Christianity

For all things philosophical.

Moderators: AMod, iMod

Dubious
Posts: 4637
Joined: Tue May 19, 2015 7:40 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 2:46 pmMy reference-point is and remains that of the 16th chapter of the Bhagavad-Gita (Chapter 16: Daivāsura Sampad Vibhāg Yoga: Yoga through Discerning the Divine and Demoniac Natures). I suppose that I must apologize for holding to a rather simple and binary dichotomy but there you have it.
From the 16th chapter of the Gita...
8 “There is no God,” they say, “no truth, no spiritual law, no moral order. The basis of life is sex; what else can it be?” 9 Holding such distorted views, possessing scant discrimination, they become enemies of the world, causing suffering and destruction.

That there is no god does not make a person a demon; that's bullshit, the kind of logic IC uses to demonize atheists...that even if they behave uprightly their non-belief negates their morality. I'm beginning to think that a well-written novel has much more to say about morality or lack of than any scripture.
24 Therefore let the scriptures be your guide in what to do and what not to do. Understand their teachings; then act in accordance with them.

Isn't this also what the IC types strive to do within 'their' scriptural beliefs? If 'everything has to be reviewed, seen again from a fresh angle', then it's time to coldly analyze the effect these scriptures have had so far on whatever merits or lack of they may have. And yes! Sex is the basis of life allowing for all its possibilities to assert themselves. On this planet, what else can it be! Without sex there is no one to read scripture and no one to have written any. Without sex good and evil and all the shades between wouldn't exist!
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 2:46 pmOne way or another, to one degree or another, it is our activities and how we mold ourselves in this world (our thoughts, what we are exposed to and so much else) that determine who we are and also, ultimately where we go. We either ascend or we descend. That is my 'simplistic reduction'.
It doesn't require more than a 'simplistic reduction' because that's the way it's always been. Since these are all different, that's where the differences occur and incessantly argued about.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 2:46 pmBehind all religious modes there is an awareness of things that are eternal to existence and being (those words have special connotation and I am not opposed to a Heideggerian inflection). Everything has to be reviewed, seen again from a fresh angle.
That was already clear to Nietzsche but does it have to be religious in the sense of requiring deities to complete the definition. Put another way, does religion require a pantheon of gods to manifest itself as somehow sacred?
User avatar
Harbal
Posts: 10729
Joined: Thu Jun 20, 2013 10:03 pm
Location: Yorkshire
Contact:

Re: Christianity

Post by Harbal »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 2:48 am
I hear people say that, and I understand what gives that impression. Those who have only the OT can easily get focused on matters of sin, alienation, judgment and so on, because the OT really identifies the problems, but gives the solutions only in a shadowy, anticipatory way. So it can come across as very negative -- especially if one has no part of its fulfillment in the NT in view.

But the longer I study the Bible, the more convinced I am of its wholeness. I don't find two Gods there...just one. But I do find two different periods of history, two different states of human affairs relative to God, a much more explicit revealing of spiritual dynamics, and a lot more of the solutions are worked out in the NT.

However, I think it takes both testaments to get a real sense of that. So what you're saying makes some sense.
But even with the NT there is the matter of what happens to non-believers. I'm not exactly sure what is supposed to happen to them, and there seems to be quite some disagreement among Christians about it, but you always imply that it is something pretty bad. Now that would be a real stumbling block for me, were I considering becoming a Christian.
Belinda
Posts: 10548
Joined: Fri Aug 26, 2016 10:13 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Harbal wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 10:43 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 2:48 am
I hear people say that, and I understand what gives that impression. Those who have only the OT can easily get focused on matters of sin, alienation, judgment and so on, because the OT really identifies the problems, but gives the solutions only in a shadowy, anticipatory way. So it can come across as very negative -- especially if one has no part of its fulfillment in the NT in view.

But the longer I study the Bible, the more convinced I am of its wholeness. I don't find two Gods there...just one. But I do find two different periods of history, two different states of human affairs relative to God, a much more explicit revealing of spiritual dynamics, and a lot more of the solutions are worked out in the NT.

However, I think it takes both testaments to get a real sense of that. So what you're saying makes some sense.
But even with the NT there is the matter of what happens to non-believers. I'm not exactly sure what is supposed to happen to them, and there seems to be quite some disagreement among Christians about it, but you always imply that it is something pretty bad. Now that would be a real stumbling block for me, were I considering becoming a Christian.
If you become a Unitarian it's respectable for you to formulate your own belief system. However their church services are not as much fun as those of high Anglicans or RCs. One Sunday I went to a 'high' Ecclesiastical church in Edinburgh where the music was especially good and the priest was particularly nice and intelligent. It's good to combine religious observance and theatre. The only doctrine required, according to the priest, was belief in God, and I gathered he thought the details are private property.
User avatar
Alexis Jacobi
Posts: 8301
Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2021 3:00 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

iambiguous wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 6:52 am I need to "calm down", go up into the intellectual contraption stratosphere with him and exchange definitions and deductions...to communicate in a proper display of pedantry.
You seem to me to operate through a ‘neurosis’ similar to Seeds: all is ‘intellectual contraption’ as for Seeds it is an exalted but also fairytale-like fantasy about ‘souls’.

