COMMON SENSE is a rebellion against the absolute, though not a loud-voiced rebellion… common sense would regard that as injudicious… Sneaking slowly onward, this common sense eats away the absolute bit by bit, undermining faith and reverence for it---and then finally perhaps an impatient common sense bursts forth boastfully into speech, loudly proclaiming its wisdom, that the absolute is madness… But how men OUGHT TO BE, about God’s requirements, about the ideals---about this less and less inquiry is made in proportion as common sense increases.” -- Kierkegaard
"The evil in our time is not the Established Church with its many faults; no, the evil in our time is precisely this evil lust, this flirting with the will to reform, this hypocrisy of seeking escape from the consciousness of one’s own incapacity by the diversion of wishing to reform the Church, a thing which our time is least of all capable of doing.”
--Kierkegaard
there doesn't seem to be anything here