Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Jan 11, 2022 6:50 pm
I read
Catholic and Identitarian (Julien Langella) where he presents a sound argument in favor of recognizing and strengthening hierarchical divisions.
I see where the key difficulty in our communication of these ideas remains.
You see the word "Catholic," and read "Christian."
I do not. In fact, as I would point out, the Bible does not. And it does not do so, not merely because to equate First-Century Christianity with Fourth-Century Romanist syncretism would be anachronistic, but because the terms specifically spelled out in Scripture by which one is saved, born again, becomes a Christian, participates in
metanoia, etc. are NOT that, and are decidedly oppositional to accepted Catholic theology.
However, you are not wrong to say that is is the Catholic thing that has dominated European history. I do not contest that. However, I think it's badly misleading to call it "Christian." It is most decidedly not -- and a proper distinction is not only the only basis of fairness to Christians, but offers the only possibility for accurate historical analysis. For most of the features of Catholicism (it's political ambitions, its coercive nature, its particular doctrines) that produced an impact on the West are NOT shared by Christians.
But there the matter must rest. I cannot insist you recognize the difference, especially since theologically-contemptuous secular historians have shared so frequently in the error I see you as making. It's hard to argue for a separation between "Christian" and "Catholic" when so many historians have not invested the time to recognize it.
Arguing that Christianity, and Catholicism in particular, far from being an enemy to identitarianism, actually forms the necessary underpinning for true European identitarianism,
Maybe. But this is only done by conflating "Christian" with "Catholic," which, I insist, is badly misleading. However, taken as a claim about the latter rather than the former, I would say it's obviously true.
...while I agree that the doctrines of Christianity, when they are defined, can be presented to anyone, and to diverse peoples, each people will and indeed must make of these things the very cultural and social structures that they live in. And when this is done, over time, out of that arises what I refer to as *a Christian culture*.
This will still be a false term, however.
It makes no more sense to speak of "a Christian rock" or "a Christian tree" as to speak of "a Christian culture." The words don't even go together.
The definition that you hold to, which I regard as ultra-idealistic
I must say, I think you shouldn't.
The fact that it has been actualized so often and so trans-culturally should disabuse you of that impression. There are too many real Christians in the world for you to imagine that's so.
That edifice, on one hand, is Catholicism, which I have gathered you necessarily reject as false or badly founded, but on the other hand is literally the foundation in a significant sense of the cultures of Europe.
This, I suggest, is quite true: Catholicism had a massive formative effect on Europe. (Christianity did too, but vastly different effects.) And if we stick to the Catholic case, then your comments about "Indo-European" cultural specificity and so forth become much more accurate and reasonable.
But as you say,
This is not Judaism, nor Judeo-Christianity (an unfortunate term in my view) but a unique and different creation.
I agree totally. Catholicism is neither Judaism nor Judeo-Christianity. It is, in fact, a syncretism of pagan Romanism with pseudo-Christian elements, shaped in its latter stages by the Greek ideas of Plato, Aristotle and others, especially through Aquinas.
So I guess I have to accept that what interests me is in defining, and redefining, a specifically European Christianity,
Say "Catholicism." For that is all you are actually talking about there.
I do not think that this means either that I am forced to differ with your view of what metanoia is, except insofar as this may be a crucial element for you.
Well, I'm only saying what the Biblical view is.
In Christian theology, metanoia is commonly understood as "a transformative change of heart; especially: a spiritual conversion." The term suggests repudiation, change of mind, repentance, and atonement; but "conversion" and "reformation" may best approximate its connotation.
That's a good definition, so far as it goes. It does not go far enough.
One way in which it fails is that it does not adequately specify that
metanoia, Biblically considered, is far more than the very ordinary human experience of "changing one's own mind," or "repudiating a view," or something like that. It is a
being-changed of one's mind, but the actual, dynamic renewal by the Spirit of God -- and as such, is not at all analogous to ordinary human cognitive changes, nor is it simply accessible to ordinary men.
...the Original Programmer...
Ugh.
I hate the "Computer Programmer" metaphor. It badly mutilates the concept. However, it does serve a grain of truth, in that the
metanoia of which I speak is produced "outside of the human program." However, unlike computer programs, it is not simply inflicted upon a dumb terminal. It is consensual, and is consequent upon the human response to the Divine initiative. In all, it is a thoroughly interpersonal, not mechanical, kind of transformation.
If Jesus Christ is seen as a person, with human desires, with specific perspectives, with likes and dislikes, and like us with bias and prejudice and preference, I think that the idea of Logos is weakened, and too personalized.
Well, it would be -- if you make of Jesus Christ somebody with "prejudices," "bias," and views that are mere "perspectives," then yes, that would be diminishing. This is not, however, the way the Bible depicts Christ.
Let us reverse the case. Do you regard "being a person" as a good thing or a bad thing, for human beings? If somebody said to you, "Tom is very much a person," would you take them to be complimenting or insulting Tom? Is the fact that human beings have personhood as their feature anything that offers an advance over, say, rocks, trees and animals, or do you regard personhood as merely a neutral fact?
If personhood is a desirable quality, one that not only lifts human beings above the animals but also makes one human being more authentic and desirable than another, then why would you think that an impersonal God would be better than the Personal God? Why would you ever think that a "god" that had no standing on morals, no plans and intentions, no purposes in Creation, was incapable of attitudes or of love, and so forth, was better than a God that had all these qualities?
If God has made personhood our best quality, then where do you think He "got the idea" from?

Is it not obvious that any personhood we have must be, at best, but the pale and distant echo of the true Personhood possessed by the Creator Himself?
If Logos is real, and pervades the manifest Universe, on some other planet in the manifest Universe, whether in the deep past or the future, will embrace the Logos-Idea through their own matrix.
I think maybe a noun is missing from this sentence. I can't quite decode it. There doesn't seem to be a subject for the verb "will embrace" or noun-referent for the pronoun "their."
Can you reword that thought for me?