Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 4:41 pmUniversalism is a religious ideology.
I had enough of a sense of what Universalism is.
When I said I was not sure why you brought in the term it was to indicate, somewhat obliquely, that I was not attempting to define a Universalism, nor refer to Universalist concepts, but rather to explain why the ideas and notions that pervade Johannine Christianity (and by that designation I mean a way of referring to certain strains of Christian theological ideas) must
necessarily play out, and be applicable, and extend to, all the manifest Universe. I do not know what to call that impetus. Yet in this world that impetus exists.
I certainly realize that the Christian world, and the Greek world, likely did not have much to say about the seemingly infinite size of our Universe, nor have I encountered speculative material in any Greek or other source where *other worlds*, other planets, other intelligent forms of life, were thought to exist, but I do this because it very nicely, and I think relevantly, helps to elucidate some important points. So, yes, I admit that I do believe it very probably that other forms of intelligent, biological life exist. Put another way I find it hard to conceive that such don't exist. But as of yet we seem not to have any proof. This is not to speculate about aliens, space-ships, UFO's and other such things. It is to develop an idea that has to do, I think profoundly, with Christian logic. And that is to say that if other worlds exist, and if there are intelligent beings in them, the conditions of life are likely similar to our own (life within a biological body and within natural and ecological systems such as that of our own Earth.)
And if such exist -- if races of intelligent beings have developed culture and civilization, and if there is 'spiritual need' of the sort that we understand to exist in our world -- then I do speculate that there will likely come to exist a similar
dynamic. The Creator of *all this*, having love for His created beings, and ultimate concern for their well-being, will similarly arrange for similar sorts of Revelation as happened with the Hebrews, and there will develop, similarly, a religious tradition that ushers in a similar salvific figure. I did not imply that this would be merely an impersonal force, and there is no reason to assume that it would not be similarly *personal*. That is, coming through men with unique personalities just like the Hebrew prophets.
Again I simply
restate the phrase: In the beginning was the Word. And just as you say the Word is the creative act. It brought about all that we see and know, and all that we cannot see and do not know, and because all of this is *its own*, it is in this sense the Owner of it. And if, as they say, there are billions & billions & billions of galaxies, it stands to reason that there are many many other 'peoples' if I can put it like this. Being created by God, being subject (I would assume?) to a Fall, and beings existing in that sort of 'spiritual and existential darkness' which would be
the other side of the term 'light' that you just defined.
Light would then have to *come into their world*. Not by my own speculative choice, but because it seems logical, or necessary, that it be so. But there is a similar likelihood that, as here, it would not be received with open arms, and for similar,
comparable reasons. And similar struggles between as is illustrated in: "For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against a spiritual wickedness in high places."
Because that is what the idea of Logos, as it is expressed in that Gospel, and in ancient thought (early Christian thought) seems to me, and quite soundly, and very logically,
to imply. It is not that I am here defining Universalist principles, it is that the very foundation of Christian ideas seem to speak to universal notions.
I do fully grasp that the Johannine Logos became the man Jesus Christ, and I do fully understand that He was rejected. And I also fully understand that this rejection set up, essentially, the entire second half of the story (to put it colloquially) which has yet to be fulfilled.
What I imply, consciously, intentionally, is that it is possible, and is it also likely? that in some other world -- the world I assume, with some reason, must exist -- is it possible and is it probably that the same process as is going on on Earth played out there? No, this is not to speculate about aliens floating mysteriously around in cigar-shapes space-vessels, it is to think about the manifest univserse, the created world in the larger sense, and ask (logical) questions about how, or if, these metaphysical notions apply to worlds beyond our own world.
Why speculate? Because it opens up the Ultimate Question of what, in fact, we are really talking about when we think about salvation, about a Messiah-figure, and this bears directly on the on-going conversation.