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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Wed May 11, 2022 10:19 pmAnd all this doesn't even touch the evidence of the millions of lives changed subsequently by the Person and events mentioned in these sources.

Does it really make sense to say, then, that Jesus was just "mythologized" by many very clever fabricators? And what do Jewish or pagan authors "get" out of confirming His real existence? You see, the conspiracy theory you're floating gets harder to believe the more you try to figure out how it could happen that way.

In the end, it's easier, simpler and more intellectually adequate to realize that it just didn't. There was -- and is -- a real Jesus.
I wonder if you can notice how you altered what I said (suggested) into something different than what I said and what I meant?

Here, again, your enthusiasm gets the better of you. I said that I do not personally have doubt that Jesus Christ was a real, historical person. That he had associates who were deeply affected by him. And I also indicated that it seems plain that this influence spread 'like wildfire' to use a popular metaphor.

I referred to A Dictionary of Christian Antiquities where very early strains and traces of Christian thought and practice are recorded. It is an amazing set of volumes. If one is interested in understanding early Christianity, that is a place to do research. Those who desired to become Christians were subject to a long (2 year) catechism-process. It was a serious affair. It was a spiritual affair, that is clear, but it was also a social affair and an affair of ideas (to the degree that the catechumens could entertain idea.

But I would, at least for our discursive purposes, draw a distinction between your assertion (that there is a Person, a God, who oversees the rebuilding of self that you describe as central to the Christian path), and the other side of the coin: a process undertaken and overseen by a community of people. My view is that just by having access to the documents, the written stories, the admonitions of Jewish Christian thought and ethics, and the desire to initiate changes in oneself, and all of this in a spiritual community with guides, is of itself a source for the 'rebuilding' that you describe as taking place when one is 'born again'. But a believer will always refer to events that occur -- dreams, mysterious events, 'synchronicities' and even miracles, as the way that that believer describes what is happening to him. This happens in all religions. Simply put these things happen to people.

I realize that what I am doing by offering this description is to seem to reduce the influence of a mystical spirit, a Holy Spirit, and a specifically Christian spirit that sends a beam of grace down to the devotee (this is a literalist metaphor). And it is true that what I do would naturally be offensive to the enthusiast. But I think that by doing this I am opening up the possibility of growth and renewal in such a way that growth & renewal is not owned by one specific ultra-mundane source. Because this is what your view, and Christian view, asserts: that there is one true source and if you are not aligned with it, you are lost. And ultimately this is how your discourse here functions: you either agree with what Immanuel (i.e. as God's Rep) says, or you end up in that eternal, alienated state.

Millions of lives have been, and are, transformed by becoming devotees of Krishna (the Vaishnava religion) which shares many many similar features with Christian enthusiasm. To become a bona fide devotee of Krishna also involves a long process of initiation; a radical change of life-style; and a complete revision of the ethical principles one lives by. The same is true if one becomes a Buddhist.

So again what am I up to with these musings? It is to try to distinguish between 'enthusiastic declaration' of a zealot and the potential facts of the issue which seem to allow more universalistic ways of understanding.

To the devotee -- and here I am on solid ground -- the object of their internal focus (Jesus, the Holy Spirit, Krishna, Buddha) is always presented by them as being *very real*. But again I would say, as I often do say, that the image that we hold (of something) is not necessarily the 'reality' of the thing that has influence and that transforms. What is that then? (I use a catch-all term in the word metaphysic).

This is where the idea of a divine inner spark or of God buried inside of one's own soul as something that must be sought and discovered and brought out is a useful idea. But I grant you that it is more mystical and somewhat less the stuff of mass-religious enthusiasm. No matter what these are difficult areas to work through and to arrive at clarity.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 2:42 pm Discourse with you is tremendously advantageous to me. You indicate, inadvertently, areas that I need to research more thoroughly.
I do believe that's a compliment. I take it as such.

