Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 14, 2022 8:53 pmThat's incorrect on at least two points: one is that no large group of people such as you describe has ever been generally "Christian." But you disagree with that, I know. The second problem is the word "applicable," which could mean no more than "believed as a general delusion." In your usage, the sentence, "At one time, the flat earth theory was applicable to the entire world," would be true.
Your assertion is really quite absurd when examined. You are saying that all those who defined themselves as Christian, according to Immanuel Can, were not and are not in fact Christians. And what you are also saying is that you define who is a Christian and who is not a Christian. Thus Europe in its 1,000 year Christian historical period was not, in fact, Christian.
When I said "At one time the Christian religion could be said to have a universal applicability" what I meant was something different. What I meant is that the world was really & honestly seen through the Christian metaphysical picture: literally the heavenly world circling around us as the starry firmament. Literally an infernal region below our feet where, literally, hellish punishments were carried out. To understand Christianity, one must understand this *picture*. And during those times this picture was universally not just 'believed' but rather literally conceived as such.
Now, today, no one can see 'the world' in these terms. And the way we see the world is through an entirely different set of perceptual terms. And what we see is for us
absolute truth: literal perceptual and qualifiable realty. Try to see it differently, It is hardly possible. The point? About
perceptual systems.
In a significant sense the entire world conceived by Christians, and the view of Christians which arose out of their world-description, has simply been pulled out from under our feet.
It is in this sense that the specter of Christianity and the shadow of belief . . . remains. It haunts like a ghost. But it cannot be *absolutely and really real* possibly never again.
Now, I did not do this, and you did not do this, and there is no one to blame for it. But it is (very much) something that happened. And it is one of the numerous reasons why Christian belief stands on oddly shaky and spindly legs. (I am merely noting and emphasising that it is so).
AJ said: :2.) Jesus Christ and the entire idea that *I am the way and the truth and the life* requires and demands a challenge.
IC replies: "It comes with one: believe it yourself, and be saved; refuse it, and be alienated from God.
Except I did not say, and I do not say, that 'salvation' is not real or may not in fact be real. What I said is the entire topic has to be revisited and thought through. However, and simply to be honest with you, I can say that most all that you say on the topic I have determined is likely not true. And the reason is because I think that you are subscribed to an authoritarian relationship to God (that is, your god-concept).
Yet I do not deny the concept of god. I challenge, I guess this is the way to put it, specific hermeneutical spin.
It also comes with another challenge. After you've rejected the claim, you have to explain why the Man who was, and is pretty much universally recognized as, the greatest moral teacher who ever lived said it was true, when you must insist He was lying.
I would not say that I reject the claim. I would say that I see the claim in a certain context. And I believe a critical relationship to the assertion is better and also more mature.
Further, I am uncertain to whom the title of "the greatest moral teacher who ever lived" should be assigned. But Christianity taken on the whole, and within the entire Old World philosophical and ethical context, cannot be dismissed. I could say, and I often have said, that the Judaic
context (my word for 'entire manifestation') has produced some of the most refined ethical admonitions that I am aware of. And it is also possible, from my vantage, that Jesus Christ was a culmination of that or deeply representative of it. But that would not change my view that the declaration that Christians make about *the one and only way* is incorrectly based.
In this sense it is Logos that is referred to. Not to a specific source.
And I certainly could not insist that he was lying since, as it happens, everything he said was heard by others, and then recorded, and everything about him was woven into specific narratives. But note that what you say to me is that I am calling God a liar. You not only say it, you really & truly mean it.
You might think that by stating it like I do that I am opposed to those moral truths but this is not so. It is simply wise and sensible to understand how these events became stories and how these became concretized into what we understand to be
the Christian religion.
And further what you do is to demonstrate how you make this assertion of truth
your truth: a truth you wield and enforce. You aslo demonstrate why the statement of specific truth was framed as it was! "Either you believe what I recite to you is true or I will declare you damned!" This is one aspect of the function. And most see this pretty clearly. As I say (this is my opinion of course) I see it largely as an indication of Judaic imperialism. The way that (certainly theological) ideas can be and are wielded by a self-asserting authority for ulterior purposes.
