I'm preparing myself for a pegged jeans sighting. Or maybe I'll launch the revival myself.
UPDATE:
Well I was always taught it was tacky... but I guess if your Ralph Lauren you can tuck in a sweater without recrimination.
"it is characteristic of the analytical philosopher to treat all mysteries as puzzles. For him there are problems, which the scientist solves, and puzzles, which the philosopher resolves. But for the Christian theologian there must be a third thing also, namely, mysteries, which remain mysterious even when understood, because, though understood, they exceed our comprehension."(p.19)I brought the quote to my local tattoo artist but he said it was too lengthy.
"When my mom was dying, my absolutely certain knowledge that this life is all there is enabled me to enjoy and treasure what time I did have with her."This Marxist, Existentialist, or if you prefer, Marleyan point of view is the, as you know, classic rejoinder to any perspective valuing the "hereafter." That is to say, heaven is merely a distraction from what really matters, which is earth.
"Of course I believe in Christ's physical resurrection... Why do you think I'm so concerned about social justice?!"Now I'm no Forbesian liberal, but that's an answer of his that I can applaud. Maybe Mr. A. could try diversifying his portfolio. He might discover that investment in the future can actually increase one's stock in the here and now.
"Science is the only common objective standard,"which means they've got a lot of catching up to do in contemporary physics! Though coffee-shop atheists still think that science can "account for everything," don't they realize that real scientists who spend their time in laboratories not coffeeshops have (for quite some time) conceded that the ever-so-slippery universe has popped out of yet another box designed for it by generations past - this time the box labeled "science is the only common objective standard"? Of course not all scientists today are Christians, let alone theists, but the old "I believe in science, not God" resort simply doesn't work anymore. But it is still attempted... and the result is that the self-professed "free thinkers," don't seem to be so free.
"No... I don't believe the Christian stuff about the resurrection of the body. That's just contrary to common sense."a priest responds
"So is much of the world revealed by modern physics!" (p. 424)Whether it pleases readers of Skeptic Magazine or not, in this day and age a response like that by a believer is fair game. What's foul is pretending that the world can still be "rationally" explained with neat and tidy Newtonian categories. It can't. This of course doesn't mean Christianity wins, there's still a lot of battles to fight, it's just that that's not one of them.