Benedict’s remarks was the 50th anniversary of Vatican II’s opening....
Is There an Intrinsic Morality of the Free Market?
In an essay for Big Questions Online, a site that examines questions of human purpose and ultimate reality, Rev. Robert Sirico considers whether morality is intrinsic to the free market: Is a hammer intrinsically moral? Your reply would most immediately be: “It depends on what it was used for. If employed to bash in the heads of people you do not like, the answer is no. If employed to help build a house for a homeless people, your answer might...
Bigger the Government, Smaller the Citizen
Today is November 6th, and we’re supposedly going to elect a new President of the United State of America by the time Charles Krauthammer goes to bed early tomorrow morning. But for those of us who can’t help but think “big picture” every second of every day, what does November 7th look like – regardless of who wins? What about November 8th? How about a year from now? Anyone who values liberty, limited government, and the free enterprise system knows...
New Baptist Primer: ‘Flourishing Faith’
As a part of our evangelical outreach at Acton, we missioned four primers from different evangelical traditions on the intersection of faith, work, and economics. The books will be written from the Baptist, Wesleyan, Pentecostal, and Reformed traditions and will be released throughout ing year. The first book released is the Baptist primer written by Chad Brand. Chad is professor of Christian theology at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, KY as well as the associate dean of Boyce...
First English Translation of Herman Bavinck’s ‘The Christian Family’
Christian’s Library Press and Acton Institute announce the release of the first English translation of The Christian Family by Herman Bavinck. When this book was first published in Dutch, marriage and the family were already weathering enormous changes, and that trend has not abated. Yet by God’s power the unchanging essence of marriage and the family remains proof, as Bavinck notes, that God’s “purpose with the human race has not yet been achieved.” Accessible, thoroughly biblical, and astonishingly relevant, The...
Jesse Jackson Didn’t Have to Choose Between the Poor and the Unborn
In 1977 a pro-life Jesse pared the pro-choice position to the case for slavery in the antebellum South: There are those who argue that the right to privacy is of higher order than the right to life. I do not share that view. I believe that life is not private, but rather it is public and universal. If one accepts the position that life is private, and therefore you have the right to do with it as you please, one...
Evangelicals Endorse Mormon/Catholic Presidential Ticket
There is an utter disconnect between what I hear other people – mostly in the media – say about evangelical conservatives, and what I’ve experienced living in and among them for nearly three decades on this planet. I hear how intolerant and close-minded this group supposedly is, and I sit and absorb such attacks with a blank look on my face. They bear no resemblance to the environment I was reared in. The people who instilled in me the values...
A Prayer for the Nation
A prayer “For the Nation,” from the BCP: Lord God Almighty, who hast made all the peoples of the earth for thy glory, to serve you in freedom and in peace: Give to the people of our country a zeal for justice and the strength of forbearance, that we may use our liberty in accordance with thy gracious will; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever....
I Am Woman: Hear Me Whine
I have been duped. I thought, along with my husband, that we were doing a good thing by raising our children in a household that valued traditional marriage and saw our children as gifts from God. I chose, for more than a decade, to work at home raising our children because I could not imagine a more important job during their formative years. According to Laurie Shrage, I’m quite mistaken. Wives who perform unpaid caregiving and place their economic security...
College Cramming: A Refresher Course on the Electoral College
Whether the Republicans cry “fraud” or the Democrats scream “disenfranchised” we can be certain of one thing after the polls close: the President of the United States won’t be elected today. Even if there are no hanging chads or last minute court appeals, the election of the President won’t be made until December 13. That is, after all, the way the Founding Fathers designed the system to work. Confused? Then it’s probably time for a brief refresher on the Electoral...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved