4.9 • 5.5K Ratings
🗓️ 19 August 2024
⏱️ 34 minutes
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Some recent polling suggests that the number of those who identify with no religion has hit a ceiling, and it may even be declining. At the same time, a number of high-profile cultural influencers—even some formerly hostile to the faith—have either converted to Christianity or announced that they now identify as “cultural Christians.” Moreover, religion and politics, once considered verboten to mix, now seem to find themselves deeply intertwined.
How do we assess these cultural and political developments from an evangelical perspective? Is it really the case that society is becoming more receptive to Christianity? Are all these developments positive for the Church, or should we take a more cautious approach to evaluating what all this means for the future?
A listener asks what he can share with non-Catholics to perhaps change their minds.
00:00 | Intro
01:32 | Bishop Barron’s update on the diocesan pastoral center
02:24 | Tracing the decline of Christianity in the West
06:07 | Assessing the decline of “nones” today
09:59 | Men, women, and trends of religious disaffiliation
13:45 | Public conversions and the indispensability of Christianity in culture
18:46 | Christianity, moral principles, and the legal system
23:09 | Is there broader cultural significance for the National Eucharistic Revival?
24:26 | Hopeful signs for Christianity in conversation
27:54 | Is interest in a broad Christianity simply good?
28:59 | What we can learn from the African and Eastern Churches
30:42 | Listener question
33:00 | Join the Word on Fire Institute
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0:00.0 | Welcome back to the Word on Fire Show. |
0:01.5 | I'm Matthew Petrucic, senior director of the Word on Fire Institute and the host of the |
0:05.1 | Word on Fire Show. |
0:06.4 | Thank you for joining us. |
0:08.1 | Is Christianity making a comeback? |
0:10.6 | Some recent polling suggests that the number of those who identify with no religion, often referred to as the nuns, has hit a ceiling and may even be declining. |
0:21.0 | At the same time, a number of high-profile cultural influencers, some of them |
0:26.0 | formerly hostile to the faith, have either converted to Christianity or announced that they |
0:30.9 | now identify as cultural Christians. |
0:34.0 | Moreover, religion in politics, once considered verbotent to mix, |
0:38.0 | now seem to find themselves deeply intertwined. |
0:42.0 | Not only are politicians publicly acknowledging God, there are also intellectual movements |
0:46.8 | appearing on the political scene that openly argue that a Christian worldview should be the |
0:51.6 | foundation of the political order. Christian worldview So how do we assess these cultural and political developments from an evangelical perspective? |
0:59.0 | Is it really the case that society is becoming more receptive to Christianity? |
1:04.3 | If so, are all these developments positive for the church? |
1:08.4 | Or perhaps, should we take a more cautious approach to evaluating what all this means for the future of |
1:13.5 | Catholicism in the US and the West. Here to help us think through these and |
1:18.2 | related questions is Bishop Robert Barron. Welcome back to the studio bishop. |
1:24.0 | And I'm going to be with. |
1:30.0 | Welcome back to the studio Bishop. |
1:33.4 | And oh, it's good to be with you. |
... |
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