See how that works out for you, I guess. I don't like your odds.
Let me put it this way. If Jesus Christ is real, and if God is real, then God is witness to everything I am saying. And God is witness to me in all my aspects. If I say that Jesus Christ must be
dethroned, I mean it in specific senses which I can explain fairly and reasonably. And I also will assume that before Jesus and before God that what I am saying both makes sense and has truth in it.
But in no sense do I mean that we should not be ethical beings who deeply think about all these things. Nor cease to be involved with the really important questions. Yet this is how you construe it. And what I am saying is that it is your misconstruing that must be seen and also challenged. And this is very different from saying a set of values must be devalued.
An honest comparison will include the question of what is the truth and what is false. Otherwise, you're just listing any superficial likenesses you can find.
We can start with the very very basic things: No garden of Eden, no ark. See there are entire edifices of *asserted things* and things that were said, by powerful authorities, that had to be believed. So the issue here is how Authority wields power. And what I suggest in your case is that you see how you also use theological assertion as a tool of power. The issue I outline is quite different from the one you imagine I am concerned about.
Now if we go down a list of truth-declarations as they pertain to Christian belief as it actually was conceived, a great deal gets punctured and deflated. So yes indeed! Just as you say "An honest comparison will include the question of what is the truth and what is false". By all means.
What you do here principally is to shuffle this important question out of sight. The fact is: you do not want to really look at it.
Yes, and now. As Paul wrote, "Behold, now is “a favorable time,” behold, now is “a day of salvation”. It won't always be. So yes, an urgent review, with a view to one's own disposition, must be undertaken. For "the Day of The Lord," as Peter says,"will come." And as Christ said, it will come "like a thief in the night," while everybody is not expecting it.
Here you are, I guess, speaking (admonishing) the frivolous multitudes, but you are not speaking with me. Simply because I am certain enough of my own involvement with moral and ethical questions and even with *the idea of salvation*. So what you do here is what many Christians do all the time: insulting my relationship to the important questions.
And you also want to bolster your personal stance with a dreadful admonition. That is, you either see what I insist you must see, or I will see you as damned. This is the ever-present background to any conversation with you.
Now would I ever recommend being lax or careless in regard to the most important questions? Have I ever said such a thing? I do not think so.
Therefore, review quickly. And make a choice.
Only enough to understand that alienating oneself from the Source of all good, health, relationship, happiness and light for all eternity is likely to turn out badly. That's enough.
No, that's irrelevant. The choice is personal, not by group.
The real question, the essential question, is just what is in fact and in truth "the Source of all good, health, relationship, happiness and light" both here in the earthly condition and as well in any hereafter. Do you notice how you begin to argue against some *dedicated atheist* of the sort that always confronts you? But you are not talking to me.
I definitely would never recommend, and certainly do not recommend, separating oneself from all that is good. Yet the larger question -- it is a series of questions -- still remains. There are many different ways and means to actualize this in one's life. And there are many very good examples of people who have done this and who do it.
You do not own the answer to the age-old question. So what I take at least some issue with is that you assume this role to yourself.
One must review, certainly, but I am uncertain if this is best done *quickly* or is better carried out slowly, thoughtfully and carefully.
One definitely must try to discover and construct oneself and all one does within "the Source of all good, health, relationship, happiness and light". And the purpose of these conversations is to define what that is and what it is not.
I also feel that it is not only nor even exclusively a merely or solely a 'personal choice'. I think that declaration can be explored fruitfully. It may have much more to do
with groups than exclusively with the solitary individual. But it is at this point that spiritual and religious questions dovetail with social and topical questions (and all the questions that are right in our faces today!)
No. You just have to ask, "Do I want to believe the truth, or do I want to stay with my own delusions?"
It is always the same with you! You assume that all other people, who do not think see and say just as you do, are deluded.
I do not see it like that --
at all.