In religious matters, the modern world believes in indifference. Very simply, this means that it has no great loves and no great hates; no causes worth living for and no causes worth dying for.
It counts its virtues by the vices from which it abstains, asks that religion be easy and pleasant, sneers the term "mystic" at those who are spiritually inclined, dislikes enthusiasm and loves benevolence, makes elegance the test of virtue and hygiene the test of morality, believes that one may be too religious but never too refined. It holds that no one ever loses his soul, except for some great and foul crime such as murder.
Archbishop Fulton Sheen