Christianity

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henry quirk
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Re: Christianity

Post by henry quirk »

Belinda wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 10:47 amGod has often been co-opted for purposes of social control,
Yep, but what hasn't been co-opted for control?

The solution -- simple, but difficult -- is stop givin' yourself over to authority.

I'm not much of a quoter, but I've been readin' this guy lately...

A Christian anarchist has no business belonging to such a reactionary organization (the Catholic Church]). I do not believe in original sin, indulgences, the infallibility of the pope, or obedience to any church official if it is against my conscience. I am not interested in earning "merit" or in being saved by priestly incantation. Ammon Hennacy

There are Christians who'd declare Hennacy a heretic, even as they work damn hard to bury themselves in the will of Christ, as offered by a priest, preacher, ecumenical council.

I'm not Christian, and my resistance at bein' told what to do is legendary, so my view is skewed, but -- as I say up-thread -- Christianity is about one man's relationship with God, not where he sits in relation to other men. He, the Christian man, has an obligation not only to his Maker, but to himself, to suss out what is what (the Bible, for example, may be God's personal letter to him, but it has passed thru many hands, and some of them hands, no doubt, were attached to unscrupulous types willin' and capable of subvertin' the text to their own ends...the Christian man must exercise discernment). He has to tease out what's real from the bullshit.

As I say: there's always someone lookin' to get into your head. You have to be the gatekeeper.
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

henry quirk wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 2:42 pm
Belinda wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 10:47 amGod has often been co-opted for purposes of social control,
Yep, but what hasn't been co-opted for control?

The solution -- simple, but difficult -- is stop givin' yourself over to authority.

I'm not much of a quoter, but I've been readin' this guy lately...

A Christian anarchist has no business belonging to such a reactionary organization (the Catholic Church]). I do not believe in original sin, indulgences, the infallibility of the pope, or obedience to any church official if it is against my conscience. I am not interested in earning "merit" or in being saved by priestly incantation. Ammon Hennacy

There are Christians who'd declare Hennacy a heretic, even as they work damn hard to bury themselves in the will of Christ, as offered by a priest, preacher, ecumenical council.

I'm not Christian, and my resistance at bein' told what to do is legendary, so my view is skewed, but -- as I say up-thread -- Christianity is about one man's relationship with God, not where he sits in relation to other men. He, the Christian man, has an obligation not only to his Maker, but to himself, to suss out what is what (the Bible, for example, may be God's personal letter to him, but it has passed thru many hands, and some of them hands, no doubt, were attached to unscrupulous types willin' and capable of subvertin' the text to their own ends...the Christian man must exercise discernment). He has to tease out what's real from the bullshit.

As I say: there's always someone lookin' to get into your head. You have to be the gatekeeper.
Some authorities are big liars that pretend they have power over you when actually they don't. But you have to obey the authority with the secret policemen.
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henry quirk
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Re: Christianity

Post by henry quirk »

you have to obey the authority with the secret policemen
Why?
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Re: Christianity

Post by DPMartin »

henry quirk wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 2:42 pm
Belinda wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 10:47 amGod has often been co-opted for purposes of social control,
Yep, but what hasn't been co-opted for control?

The solution -- simple, but difficult -- is stop givin' yourself over to authority.

I'm not much of a quoter, but I've been readin' this guy lately...

A Christian anarchist has no business belonging to such a reactionary organization (the Catholic Church]). I do not believe in original sin, indulgences, the infallibility of the pope, or obedience to any church official if it is against my conscience. I am not interested in earning "merit" or in being saved by priestly incantation. Ammon Hennacy

There are Christians who'd declare Hennacy a heretic, even as they work damn hard to bury themselves in the will of Christ, as offered by a priest, preacher, ecumenical council.

