Skip to main content

A Timely Significance to Easter

I got into the "Settings" of my phone yesterday to turn off the alerts. If "they" want the alerts to be noticed, then they certainly succeeded. But my reaction wasn't what they wanted. I find this continual alarmism obnoxious and cowardly.

The Alert was offensive, too. It came a day before Easter, and warned people not to go to church. Why is that? Couldn't people take precautions in church, as they do at Walmart or the grocery store? I think something else is going on.

Although I am not a Christian, one part of me would like to see Christians defy the Alert, and show the world that their Faith is still alive -- and that their Faith isn't just "Moralistic Therapeutic Deism" as some critics claim.

There was a time in history when Christians were courageous. The persecution and ridicule they suffered the first couple centuries (before Constantine) must have been a great help in making their Faith survive. 

But by 1750 or so, European Civilization had outgrown Christianity intellectually. The Faith survived, but merely as an emotional crutch. The shame of it is that nothing better has come along to replace it -- although there has always been an applicant or two for the position.

Think what strength a culture has when it doesn't consist of craven, atomized Individuals, who think their own Ego is the center of the universe; doesn't believe in extending life to the last possible day, regardless of anything else; and doesn't worship maximum safety and material comfort, until the last day of life.

This would be a good time to re-watch Bergman's "The Seventh Seal." It has some images you won't forget. And you will be reminded how courageous our ancestors used to be.



Comments

XXXXX said…


Nietzche's Last Man from "Thus Spoke Zarathustra." Is that it?

George
George, I don't understand the question. Is that WHAT?
XXXXX said…


The various thoughts you expressed reminded me of Nietzche's concept of the Last Man. You can google it if you like but basically your thoughts that reminded me of the concept are the present lack of courage you mentioned and lack of a strong belief as Christianity's influence has weakened. Your idea of a craven, atomized individual reminds me of the Will to Power (Nietzche) and the Last Man is the result of the loss of that. The Last Man is a pacifist, lacks ambition, takes no risks. He is only interested in comfort. Nietzche also thought we were heading this way as a species. Published 1885.
My question is asking if these thoughts of Nietzche are compatible with what you are saying as well. Don't feel you have to answer if you don't want to. It's just that it seemed so to me.

George
Anonymous said…
Well, of course “something else is going on”. A diktat not to attend church is yet again another conspiracy by the leftie pinkos to deny Christians religious liberty. If we believe that “social distancing” will help suppress the spread of COVID-19, then optional church attendance should be off the table. After all, the one time of the year that all good Christians attend church is today. Attendees will be shoulder to shoulder.

Chris
George, I did a little reading at Wikipedia about Nietzsche's Last Man. It DID overlap a little with what I was writing about in this post. I have tried reading Nietzsche several times, and never been able to finish one of his essays. It think it is his prose style.
Anonymous said…
"The Faith survived, but merely as an emotional crutch. The shame of it is that nothing better has come along to replace it "

One of the tenets of different religious brands is to be an "emotional crutch". We don't need more religions. We need more humanists who seek out the goodness, values and rational thinking in people without enslaving them to vacuous dogma.

Chris

Chris, "We don't need more religions." Do you feel the same way about secular religions, aka, ideologies?

Are you sure that goodness and rational thinking are sufficiently strong for when the shit really hits the fan?
Anonymous said…
"Chris, "We don't need more religions." Do you feel the same way about secular religions, aka, ideologies?"

No, unless ideologies turn kooky, and we know they can and do. I like Christian Duncker's definition of ideology, "...a system of presentations that explicitly or implicitly claim to an absolute truth." (Thanks Wikipedia). And I would add, rationally though through.

"Are you sure that goodness and rational thinking are sufficiently strong for when the shit really hits the fan?"

Those qualities are a wise place to start.

Chris


Chris, I guess you are more optimistic about the value of reason when it comes to life or death. Like some cranky German philosopher or other, I consider life and death to be the arena of the Will, not of Reason. Oh dear, the Triumph of the Will, another classic movie to watch!