Words cannot express the profundity of this work. In our age of "reflection" and abstraction, where thousands of evangelical preachers regularly prostitute Christianity and sell it as a membership to a health club, Kierkegaard's lone voice, "crying out in the wilderness" (or rather screaming through the cacophony of conforming masses)pulls us back to the I - Thou relationship with the Absolute,...
more Words cannot express the profundity of this work. In our age of "reflection" and abstraction, where thousands of evangelical preachers regularly prostitute Christianity and sell it as a membership to a health club, Kierkegaard's lone voice, "crying out in the wilderness" (or rather screaming through the cacophony of conforming masses)pulls us back to the I - Thou relationship with the Absolute, with the God-Man, with Christ.
Here's no abating, ameliorating, mollifying, beautifying, or mediating the fact that if Christianity is true (as it is revealed by Christ himself through our contemporaneousness with him) then our lives must, absolutely must, categorically must, undergo a radical change; in fact our lives must end, so true Christianity can begin.
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