I'm not Christian, and my resistance at bein' told what to do is legendary, so my view is skewed, but -- as I say up-thread -- Christianity is about one man's relationship with God, not where he sits in relation to other men. He, the Christian man, has an obligation not only to his Maker, but to himself, to suss out what is what (the Bible, for example, may be God's personal letter to him, but it has passed thru many hands, and some of them hands, no doubt, were attached to unscrupulous types willin' and capable of subvertin' the text to their own ends...the Christian man must exercise discernment). He has to tease out what's real from the bullshit.

As I say: there's always someone lookin' to get into your head. You have to be the gatekeeper.
well said
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henry quirk
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Re: Christianity

Post by henry quirk »

well said
Thanks... 👍
Nick_A
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Re: Christianity

Post by Nick_A »

henry quirk wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 2:42 pm
Belinda wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 10:47 amGod has often been co-opted for purposes of social control,
Yep, but what hasn't been co-opted for control?

The solution -- simple, but difficult -- is stop givin' yourself over to authority.

I'm not much of a quoter, but I've been readin' this guy lately...

A Christian anarchist has no business belonging to such a reactionary organization (the Catholic Church]). I do not believe in original sin, indulgences, the infallibility of the pope, or obedience to any church official if it is against my conscience. I am not interested in earning "merit" or in being saved by priestly incantation. Ammon Hennacy

There are Christians who'd declare Hennacy a heretic, even as they work damn hard to bury themselves in the will of Christ, as offered by a priest, preacher, ecumenical council.

I'm not Christian, and my resistance at bein' told what to do is legendary, so my view is skewed, but -- as I say up-thread -- Christianity is about one man's relationship with God, not where he sits in relation to other men. He, the Christian man, has an obligation not only to his Maker, but to himself, to suss out what is what (the Bible, for example, may be God's personal letter to him, but it has passed thru many hands, and some of them hands, no doubt, were attached to unscrupulous types willin' and capable of subvertin' the text to their own ends...the Christian man must exercise discernment). He has to tease out what's real from the bullshit.

As I say: there's always someone lookin' to get into your head. You have to be the gatekeeper.
Simone Weil said basically the same thing.
Religion in so far as it is a source of consolation is a hindrance to true faith; and in this sense atheism is a purification. I have to be an atheist with that part of myself which is not made for God. Among those in whom the supernatural part of themselves has not been awakened, the atheists are right and the believers wrong.
- Simone Weil, Faiths of Meditation; Contemplation of the divine
the Simone Weil Reader, edited by George A. Panichas (David McKay Co. NY 1977) p 417
Blind belief is a dead end road as is blind denial. Atheism can demonstrate what is wrong but how does a seeker of truth awaken to find what is objectively true or what can be experienced as the good described by Plato
"We must make the individual man aware of his conscience so that he understands what it means that only a few will survive the next war. This man will be the cosmic man." Albert Einstein, in Einstein and the Poet – In Search of the Cosmic Man by William Hermanns (Branden Press, 1983, p. 99.)
What is conscience and how is it distinct from conditioned beliefs? If Einstein is right unless there are sufficient human beings having experienced their conscience, war is inevitable. Conscience has become atrophied in Man and like a muscle never used, become useless. The Gods of the Great Beast are politics and secular religion. Who can defy the gods and strive to awaken the latent power of conscience to respond to truth? Not many. The gods of the great beast are too strong. A person needs help and one can only learn from one who knows. But how are they found when the way is blocked by countless charlatans serving the great beast?
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Re: Christianity

Post by Nick_A »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 12:36 am
Nick_A wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:01 pmWhat you desire to do is to apply a very strict limit to who is and who is not a Christian.
OK, but what cut-off date would you accept before which one remains *a Christian*?
I didn't write that but will answer it anyway. The first step is the desire to be Christian. The second step is the discovery that we cannot be Christian. Now we are pre-Christian and become aware of the power of sin or how we "miss the mark". The third step is to become capable following in the precepts of Christ; when a pre Christian becomes a Christian.

