Audie
Veteran Member
"My aren't we the judge"Yes, many have lost their sense of community as our culture has become more and more isolating and materialistic. But just because you came too late to experience it doesn't mean it wasn't a thing.
My, aren't we the judge of all mankind's thoughts and feelings.
You would have had to actively participate in it for that to happen.
As the general culture has become more and more isolating, a lot of churches have become more and more cult-like to try and hold onto their members. That is sad, indeed.
I have been fortunate to have experience a very different kind of Bible study. So I know they do still occur. Or did 25 years ago, anyway. But even the kind of thing you're talking about created a community among those who wanted it. Unfortunately, as you point out, it did so by separating them from everyone else.
Clearly you are resentful. But not all churches are that way, or have always been that way. And you are condemning them all based on your own very singular bad experience. And that might have been because you're the "odd penny" that won't conform. Which is, itself, a kind of isolating selfishness. Perhaps even that church provided a sense of community for the people it served.
But I agree that for whatever reasons many churches have not been able to withstand the onslaught of selfish individuality that our modern consumer culture with it's industrial strength advertising propaganda has created. Our neighbor loses their job and their home or a loved one and we really couldn't care less. So long as it's not us. We all live in the tiny community of 'me and mine', now. And everyone else is just competition. Churches used to be a place where people were brought together to look after each other. Now they're becoming just another business on the block. Selling their wares by hook or by crook. Another wanna-be monopoly.
You make things up as needed, and then
judge those.