G
Gaber
Guest
Yes, I call this cafeteria theology, but my take is to question the person who holds up a tray and declares to all those present “THIS is the One True Holy Revealed Tray!!!” and expects everyone to ignore any other offerings save what’s on that one’s plate. Good idea, huh?This is something I used to encounter all the time back in my days of campus evangelism, and even now when I’m talking to people about Islam.
I use the term ‘fast food theology’ or ‘Burger King religion’ to describe the situation where people have chosen to pick and choose their set of religious principles from the whole religion, whether this be from one religion or many.
But what I’m wondering is why it seems more and more common for people to pick and choose the bits of religion that suit, and why it seems that those who stick to the whole of the deen (faith) are often ridiculed for doing so.
To my mind it is pure arrogance. It seems to assume that God has somehow ‘made a mistake’ or that God does not know what is best for us, and so we replace His will with our own. This is purely my view though…
I’m putting it here because I think it would be interesting to have some inter-faith/denominational perspective upon this.![]()
But that is why in either your “fast food” analogy or mine, I consider the important element not what the selection on the plate is, but what is nutritious and needful for that individual. And that may change. Even for the carrier of the O.T.H.R. tray.