te_lanus
Alien Hybrid
The person who wrote it makes a lot of sense, just a shame that the people who need to read it won't.
Dear Church, Here’s Why People Are Really Leaving You
Dear Church, Here’s Why People Are Really Leaving You
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Great article. What ways have christians try to bring the love of Christ back into the Church?The person who wrote it makes a lot of sense, just a shame that the people who need to read it won't.
Dear Church, Here’s Why People Are Really Leaving You
I remember reading this a few months ago, it was pretty enlightening.The person who wrote it makes a lot of sense, just a shame that the people who need to read it won't.
Dear Church, Here’s Why People Are Really Leaving You
Although that is a popular explanation among Christian conservatives, when you look at the numbers, it is largely not true:The reason people leave churches is because most churches lack authenticity in their practice and doctrine. People do not need churches that try to get with "the times" with gimmicks like band music or trying to change doctrine and appearance for conformance sake. Rather, people seek authentic experiences that have substance behind them. That is why the mainline protestant churches have been hemorrhaging membership for decades while more traditional minded churches (ie Catholic, Orthodox, Evangelical) are staying relatively strong.
The problem is that the "new guard" want a new religion with a new type of Christ that conforms to a largely liberal Western agenda.He's right, but there's absolutely nothing new here; we clergy, church leaders, and experts had already identified these issues several years ago. The problem is that, in order to be reborn as something new and relevant, the old church needs to die, and the "old guard" refuses to let it.
That's not what I've largely found in my experience of reaching out to and working with, say, Millenials who are searching. What these people are looking for is to do away with the packaging which they see as largely dishonest, and embrace a religion that honestly maintains ties to more ancient expressions. They're more interested in practicing love than they are in defending and conforming to doctrines. Sort of like Jesus.The problem is that the "new guard" want a new religion with a new type of Christ that conforms to a largely liberal Western agenda.
Love is certainly important no doubt- but the Love of God is different than any form of love we think we know. Doctrine is important because it distinguishes the teachings of Christ; if one does away with any doctrine, then they are denying the purpose of Christ by trying to alter the truths that Christianity poses to have. Truth takes precedence over my feelings/appeal/popularity. As a millennial myself, the way many Christian groups try to do away sacred traditions and Biblical principles comes off to me as largely dishonest.That's not what I've largely found in my experience of reaching out to and working with, say, Millenials who are searching. What these people are looking for is to do away with the packaging which they see as largely dishonest, and embrace a religion that honestly maintains ties to more ancient expressions. They're more interested in practicing love than they are in defending and conforming to doctrines. Sort of like Jesus.
1) I don't think they're trying to "do away" with sacred traditions. Instead, they're trying to recapture them.Love is certainly important no doubt- but the Love of God is different than any form of love we think we know. Doctrine is important because it distinguishes the teachings of Christ; if one does away with any doctrine, then they are denying the purpose of Christ by trying to alter the truths that Christianity poses to have. Truth takes precedence over my feelings/appeal/popularity. As a millennial myself, the way many Christian groups try to do away sacred traditions and Biblical principles comes off to me as largely dishonest.
But Humanism is better for promoting "do the right thing" than any revealed religion because it doesn't doesn't come with the baggage.sojourner post: 4260788 said:2) By downplaying "what the bible says," they're dismantling sola scriptura, promoting, instead, a Xy that is based on orthopraxis -- doing the right thing, rather than orthodoxy -- believing the right thing.
I disagree. You're looking at Xy from a Euro-American perspective, where it is culturally-embedded and the majority POV. But Xy historically thrives "on the fringes."But Humanism is better for promoting "do the right thing" than any revealed religion because it doesn't doesn't come with the baggage.
Humanism can improve with time and increasing moral sophistication. Revealed religions must first explain, convincingly, how the prophets were right even though they were wrong. That isn't easy to pull off. It takes centuries usually.
In the meantime millions of people suffer from the immoral teachings that they can't just chuck out.
Tom
Don't you think Almighty God could do a little better than that?I disagree. You're looking at Xy from a Euro-American perspective, where it is culturally-embedded and the majority POV. But Xy historically thrives "on the fringes."