Thank you. That's very generous of spirit.
And indeed as everyone knows, and as you also state, Catholicism is, truthfully, a blending of many different strains of tradition.
Does everyone know that? I believe you do, and I know I do. I wonder if the majority of Catholics, raised as they are to believe that the tradition of their group recedes all the way back to Peter, would even imagine how much syncretism has gone on. And as for secularists, I think most of them view "Christianity" from the outside, and are baffled by it. They find it convenient to conflate the whole confusing mass into one entity, and dub it "the Christian tradition," or some other such vague collective term, and then make generalizations about what the whole mass allegedly "did," in a given historical period, rather than to face the complexities involved in understanding what Christianity actually is.

I am, in fact, convinced that most of the talk in the press and schools, and even in universities, about "Christianity" is exactly of this type: overgeneralizing, collective, unnuanced and indifferent. Needless to say, I find it all also uncomprehending.

And erroneous, as well, of course.
Now, according to you...there can be only one reason why the religion spread so quickly.
Point to where I said this. You won't find I did.

In fact, I would say there are many such reasons, but admittedly, some more important than others.
I would suppose that you would describe that as the essential power of 'saving grace'.
I don't know how to interpret what you mean by the way you use that phrase. I wouldn't have said it that way myself. It's still possible I might agree, but I might not: I can't tell here.
Myself, I often tended to see the power of Christianity as having a great deal to do with the Jewish scriptures

Oh, I agree with that point, anyway.
...the religious performances of Benny Hinn.
Such people have done much to damage the reputation of Christianity. However, Mr. Hinn is not mindful of the judgments pronounced against men like him in Scripture itself. He has put himself in very deadly danger, nor merely for his many frauds but for his constant false teaching. So I will thank you not to conflate Christians with the man you see on the screen. And you will do yourself a service if you do not.
However, there is definitely another level and a far higher level when one considers enthusiasts like CS Lewis, John Henry Newman and GK Chesterton.
These are people who did not hesitate to deal intellectually with the life of faith. They make much more commendable models that does Mr. Hinn. But all human beings are fallible, of course; and not every word they said was right, either. We all have to stay humble about these things when we consider we are trying to speak about God. But yes, they serve as at least approximate examples of the sort of reasonable Christianity I would condone.
...you attempt to bridge two opposed epistemes, the ancient and the modern,
On the reverse, I find the simple bifurcation of history into these two categories insufficiently intellectual. To me, they look like hyperbolical mistakes, the sort of heuristic crutch invented by historians overwhelmed with the actual complexity of the data.

What I'm encouraging, in its place, is a more nuanced understanding of Christianity, one that does not do so much egregious violence to the data.
But let us examine, say, enthusiastic Dionysianism.

Ugh. Are we back to Nietzsche?
So I will share my own impression: there are, beyond doubt, tremendous sources of living water within the Jewish and Christian traditions. This cannot be denied. But neither can it be denied that the pagan religions and pagan pre-Christian philosophy express the same.
This isn't quite right.

You would be right to think, as Lewis said long ago, that it is incorrect to suppose that if a belief system is generally errant, that every single thing within it must also be wrong. That is not the case. And within various world traditions, you will find statements that are true, ideas that are worthwhile, and observations that are, in their own manner, wise. Lewis thinks that this is because all human beings have what he calls, "good dreams" from God, who gives all men signals of the truth, signals to which they attend in varying degrees, and thus may end up represented to varying degrees in various traditions. So far, so good?

At the same time, though, we must be mindful of one simple fact: that every deception is composed of both truth and falsehood. The most poisonous and potent lie is, in fact, the one that is closest to the actual truth in most details, but savagely wrong in the crucial one. What makes that the worst lie is that it will prove the most believable, the most apparently "wise" and "honest" every time we test its particulars; and then the danger is that we will assume, quite wrongly, that the totality is good or benign, when in fact, the totality of the same lie is death.

The principle is simple to illustrate. You've been a teenager, no doubt. And very early on, you probably learned how to "manage" your parents. If you were smart, you realized that to lie to them in any outrageous fashion would get you in trouble. The whole secret of lying was to make your lie plausible, subtle, and hard to detect. And in this, you understood that the truth would serve you well, if you kept as much of it as you possibly could in your explanations to your parents, and varied into a lie only when you absolutely had to. If you did that, then your lie was far more likely to go unquestioned and unchallenged.

