04-07-2016, 04:38 PM
If you remove the Christian connotation to the word 'resurrection', and instead look at the etymology of the word (mostly from late-latin, 'rise again' and middle english, 'resurgent'), then the image seems to make more sense. Thus, a 'conservative family image' rising as a puzzle piece and being told that 'resurrection is not the end' would tend to imply that even when 'conventional family values return, this is still not the end'.
It would appear to be a statement that morals and conventional family ideology will return, yet even that will not be the end. Definitely a hopeful dream, but in today's world, I don't see it enacted without a massive paradigm shift. We are running away from this as a desire, not to it.
It would appear to be a statement that morals and conventional family ideology will return, yet even that will not be the end. Definitely a hopeful dream, but in today's world, I don't see it enacted without a massive paradigm shift. We are running away from this as a desire, not to it.