If you saw the movie, you know where that got her.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mUxLZWWRKUI
Have you considered that your personal belief in what it is to have a Christian belief is wrong? So far you have proved that you make generous assumptions based on vague wording within the bible, hence your entire concept of what denotes Christianity is extremely skewed.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 5:04 pmAll you're saying here, really, is that if we use the wrong definition of "Christian," it's quite possible to make any statement, no matter how absurd, about what "Christians" have believed.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 3:47 pm ...that in fact Christianity of that period and time did have a panentheistic understanding of divinity's penetration of the manifest world.
Carefully. And on an ongoing basis.attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 10:42 pm Have you considered that your personal belief in what it is to have a Christian belief is wrong?
For example, your belief that the following opening line of Genesis translates as God created the universe, indeed everything. All one could extend to assume from this line is that God created the Earth, and the stars above (if one is to consider 'heaven' refers to the canopy - as you stated, what is visible), NOT the universe.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 12:37 amCarefully. And on an ongoing basis.attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 10:42 pm Have you considered that your personal belief in what it is to have a Christian belief is wrong?
On what basis would you say you have reason to think it's wrong?
No, I'm clear on that. I know enough about idioms and Biblical exegesis to know for sure I'm right about that one. I'm quite sure you've not looked far enough into it to know, so I'm not going to contest it with you; but you're going to find out I'm right, if ever you do inform yourself.attofishpi wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 12:41 amFor example, your belief that the following opening line of Genesis translates as God created the universe, indeed everything.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 12:37 amCarefully. And on an ongoing basis.attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 10:42 pm Have you considered that your personal belief in what it is to have a Christian belief is wrong?
On what basis would you say you have reason to think it's wrong?
Well, it should be easy for you then. Since everything you conceive of regarding Christianity comes from the bible, then please provide examples from it where one can consider God created everything.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 1:48 amNo, I'm clear on that. I know enough about idioms and Biblical exegesis to know for sure I'm right about that one.attofishpi wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 12:41 amFor example, your belief that the following opening line of Genesis translates as God created the universe, indeed everything.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 12:37 am
Carefully. And on an ongoing basis.
On what basis would you say you have reason to think it's wrong?
As I wrote:attofishpi wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 1:53 amWell, it should be easy for you then. Since everything you conceive of regarding Christianity comes from the bible, then please provide examples from it where one can consider God created everything.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 1:48 amNo, I'm clear on that. I know enough about idioms and Biblical exegesis to know for sure I'm right about that one.attofishpi wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 12:41 am
For example, your belief that the following opening line of Genesis translates as God created the universe, indeed everything.
Surely you can provide chapter and verses to support your claim that God created the universe?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 2:11 amAs I wrote:attofishpi wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 1:53 amWell, it should be easy for you then. Since everything you conceive of regarding Christianity comes from the bible, then please provide examples from it where one can consider God created everything.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 1:48 am
No, I'm clear on that. I know enough about idioms and Biblical exegesis to know for sure I'm right about that one.
"I'm quite sure you've not looked far enough into it to know, so I'm not going to contest it with you..."
I did. You immediately denied it said what it clearly says.attofishpi wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 2:24 amSurely you can provide chapter and verses to support your claim that God created the universe?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 2:11 amAs I wrote:attofishpi wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 1:53 am
Well, it should be easy for you then. Since everything you conceive of regarding Christianity comes from the bible, then please provide examples from it where one can consider God created everything.
"I'm quite sure you've not looked far enough into it to know, so I'm not going to contest it with you..."
They share certain similarities, however, pantheism does not allow for a transcendent, personal (self-aware) Creator of the universe, whereas panentheism does.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 1:26 am The notion of monotheism seems sound and also necessary. But panentheism is not dependent on a pantheistic concept, is it?
Correct.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 1:26 am One could be panentheistic yet monotheistic it seems to me.