We exist in a triune universe. Existence is determined by the integration of three forces. Normal human/animal reason functions by two forces: yin and yang for example. The "dis is here and dat's dere" binary reason cannot understand Christianity much less the universe. But the experts continue to try and turn in circles.
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Re: Christianity

Post by promethean75 »

"The person who makes that statement believes it to be true and acts as if it is true. Therefore, it is no different than a fact for him/her."

Thank you, William James.

"Actually, the principles they live by are Christian."

I know that's what I'm saying the problem is. If left to the Christian anarchist, who might claim all we need to know is in the Bible, an advanced world of this size would fall into complete disarray if it took his advice.

It's really a rather strange style. A naive and unworkable political theory mixed with some superstitious beliefs of a few middle easterners from thousands of years ago.

Mannie sir we aren't on the same page (same book tho) about moral epistemology. Imma non-cognitivist emotivist who believes that value judgements express no facts about the world, and that 'right' and 'wrong' are such value judgements made in statements that can't be either true or false.

"Abortion is bad" expresses and demonstrates nothing about the act of abortion, but only the attitude and preference of the utterer.

An abortion can be too long, or decently priced, or difficult to find services for, or inconvenient, or performed on a Wednesday, etc., but it can't be 'bad' categorically.

It can be hypothetically 'bad' tho; if it will piss your mom off or get you fired and your objective is to not piss your mom off and keep your job, it would be 'bad' to get an abortion.
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Re: Christianity

Post by iambiguous »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:23 pm
iambiguous wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 8:19 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue May 24, 2022 4:47 am "Impotent," then. Nothing you assert is more than a personal feeling, you say?
It's not just my "personal feeling" that the Pope resides in the Vatican.
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue May 24, 2022 4:47 am It's a merely empirical question.
Well, guess what: I'm looking for empirical answers!!! Of which [so far] you have provided me with...none.
Not true. Check out the videos I sent you.
How about this...

You note the video where actual empirical proof of the Christian God residing in Heaven is most powerful. Something that will then entice me to view all of the other 15 videos. And trust me, if the proof is there, I'll view them.

Well, unless, of course, by empirical proof you mean proof that is merely up to your own "standards".
For that matter, I have never met Joe Biden or Vladimir Putin. I merely suggest that the proof of their existence is...substantial? Sans sim worlds and the Matrix and solipsism, of course.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:23 pmFar more people have believed in God than believe in both of those put together. That won't make any difference to you, of course, but it's true.
Over and over and over again in regard to God and religion, I note that crucial distinction between what someone believes "in their head" about them and what someone is able to demonstrate that all rational men and women are obligated to believe in turn. For example, the way science works. And over and over and over again, you're content to let it all come back merely to what you do believe in your head.

Does anyone else here think that the existence of Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin ultimately comes down to what you believe about it in your head?

Your schtick here [in my opinion] is to argue that the empirical evidence is there. It's there for anyone willing to abide by your own "standards of evidence". And if they don't accept that they are, what, the equivalent of what Henry calls the "dumb motherfuckers" here? It's just another "intellectual" equivalent of "the Christian God must exist because it says so in the Bible; and the Bible must be true because it is the word of the Christian God". And around and around you go. Providing us with nothing [so far] that even comes close to the evidence folks can evince to establish that the Pope resides in the Vatican.
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri May 27, 2022 6:15 pmIf your morals are only subjective, then they are impotent with regard to anybody else. There is no reason why something particular to only you and your perspective should be regarded as binding -- or even necessarily interesting -- to another human being.
I couldn't agree more. But not every subjectivist is "fractured and fragmented". Many are willing to embrace democracy and the rule of law
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue May 24, 2022 4:47 am That changes nothing.
Really? Tell that to those living in Russia or China or North Korea.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:23 pm I mean about the question of whether or not morality is objective. Putin or Ji's belief that X is a moral value doesn't make it one. And no matter how many people follow them, their values don't become objectively true.
Right, but when they turn it all around and insist that just because you believe that the Christian God provides us with an objective morality doesn't make it so, you vehemently insist that, unlike theirs, your values really, really, really are the One True Path. Then to prove it you quote John 3:16.

