History is marked by eras. These are usually based on literature as this lays down our knowledge. It begins with prehistoric moves through the ancient, middle age and Medievil era's. Then comes the Renaissance and age of exploration. Then begins the Modern era around 1620 which brought Enlightenment, the industrial revolution, the Romantic era and into the High Modern era. Then came the Postmodernism era and everything that comes with it such as the cultural revolutions, critical theories, subjective morality and relativism as the new reality.
My question is are we still in the Postmodern era or are we moving into a new era. The reason being is that we have had Postmodernism for some time. It seems to me we have moved beyond Postmodern relativism. Postmodernism though relative and self referential initially was the idea that there were many truths and not objective truths.
I remember 20 or 30 years ago it was all about multiculturalism. The west had to be more multicultural. The basic idea was allowing for diverse beliefs and ideas but the west was still a unique culture based on their history of Christianity and widely supported. Both Christianity and other cultures could exist altogether as one big happy melting pot of society. That was the true essence of Postmodernism relativism that all truths could live together and none were dominate and more true than the other.
Then things changed. Almost a sudden shift post 2000 into PC, CC and identity politics. Of course we know that this was no accident. That the groundwork for this was laid through academia Postmodernist Critical theories and into the institutions.
But it is this period where I think we have shifted into the beginning of a Post Christian era. Because as mentioned God and Christianity was being critiqued, then questioned, then rejected and then replaced with the Postmodern ideas of the late 20th and early 21st centuries which has established itself as a post Christian secular society. Such as with progressive and humanistic ideology.
Its the beginning of an era where Christianity is no longer being tolerated in the market place whereas before it was tolerated as one of the many alternative truths. So a line has been crossed where predominatly the scales have tipped from a Christian norm, to a relative norm thats accepted Christianity and now to post Christian norms reject Christianity out of the public square.
Hense I think we are beginning the Post Christian era. Its been around long enough to have become the norm. Like other eras which overlap there will still be varying degrees of intolerance for Christianity and God at first.
But as the Post Christian era becomes more established I think Christianity will not only be not allowed but not tolerated. If the same trajectory that is occuring now where secular ideology and Christianity are clashing in a growing number of issues with Christianity coming off second best then we should expect a more complete rejection and intolerance as the era becomes more established.
PS: I think the evolution from the Postmodern era into a Post Christian one may also be seen as representative of a larger change in worldview from the Christian worldview that has lasted in varying degrees throughout western history up until maybe around the 80s or 90's. But definitely post 2000. As opposed to the PostChristian era where the worldview is secular, materialistic and antiChristian.
In other world fundementally this is a battle of worldviews where Christianity has been the worldview up until recently and now a secular worldview without God and Christianity has taken over for the first time in western history. We as western societies are now moving into a world atheists claimed would be better. A world without God. They are finally achieving their Godless utopia.
My question is are we still in the Postmodern era or are we moving into a new era. The reason being is that we have had Postmodernism for some time. It seems to me we have moved beyond Postmodern relativism. Postmodernism though relative and self referential initially was the idea that there were many truths and not objective truths.
I remember 20 or 30 years ago it was all about multiculturalism. The west had to be more multicultural. The basic idea was allowing for diverse beliefs and ideas but the west was still a unique culture based on their history of Christianity and widely supported. Both Christianity and other cultures could exist altogether as one big happy melting pot of society. That was the true essence of Postmodernism relativism that all truths could live together and none were dominate and more true than the other.
Then things changed. Almost a sudden shift post 2000 into PC, CC and identity politics. Of course we know that this was no accident. That the groundwork for this was laid through academia Postmodernist Critical theories and into the institutions.
But it is this period where I think we have shifted into the beginning of a Post Christian era. Because as mentioned God and Christianity was being critiqued, then questioned, then rejected and then replaced with the Postmodern ideas of the late 20th and early 21st centuries which has established itself as a post Christian secular society. Such as with progressive and humanistic ideology.
Its the beginning of an era where Christianity is no longer being tolerated in the market place whereas before it was tolerated as one of the many alternative truths. So a line has been crossed where predominatly the scales have tipped from a Christian norm, to a relative norm thats accepted Christianity and now to post Christian norms reject Christianity out of the public square.
Hense I think we are beginning the Post Christian era. Its been around long enough to have become the norm. Like other eras which overlap there will still be varying degrees of intolerance for Christianity and God at first.
But as the Post Christian era becomes more established I think Christianity will not only be not allowed but not tolerated. If the same trajectory that is occuring now where secular ideology and Christianity are clashing in a growing number of issues with Christianity coming off second best then we should expect a more complete rejection and intolerance as the era becomes more established.
PS: I think the evolution from the Postmodern era into a Post Christian one may also be seen as representative of a larger change in worldview from the Christian worldview that has lasted in varying degrees throughout western history up until maybe around the 80s or 90's. But definitely post 2000. As opposed to the PostChristian era where the worldview is secular, materialistic and antiChristian.
In other world fundementally this is a battle of worldviews where Christianity has been the worldview up until recently and now a secular worldview without God and Christianity has taken over for the first time in western history. We as western societies are now moving into a world atheists claimed would be better. A world without God. They are finally achieving their Godless utopia.
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