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davelinde -> RE: What is the difference between christian faith & christain culture? (4/22/2008 10:52:15 AM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: URForgiven It is wrong to categorize western culture as 'Christian', even though, at one time it may have been dominated by such. We will and do have western culture today, but there is very little about it that is Christian. quote:
ORIGINAL: themaestro Christian culture is the monastic hiding in a cave mentality that says we should only read Christian books, listen to Christian music, watch Christian tv, have Christian friends, speak creepy Christianese, and sequester our children in youth groups with no outside unsaved friends ever. It basically says bless us four and no more. I do not see anything wrong with identifying a link between Christian teachings and culture and categorizing a thing as "Christian". You do, of course, need to be clear about what you mean when you make that categorization (eg the point of the OP). I would not classify the examples above as a Christian culture though, rather I'd call that a Christian SUB-culture. The monastic culture was a real influence on society so maybe that's a real cultural phenomena. But the other stereotype is not that big a societal influence I'd say. My first thoughts on this include: western science and medicine - working on the presumption of the creator as described in Genesis also the concept of human beings as "image bearers", the 10 commandments, and the motivation to explore the world to evangelize it and influential Christian concepts. I am not arguing that all in a "Christian culture" behave as believing Christians should behave, just that the teachings of Christianity have an influence on the surrounding culture that can be categorized. I think the opposite is also true (and concerning). A culture influenced by an atheistic world view can be identified and categorized.
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