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Recent Questions
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The simple answer is NEVER.
A person will never lose faith in God, because to remove God from the system of human worldview means to destroy all logical chains of reasoning about the meaning of human life.
The meaning of life is an eternal question for a person, and without God, it completely loses its meaning, since no one gives the beginning of life, does not know the end and outcome of a person's life. Without beginning and end , it's like without yesterday and tomorrow, time becomes without a coordinate system.
Sometimes a person dreams of arranging his life in an ideal world, i.e. invents a planet or a state in which he would like to live. At the same time, life priorities are dictated: ecology, comfort, literacy, and a fair system of values. For the entire historical period of human life, we do not find such a system. Will people stop believing in happiness for themselves and their children?
Who can make people happy?
The song says: no God, no king and no hero!
But, we must admit that the universe is vitally stable, it has a system, renewability and eternity.
Man did not build this universe, and what he is doing on planet Earth terrifies him.
Who built the universe so well?
People will stop believing in God, that is, in the fact that the world is created by the laws of Higher Intelligence, when they can prove that the world was self-created from nothing and nowhere, that is, by a miracle.
Faith in an Intelligent creature will disappear by itself.
So, we are waiting for evidence of the emergence of everything from nothing.
Most people don't believe in God, so the world is filled with cruelty, immorality, and lies. People do not want to lead their lives according to the moral commandments of God, to give in, to sacrifice something, it is easier to do nothing. They find it strange to say, “It is more blessed to give than to receive” (Acts 20: 35).�
This question and similar questions have been asked dozens of times. And dozens of times it was answered in questions where it was not asked.))
There's my collection of links:
TheQuestion: we will find those who will answer your questions.
Most likely in 200 years, if we talk about the global scale.�
I adhere to the Marxist concept, and I believe that as the economic disproportions of development decrease, which by the way happens, as the historical experience of economic development proves, as new forces of influence arise, social institutions will improve, religion will play an increasingly smaller role in society, unlike, for example, mass culture, which hinders the process of mass education, but later, and it may also disappear in the distant future.�
Of course, some may express concern that there is a wave of Islamization that may sweep over Europe, which will lead rather to the opposite trend, an increase in religiosity.�
But despite the fact that different regions of the world go through different stages of development – progress, regression, and stagnation, in any case, religion, judging by the global scale, will disappear from everyday life.�
I do not believe that there are statically developing countries or civilizations, there are simply regions that inevitably face development imbalances.�
It is natural that the developed countries of Western Europe are the most secularized in comparison with the rest.�
However, there is such an exception as the United States, which is the most religious state in the Western world, despite its secularism.
Yes, even tomorrow, if you give people faith in something else. In North Korea, there is no faith in God, but there is faith in the leader. And no matter how much all these atheists, communists, etc. spit at your mother, believe me, faith in God (and most importantly, following his commandments) is much better, kinder, and, to be pragmatic, more useful than disbelief in him, and even more so replacing faith in something omnipotent, kind, perfect being, devoid of flaws, with faith in some leader-executioner. In general, Fyodor Dostoevsky wrote about all this a long time ago, read the classics.