And what makes Putin and Xi Jinping particularly scary is that they are part and parcel of the very, very rich and powerful few who own and operate the global economy. Their philosophies of life more or less revolve around two "principles":

1] "show me the money"
2] "what's in it for me?"

The self-righteous authoritarian mind in a nutshell:
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:23 pm It's an objective fact that their bad values exist; it's not an objective fact that they value the right things.
Don't believe their values are bad and IC's values are good? Watch the videos.
How about you? If you were in a position of power in any particular community, what would the "rules of behavior" be predicated on if not your own dogmatic, authoritarian interpretation of "what would Jesus Do?" Or would you be open to moderation, negotiation and compromise in regard to, say, abortion? Or buying and selling bazookas?

You claim not to be a theocrat yet seem to dismiss democracy and the rule of law unless it is based on "the objective moral truth".

So, which is it? How would you go about rewarding and punishing behaviors in a community where you were in power? Ecumenically?

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:23 pm An absurd hypothetical. I'm not.
Come on, admit it. You fall back on this in order to actually avoid responding to the points I raise above. You claim you are not a theocrat. Okay, note for us the community that you would construe to be the "best of all possible worlds". Is it not one in which the word of God -- the Christian God -- prevailed across the board?
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:23 pm In any case, Christianity is apolitical, not political.
Right. the Christian God has the power to judge you such that for all the rest of eternity you can either be saved or damned. But, nothing political about that, right?
“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life."

See! Back again to that!!

If you don't believe in Jesus Christ -- God in the flesh? -- no immortality, no salvation. So, Henry and other non-Christians die and it's Judgment Day for them. What then?

Well, of course: it's whatever your own existential leap of faith to the Christian God provides in the way of an "answer". Your own private and personal answer that you merely have to believe "in your head" to make it true.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:23 pm That is what the Bible says. So it's a conflict between you and God if you think otherwise.

Fight it out. See where it gets you.
Again, this is just you in "wiggle, wiggle, wiggle" mode. You snip out a fragment of what I posted and ignore altogether the fate of Henry and all the other non-Christians on Judgment Day. After all, you and Henry see eye to eye on many political conflagrations. So, sure, by all means cut him some slack, God.

Okay, but, come on, what does this vague general description spiritual passage have to do with crunch time and all those who are not Christians -- or even construe Christians to be infidels -- are being judged for passage into Heaven?
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:23 pm Can you read?

If you can, you have your answer.
In other words, that's your answer and you're sticking to it.
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue May 24, 2022 4:47 am You know what you need to do? You need to read the Bible for yourself. It's much more plain than you imagine on these topics.
I did read the Bible. From cover to cover. But that was some years ago. Now, you say the Bible covers the part about those who are not Christians -- or even war against Christians -- on Judgment Day. Okay, give us the John 3:16 rendition of that..
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue May 24, 2022 4:47 am :D I do not believe you. I simply cannot.

The degree of bad information you have forbids me to think you have. If you knew the Bible even marginally well, you would not be asking such basic questions, nor would you be in doubt of what the answers are.
Okay, if it comforts you to believe that I did not read the Bible from cover to cover back in the days when I was a devout Christian myself, fine. Think what you will. But let's get back to Romans I:

"What admirable answer? What's Paul got to tell us about the fate of those who at death had never even heard of Christianity or Jesus Christ."

Or the fate of Henry and the Jews and Muslims and Hindus and all the other non-Christians.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Nick_A wrote: Sat May 28, 2022 11:01 pmIf a culture legalizes late term abortion for convenience up to the point of birth, is it considered a Christian culture? I would say no.
Sorry for my previous misquoting error. I have no idea how it happened.

