This is a Roman Catholic commentary.....can it also be applied to Baptist's & Protestants?
Thomas Merton courageously wrote in 'The Living Bread' in 1956:
"The great tragedy of our age is the fact, if one may dare to say it, that there are so many Godless Christians - Christians, that is, whose religion is a matter of pure conformism and expediency. Their "faith" is little more than a permanent evasion of reality - a compromise with life. In order to avoid admitting the uncomfortable truth that they no longer have any real need for God or any vital faith in Him, they conform to the outward conduct of others like themselves. And these "believers" cling together, offering one another an apparent justification for lives that are essentially just the same as the lives of their materialistic neighbors whose horizons are purely those of the world and the world and it's transient values."
Thomas Merton courageously wrote in 'The Living Bread' in 1956:
"The great tragedy of our age is the fact, if one may dare to say it, that there are so many Godless Christians - Christians, that is, whose religion is a matter of pure conformism and expediency. Their "faith" is little more than a permanent evasion of reality - a compromise with life. In order to avoid admitting the uncomfortable truth that they no longer have any real need for God or any vital faith in Him, they conform to the outward conduct of others like themselves. And these "believers" cling together, offering one another an apparent justification for lives that are essentially just the same as the lives of their materialistic neighbors whose horizons are purely those of the world and the world and it's transient values."