Ina
Well-known Member
- Location
- Harris County, NE of Houston, Tx.
Last time I was in church, my father drug me down the aisle, with him yelling at me to confess to one all. I was eight. I said to myself, "No more church for me."
A chaque oiseau, son nid est beau, I guess.
The point I have been trying to make, Phil, is that it is not about seeking a pleasant experience on the part of the adherent. That is not one of the promises. Quite the reverse is the often outcome. Nor is it about accumulating wealth on behalf of the "corporation". It is about sharing wealth though, which is why the wealthy have corrupted the message over the ages.
Where on earth did you get that translation?![]()
I think you can be sure that if all of your contributions were to dry up, your church might begin the long, slow slide into oblivion that has happened repeatedly over here.
Timeless truth I speak to you: Unless a grain of wheat falls and dies in the ground, it remains alone, but if it dies, it yields much fruit.”
Jn12:24
But they are drying up. My denomination has the oldest age profile in Australia and we are all getting older.
In time it will die but that is the nature of things - material and spiritual.
Oblivion is not inevitable. Death is not necessarily oblivion.
Well, the church has been around for 2,000 years, give or take a few centuries - they're still here. If they change radically and become the social club that you're referring to they might survive another 2,000 ...
Therefore death is not inevitable?
Disagree.
Au contraire, Phil. Social clubs don't last but that is what CeeCee seems to be looking for. It is possible to find a faith community that is convivial and social but that is not its raison d'etre. Just a spin off from the core philosophy.
Where did I say that death was not inevitable?
I said oblivion was not but I was talking about things that are more enduring than mere flesh and blood. Some things exist in hearts and minds and outlive both of those host organs. Like fire they can exist as almost unnoticeable embers in a book, a painting, a song or an oral story and may flare into life later when the conditions are again favourable. Renaissance does happen.
You made a logical construct: if A=B and C=B, then A=C.
Oblivion is not inevitable. Death is not necessarily oblivion.
Death is not necessarily inevitable
Well, the kernel seems to be that you think you're going to live forever, and I think I'm going to die.
We'll see who's right in the end.
Well, the kernel seems to be that you think you're going to live forever, and I think I'm going to die.
We'll see who's right in the end.
You assume wrongly. People die and necessarily so and so do some ideas but there are other ideas which, if not exactly eternal are very long lived. They leap from host to host. That is what I have been arguing.
Getting back to churches - it is not their mission to preserve themselves. Their mission is to pass on teachings and values which should, if they are 'living words", outlive the institutions that fostered them.
I have no expectation of any kind of afterlife but for some time I will live on in the memories of certain people who knew me intimately.
Now, before asking you the next question, I must advise you it contains a trick.
In order to see into the trick, I give you two words of advice: Never assume.