Interestingly enough, the newly available good quality education in many parts of the world is actually helping boost the numbers of Christians in many parts of the world.
Good education is more than just literacy rates and mathematics - unfortunately, that realisation seems to be going out of favour here, as well as in the developing world.
This suggests that the availability or otherwise of good quality education doesn't necessarily have that great an impact on the strength or weakness of a religion, and that there are other factorts at work.
Perhaps it is something that's unique to Western Cultures, which are the only ones we have sufficient figures for to make the judgement - statistics is always on slightly dangerous ground when it moves outside of the sampled areas, but certainly even when ethnic and economic factors are accounted for, educational achievement has been shown to have a fairly strong negative correlation with religiosity. I guess we'll have to wait a while to see if that holds in other places as well.
Remember that Europe and the West don't have the monopoly on 'what is best for humanity'.
No, they don't, but they do have much, much better success rates than other places so far. They have happier, healthier, wealthier, better educated people living in freer, fairer societies; they've provided scientific and technical developments, legal frameworks and concepts like personal liberty and human rights. They've not done that in isolation, and there are still more than enough examples of where they are far from perfect, but whilst we shouldn't dismiss other cultures out of hand as merely 'primitive' and therefore unworthy, we shouldn't fall prey to the idea that all cultures are equally valid and decent.
The West isn't the only possible good way, but it's the best we have at the moment.
O.