A
angellous_evangellous
Guest
I've said before that I think that Christianity is ethically bankrupt. The solution to this problem I think is to place humanism before Christian theology and morality in our thinking and especially our ethics (thinking - or unfortunately the lack of it - determines ethics).
A solid grounding in humanistic ideas is the foundation of ethics. If Christian pastors and theologians (and many of them do...) had a firm grounding in ideas such as human dignity, personal freedoms, responsibility, human worth, and integrity, we'd have less emphasis on bald meaningless proseltyzing which really does not add to the human experience and more on the enrichment and fullness of life.
A solid grounding in humanistic ideas is the foundation of ethics. If Christian pastors and theologians (and many of them do...) had a firm grounding in ideas such as human dignity, personal freedoms, responsibility, human worth, and integrity, we'd have less emphasis on bald meaningless proseltyzing which really does not add to the human experience and more on the enrichment and fullness of life.