So if you were late home, you did not try the excuse, "I was abducted by aliens." You were far too smart for that. Instead, you said, "My friend's car tire was low on air, and we had to stop to fix it." Unless your parents were witty enough to ask you, "Which tire" and to compare your answer with your friend's, they would not catch you.

So when one speaks of pagan religions, one should keep this simple principle in mind: the more they sound like the truth, the more danger exists in being deceived by their totality, if their totality is a lie. And this problem is compounded by the simple fact that it is often hard to extricate the lies in a tradition from the truth.

The only solution? One must refer to a standard of some sort to test each individual claim, and decide what the relative weight of each claim should be to the whole, and figure out what aspects of a given tradition are worth trusting, and which are in need of review. But what standard to take? That's a key issue.
But when one speaks of 'pagan religions' I'd be more inclined to speak about force of impetus or something irrational, like a longing for participation, a longing to feel oneself 'deeply connected', that is so central to our psychology, our human longing.

I don't have any objection to the saying that pagan religions or any religions are "central our psychology, our human longing." But what are we "longing" for? And why are we "longing" for it? If it's something we don't have now, why do we "long" for something that's impossible? And if we have it already, we would not be "longing" for it?

The question, though, is "Are all human traditions equally true?" They may all articulate human longings, but do they articulate them all truthfully? Are they all "barking up the right tree?" Or are some on the wrong track altogether?

Recent sociology of religion has some definite positions relevant to this. And one of the few things they agree on totally is what's called "incommensurabilty." Incommensurability means that we all now have to recognize, if we're honest at all, that not all world traditions can be reconciled into one thing, such that no tradition "loses" and none "wins" in a given conclusion. The reason for this decision -- made entirely by secular, not theological scholars -- is that detailed investigation of those traditions shows their various claims and precepts to be actually directly contradictory. So they cannot possibly all be true: and to treat them as such turns out to actually do an injury to all of them.

So the myth of universal unity in religions is now thoroughly dead, in all places but in the minds of leftover liberals of a dying age. Secular scholarship, not just religious scholarship, has proceeded beyond the simple-minded conflactions of the Frazers and such of a past day, and even beyond the Jungian architypes. We all agree now that we are dealing with a situation of incommensurability, not commensurability in traditions.
I gather that in your rather reduced and simplified version of things that Nietzsche is somehow responsible for the Nazi regime
In a way, yes.

Nietzsche is not responsible for positively advocating Nazism itself. That's too simplistic a way to tell the story of what he did. What he did instead was this: he set out to destroy the only meaningful basis of resistance to things like Nazism. And to the extent that he succeeded in doing that, he certainly raised and fed the dragon. His amoralism could have precipitated different attrocities, and I would argue it did that too. But in the case of the Nazis, they certainly found his terms, like ubermensch, and his contempt for Jews, women and those others he saw as inferior, or his idea of a superior morality that vacates all conventional morality, as fertile matter for creating their own disasters. They used him, but used him well for their purposes.

We don't know if Nietzsche would have complained about that. Plausible, since he didn't like Nazis, apparently. However, what Nietzsche did was so serviceable to them that we should not take his objections seriously, even if they came. From him and from Heidegger, they derived all the intellectual rationalizations they would ever need. He knocked all the walls flat; and he left nothing that could stand against Nazi attrocities when they arose to make use of him.

That he got what he may not have wanted is his own darn fault. That's what one gets for talking like a madman.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 4:11 pm Here, again, your enthusiasm gets the better of you.
Let's see if it does.

Here's somebody you're going to want to hear from, I'm sure. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvMyZK717gE

You like JP, don't you?
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 2:06 pm
Dubious wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 7:33 am When you say I know nothing of the bible you make an assumption of something you cannot know
Yeah, I can.

All I have to do is listen to what you say.

QED.
...but I haven't discussed or referred to anything IN the bible, only about you and your perverse belief in a book which you regard as the be-all and end all-of revelation which amounts to the following...

