- Joined
- Jul 13, 2015
- Messages
- 19,194
- Location
- Western Australia
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Catholic
- Political Affiliation
- Moderate
- Marital Status
- Single
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
I had lunch with a good friend yesterday, we had some Thai food and chatted about laptop computers and technology and religion. It was almost like a conversation here in Christianity Haven. My friend is an atheist. A PhD in education and quite insightful. Some years ago he gave me an adage I've valued ever since "Shopping is better than buying". During our discussion we observed how hard it is to believe in what cannot be seen and cannot be detected by scientific instruments and can't be proved to be by philosophical argument - God and his angels - and how Christopher Hitchens was so articulate (cynical too) in his analysis of religion. I mused that We live in increasingly secular lands now and few people believe in God and angels which makes me wonder if we in the west have abandoned the core of our culture having sold what might be called our "birth right" for a material "mess of pottage" in the things we own and eat and enjoy because it seems as though the more we have the less we are willing to believe in goodness and God and his angels. Naturally my friend looked for other explanations for declining birth rates, manners, and the flush of young people with face metal, tattoos, and back pack ghetto blasters not to mention tablet sized phones that draw their attention more than their surrounds.
Have we lost the faith of past generations being drawn into a cult of possessions as a substitute?
Have we lost the faith of past generations being drawn into a cult of possessions as a substitute?
Last edited: