The spiritual crisis engulfing the West entails not only revisionist academics’ skepticism concerning the Resurrection as an historical fact, or of the doctrine of the Trinity. So decadent and thoroughgoing is the skepticism of modern man that a willful embrace of ugliness, a worship of personal power for its own sake, and an unrestrained exaltation of the self are the most obvious features of our culture and our public life. A rejection of form as such is implicated here. There is a calamitous discordancy in all our public rituals. Our national anthem is seldom performed with reverence and beauty, being reduced to wild and extravagant displays of “range” on the part of the performer. The confused Novus Ordo Catholic liturgy celebrated in virtually every contemporary parish lurches from the sudden, crashing onset of noise, to awkward silence, is afflicted by incessant contradiction in the movement of the unconsecrated to and from the altar, and suffers from a near-complete absence of coherent form that is the necessary picture frame of ritual. Disorientation is our preferred orientation...
Some have not realized that music performed badly sounds even worse when amplified.
Think about what Jesus did with wine - instantly made the best wine.
Jesus rose from the dead, in a physical body.
This is a fact.
Jesus did not rise from the dead.
This is also a fact.
Only one of those is a true fact.
I was taught (perhaps wrongly... it was a public school) that a "fact" was a statement that could (at least in theory) be verified as true or false. As opposed to an opinion.
The "empty tomb" is approximately as "historical" as the physical resurrection. There is no verifiable historical evidence, in the secular academic sense, for either one.
Alas, I was taught something entirely different, in a public school. And I checked definitions before I posted to see if I might have been in error. Sorry if you disagree with me and what I take to be the prevailing viewpoint on the definition of "fact."
And if Christ be not risen again, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain.
(For Adam I include the DR version)
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