All those who do not believe in Jesus are destined for hell or oblivion.

This includes...

...all the Jews who never accepted Jesus as saviour and messiah. (Jesus really wouldn't be happy about that!)
...all those whose scripture differs from the bible; that is, they have their own religion.
---and what about those who never heard of Jesus in the first place...before or after his historical appearance?

Of course, you wouldn't have an explanation for these or any other kind of biblical anomalies, since the bible as the literal word of god cannot possibly contain any discrepancies which, if true, would make god the primal idiot of all time! I actually have a higher opinion of god's intelligence than you, if I limited myself into thinking there was one.

If imbecility, willful ignorance and deceit could be called immaculate, you'd be wearing a halo as one who has perfected the routine!
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 5:41 pm You like JP, don't you?
I appreciate him in numerous ways. More so when he doesn’t sob like a teenage girl 😭.

At the same time, and because he is a public figure and is 'captured' by his role, he cannot for that reason be *trusted*. He is too close to the general hysteria and indeed he is, himself, obviously hysteric (employing the Jungian definition). People like him (I think) get captured by the current they work in. His audience, and their madness (of the madness of crowds variety) has its hold on him.

As to the rest I will attend to the other parts of your posts when I can.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Dubious wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 7:48 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 2:06 pm
Dubious wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 7:33 am When you say I know nothing of the bible you make an assumption of something you cannot know
Yeah, I can.

All I have to do is listen to what you say.

QED.
...but I haven't discussed or referred to anything IN the bible
Precisely my point. You talk as if you know Christianity, but your descriptions show you know nothing.

You should read a book every now and then, instead of just colouring them. :wink:
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 8:26 pm
Dubious wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 7:48 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 2:06 pm
Yeah, I can.

All I have to do is listen to what you say.

QED.
...but I haven't discussed or referred to anything IN the bible
Precisely my point. You talk as if you know Christianity, but your descriptions show you know nothing.

You should read a book every now and then, instead of just colouring them. :wink:
as mentioned...

...but I haven't discussed or referred to anything IN the bible, only about you and your perverse belief in a book which you regard as the be-all and end all-of revelation.

In short, the domain of applicability - whose meaning you're clearly ignorant of - was not contextualized as a bible discussion. It was all about some of the ramifications of your beliefs, as was outlined, which you also failed to mention. I wonder why! :shock:

What you should do is attempt to escape from the Alcatraz your brain has been rotting in for how many years now, instead of stupidly marching to the rules commanded by 2000-year-old biblical protocols. But we know that such an upgrade into the 21st century won't happen! That would put into jeopardy any hope for a favorable final judgment into an afterlife.

Safer to stay put than live dangerously, nicht wahr! :wink:

That's so wise! I can only commend those who think they have something to learn from you. :roll:
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Dubious wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 1:55 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 8:26 pm
Dubious wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 7:48 pm

...but I haven't discussed or referred to anything IN the bible
Precisely my point. You talk as if you know Christianity, but your descriptions show you know nothing.

You should read a book every now and then, instead of just colouring them. :wink:
as mentioned...I haven't discussed or referred to anything IN the bible, only about you and your perverse belief in a book which you regard as the be-all and end all-of revelation.
Since you don't know what it is, having never read it, it's quite funny that you think you are still entitled to an opinion.

You're not. At least, not to one that any sane person should take seriously.
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 2:33 am
Dubious wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 1:55 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 8:26 pm
Precisely my point. You talk as if you know Christianity, but your descriptions show you know nothing.

You should read a book every now and then, instead of just colouring them. :wink:
as mentioned...I haven't discussed or referred to anything IN the bible, only about you and your perverse belief in a book which you regard as the be-all and end all-of revelation.
Since you don't know what it is, having never read it, it's quite funny that you think you are still entitled to an opinion.

