DrStakhanovite, thanks for expanding thoughts on the subject. I have a quick reply though your post deserves more thought. There have been times when Christianity thrived being the overwhelming majority of the culture. It has often not been a minority group rejecting the larger culture. Instead it was and expression of hopes and ideals held by the majority of the society. Even today when for conservative groups where rejection of outsiders or outside beliefs applies, there is usually only rejection of certain selected aspects of the larger culture which is otherwise fully embraced.DrStakhanovite wrote: ↑Fri Jun 09, 2023 6:42 pmHey Huck,
I’m of a similar opinion as Jack, but I’ve come to it from a different social-science track than she did, so perhaps how I frame it might help with some of those puzzles.
The fundamental concept here is that social groups whose beliefs and lifestyle conflict (or are otherwise in tension) with broader contemporary culture always have better growth and retention rates than social groups that are not in tension with broader contemporary culture. Hasidic Jews and the Amish are not going to be dwindling into nonexistence anytime soon.
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To Jack’s point, Churches that are comfortable co-existing with the broader culture they exist in are going to struggle to find ways to get people to stay and be committed to a religious identity. If Christ died for everybody and they benefit from it regardless if they embraced the Gospel or not, the act of evangelization rapidly becomes pointless. Sure, you can still do missions work where you feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and house the homeless, to get your dopamine hit, but how do you distinguish that from regular charity organizations?
Now if churches with a more liberal theology struggle with building and maintaining a distinctive religious identity, churches with a more conservative theology struggle with maintaining a distinctive religious identity that doesn’t result in more radical expressions that cause harm.
I just don’t see a progressive Mormon Church being at all successful in staving off decline, much less actually growing.
It has long been generally assumed that the point of the atonement was establishing a ticket to heaven for people who correctly accept it. Perhaps that is a reduction of meaning of the atonement. An invitation to build upon and toward a better humanity does not have to be black and white. The horrors of not doing that do not have to be limited to a rather narrow mythological idea of hell. They might manifest in time in a variety of ways.
One might hope for a universal salvation as an ultimate end but that would not mean that there is not all sorts of hell standing in the way. Beware and repent. Live to build a better human life.