I regularly espouse how wonderful I think choral singing is for my general well being. I'm sure people might call me evangelical. But this is about how good it feels to me, and I freely accept and understand that there are plenty of others for whom choral singing would leave them cold or be the last thing they wanted to do. I'm not trying to convert anyone, merely telling them about how much I enjoy it.
It's a basic human reaction. I know from plentiful direct personal experience that if I've read a particularly good book, or seen an especially good film, or heard a particularly good piece of music, I'll tell others around me in the hope that they might have the same reaction to it and derive as much pleasure from it as I've done. Surely this is the basis of the 'Music was my first love' thread, otherwise, why share links?
However. I have sufficient imagination to know that all people are different and don't respond to the same thing in the same way. There are several dedicated Terry Pratchett fans on the forum, for example, someone whose books despite repeated attempts to read quite a few of them leave me cold. I absolutely cannot see anything to enjoy in
Strictly Come Dancing,
X Factor or
Downton Abbey, or any soap opera come to that - some of the highest rated programmes on British television, watched and enjoyed by many millions. I might think that more people's lives would be enriched and given a lifetime of delight if they listened to Sibelius, for example, andI've been known to say so; but religious proselytisiation isn't and religious proselytisers aren't like this. Given YouTube and Amazon/Kindle, anybody who might be interested in Sibelius or this book can find out for themselves - it's all out there, they don't need any pushing from me. If somebody isn't interested in the latest superb novel I've just finished, that's the end of the matter. They're not interested and that's that. I don't need telling twice. Religious proselytisers are rarely, if ever, so obliging, seeing it as their bounden duty to impart a message - in fact, a mission - that they
must share come what may.
But for it to be proselytism surely the agenda isn't merely to tell someone how important your religion is to you, but to try to convert them. That's different.
Precisely.