R
RevDon
Guest
Posted by Ed West # 361
My worldview is informed more by religion than anything else. With all due respect, I do not live in a secular world.
Do you live in Vatican City? Chances are you live in a secular worle in which you may live by religious values
I know some who want me to think that but it’s simply not true. The majority of the people in this country hold to some religious belief, our coins have In God We Trust on them.
Then we need no military, do we?
However, the idea that secularization has come to America is simply a promotion campaign, and for what benefit? Like the photo I saw in a newsweekly magazine showing a man with a placard that read: “America! Get off your knees!” or a non-book review on amazon.com that read: “Keep your Bible out of my government.” or the idea that we can be “Good without God.” Good based on what?
The notion of what constitutes a good life vastly pre-dates Christianity and continues in many different cultures. Religion wrestles with that in every permutation.
We should work to our mutual benefit but without agreed upon goals and principles, some tend to either (A) ignore (name removed by moderator)ut from religious people, or (B) become individualists all running off in different directions.
Yes, that does happen.
The Holy Father says:
“If we cannot have common values, common truths, sufficient communication on the essentials of human life–how to live how to respond to the great challenges of human life–then true society becomes impossible.”
Commentary by the practical Catholic:
"How true this is. Where there is no communication, no culture, no shared experience, there is no society; because there is no people. There remains only a vast and foreboding, unforgiving sea of individuals ready to crash upon each other and the world with the slightest wind. Without a common basis, we have not the vaulted pluralism we’re taught to embrace, but Babel, in all the confusion and madness of a society with no binding forces. Already we are seeing the tensions of this fragmentation breaking out across cultures.
“Without common values and truths, such as in the socieites we find ourselves in, we find the fabric of society torn like Joseph’s cloak, by a great many tribes which would like to lay claim to the title of favored. Leftists, conservatives, anarchists, nihilists, secularists, objectivists, the shallow, the entertainers, the entertained, all vying for control against each other. Tribalism can indeed spawn differentiation, but without some common ground, and in the face of increasing jargon not only in the academies but in the cultures; we shall be left with madness. In the end this tribalism can only result in the decline of all their claims, and the alienation of one from the other. Babel is the happenstance when society tries to become God.”
**Communication is not easy, as we have discovered on this web site. The realities of life are complicated and nuanced. For that reason, communication can occur only through a long process of attempting dialogue based on good will. **
My worldview is informed more by religion than anything else. With all due respect, I do not live in a secular world.
Do you live in Vatican City? Chances are you live in a secular worle in which you may live by religious values
I know some who want me to think that but it’s simply not true. The majority of the people in this country hold to some religious belief, our coins have In God We Trust on them.
Then we need no military, do we?
However, the idea that secularization has come to America is simply a promotion campaign, and for what benefit? Like the photo I saw in a newsweekly magazine showing a man with a placard that read: “America! Get off your knees!” or a non-book review on amazon.com that read: “Keep your Bible out of my government.” or the idea that we can be “Good without God.” Good based on what?
The notion of what constitutes a good life vastly pre-dates Christianity and continues in many different cultures. Religion wrestles with that in every permutation.
We should work to our mutual benefit but without agreed upon goals and principles, some tend to either (A) ignore (name removed by moderator)ut from religious people, or (B) become individualists all running off in different directions.
Yes, that does happen.
The Holy Father says:
“If we cannot have common values, common truths, sufficient communication on the essentials of human life–how to live how to respond to the great challenges of human life–then true society becomes impossible.”
Commentary by the practical Catholic:
"How true this is. Where there is no communication, no culture, no shared experience, there is no society; because there is no people. There remains only a vast and foreboding, unforgiving sea of individuals ready to crash upon each other and the world with the slightest wind. Without a common basis, we have not the vaulted pluralism we’re taught to embrace, but Babel, in all the confusion and madness of a society with no binding forces. Already we are seeing the tensions of this fragmentation breaking out across cultures.
“Without common values and truths, such as in the socieites we find ourselves in, we find the fabric of society torn like Joseph’s cloak, by a great many tribes which would like to lay claim to the title of favored. Leftists, conservatives, anarchists, nihilists, secularists, objectivists, the shallow, the entertainers, the entertained, all vying for control against each other. Tribalism can indeed spawn differentiation, but without some common ground, and in the face of increasing jargon not only in the academies but in the cultures; we shall be left with madness. In the end this tribalism can only result in the decline of all their claims, and the alienation of one from the other. Babel is the happenstance when society tries to become God.”
**Communication is not easy, as we have discovered on this web site. The realities of life are complicated and nuanced. For that reason, communication can occur only through a long process of attempting dialogue based on good will. **