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Faithlessness: A Void Within and Without

Michie

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In an increasingly complex and often contradictory world, faithlessness emerges as a specter haunting the corridors of the human heart. This lack of faith can manifest as disbelief, cynicism, or simple disinterest. But what truly is faithlessness, and how does it resonate with our lives?

The insights of literary greats like T.S. Eliot, G.K. Chesterton, C.S. Lewis, and the timeless lessons from Scripture are helpful in exploring this phenomenon.

Hollow Men


T.S. Eliot’s poem “The Hollow Men” paints a hauntingly vivid portrait of a world without faith. It is a world populated by hollow figures devoid of substance or conviction. These are not creatures of malevolent intent but beings “stuffed” with straw.

Eliot’s metaphorical usage of the ‘hollow’ and ‘stuffed’ imagery evokes a profound emptiness, a void that suggests a lack of essence, meaning, or purpose. This emptiness embodies faithlessness, a void where the flame of faith once burned bright.

“Between the idea and the reality… falls the shadow,” Eliot writes. Here, the shadow symbolizes the chasm between intention and action, thought and deed. Without faith, this shadow grows, creating a gulf between us and our true potential. Faith, after all, is the bridge that spans this divide.

A Vacuum


Continued below.