ChatterBank0 min ago
If This Not A Full U-Turn...
... is it at least a 90° one? 😃
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Our church isn't always empty, but it is peaceful - comes from nigh on 1,000 years of contemplation and prayer I expect.
I do like Dawkins' phrase of 'cultural Christianity'.
However, over the last very few years, 500 of the churches which closed have been repurposed and are now operating as mosques - so anyone who doesn't want to live in a cultural atmosphere of Islam ought really to help to keep their local church open. People can choose to contribute just to the Fabric Fund, which just helps to keep the building up and running, no religious subscription. Many people choose to do this. .... end of advert.. :)
that appears to be the case, sandyRoe, though as PP's link shows he was quoted as saying the exact opposite of what he did say. The Almighty should place less trust in the reportage of the Daily Mail.
why so many Mosques are required ,in a predominately Christian country , for a so called 'ethnic minority'
those churches acquired by Islam are required by a religious minority, because the original worshippers no longer have any use for them or the faith they embodied. If Christians want to keep their churches all they have to do is use them more often. A church is for life, not just for Christmas Eve.
jno. Yes, but you don't have to go to church just to keep it alive, you can go because a visit can be spiritually (& socially) uplifting.
The last visit I made to church in England was to a Sunday morning service in St. Lawrence's church in Stroud. The vicar had moved the pews to the back of the church and set out chairs in circles, so instead of looking at the back of heads you looked at one another face to face, which created an atmosphere of community. (Christ would have approved :0)
There was about 40 people present, it was a very nice experience and we even had coffee afterwards and chatted to one another.
Not a bad way to spend an hour or so on a Sunday morning. I would say.
Khandro, I was responding to a post asking why there were so many mosques, and one noting that some were converted churches. The answer isn't that there are necessarily more Muslims, just that a greater percentage of Muslims than of Christians regularly attend worship. (One ex-church near me is now a mosque; another is a block of flats with a steeple.)
I'm not that fussed about seating arrangements though I believe they played a part in the religious schisms in early modern times.