akwoo, on 2019-March-09, 00:43, said:
The underlying theology of Evangelical Christianity in the US has, since the early 19th century, been Wesleyan/Arminian - some people are predestined for salvation and have an easier path to it but everyone can work towards it and make it to heaven by working hard at building their faith.
If you're paying attention to Evangelical circles, you'll have noticed a considerable uptick in the popularity of Calvinism - God has predestined everyone either to heaven or to hell.
I think there is a reason.
A few will, through some combination of birth and early childhood environmental factors, have some talent that enables them to do something no machine can do.
Everyone else will be made economically obsolete by automation.
I've said this before - I think it's more likely than not I will die as a result of nuclear war, because what I've described above is not a stable social dynamic.
There is a danger in getting off topic here but it's a lazy Sunday morning and I found this post interesting so a few thoughts.
"If you're paying attention to Evangelical circles," As the little pig said to the big bad wolf, not by the hair of my chinny chin chin
"you'll have noticed a considerable uptick in the popularity of Calvinism - God has predestined everyone either to heaven or to hell.". Yes, but they don't really mean it. I was confirmed in the Presbyterian Church when I was 13, I went every Sunday, I worried about whether I should pluck out my eye because it is better to lose an eye than to have my body cast into hell. When I was 14 the minister took me aside to explain that I had to get my parents to attend church more regularly so that they wouldn't burn in hell. Had been more theologically inclined I would have advanced the pre-destination argument to show that it didn't matter, but I took a more experimental approach. I found an isolated spot and shouted obscenities at God for five or ten minutes and when I wasn't struck dead I figured well, that's that, and I never went back to the church.
Actually, this might, in its own way, be on topic. I'm fine with religion, I believe in faith hope and charity, I even believe the greatest of these is charity, I just don't much care for being condemned to hell. I am also fine with providing opportunity, but I am not fond of being condemned for writing off some progressive ideas as not sensible. Whether a church or a political party, we might go a little easy on burning heretics, metaphorically or otherwise. People can, and do, walk away.