My question was: What is the cut-off date before which (when aborting) one can do so and remain Christian? Christian philosophy and the metaphysics behind it make abortion extremely problematic morally, that much I surely understand. My irony is that though late term abortion truly horrifies, earlier abortion is more or less the same (speaking technically).

In my recent conversations with IC I am merely pointing out when certain cultural shifts took place. And why. These opened up whole new worlds of activity and fulfillment in a thousand different areas. It also led to the devolution in established ethical values. It is a complex process that cannot be looked at through black and white filters.
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henry quirk
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Re: Christianity

Post by henry quirk »

Simone Weil said basically the same thing.
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henry quirk
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Re: Christianity

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left to the Christian anarchist, who might claim all we need to know is in the Bible, an advanced world of this size would fall into complete disarray if it took his advice.
Didn't I address this up-thread?

*looks up-thread*

Well, I'll be damned, I did address it up-thread.

And: an advanced world of this size would fall into complete disarray if it took his advice.

Does the world, with its clash of slavers and slaver states, with its disintegratin' and degradin' cultures and movements, with its hodge-podge of commie and commie-light economies, does this world appear, to you, arrayed?

Even if the Christian Anarchist throws it all on the Bible, on God (which, of course, he doesn't), the result couldn't be any more screwy than what we have now.
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iambiguous
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Re: Christianity

Post by iambiguous »

Note to Henry:

You will accept Jesus Christ as your personal savior!

Or you will be damned!!

Of course, I'm only paraphrasing IC and John 3:16. :wink:
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dontaskme »

Arthur Schopenhauer — 'Life swings like a pendulum backward and forward between pain and boredom.'

But alas, there is hope..there is a plan...there is a place called heaven...there's always something better than this you know, there's always somewhere better, always, never give up hope, just believe, that there is, really there is....all you have to do is believe...have faith, have trust...and all will be revealed to you...you do believe me don't you? oh come on now, why don't you believe me? I'm not kidding, there's a special place for people like you .. :roll: :? Don't you realise that even you, yes, even you can become God's little shoeshine boy just like me.

The proof is right here on this forum folks...
'Immanuel Can' the wannabe 'Jordan Peterson' has been specially designated to help you with this embarrassing unfortunate predicament that ''Life really does swing like a pendulum backward and forward between pain and boredom.''

God in his wisdom sought tirelessly and relentlessly to undo his monumental catastrophic error by appointing some specially nice people, who were willing to give up their entire lives to reside in some mental prison that dreamt up an endless array of 'philosophical thought' that was always of their own making, just in case it was needed to assuage the many realisations made by intelligent people, that their entire life swings between hope and despair, in the disbelief that reality is indeed unfathomable, a reality you didn't even choose or consent to be a part of in the first place.

But that's ok, we can always make up some Bs story that will make sense attaching some sort of meaning and purpose to the awful conundrum. You are a sinner, not because it was your fault, but because Satan the devil said you are a sinner.

But then Satan came from the exact same place God came from. I mean, what other place is there?

Seriously, then you wonder why humanity is so fucked up, spending most of their lives wishing it was over.


.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 1:50 am Strict binary divisions do not work in many situations.
And in some, like predications of existence, they're the only thing that does work.
For the Bible, one is saved or one is not.
Salvation from what? To what? [/quote]
From sin, to God. It's right there in the text...you can't miss it, if you read it.
The idea of a 'world beyond' that is better and more real than this world, became untenable and indeed an unhealthy idea to hold to.
Well, that's Marx's old canard. But Marx was wildly wrong there. Quite the contrary: it's only the idea that the consequences of this world persist that makes sense of the present at all. I can easily prove that. And it's nearly a universal truism, as well, one of the few things that the Eastern and Western traditions tend to all agree on.
Whether or not I think it will change nothing. It will still be the same, either way.
Yes, I do understand how binary thought-systems function.[/quote]
It has nothing to do with binaries. It has to do with reality. Reality has been defined as, "The thing that pushes back against your wishes." That's a good insight -- there's something "out there" that thwarts our imaginings, that limits our ambitions and resists our projects.