You're not. At least, not to one that any sane person should take seriously.
How do you know I never read the bible because I have, but not all of it. We had to, whether we liked it or not. Based on the dearth of people who have agreed with you thus far, I'd reconsider your take on the sane part. I'm not the one who believes in Adam and Eve or that Jesus was the scapegoat for all our sins or that it's mandatory to believe in Jesus to be saved, etc. Such a pile of rubbish implies a discontinuity of reason if taken literally by someone who flushed all logic from his brain; it confirms how insane your beliefs really are. None of the theists I've encountered have so completely renounced reality as you have.

Your position as I see it, Nietzsche knows nothing about the bible, I don't know anything about the bible and anyone who questions the bible knows nothing about the bible. For you, there is no distinction between believing in the bible and knowing about the bible. In short, believing is the same as knowing, which doesn't combine to make any sense in regard to anything.

Anyway, I'll leave it to others to judge who's the nutcase.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Dubious wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 3:36 am How do you know I never read the bible...
Because you know squat about it.
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dontaskme »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 4:00 am
Dubious wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 3:36 am How do you know I never read the bible...
Because you know squat about it.
Well maybe that's because it's just another fairytale book referring to characters, places and events that happened in the past. Where is this past now - but always herenow in the mind. And is what gives the illusion of autonomy in the here and now present.

It's like looking back through a diary or photo album and mistaking the images and symbols for reality in the here and now.

There really is no story of you without a mirror, aka the image of emptiness.

You really don't..get it, do you.

You don't.

I know it's just too shocking for you to realise that you are god, god is not you..

You don't. You do/not.
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 4:00 am
Dubious wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 3:36 am How do you know I never read the bible...
Because you know squat about it.
I realize an impaired brain like yours requires a lot of repeating, but since its content was barely a discussed subject, how would you know that I know squat about it? I repeat, how could you possibly know without evidence and if there is, then why not show it instead of defaulting to your usual trite brainless responses when you don't know what to say.

You also accused Nietzsche of knowing squat about the bible compared to whom, with his history of having a father who was a very devout Lutheran pastor and later trained as a philologist in which he was outstanding, it's you who's firmly planted in the squat league which you've inhabited without the slightest progress since signing on to Philosophy Now.
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

attofishpi wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 11:53 am
Belinda wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 9:24 am Christianity is a religion which introduced the notion that there was and is a leader and rescuer who shows the proper ethical system to us.
Yes. It's quite a conundrum to exist (what will?) and yet be faced with the EVIL of God itself where we must be rescued from ITS punishment by believing in Christ!

To define God as love and not comprehend the other side of it as evil is short of sight.
Augustine defined evil as absence of good. If evil is absence of good then good is the default i.e. God.
Belinda
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 2:10 pm
Belinda wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 9:24 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Wed May 11, 2022 10:26 pm
I didn't say it had anything to do with Evolution at all. I said that both Evolutionism and Creationism presuppose an original mating pair.

But if you think otherwise, I'm happy to hear your alternate theory. Fire away.
You said...
No, not my theory...we know what I think. What I want is your alternate theory.

Or is it the case that you would rather reject what both the Bible and Evolutionism suppose to be the case, and would rather know nothing than have to agree with both?

If you have no alternate theory, that means you'd rather know nothing. :shock: That's kind of desperate, B., if you don't mind me saying.
Below I have copied and pasted my theory from my post of May 12 at 9.24 AM.
The exclusion from Eden is about the human condition as it was thousands of years ago , always has been, and still is. The human condition is such that, unlike any other species as far as we know, humans cannot depend on inherited instinct for their ethics but must , each man and each human collective, must decide what is good and what is evil.
The Eden myth is structured on the contrast between man and all other species. All species except man can remain innocent , as in Eden, of bad choices as they are unable to choose.

Christianity is a religion which introduced the notion that there was and is a leader and rescuer who shows the proper ethical system to us.
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Re: Christianity

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Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu May 12, 2022 7:57 pm
I appreciate him in numerous ways. More so when he doesn’t sob like a teenage girl 😭.

It's one thing to cry over real emotional things..but to cry over a 2000 year old dead jewish zombie is quite the spectacluar spectacular fake as fuck drama queen act. . and men like Immanuel Can ..think women are good at playing their role..well you ain't seen nothing yet..enter JP..the greatest showman alive...huh!


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