L
Le_Cracquere
Guest
That’s an excellent point, and one that gets lost on those for whom “ritualism” is the paramount sin. Man is a ritual-making creature; it seems tied up with our religious sense. In my experience, as perhaps in yours, when a venerable old ritual is kicked out a church’s door, a newer and generally less graceful one climbs in the window. (Like you, I’ve often had occasion to notice the "Evangelical ‘just.’ " Sometimes I’ve been impertinent and wrong-hearted enough to keep count.)Baptists, and fundies in general think that unless prayers are made up as you go along, God dos not listen. Of course the Our Father, or Lord’s Prayer is written ahead of time, so God does not listen according to them.
That is the reason that fundies only let one person pray at a time, while the audience only sits and listens. The fact that fundie prayers all pretty much sound exactly the same and use the same words and phrases over and over, (guard, guide, and direct us, give the preacher a ready recollection as he preaches your divine WORD, we pray for the sick of our numbers, and the word “just”) over and over, never occurs to the fundie. Their prayers are no more “sincere” than written liturgical prayers.
If a Christian loses sight of the truth that animates a given ritual or formulaic prayer, that’s certainly no good. But when some people see this happen, they commit the post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy, and conclude that it must be the ritual or formula that did it.