And Christianity is probably the example par excellence
It's been several centuries since Christianity was the counter-culture anywhere round here.
I think the new testament is rich on individual moral responsibility and low on commandment.
Unfortunately for us all Christianity is about the activity of Christians, which is not always particularly well-grounded in the nicer parts of the scriptures.
It was after all the individual who repents, The individual who recieves the holy spirit. The individual who recieves faith.
But it's the institutions and the traditions which set expectations on indoctrinating children, on denying equality to people based on sex, sexuality and, until very recently, race.
Do we see Humanist as the new kid on the block, is it in it's teenage?
Humanism emerged in late 13th Century Italy, so I'm not sure it's the 'New Kid'.
How will it fair when it's on top.
To hear you tell it elsewhere it already is on top, surely? Regardless, it rather depends on how well its proponents abide by the underlying ideas, and how much they try to reify the concepts or drag other cultural ideas into the acceptable norms; I'd like to think that the absence of any claims of divine or absolute right behind any of it would result in it being at least more open to question, but we'll have to wait and see.
Will it rediscover the need to coerce and indoctrinate society into righteous humanist values?
If it does it will be a disappointment, but still an improvement on what's come before, so... mixed bag?
Or christians thrown to the lions.
Ah, other people were terrible, so therefore the perfect deity's chosen system gets a pass...
My goodness I'm actually physically startled at how religious that sounds
When you can suggest that Professor Dawkins told people 'I am the way' or 'Do this as often as you eat/drink it, in remembrance of me' then you can suggest that he tried to start something equivalent. Whatever the real Jesus might have said, the mythical magical Jesus is portrayed as very definitely trying to start a religious movement.
And he set up a foundation to nurture them.
A foundation which promotes scientific literacy, secularism and critical thinking... if that's what he's nurturing, it's pretty much the opposite of a religion, you know that right?
O.