ON THE FORUMS


"; document.write(HotScript); //var TableBegin=""; //document.write(TableBegin); //-->

 View Forums

 FREE Membership

 FREE Newsletter

OUR SPONSORS




Please support our sponsors

CATHOLIC QUOTES


 Encyclopedia RSS

 Catholic Encyclopedia

SPECIAL OFFERS


Catholic Answers Live - Special Offers


F  r  o  n  t  i  s  p  i  e  c  e



Not a Matter of Indifference

By Karl Keating



This Rock
Volume 16, Number 7
  September 2005  

 Frontispiece
By Karl Keating
 Letters
 Sex, Lies, and Videotape (Reader Discretion Advised)
By Susan Brinkmann
 Kinsey's Stranglehold on Sex Education
By Susan Brinkmann
 Post-Kinsey Sex Crimes
By Susan Brinkmann
 Christians Charged with Hate Crimes
By Susan Brinkmann
 My Friend the Holy Father
By Tom Harmon
 The Coming Hispanic Majority
By Maria Ruiz Scaperlanda
 Hispanic Numbers at a Glance
Source: www.usccb.org/hispanicaffairs/demo.shtml
 Model of Faith
By Maria Ruiz Scaperlanda
 A Parish Transformed
By Maria Ruiz Scaperlanda
 Spanish Products
By Maria Ruiz Scaperlanda
 Are We Dunghills or Fertile Soil?
By Mike Sullivan
 Where Luther Got It Wrong
By Mike Sullivan
 Effects of Original Sin
By Mike Sullivan
 Step by Step
Marriage and Divorce in the Teaching of Jesus
By Kenneth J. Howell
 Fathers Know Best
Contraception and Sterilization
 Brass Tacks
What Is Heaven Really Like?
By Jimmy Akin
 Damascus Road
Obedience to the Pope Was What He Wanted
By Joanna Bogle
 Reviews
 Quick Questions

  Subscribe
  Permissions

At one time indifferentism meant the idea that one religion is as good as another: You were no more likely to get to heaven through the Catholic Church than through the Presbyterian, Methodist, or Episcopal churches. You were free to choose your religious home based on aesthetics or social interests or family customs and did not need to worry about doctrine. One Christian church was as good as another.

Sometimes indifferentism was applied even more broadly: You were no more likely to get to heaven through the Christian faith than through the Buddhist, Jewish, Muslim, or Hindu faiths. Being religious was important, but which religion you embraced was not. Religion helped you to be a "good person," and that could be accomplished no matter what beliefs you held.

These senses of the word fell into disuse a lifetime ago. Today, indifferentism means the belief that no religion matters at all—and that none is necessary. For people other than oneself, religion might be a good or, at least, not a harmful thing—"like stamp collecting," quipped Catholic apologist Frank Sheed—but most thinking people can dispense with it altogether. "The average man now regards any adult who practices religion with the kind of amiable contempt that we reserve for the more harmless sort of crank," said Sheed.

Most Americans identify themselves as Christians, but most American Christians do not even bother to go to church. They see no reason to. Their religion is no more functional than a man’s tie. They sport one only because it is expected, not because it is needed.

The problem with indifferentism—especially the new kind but also the old kind—is that it refuses to ask basic questions. Indifferentism is the lazy man’s out. A man must be lazy if he refuses to ask the simplest question of all: "Why am I here?"

Perhaps that is too harsh a judgment. Perhaps I should say that, instead of lazy, such a man is fearful. He is fearful of receiving an answer. If he learns why he is here, he may feel compelled to change his life. If the answer he receives is the one given at the beginning of the child’s catechism ("God made me to know him, love him, and serve him in this life and to be happy with him forever in the next"), certain consequences will follow. After all, whoever says A must say B.

If God made me to know him, I should know him. If he made me to love him, I should love him. If he made me to serve him, I should serve him. I should not be satisfied with knowing, loving, and serving only myself. I should not succumb to the narcissism that has Sinatra’s "I Did It My Way" as its theme song.

This is not the logic that most people want to hear. They want to do things their way. They do not want to change, they do not want to be bothered, and they certainly do not want to hear the barking of the Hound of Heaven.


This Rock -- Free Offer

[BACK][TOP]

Home | Seminars | Library | Radio | This Rock Magazine | Shop | Donate | Chastity | Search