something that you can do nothing about
I can do something about it, I can point out to you that you're captivated by packaging, not substance.
but
it can prevent you from living your life to its fullest
Do you even realize how ironic that is...
Thank you though, and I mean that sincerely, because you caused me to do a little searching for something that would flesh out the framework of an idea in my mind that I couldn't quite put a finger on and I found something else along the way (more on that later).
Peterson is Jungian, I knew this, which is why the archetype would come into play and why I brought it up yesterday.
And he's not a Christian although he apparently wants to sound like one for his own nebulous purposes. (Wanting to appear purposefully nebulous for effect?) You see him as "more of a Christian than anyone I know of," but for what? His living out of the two greatest commandments? Or because he reassures you when you're alarmed by modernity?
You may call this confirmation bias, and maybe there's some truth to that, but I found the description needed: "theological patina." Up early this morning (best time to study) I found it in Catholic World Report, hardly a modernist publication:
Jordan Peterson’s Jungian best-seller is banal, superficial, and insidious
The real danger in 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos is its apologia for social Darwinism and bourgeois individualism covered over with a theological patina.
You might want to brace yourself, because Peterson is eviscerated in every possible way, and it isn't pretty if you're an ardent believer in Jordan Peterson.
But here's the gem I found along the way that made this all worthwhile. The author ("
Dr. Adam A. J. DeVille is associate professor and chairman of the Department of Theology-Philosophy, University of Saint Francis (Fort Wayne, IN) and author of Orthodoxy and the Roman Papacy (University of Notre Dame, 2011)") reminded me of the saintly humanitarian Jean Vanier, founder of the L'Arche communities, perhaps you've heard of him. Years ago I read his book From Brokenness to Community. If you don't know of Jean Vanier, perhaps you'll read something by him, because he's a far better archetype for "more of a Christian than anyone I know" than Jordan Peterson could ever be.