I do not think there is a way to separate the political from the social, or really from any other category. All is intertwined.
Spiritual renovation can be viewed, and defined, in various ways. Philosophically, I am interested in defining it. And I am also interested in addressing -- or at the least beginning to understand better -- what is going on socially and politically in our cultures.
Immanuel Can wrote:The benefits of Christianity to the West have not come because of collectivism or "Christendom," per se. They've come because individual people genuinely believed in Christianity, and then allowed it to shape their ethics and activities. There's no other solution.
Whether people 'genuinely believe' in Christianity, or if they only somewhat believe in it, and even if they live in a shadow-version of post-Christianity, as most do, it does not change the fact that Europe is facing some serious issues. I submitted Jayda's case because it seems poignant to me. I would like to know how others think about this. What are your comments on her situation? What she is facing? That she spent months in solitary confinement 'with her Bible and with God' seems quite interesting to me. I wonder what that was about? What she thought about, how she sees herself and her mission.
Re: Catholicism vs Protestantism: an interesting conversation could ensue, no doubt, and you could explain your Catholic-critical position (as I assume you have). But that would be a sub-topic. What interests me is a response -- if one will be given -- to
what is going on in our present. And I opened this conversation (thread) trying to bring up the so-called 'Extreme' Right and their ideas about the European situation. (They are called 'extreme' but I do not see them in that way at all).
You surely must notice if you pay attention to the blogs, to YouTube and to the larger discussion going on, the social conflicts, the neo-totalitarianism of the so-called Left-Progressives, that there are people who are thinking deeply about things?
If you are not a Christian Universalist, how would you define yourself? I am deliberately trying to be a European Christian. I have a reason for thinking in specific terms. If you are interested, that can be talked about.
I have thought a great deal about what "faith" really is, actually. And I would say that my views are not so much "flexible" as "developed and developing." One thing faith is for sure: it's a commitment of personal trust, a commitment of self, which admits no hold-backs. Kierkegaard had this right: it's not faith by itself that saves: it's Who you have your faith in.
Similarly, I am trying to understand what my own faith-commitment is. But especially in the context I am trying to contemplate in this thread.
On the other hand, if I can get myself in order, there's just a chance I might be some use to somebody in a larger sphere. So what I could do is take care of my own faults first, and then see if I can help one other person, and if that all goes well, see if I could help a few more...and if I'm successful on all those levels, then hey, maybe I am fit to help shape Europe. But maybe not: few people are.
That may be so, but I do not think the issues and problems that (for example) Jayda sees herself as facing, only have to do with 'taking care of our own faults'. So, you seem to be speaking of interior work. It is a different domain than that of 'meta-politics'.
So I'm not waiting for the revival of "Europe" to save me, or my civilization. Some things are best left in the biggest hands.
Perhaps you will notice that I did not make an effort to establish that Europe (with or without quotes!) would 'save me' or anyone. I see it as an integral project. And I do mean each nation of Europe, and European peoples all together. I see a great deal of interchange going on as the Conservative or Traditional Right seeks to communicate with all the people open to it. Spain, France, Germany, Austria, Poland, Sweden, Holland: in these and many other countries
people are talking. We are attempting to examine and be capable of defining 'what is going on', what happened to us (the outcome of decadent processes) and what the solution might be, if one exists.
I also submit here this interesting conversation. Tim Kelly speaking with John Bruce Leonard of Arktos Press about
The Liberal Mirage.
Whether people here have the time to listen through I am not certain. But it touches on highly relevant ideas and goes to the center of the problems faced. (Tim Kelly is a 'practicing Catholic', for what that is worth).
"John Bruce Leonard is the Editor-in-Chief of Arktos. He studied philosophy, letters, and languages in a university curriculum based exclusively on the great books of the Western Tradition. After earning his degree in Liberal Arts John relocated to Italy, where he nourishes his ever-living preoccupation with the heritage and the future of Europe."
Here is his page at Arktos and there is a list of articles he's written.
The Problem of Christianity I have not read, but intend to.
Comments welcome.