Table of Contents
No One In The Audience
Quote
Poem

Topic : Religion, empty

No One In The Audience

Let’s accompany the British journalist David Pryce-Jones to Hereford Cathedral. While showing the cathedral to a pair of foreign guests, they stumbled upon a service in progress and were rebuked by the vicar. “Not a single worshipper, apart from the vicar, was present in that great nave,” writes Pryce-Jones “Evensong was taking place in a vacuum: NUNC DIMITTIS, indeed.”

Thinking And Acting Like A Christian, D. Bruce Lockerbie, p. 32

Quote

Some people have just enough religion to make themselves miserable. - Harry Emerson Fosdick.

Poem

In the book “Gaily The Troubadour,” published in 1936, Arthur Guiterman wrote the following poem. Reading his observations, you wouldn’t guess it was written nearly fifty years ago.

First dentistry was painless;
Then bicycles were chainless
And carriages were horseless
And many laws, enforceless.

Next, cookery was fireless,
Telegraphy was wireless,
Cigars were nicotineless
And coffee, caffeinless.

Soon oranges were seedless,
The putting green was weedless,
The college boy hatless,
The proper diet, fatless.

Now motor roads are dustless,
The latest steel is rustless,
Our tennis courts are sodless,
Our new religions, godless.

Source unknown



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