That thing is reality.
For the Bible, one is saved or one is not.
Yes, but there are no other options available to you,
Why should one prefer the having of lots of "options" to the having of a direct "truth"?

That's especially a bizarre idea when the "options" in question are mutually contradictory; because not more than one of the contradictors options is even capable of being right. And again, that's not binary; one might have a milllion options, and if they contradict one another, the one thing we know for sure is that 999,999 of them are bound to be wrong -- and that's true even if we don't know which if the options actually is the correct one. That's just a fact of logic.
IC: You'll have to say who you're talking about. I'm unfamiliar with the case you seem to have in mind.
An entire wave that moved through Europe between approximately 1880 and 1930 (to choose general dates).
Can you be more specific? Do you mean the Fin De Siecle? Or were you thinking of the run-up to the First World War? But then, why include the Depression and not World War 2?
AJ: That is one aspect. But there is another and I think it has to do with what became necessary, within a post-Christian culture, for people interested in 'knowing themselves'.
IC: That's very easy to answer: they won't...To the degree that one loses association with God, one loses also awareness of oneself. And you can read about this in the current range of sociologists and psychologists who have remaked on the way the postmodern self is dissolving...from Walter Truett Anderson, to Anthony Giddens, to Zygmunt Bauman, to Kenneth Gergen, to Christopher Lasch, to Roger Lundin...they're all seeing the same thing: the secular self, long shored up on a sort of Cartesian view of the self, is now in rapid dissolution to what they call "the Protean self," which like the mythical character Proteus, assumes many forms and has none as its essential form.
...they're all seeing the same thing: the secular self
I am not advocating for a 'secular self'. I am speaking of the ways that the concept of divinity changed.

What does "secular" mean, if not "devoid of reference to divinity"? If it has another implication, can you say what you think it is?
When you use this term "God" you are referring to an abstraction.
I'm not, actually. I'm referrring to a literal Person...the prototypical Person, in fact, from whom personhood itself derives. You seem to be referring to an abstraction...but that's not what I think of God.
And you also think that turning inward, and discovering the intimation of divinity on an inner plane, has no relationship with a personal revelation of God.
You'll have to show me where you think I said that. To my knowledge, I did not.

No, I would say the inward look can be helpful, since our own personhood is derived from God...but I would add that it's not enough.
...the God you describe is unreal. Un-transformative.
Heh. :D Not the way He describes Himself. In fact, He's the only true "Transformer" of human nature. So if you have a problem with that idea, your problem is with Him, not me.
People veered away from those closed concepts...
Yes: the Bible talks about this: "All of us, like sheep, have gone astray, Each of us has turned to his own way..." (Isaiah 53:6)

It says also, "There is a way which seems right to a person, but its end is the way of death." (Prov. 14:23)

As for Nietzsche, you can either believe him or not, depending on your inclination. He gives you no more than that to go on: he just declares, "God is dead," then does absolutely nothing to prove it. He offers no evidence, no logical syllogisms, no historical certification, or anything like that. He doesn't even try, because of his prior assumption that "God" is just a concept, not a reality. It's just another narrative, another way of "telling the story," but utterly devoid of justification. Nietzche's just taking his own assumptions for granted, and counting on the fact that you will too, if he doesn't expose them.

So he just goes on, instead, to show you all the things that follow logically IF you have already believed his first premise gratuitiously. He doesn't say, "I have to admit I have no evidence, so I offer none, and just give you a way it could be, if I'm right." He continues as if he's stated a certain fact. And those who follow him do so like lemmings, without thought or interrogation of Nietzsche's warrant. They're just so glad, maybe, to think they've found a way to banish God from the world that it doesn't suit them to investigate or even interrogate Nietzsche's essential premise.

