“…it is in Him that we live, and move, and exist” (Acts 17:28).
About twenty years ago, a panel of social scientists met for a week-long discussion of the principal concerns of that generation’s life. Later, the content of the symposium was summarized in a three-hundred-page book. The book contained chapters on the arts, on education, on science, on politics, on economics, on technological advances, and even on the use of leisure time. Curiously, the book did not contain a chapter on religion. When asked about this omission, the book’s editor said, “Well, they just didn’t have very much to say about the subject.”
That panel’s view of modern society clearly was that of a secular civilization spreading around the world, with religion in general and Christianity in particular not playing a very important role. Religion was treated as though it were off in a closed compartment where people needn’t bother even to look at it.
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