Proinsias wrote:Admittedly I am only talking from personal experience and what the older generations tell me personally. I wasn't really thinking about the Enlightenment. A generation or so ago I'm told non-religious marriages, or cross-religious marriages, were rather more taboo than they are today. Other things like breaking to your family that you are atheist or gay I feel carries less social pressure nowadays than it did a generation or two ago. I do see much of this tying in what I see as a decline in Christianity, in a wishy-washy sense, in general but I will allow for the notion that although what I see as Christianity around me on the decline Christianity if a more subtle nature may be doing something else entirely. As I think has already been mentioned, the least subtle are often the most heard..
You're right in a sense- a significant sense. The existence of liberal churches have perpetuated this wishy-washy Christianity you speak of. I'd be wrong to side-step this, and this is a tragic issue. I'll give you an idea. (You may well know of this.) A few years ago, around '01/'02, the BBC commissioned a poll of leading British figures on attitudes to traditional Christian beliefs. Yes, the BBC thinking it can gauge public opinion. Now, among those polled were a number of clergy throughout the country. Out of the clergy alone, only 93% of them believed literally in the virgin birth. 93%! Say there were 200 clergy polled; that's 14 clergy who run their church with the belief that the virgin birth is not a literal historical event. If you were to continue with the trend that the poll suggests, which is admittedly a matter of choice, then you see how liberal the church in the UK has become. Now, this is just one twig on the branch of a tree and I won't get bogged down with it all and bore us both to tears. But this, in my opinion, is what causes the dwindling congregations. Don't mess with the traditional, central tenets of Christianity. Christians don't care whether Christianity appeals to outsiders if it means adjusting the truth of Christ.
Proinsias wrote:Truthfully I don't really know. But I'll make something up anyway. Initially I think Constantine did play a great part in making it the 'next big thing' but that excuse begins to run a bit thin after a while, never mind nearly two thousand years. The other would be that Christianity may be so powerful and enduring as it appeals to those who wish to be powerful and endure. Eastern traditions are more about the illusion of the self, western indigenous religions seem to me in large part concerned with higher powers and how to utilize them in day to day life, Christianity paints itself to me as the fulfillment of the one true religion stemming back from the creation and a means to endure for all eternity with the greatest power of all, God.
Constantine was definitely a god-send. But I believe the enduring appeal of Christianity is the truth of the bible and Jesus. The bible is the most accurate, historically verifiable, believable book in history. The independence of the authors of the four gospels from one another, for example, is almost unanimously accepted among scholars. It's not a case of blind belief in a book; it's that it has stood the test of time for 2000 years and counting. Not to mention the Holy Spirit guiding the billions of Christians in the world. I understand what you say about Christianity claiming the One true God, but has it ever occured to you, Proinsias, that this might be because this is true? I know that's easy for me to say, but multiple religions doesn't take away from the possibility of there being one true religion. I like your style, though. You appear to be pretty accurate on many issues, regardless of your non-christian position.