But a critical mind requires more than that. And a critical mind soon discovers that Nietzsche is a toothless tiger...lots of growl, but no real bite if you don't cede to him his first, unsubstantiated premise.
When kids raised in strict Christian homes (I have known a few) break out of those constraints they often go ape-shit and wind up in bad places.

That can happen. Kids raised with any firm morals tend to do the same...at least for a time. You'll find the same in all traditional families, military families, or even normal Western families, except in those homes where permissiveness is so broad there's nothing to rebel against. (That's problematic in its own way: imagine being a teen, and having no way to claim one's own identity.) Its a natural inclination of teenagers to rebel against their parents, at least for some period, so as to claim their autonomy. In a way, it's a normal thing, even though it's a dangerous thing, as well. The alternative, of unthinking compliance, makes it necessary sometimes. One must claim one's autonomy in order to be able to decide where to devote it.

The differentiator is what one does once one has claimed one's autonomy.
AJ: So what happened is that through an abandonment of the Image, and the exploration on new roads and new avenues, which required a very different sort of God-figure.
IC: That's such an odd line.
Describe it as you wish to.
No, it's odd...regardless of pejoratives. It doesn't actually make sense, even on its own terms.
And to live here, on this plane, honestly and with integrity, requires a non-dual God-figure.
Actually, the opposite.

If "integrity" and "honesty" are objective and universally-good values, as you assume here, then only a singular God who also values honesty and integrity is "required."
If the object is to live authentically in this world,

:D I'm so amused by the word "authentically." It gets thrown around so loosely these days.

"Authentic" means, 1a : worthy of acceptance or belief as conforming to or based on fact
b : conforming to an original so as to reproduce essential features
c : made or done the same way
(Webster)

So to speak of an "authentic" person means to speak of somebody conforming to some pre-existing pattern, fact, or essence. But few people who use the word "authenticity" ever say authentic to what.

So perhaps I can ask you: what pattern, original or fact is a "person" capable of being "authentic to"?

Of course, I have my own ideas about that, but I'm interested in yours.
Actually, it's even funnier than that...it's like saying, "The world requires a very different law of gravity..." Good luck calling for one. If we're talking about a reality, then you're going to get what's really there...not what you imagine you'd like in its place.
The reason you can make this ultra-silly statement is because you are trapped within your structured God-concept.[/quote]
Not at all.

As you can see, above, it's analytical in the word "authentic." My objection there is not just one that a secular person could have, though it's certainly that -- no God belief need be involved -- but one that any rational person should surely raise, anybody who understands simply that "authentic" always means "authentic to ______."
I do not deny (based on my observations) that one could return to the former concept. It could very well be the best choice for a soul who cannot handle freedom.
So simplistic.

Yes, yes...it would be one reason that a person could turn to God as a concept; he could be running away. Big deal. A man could turn to Atheism in exactly the same way; he could be running away from God, from moral responsibility, from his cosmic parent, like an overgrown teenager. But what do such characterizations actually show? Nothing, really.

The point is very simple: many highly intelligent and thoughtful persons have been Christians. So if it's possible for somebody to become one because he "cannot handle freedom," it's equally possible for a person to use his or her intellectual freedom to explore, find answers, and then choose to believe in God for rational reasons. That's certainly happened.

So the slander that all religions people are all just running away is only that -- a slander...and a rather shallow one, at that. Any fair scanning of history certainly dispells it.

P.S. -- Here we should pause. I offer you an option: is our discourse to go forward on the disagreeable ad hominem note of you accusing me and other Christians of always being naive, being fools, fearing freedom, being binary, being locked in amber, and so on, or is it to go forward companionably, with the goal of mutually locating some further truth? I think we could decide now, and shape our discourse accordingly. I see lots of value in the latter, but little in the former.

But I leave the choice to you.
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