What you recommend is sort of folksy advice.
You see
folksy where I've simply stripped away obstacles. If religion, Christianity specifically, is about man's relationship with God, your
critical movements, your
trends in theology, are impediments.
If God requires interpretation by
authority for a common man to apprehend Him, then He has a rather large problem, doesn't He?
No, if God
is God, He requires no intermediaries, no interpreters, no middlemen. As God, He, I think, would have a really clear understanding of the dangers of allowin' somebody else to run His PR dept.
As I say: my interest is less in the divinity and more in the practical Christian morality. Here too, all your wordly trends and movements seem to be of little consequence. Nuthin' of the trends and movements, these churches and congregations, these shifty and shifting
dynamicisms, clears the path for one man to live morally.
No, all that falderol is, as I say, impediment.
it does not in any sense get to the heart of the problem of a collapse of faith. And it does not in any sense speak to what has occurred in the culture over the last 100-150 years.
I believe you've bought into fiction, Alexis: the fiction of a coherent, cohesive Christian culture; the fiction of communal faith.
The Roman Catholic Church of course is a cultural force (and, at its height, a brutal one) but despite past and present displays of that force it was never the catalyst for, or the sustainer of, coherency or cohesion. It was and is primarily a
political entity (replace Uncle Sam with Jesus on the recruitment poster and you've nutshell'd it). I have no grudge with the Church but I can only see it for what it is: as I say, a political entity wearin' Christian trappings as both enticement (this way to Salvation!) and threat (this way to Salvation, or else!).
Fundamentally, the Church has little to do with Christianity (one man's relationship with God, and, one livin' morally).
Touchin' briefly on cultural collapse: it does not seem to me this is
necessarily a bad thing (we've been livin' in an iteration of the Roman Empire for quite a long time, haven't we? Me, I'm ready, past ready, to be out from under its heel. You?), but it is a
thing, exploitable by anyone with a mind to. I'm all for gettin' minimal and leavin' folks to sink or swim within the broad borders of what is permitted and prohibited by a recognition of, and respect for, individual natural rights (I am mine, you are yours, neither of us has any claim on the other). But, as established, I'm
superficial & folksy, unaware of, perhaps incapable of being aware of, the oh-so important minutia you invest yourself in and that is important to you.
Pretty much: if you advertise for masters, you'll have masters. Seems to me you're clamorin' for one. Each to his own.
What are you talking about when you yourself do not believe in any part of the picture that is revealed in the Gospels? But you are giving advice about how Christianity is to be understood? On what basis?
Just a heathen tossin' two cents on the table: that's me. Not a one is obligated to pay attention to a deist holdin' forth. Up to now, no one has.
That might be true for very simple people, and certainly for people who may only have or have had the Gospels to read. Yet I can assure you that the issue is a great deal more complex than what you present.
No, it's not. This thread has entertained and taught me. The back & forth between you and Mannie was revealin' of so much. But everything laid atop Christianity (naturally and forced) doesn't, can't, define what is plain and direct about it. Yes, we simple people as we plow our fields and live our lives and celebrate our simple pleasures and worry over our plain little problems, yes, we look for the root of it. And we wonder, why folks such as yourself are hellbent on stayin' well away from that root. If Christianity is true: the Gospel ought be enough. And yet you, a Christian, say it is not.
Curious.
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And you seem very much on the outside of contemporary socio-political conversations that are going on around us now. That is, how the Right and the so-called Far-Right ground their reactionary attitudes. Or how the Left and the so-called Far Left orient themselves within post-Christian categories.
This is true. The
superficial & folksy lens thru which I see the world is not at all immersed in what seems to me to be titanic struggles to decide who gets to put his boot on which guy's face. All these ridiculous categories (most prominent, least defined, bein' the
Left and the
Right), these are boondoggles. Perhaps it takes a
superficial & folksy head not to be taken in by it all.
Why must you insist that the only area that interests you is the one that I or others must interest in?
I don't believe I've done anything but ask questions and attempt to make a point. As I say, not a one has an obligation to answer or take my point to heart. You've made it clear I'm a trifle and yet here we are, makin' with the back & forth. Mebbe your intent was to bulldog me into shuttin' up? Put me in my place? Obviously, I'm too
superficial & folksy to be moved that way.
As far as I am aware I am the only one who has written about 'degraded culture' and 'lack of agreement'.
Oh, several, in their own ways, thru their own lens, have touched on it.
And I personally have a difficult time relating to or even locating the 'personality of Jesus' and, no, Jesus is not very 'iconic' for me (personally).
An interestin', and, I think,
damning, admission.