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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 13, 2023

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I'm curious where you get your evidence for this view outside of anecdotal examples? A quick wikipedia check of the Progressive Christianity shows that there are many branches of progressive Christian thought:

Though prominent, the movement is by no means the only significant movement of progressive thought among Christians. It draws influence from multiple theological streams, including evangelicalism, liberal Christianity, neo-orthodoxy, pragmatism, postmodern theology, progressive Christian reconstructionism, and liberation theology.

There's also a separate movement called liberal Christianity I can't find stats on how long individual churches last, but clearly they've been around for a while. The "New Thought" movement has been around since the 1830s, and apparently the original denomination/Church The New Church has been around since then. Two hundred years give or take is nothing to scoff at.

subtract the very things about the philosophical aspects of Christianity that make it appealing in the first place.

Could you expand on this? I agree that the things you listed are appealing to you, but why do you think they would be appealing to most modern people, especially those who do go and join these progressive churches?

For instance, this is pretty clearly not true since these churches exist and do have a significant amount of followers:

Leftists who already hate Christianity are not going to be convinced by a softer form of it.

Some leftists are - otherwise there would be no church/discussion.