G
gurneyhalleck1
Guest
Superb post, Manualman. Nicely-stated. The philosophies that these ‘progressive’ denominations of Christianity have adopted is that a church that has norms, fixed morality, doctrine that is firm, and a traditional respect for Christ are all ignorant and behind in the times. Their Christ is clay, to be molded in their own image. The very definition of idolatry.The label “fundamentalist” is one I struggle with. At the heart of the issue, ANYONE with firm religious conviction is a “fundamentalist.” Those without firm religious convictions aren’t.
SpiritMeadow, you are quite clear in your posts that you believe that all men and women of sincere religious intention and conscience are equal in standing before God. What you don’t seem to see is that you are as rigid in this belief as any bible - thumping tent revival preacher! You pretty clearly have derision for those who are conviced that God has revealed to humanity that (for example) abortion or homosexual acts are utterly wrong and not to be permitted under any circumstance. How is that any different from those who deride the people who commit those acts?
What I see in your posts is a deep uncertainty whether humans can have much moral certainty in this life (at least in some issues). I hope you can come to see that this attitude is just as much a principle open to question as those you ask others to hold open and refrain from being dogmatic about.
It is a self - contradiction to state that no one may be dogmatic about anything. Such a statement is, itself, dogmatic. I’m with you that no mere human should be dogmatic about moral issues. That is the place of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic church, not individuals. That’s our stance, anyways. I’m not sure how the Episcopal Church decides hard questions (or decides not to…)
**“Today, a particularly insidious obstacle to the task of education is the massive presence in our society and culture of that relativism which, recognizing nothing as definitive, leaves as the ultimate criterion only the self with its desires. And under the semblance of freedom it becomes a prison for each one, for it separates people from one another, locking each person into his or her own ‘ego’” – Pope Benedict XVI | June 6, 2005 **
People with this heavy an axe to grind create the very prison for themselves that Benedict mentions and then they want us to enter a similar cell. All of us living in our own little cages of belief isolated from Christ. Scary thinking…