I don't know about Judaism, but Christianity most definitely does.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 1:26 am I’d have thought that Judaism and Christianity both accommodate panentheistic notions.
Hence, a clear accommodation of panentheism."...For in him we live, and move, and have our being..."
I never denied it said what it clearly said. Indeed, it is you that is in denial...you are deceiving yourself which is rather sadImmanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 2:38 amI did. You immediately denied it said what it clearly says.attofishpi wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 2:24 amSurely you can provide chapter and verses to support your claim that God created the universe?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 17, 2022 2:11 am
As I wrote:
"I'm quite sure you've not looked far enough into it to know, so I'm not going to contest it with you..."
Yes, but when he found her did she love him warts and all? Can the woman he found love a human being, or can she love only a Heavenly ideal?Nick_A wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 9:19 pmI remember reading once of a man who had no faith but for some reason needed a woman to have faith in him.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 9:04 pmI imagined the one pictured in the video as being you (it called to mind some scene out of Repo Man!) If so, to have the visual is oddly helpful. It helps to understand better where you are. You (literally) embody the fact that you have no faith at all of any sort. I'd guess there is nothing to have reverence for. It becomes a recital. And the recital is the affirmation. And the medium is the message.promethean75 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 7:22 pm "As I live, says the Lord, to Me every knee will bow, And every tongue will give praise to God"
Empty promises, because god is empty just like me
Only that he could be.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Mar 15, 2022 9:07 pmWell, according to Uwot God is -- I don't know how he does this -- an old boot.
Not really Gus; it's fairly standard to concede that anything not logically impossible could obtain.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Mar 15, 2022 9:07 pm(But that is Uwot, something of an oddball as philosophers go).
Well, it's not logically impossible.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 3:47 pm Once again -- it will always come up -- I differ with what you propose here in a practical, real-world sense. I regard Christianity (and I will also include Judaism) not as abstract, idealistic theological creations, but as things that can only be studied in context.
By way of observation: I have noticed that your arguments, when challenged on a particular, often take this tack: you are, as they say, arguing against a Straw Man. I did not say that there is nothing behind 'the theological creations' and I do not say they are mere fictions, and I definitely would never say that in theological ideas that there is no truth. And I have never employed Christ as a metaphor for natural human goodness.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 5:04 pm That begs an important question, though.
It doesn't even ask whether or not there's anything real behind the "theological creations." It rules, automatically, that they are some kind of mere fiction, or some sort of construct that implicates things other than those things the theological statements purport to speak about, such as, perhaps, the anthropological utility for collective life of a common code (even if based on nothing).
The crucial question remains: in the theology, is there any truth? And if there is any, is it literal truth, or is it merely something that the literal level completely misunderstands, and always has misunderstood, because it's not literal at all, and that now has to be drawn out by the ingenuity of modern or postmodern analysis?
Does Christ used as a metaphor for natural human goodness mean the same thing as Christ, the Saviour of a lost World?
The 'literal level' does the best it can within difficult circumstances that always require adaptation and I suppose concession. It operates in relation to an impossible ideal of perfection -- there is no Christian who can pull it off perfectly and even the saints are flawed -- and yet the best of the best do the best they can. My view is that each historical period must be examined *for what it is* not so much for what it should have been.And if there is any [any truth], is it literal truth, or is it merely something that the literal level completely misunderstands, and always has misunderstood, because it's not literal at all, and that now has to be drawn out by the ingenuity of modern or postmodern analysis?
As I say, and as I can only say because it is (I suppose I will have to say) logically necessary, there is no single human authority capable of deciding who is 'saved' and who is not saved. However, and this is common among some Evangelicals, the notion of salvation is a managed concept in the sense that they do say, and with a great deal of assumed authority, that they define salvation and also what salvation is not. So they seem to set themselves up as mediators of it. (It must be said of course that the notion of 'managed salvation' definitely operates in the Catholic religious modality.)Christ, the Saviour of a lost World