Should I
start here or
end here?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jun 07, 2022 8:02 pmBut there are things missing from that account, too: God is Creator. God is the Source of all ultimate good. He is Life, Light and the only Way. And above all, He is holy -- no sin, no flaw, no evil can have anything to do with God. He excuses nothing, never colludes with wickedness or looks away when evil is doing its work. He's the Sovereign Lord of all. He's the Judge. He is the Righteous One. He is salvation. He is truth. He is hope. He is the eternal God.
[It would appear that I am engaging you in conversation by quoting you. But that is not exactly the case. I am employing your paragraph as a jumping-point.]
Here, it seems to me, we have
the idea of God from a Christian perspective. One has to examine it as a construct and not, not necessarily, as a real description of 'what God is'. Certainly the description offered here is ultra-Christian and I think it coincides with a Jewish concept. This sort of concept originated in Judea (obviously) and was developed by early Christians.
What I have come to understand, over the course of this months-long conversation, is that the Christian 'idea of God' is just that: an idea, a hope, a projection in a sense. And the way I have come to understand that this idea functions in a certain way has been to observe Immanuel Can demonstrating how it is
wielded. It is a classic absolutist's argument. It is established just as he says and shows: "I am not telling you this" [here the demands of the absolute God are presented] "it is God Himself". Disagree with what God says at your own peril.
In most (or many) Christian cults the *image* of this God is wielded in a social-religious context. I have come to understand that this is primarily how IC wields it. The image presented, however, remains an
absolute abstraction. What I mean is this: the God that is pictured is said to exist and is said to have all the characteristic most theology ascribes to God. Yet this god-image, I think it is fair to say, is not found in any part of the world, that is the world as we understand it. The world may be unimaginably complex in all aspects of its construction, which it certainly is, and this is almost inconceivable that it is the way it is when it is examined. Same with all workings of the universe. The more we (i.e. those who look and observe and study) examine the world, the more impossibly weird and strange it looks to be. But there is no Christian God in it! If there is a god interweaving the world (one would have to assume) it is a god
pretty much utterly unlike the God
pictured by Christianity. The world (biological and physical life) reveals no such God! Not inside of any of us. Not in the forest or jungle. Not in the star. Not anywhere.
Except in concept.
But here is my point: there is no such 'absolutely pure' and 'absolutely removed (holy, non-evil, flawless, sinless, etc., all the terms that IC uses) God that is ever visible, or manifest, except in the descriptions that are ascribed to God by religionists. In this sense the Christian God is an 'absolute abstraction'. So that what I say seems true:
this God is an idea held in the mind.
Now the purpose of establishing such an image, and such a construct, must be examined. It is irrelevant in a sense if indeed such a God exists. Belief in it changes nothing in this world, the real world, the world of reality. Sure, why
not define a purely good God outside of the creation? (There is a flaw but it will have to be talked about later).
But one must examine, as I suggest, the way the god-concept is
wielded. If I were to say (for example) "Yes, God must surely be all those things. I accept that. And I make efforts to be the best sort of person I can be and to live by the ethics that are practicable to me" we must now understand that what Immanuel Can will say next is "That is not enough!"
And it is at this point that the social-religious aspect of the Christian admonition shows itself. If I cannot by my own effort 'be moral', at least
sufficiently to be recognized as a decent man and person (the only measure that actually seems to count I might add -- in the eyes of others surrounding me), it is asserted that no matter what I do, or don't do, I need
something else. And that something else is defined by the term 'salvation':
to be released from the consequences of sin.
Obviously, and I think unavoidably, no person could ever become 'sinless' or could ever do enough to become justified, and even a born-again Christian (born again in accord with IC's recommendations and outline) will, and necessarily must, continue sinning. All Christians sin. That is, they may be freed from sin's
consequences but cannot ever achieve full sinlessness. But according to the Christian view it is 'salvation' that wipes away sin's consequences. Only through the grace of God.
So let's examine how these ideas, these assertions,
function. A sinner gets saved and becomes a Christian. In IC's religious camp once one is forgiven one is always forgiven. There is no turning back (I am not sure how to express this) according to all born again Christians that I have conversed with (or read). Once saved, always saved.
There is nothing in the world, and nothing in you, that can 'save' you. You can only be saved by the eternal God (defined in the quoted paragraph).
So the Christian of this sort has an unusual advantage. He has the *image of God* that is absolutely beyond the world and of an absolutely ideal type. He has been released from the consequences of personal sin as well as racial (human) sin. The state of salvation cannot be revoked (to the best of my knowledge this is how it is described, at least in Protestant circles). And though all Christians will inevitably continue to sin (it is impossible to be perfect and sinless in a world so bound-up with sinfulness) the still-sinning Christian is still certain of his saved state.
In contrast, even the best of the best, the most ethical, thoughtful, considerate, selfless man or woman,
if not *saved*, does not get any benefit from being good (to use a popular way of putting it). No man, woman or child, therefore, in any other clime or time who has 'heard of Jesus' or been preached to about Christian salvation, is excused from having to seek this 'salvation' that IC, and Christians generally, though there are differences in how it is conceived, defines.
It is not so much that I agree or disagree with this *idea of God*, it is more that I have begun to pay a different sort of attention to 'how it functions'.