RangerDave wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
This is very disturbing. It sounds like you are saying that you basically object to people taking their own religious beliefs (or lack thereof) seriously.
Aye, I think devout was a poor choice of word. What I object to isn't people taking their beliefs seriously; it's the all-encompassing nature of some Christian culture in this country today.
For many, their faith isn't just about their relationship with God, it's about their relationship with the world at large - they listen only/largely to Christian music; they send their kids to Christian camps and Christian schools; they reject a lot of mainstream culture as corrupt and immoral; they become "values voters" and seek to regulate or at least shame personal decisions about sex, drugs, marriage, etc.; and their social circle is dominated by others within that same mindset. In short, they exist in an echo chamber that fosters a narrow and self-reinforcing view of the world.
Ok, look at your third sentence, the one I underlined. Christianity, like pretty much every religion, teaches partly how you are relate to the world at large because it affects how you relate to God. Then look at all your examples. So what if people aren't being involved in "mainstream culture" (whatever that is) or not listening to a wide enough variety of musive, or just choosing not to socialize with people who engage in behavior they view as immoral? I don't really see the problem there, at least not from this persepctive. Most people choose not to associate with others they think are excessively immoral. If you think society in general suffers from a dearth of morality, why should you feel compelled to participate in it to the degree that others who disagree with you demand? Are you objecting simply to the fact that evangelicals often teach that much of what we consider normal is immoral, and you just don't like it that someone else thinks something you do is immoral?
Now, I would disagree with these sorts of teachings on theological grounds (I think that claims about the immorality of modern society are both overblown and based on extreme oversimplifications of Biblical teachings, and I think that modern society is no worse than any other era in terms of obediance to God, nor do I think
societal obediance is really important anyhow), but I don't see any reason that evangelicals should go out of their way to explore other beliefs simply because I disagree with them. If I disagree with one of them; it's on the merits. Hence why Bery got his *** handed to him so frequently; he felt the merits of his position were so self-evident as to be beyond assailing with anythng so trivial as the facts.
That's why I think Vind's point is at least partially wrong:
Vindicarre wrote:
The reason I would worry less about her being an anti-Christian Atheist (though I wouldn't be "okay" with it) is that Atheists don't have a huge culture of other Atheists, complete with its own rituals, movie industries, schools, etc., encouraging her to organize her entire life around her Atheism and/or any accompanying anti-Christian prejudices. Consequently, if she were espousing zealous Atheism, I would take some comfort in the knowledge that she'd be more likely to just grow out of it over time. I would, however, much more aggressively push back against outright declarations of snobbery toward people of faith.
I think that the distinction you're making (music, rituals, schools, movies, and I'd contend there are defintiely movies and schools with atheist agendas) are exceedingly trivial, to the point of being petty, and ignoring that the reason atheism doesn't have those things is because it's a different belief, not because it's less all-consuming.
Quote:
However, the reason I say Vind's point is only partially wrong, is that I'm not sure there isn't an element of bigotry in my concerns. Not anti-Christian bigotry, but more of a class- and culture-based bigotry. To be honest with myself, I have to acknowledge that I'd be less worried if she were becoming more serious about Catholicism or mainline Protestantism, even to the point of pursuing a Masters of Divinity or considering becoming a minister down the road. Now, part of that is because, as I said, most Catholics and mainline Protestants in the US, even those pursuing their religions professionally (i.e. Divinity scholars and ministers) don't organize their entire lives around their faith in quite the same way that the "fundamentalist" Christian churchgoers do. However, as valid as that distinction may be, I'd be fooling myself if I didn't recognize that I'm biased in favor of the Catholic & mainline Protestant routes because they're just more familiar to me as a middle-class New Englander with an Episcopal upbringing.
Guess I have some soul-searching of my own to do on that point.
I'd say that the basic problem here is that you're worrying about her organizing her whole life around her belief, rather than the way she organizes it around her belief. Nuns also organize their entire life around their faith. So do suicide bombers in Afghanistan. One of these types of people I hold the door open for and the other I have no compunctions about shooting. Your neice falls into the former category. Sure, sometimes Christians (or more frequently quasi-Christians) get pulled into situations where unhealthy, harmful, and even violent behavior results, but merely being a strong evangelical does not mean anything unhealthy is happening, nor is there cause for concern (aside from concern that she may become annoying to be around).
That's the sort of thing we used to see from Monty, siezing on a few fringe elements of evangelical Christianity and trying to claim they somehow represented the norm, or made evangelicals the same as the Taliban. Don't be that guy. If you disagree with what she thinks on the merits, disagree on the merits, not "you're believing it too much."