Published: 2006-06-30

Spiritual Crisis in the Modern World as a Moral and Religious Problem

Tadeusz Borutka
Seminare. Learned Investigations
Section: Socio-pedagogical sciences
https://doi.org/10.21852/sem.2006.23.14

Abstract

The question of spirituality is a very broad and multifaceted concept. In Christian understanding spirituality has both personal and social dimensions. It marks man's relationship with God, expressing itself in a specific attitude to life throughout the history of the relationship of mankind with its Creator. The crisis emerges primarily in questioning fundamental values and principles. Consequently there is no longer room in our social life for objective truth, moral, ideological or religious values. Skepticism dominates over rationality. What's more, proponents of this paradigm announce a departure, in social life, from traditional symbols, ethical criteria and patterns of behavior in favor of cultural pluralism, social and axiological differentiation and individual subjectivism. This leads undoubtedly to secularism whose effects are most clearly seen in the moral and religious life of man. These effects become increasingly dangerous because of the inevitable advance of the process of globalization. Although globalization is not a direct symptom of spiritual crisis, but a consequence of the development of civilization, yet it can be disturbed by spiritual crisis. Currently we observe the advance of processes distorting globalization.

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Borutka, T. (2006). Spiritual Crisis in the Modern World as a Moral and Religious Problem. Seminare. Learned Investigations, 23, 181–194. https://doi.org/10.21852/sem.2006.23.14

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