Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 4:37 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Oct 11, 2022 7:34 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 11, 2022 6:27 pm
What god do you believe in, then?
Why are you interested?
Because if you believe in "a god," but not
the God, the God of the Bible, I'd be interested in knowing who that is.
The question is really a very good one. But the asker of the question is a very bad asker. Yet since the question is a worthy one I'll share some of my thoughts on the matter.
I cannot describe to you *which god* or *what god* I recognize because, in my view, one can only have experiences in the living of life that provide something like hints or something like senses of what it is that speaks back to one, communicates with one. It is all about
communication. You or I could read descriptions, or see the myriad images and symbol-complexes that are used as tools to describe (to someone) what *god* is, and we could refer to the god of Christianity, of Islam, of the Vedic religions -- but none of this would be of much use to a person who is inclined to "know god' (or have some sort of relationship with whatever we mean when we employ that term.)
Frankly, I think that many people
do rely on, and likely must rely on, the *picture* that is provided (the symbol-complex) for them to be able to conceive of what they are referring to. Their *relationship* remains a sort of social observance with a theological element. But the essential thing is that any given person, in various different contexts (Europe, the USA, India, China, etc) can only approach *god* through the set of concepts and images that are part of their social context. So as I often say: We approach life, the world, god, our conception of *where we are located* (i.e. within a cosmos) through our imagined world: the picture that we hold in our imagination. But it should be obvious that that is only a picture, a sort of interface.
There is another dimension and it is one that we contact, or sense, not through our conscious conception or a rational description, but on other, inner levels. So for example a person who is engaged with god, and with spiritual life, will have dreams that contain messaging, content, indications, or perhaps 'omens' is a proper word. And with that term (which I have to borrow from an existing language-pool) a very interesting idea presents itself. One is said to *step onto a spiritual path* or enter into it. This is certainly true for any practitioner including a Christian one. The tales, the anecdotes, are legion. One prays, things happen. One acts prayerfully (again I have to use the terms that are available in our language-pool) and 'something responds'. It might come through people (something someone says) or events (something happens) or in myriad different ways. But one knows when *it* happens.
These are mere allusions, traces or outlines of how people experience that which you refer to when you use the word *god* (which of course you capitalize for convention's sake). My view is that all people who are involved in these paths, when they share what their experiences are, will speak in similar terms. But the core issue here is that by entering onto what we call *a path* (language conventions) that what is experienced is not experienced through discursive, rational processes, but through experience. And what they experience is is very hard to strictly categorize. It is also difficult, even potentially impossible, to share one's experience with someone else. The reason should be obvious.
To ask "What god do you believe in?" is, to my mind, the question of an ignoramus. You will reject, and you can only reject (no other option exists for you!) everything that I have said here. Because what I am describing (you will say and you must say) is not Jesus of Nazareth nor the Holy Spirit but something else, something which you (as Christian and as one deeply embedded in Hebrew Idea Imperialism) must designate as pagan and also as 'satanic'. This is your
problem really but it is not an incomprehensible one to me. I understand what your operative conception is and why you have it.
Now, with that said I must clarify: to be involved with Christianity and to some extent Judaism (though it very much depends on what branch of Judaism and also how Christianized the Jew has become) will involve one in an idea-pool that has to do a great deal more with the ethics of day-to-day behavior because this focus is a strong tendency in the Occidental traditions. I only have experience with the Vedic religions (and one in particular: Vaishnavism) so I cannot speak for Islam or Taoism or any other. To be involved with our Occidental traditions, and religiously, is to involve oneself in the entire Occidental pool or ideas and concerns. So the 'manifestations of god' will manifest in terms of the quality of one's relationships in the family or between friends. The notion of 'love' (the marriage sacrament but also social 'love' and justice) are accentuated in the Occident. But again these differences have to do with 'locality' and also 'context'.
And what I am speaking about here is intuitively obvious.
As Occidentals we cannot, in my view (nor should we wish to) escape or remove ourselves from our *cultural trajectory*. To have been born into it is like being born, if you will, into a family. We will not ever be able to *escape* or side-step a great deal of what has come through to us through the Christian (or Judaic) traditions. But at the same time we cannot escape from or side-step the mythic dimension that is Greek (the reality of the Greek gods as pictures of internal and external processes) and which 'came alive' again through modern psychology (Jung).
So people have ventured forth on new paths. The paths bring forward new views, new conceptions, new experiences, new language-forms to express it.
I do not present my own conceptions here as a path for anyone to follow necessarily. It is just a description of what my experience has been.
Do I
not believe in "the god of the Bible'? I
definitely do not believe in Yahweh of the OT. Because the conception is ugly and brutal. I would go with what the Gnostics have said: this is a demiurge. But the god that Jesus of the NT refers to is, in fact, a very different entity! A very different set of possibilities. The concept of god that it could be said that Jesus spoke of, I would submit, is more in line with what I have spoken of here! So it is not possible to say *I do not believe in that god*.
There is of course more that could be said on this topic. It is indeed germane to this present conversation.