Monday, February 17, 2014

Christians are the reason fewer of us are Christians


A recent poll found of the non-Christians among us or those who may consider themselves Christian but rarely attend church have a very negative view of Christians.  78% say that Christians are too sheltered, 85% view them as hypocritical, 91% think religious people hate gays, and 75% say Christians are too political.  

The 2010 book, American Grace, concluded that partisan politics was directly to blame for the rise of religiously unaffiliated Americans.  The writers, Cambell and Merritt argue  "The growth of the nones is a direct reaction to the intermingling of religion and politics in the United States." And.  "As American Evangelicals have become more partisan, American Christianity has suffered as more shy away from the faith."

Check out this months Atlantic for more on this, and how the Catholic right and other religious right groups are moving to box in the new "liberal Pope".  I have a business associate who is an extreme Catholic, I tell him how much I like the Pope, he says he does too, but then proceeds to say that I and  even most Catholics don't understand him, he is not changing anything, he is not going to change anything, he can't change anything because it is God's law and the Pope has no authority to change the Church's direction.  It is easy to see, he does not like the new Pope at all, not harsh enough, he even says the Pope needs more PR people to clarify the message.   What he cannot see is that this Pope could return the Church to how Jesus spent his life, fighting wealth, power and injustice.  

5 comments:

  1. You know that the Arch Bishop of Cincinnati and John Beohner have had some what is reported to be heated discussions about the way the GOP treats the poor. If Brownback is a true Catholic then they follow the word of the Pope. Brownback is a evangelical zealot. I wonder what does the Arch Bishop of Kansas City have to say about him?

    Ron

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  2. Gov, oh I mean Pope Brownback is a fundamentalist Catholic, of an extreme and small group who believe they must scourge themselves from time to time, ie draw blood by beating their own body, mortify the flesh. Can't remember the name of that group, and thats ok with me. It's right out of the 8th century, or 8th century BC.

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    Replies
    1. I think that is Opus Dei. Didn't know about them until the Davinci Code...

      Ron

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  3. As I have been saying for years...God save me from Christians...of all stripes!

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    1. jaded, if I may add ...and save us from those who ignorantly vote with them out of bigoted ideals.

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