SuburbanFarmer wrote: ↑Wed Jan 09, 2019 8:45 pm
heydaralon wrote: ↑Wed Jan 09, 2019 8:23 pm
brewster wrote: ↑Wed Jan 09, 2019 8:14 pm
I heard a guy in a podcast interview say spirituality is having questions, religion is having answers. I liked that a lot. So, using that: no, not everyone is religious.
I heard a guy on a podcast interview say, Good thing we are not using that, and that distinction is utterly meaningless. Many traditional religions also do not claim to have answers. In fact, a big part of many religions is practice, which is considered more essential than belief. You, like, everyone else on this board is a Liberal (big L). The basic ideas you take for granted about the individual, society etc are from a belief system that explicitly and fundamentally derives from Christianity. This is a historical fact. I feel like I have made these points on another thread, possibly more than one, and what ends up happening is the resident atheists on here go into denial mode like clockwork.
Not denying that the ideas were born out of a largely Christian society, and that Christianity influenced them, but... what does that mean for you? Non-believers be silenced, because we are a theocracy?
Not at all.
Its just interesting to me how in this day in age belief in Christian ideas are rarely discussed (certainly not among anyone my age that I know), yet no one questions Liberalism or any of these other bastardizations of it, which would sort of be the logical conclusion right? I like these ideas, I think they are fine ideas. I haven't been to church in almost a decade, so I'd be lying if I said I was a Christian (or a good one anyway lol). What I have been noticing though is that as Christianity is on the wane among Americans, and the West, the sacred new beliefs we have replaced it with are becoming increasingly repulsive. This Social Justice stuff in all its forms really is just like Christianity. It has original sin, a strict Orthodoxy, idols that need to smashed, sinners that need to be punished, and purifying rituals. The globalism in all its forms seems to me to be very utopian and messianic as well. Venerating diversity for diversity's sake, change for change's sake etc. But more than that, modern life to me feels very empty. Every time modernity undermines some aspect of traditional religion, it creates a void. And that void gets filled with something.
I think a big problem with modern culture is the repeated attempts to remove man away from belief. It doesn't work of course, but what ends up happening is that people stop realizing that their beliefs are such and assuming they are facts, which in my opinion is exactly where we are right now. There are some folks who think that commerce and civic nationalism can keep the cultural problems we are coming up against dormant. I hope this is true, but historically, when one old belief system gets eradicated, another worse one takes its place.