Difference between revisions of "Atheism and architecture"

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(Ravi Zacharias on postmodern architecture)
(Ravi Zacharias on postmodern architecture)
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== Ravi Zacharias on postmodern architecture ==
 
== Ravi Zacharias on postmodern architecture ==
[[File:Ravi Zacharias.jpg|thumbnail|200px|right|Ravi Zacharias]]
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[[File:Ravi Zacharias.jpg|thumbnail|200px|right|[[Ravi Zacharias]] ]]
 
The [[Christian apologetics|Christian apologist]] [[Ravi Zacharias]] said about postmodern architecture:
 
The [[Christian apologetics|Christian apologist]] [[Ravi Zacharias]] said about postmodern architecture:
 
{{Cquote|I remember lecturing at Ohio State University, one of the largest universities in this country. I was minutes away from beginning my lecture, and my host was driving me past a new building called the Wexner Center for the Performing Arts.
 
{{Cquote|I remember lecturing at Ohio State University, one of the largest universities in this country. I was minutes away from beginning my lecture, and my host was driving me past a new building called the Wexner Center for the Performing Arts.

Revision as of 18:58, April 23, 2016

Postmodernism is an antichristian,[1] far-left, 20th century worldview and academic movement characterized by denial of objective truth, and which asserts that assertions of objective knowledge are essentially impossible.

The Christian apologist Norman Geisler wrote about postmodernism: "In short, the root of Post-modernism is atheism and the fruit of it is relativism — relativism in every area of life and thought."[2] Atheists played a significant role in terms of postmodernist leadership and its following (see: Postmodernism and atheists).

Postmodernism spawned a form of architecture commonly called postmodern architecture.

Ravi Zacharias on postmodern architecture

The Christian apologist Ravi Zacharias said about postmodern architecture:

I remember lecturing at Ohio State University, one of the largest universities in this country. I was minutes away from beginning my lecture, and my host was driving me past a new building called the Wexner Center for the Performing Arts.

He said, “This is America’s first postmodern building.”

I was startled for a moment and I said, “What is a postmodern building?”

He said, “Well, the architect said that he designed this building with no design in mind. When the architect was asked, ‘Why?’ he said, ‘If life itself is capricious, why should our buildings have any design and any meaning?’ So he has pillars that have no purpose. He has stairways that go nowhere. He has a senseless building built and somebody has paid for it.”

I said, “So his argument was that if life has no purpose and design, why should the building have any design?”

He said, “That is correct.”

I said, “Did he do the same with the foundation?”

All of a sudden there was silence.

You see, you and I can fool with the infrastructure as much as we would like, but we dare not fool with the foundation because it will call our bluff in a hurry.[3]

Soviet Union and Museums of Atheism

The Soviet Union closed down many churches and converted some of them into Museums of Atheism rather than build magnificent buildings dedicated to promoting atheistic ideology.[4]

See also

Notes