"Over a half century ago, while I was still a child, I recall hearing a number of old people offer the following explanation for the great disasters that had befallen Russia:
Men have forgotten God,
that’s why all this has happened.”
— Alexander Solzhenitsyn

Do You Worry About Your Child?
When I was in my late teens one Christmas Eve, I had been doing some shopping and afterwards I sat in a bar in St Enoch’s Square in Glasgow feeling as empty as a beggar’s pocket. I felt purposeless. This was made emptier when a sad song came on the juke box, it was Chicago’s “If you leave me now.” I drank my beer and headed to the bookshop and searched for books that would add some meaning to life. Sure, I believed there was a God, I saw stars, flowers, beauty. We had a cabin on one of Scotland’s west coast Islands that I spent my childhood and teenage summers on, but I needed more convincing; I was having a faith crisis with no one was there to help me; It took a few years until I got there. Don’t let your children face that.
Today, many parents carry a quiet, persistent worry about their children, especially their teenagers. It is not simply concern over grades, friendships, or career paths. It is something deeper and more troubling. Many young people are growing up in a world where they believe God is absent although they haven’t read the evidence otherwise. In today’s society, God is ignored, or openly dismissed, and that absence has consequences that reach far beyond belief itself.
A school teacher once reported that a quiet, capable student stayed after class; not because he was failing or in trouble, but because he felt empty. Surrounded by screens, social media, and constant stimulation, the teenager admitted he saw no real point to anything. Late nights online had pulled him into isolation and pornography, leaving him exhausted and numb. What stood out most was not rebellion, but absence: he had never been given a reason to believe his life had meaning at all. Saturated with noise, he was quietly starving for purpose.
We see the results everywhere. Teenagers increasingly struggle with pornography, drugs, depression, anxiety, and self-harm. They are surrounded by opinions, pressure, and ideology—yet they are starved for meaning. When life is presented as accidental, purposeless, and ultimately empty, despair should not surprise us. When a young person told that they are nothing more than a biological coincidence and they are just dancing to their DNA, this is being asked of them to carry a burden no soul can endure for long.
Belief in a Creator is not a crutch; it is a compass. Ask yourself an important question: “Why does Christianity work?” What I mean by that is to look at Christian communities, families and individuals; why are they happy? Knowing that life is intended, that truth exists, and that good and evil are real providing a kind of moral and psychological ballast. It does not guarantee an easy life, but it offers resistance against drifting into destruction. Faith acts as a buffer, not because it removes hardship, but because it gives hardship a context.
While parents are sleeping, the damage is accumulating. Even in Christian environments many parents assume that belief will simply “take root” on its own because they attend a Christian service. That assumption is increasingly dangerous and flawed. Children are not being raised in a neutral environment. They are being shaped—often aggressively—by an atheistic worldview presented as fact, progress, or “science.” In some schools and cultural spaces, disbelief in God is not merely permitted but promoted. athiest scientist in the media have become the new pop stars. When this influence goes unchallenged, silence becomes surrender.
This should be a red flag. If ideas are shaping your child, then those ideas must be examined. Faith cannot be left to chance when scepticism is being taught with confidence. Children need more than instruction—they need evidence, reasoning, and the freedom to think critically rather than absorb slogans. If not, the pied pipers of new atheism will lead them into an empty world.
That is why I recommend intentional family reading, particularly Is Atheism Dead? by Eric Metaxas. This is not a devotional book, nor is it built on emotional appeal. There is a quiet confidence running through its pages—the confidence that truth does not fear scrutiny. Metaxas presents a sustained argument showing that modern atheism has failed to keep pace with discoveries in science, philosophy, and history. And whilst the overwhelming evidence for a creator is mounting, we do not take time to scrutinise it.
For parents reading with teens, this matters deeply. Teenagers are not persuaded by catchphrases. They want reasons. Metaxas gives them reasons—and more importantly, he shows them how to do so.
To Teenagers and Young Adults
Is Atheism Dead? doesn’t talk down to you or ask you to believe anything blindly. Instead, it asks a bold question: What if the modern world no longer supports atheism as well as people think it does?
This book explores discoveries from science, philosophy, and everyday experience—and shows how they raise serious problems for the idea that everything is just an accident with no meaning behind it.
You’ll read about why the universe having a beginning matter, why the laws of physics seem strangely fine-tuned for life, and why information (like DNA or computer code) doesn’t appear to come from nowhere. You’ll also face questions most people avoid:
Can chemistry really explain consciousness?
If our thoughts are just brain reactions shaped to survive, why trust them to tell us the truth?
And where do our deep beliefs about right and wrong come from?
What makes this book different is that it doesn’t pretend these questions are easy, or that all answers are equally good. It respects you enough to show that ideas have consequences. If God doesn’t exist, it’s not just faith that disappears. Meaning, purpose, and human dignity are put at risk too. That’s not meant to scare you; it’s meant to be honest.
You don’t have to agree with everything in this book to benefit from it. But if you care about truth, if you’ve ever felt torn between what you’re told in school and what you sense deep down about life, or if you want reasons for belief that go deeper than “because I was raised that way,” this book is worth your time.
Read it thoughtfully. Argue with it if you want. But don’t ignore the questions it raises, because they’re the same questions that shape who you become.
And those questions matter more than most people admit.
There is a saying "If you see a turtle on a fence post," it begs the question, how did it get there?























