C
Cambridge
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What do you think that has to do with the post you replied to?No I am not kidding you. An education is a fundamental right.
What do you think that has to do with the post you replied to?No I am not kidding you. An education is a fundamental right.
StTommyMore assumes that you don’t think girls have the right to an education.What do you think that has to do with the post you replied to?
Agreed, marriage is supposed to be until death.Yeah, well I don’t think the intention was to make civil divorce/annulment banal. So, marriage is still supposed to be permanent. However, the divorce rate is around fifty percent. Thus, it would seem as if marriage has become, in practice, a temporary arrangement. Certainly, that is something that we should condemn.
No doubt, our culture does not prepare people for marriage anymore, I think, because our culture does not value marriage or the moral order, for that matter, anymore. So, you know, why would it botherAgreed, marriage is supposed to be until death.Divorce ought not be common, but it is, clearly. I can’t tell you why, though. I guess one answer is that people who are not prepared to marry are marrying anyway. I think we generally fail as a society to prepare people for marriage. As I think you alluded to somewhere on this thread, it is not like you or I can personally fix society. We can only try to figure out what is broken and do our best to help others.
So what are you going to do about it? Bemoaning the state of the word does nothing. If you want things to change, you have to actively DO something. What are you going to do?No doubt, our culture does not prepare people for marriage anymore, I think, because our culture does not value marriage or the moral order, for that matter, anymore. So, you know, why would it bother![]()
Hello again Kaninchen.One of the problems with these sorts of arguments - driven by one particular agenda - is that they neglect that a lot of different things are going on at the same time.
The structure of the economy is entirely different from back in the 1950’s, it isn’t that ‘Rosie the riviter’ has taken ‘Ronnie the riviter’s’ job, his job is being done by robots. It’s been a period of massive technological change and massive structural change in Western economies and these are not the result of feminism, though feminism did a lot of mind-changing about entering the world of work beyond what was, supposedly, traditional ‘women’s work’.
Well, I’ve never been a candidate for conversion and I do have to say that, after 15 years of talking to Christians on the Internet, I’m even less of a potential candidate than I was at the beginning.Hello again Kaninchen.
(I see you are still here after many months, and my heart is not a little saddened that you have yet to embrace Christ ; however, I am glad nonetheless that you are still present.)
Is this because of the poor witness of Christians, or you have found the teachings to have no merit?Well, I’ve never been a candidate for conversion and I do have to say that, after 15 years of talking to Christians on the Internet, I’m even less of a potential candidate than I was at the beginning.
I think he was delivering a homily.Well, I’ve never been a candidate for conversion and I do have to say that, after 15 years of talking to Christians on the Internet, I’m even less of a potential candidate than I was at the beginning.
For the rest of your posts, I have to mention something I’ve learned over the years - it might almost an internet conversation ‘Iron Law’, perhaps - “Less Is Usually More.”
Either you were talking to me, in which case some succinct points would have been in order, or you were delivering a homily, in which case . . . .
A decade and a half is quite some time - on boards of all kinds - and people have taken all sorts of approaches - some less maladroit than others.Is this because of the poor witness of Christians, or you have found the teachings to have no merit?
Think so.I think he was delivering a homily.
How to win friends and influence people.Especially thanks to this line:
Hello again Kaninchen.
(I see you are still here after many months, and my heart is not a little saddened that you have yet to embrace Christ ; however, I am glad nonetheless that you are still present.)
The reason I asked is that what we all tend to forget is that evangelization comes more form a life that bears witness to our faith, and less from apologetic debate. I have lost sight of this truth many times myself.A decade and a half is quite some time - on boards of all kinds - and people have taken all sorts of approaches - some less maladroit than others.
Perhaps the best way of putting it is that, by knowing more about Christianity, I’ve learned more reasons why not.
I’ve met quite a few interesting and engaging people though.
I see. Well, then, to put it succinctly,Well, I’ve never been a candidate for conversion and I do have to say that, after 15 years of talking to Christians on the Internet, I’m even less of a potential candidate than I was at the beginning.
For the rest of your posts, I have to mention something I’ve learned over the years - it might almost an internet conversation ‘Iron Law’, perhaps - “Less Is Usually More.”
Either you were talking to me, in which case some succinct points would have been in order, or you were delivering a homily, in which case . . . .
I don’t know about you, St-Tommy, but I have a feeling we share a similar belief : in practice and daily life, evangelize like St Francis ; on the internet, defend it like St Augustine.The reason I asked is that what we all tend to forget is that evangelization comes more form a life that bears witness to our faith, and less from apologetic debate. I have lost sight of this truth many times myself.
I am not sure how successful I am at emulating those great saints, but that is definitely the intent.I don’t know about you, St-Tommy, but I have a feeling we share a similar belief : in practice and daily life, evangelize like St Francis, on the internet, defend the Faith like St Augustine.
Pax,
Tim
Immitation is the heart of our religion, and I don’t believe we are ever asked to do more than that.I am not sure how successful I am at emulating those great saints, but that is definitely the intent.
I didn’t say that it had no consequences, I was merely talking about context.I see. Well, then, to put it succinctly,
The first post deals with the error in imagining that while feminism has changed the way people think (“did a long of mind changing,” as you put it), that it nonetheless had no consequence on economy, as if how we think and what we believe has no impact on the policies we develop.
Logical error?The second post deals with the not-so-little logical error in asserting that robots are stealing peoples jobs.