
At a clergy gathering years ago, a pastor got up and made a brilliant observation: “Whenever I read the Bible,” he began, “it always surprises me. When I hear a pronouncement coming from the United Church of Christ, I’m never surprised.”
This is a crucial point. The uniformity of thought within the mainline Protestant churches today is appalling. And stultifying. As I’ve said many times, the rhetoric is generally warmed-over elite opinion cloned from “sophisticated” secular sources.
Yuval Levin, in A Time to Build, states what ought to be obvious: “Being exposed to influences we did not choose is part of how we learn to live with others, to accept our differences while seeing crucial commonalities, to realize the world is not all about us, and to at least abide with patience what we would rather avoid or escape.”
Continue reading “Homogenized and Interchangeable, Part II”