You imply that I am not engaged with the real world because I prefer to think through contentious issues, or clarify what I am talking about, rather than jumping into specific actions. But you want only to push me in a direction that would confirm your own biases and prejudices.

Exchange of ideas require definitions of terms. You certainly would have to calm down so to be better positioned to understand the issues being raised (by either Bowden or Camus as examples).

Both you and Seeds block the possibility of conversation, and better understanding, through imposed zealotry.
User avatar
Harbal
Posts: 10729
Joined: Thu Jun 20, 2013 10:03 pm
Location: Yorkshire
Contact:

Re: Christianity

Post by Harbal »

Belinda wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 12:40 pm If you become a Unitarian it's respectable for you to formulate your own belief system.
Perhaps IC and I could reach a compromise, and both become Unitarians. :)
User avatar
Alexis Jacobi
Posts: 8301
Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2021 3:00 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Dubious wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 9:47 am That there is no god does not make a person a demon; that's bullshit, the kind of logic IC uses to demonize atheists...that even if they behave uprightly their non-belief negates their morality. I'm beginning to think that a well-written novel has much more to say about morality or lack of than any scripture.
The Bhagavad-Gita is an ancient document and its form is steeped in the time and place where it was produced. But by reference to it, and to the 16th chapter, I am referencing ideas that can be examined outside of the context. I do grasp that you understand that the logic or intuition used to arrive at the set of ideas I think are overall valid are similar to the "kind of logic IC uses to demonize atheists" but take into consideration that in my view I do not see atheism in a negative light. I see it as a necessary step out of too constrictive religio-social modes of thinking. But, I do not see it as the final point on the strange trajectory we (humankind at this juncture perhaps?) are in.

The position that I take -- and I would agree it is purely personal -- is to focus on the human confrontation with Existence and Being and as I said I could examine it in ways similar to Heidegger. Existence and Being are absolutely beyond our description and, again in my view, it is when that is confronted on an inner plane that one understands, intuitively, what we are really dealing with. Something completely unexplainable, something only known through 'relationship'. By relationship I mean intuited, meditative, revelatory frame of mind or consciousness. So many words to describe the very core of a mystical, internal, intuited relationship to something inexplicable. The source of my being in a larger sense of Being. The source of my existence within Existence.

For months now -- I am just as capable of a form of idea-zealotry as others! -- I have been writing about my perception that when people lose their 'metaphysical anchor' they fall down into the resulting 'traps' or 'prisons' of mutability. That is to say that if one loses a grounding in higher concepts one only then has access to, or is dominated by, what I refer to as the 'lower' dimension. I would say it is basic Platonic theory and as such I admit to it. Religious modes and religious practice, despite all their faults, are based in a principle of sacrificing a lower, mutable or immediate gain for a higher, less tangible (or less material and thus more 'spiritual') goal or object that is only perceived as valuable by a being with the clarity of understanding to see it. And as I have referred to numerous times I accept the basic sense in the Catholic/Christian term intellect (intellectus):
The faculty of thought. As understood in Catholic philosophical literature it signifies the higher, spiritual, cognitive power of the soul. It is in this view awakened to action by sense, but transcends the latter in range. Amongst its functions are attention, conception, judgment, reasoning, reflection, and self-consciousness. All these modes of activity exhibit a distinctly suprasensuous element, and reveal a cognitive faculty of a higher order than is required for mere sense-cognitions. In harmony, therefore, with Catholic usage, we reserve the terms intellect, intelligence, and intellectual to this higher power and its operations, although many modern psychologists are wont, with much resulting confusion, to extend the application of these terms so as to include sensuous forms of the cognitive process. By thus restricting the use of these terms, the inaccuracy of such phrases as "animal intelligence" is avoided. Before such language may be legitimately employed, it should be shown that the lower animals are endowed with genuinely rational faculties, fundamentally one in kind with those of man. Catholic philosophers, however they differ on minor points, as a general body have held that intellect is a spiritual faculty depending extrinsically, but not intrinsically, on the bodily organism. The importance of a right theory of intellect is twofold: on account of its bearing on epistemology, or the doctrine of knowledge; and because of its connexion with the question of the spirituality of the soul.
I can examine this set of ideas (essentially a set of assertions) from outside of a specific religious context (or 'contraption' as Brother Iambiguous might say). What I discern here is essentially metaphysical concepts and concerns.

I would also say that *a well-written novel* is much more of the field for considering everything that I refer to! The novel and the poem (and the work of art) is really & truly the place where idea, value & meaning are explored. So I tend to reject *religious piety* and the formalism that religious conformity tends to demand of people.

But what I do say and I do believe it is that when average people who do not have intellectual foundations established and are not capable of real distinguishing of both value and meaning are ripped out of their religious contexts, and here religiousness is a sort of dike around their unruly selves, that they quickly fall down into what is termed materialism and sensuousness. Again, if you have lost the 'conceptual pathway' to be capable of defining "higher things" (which are always supersensuous and metaphysical) you have np option available to you but to seek all your satisfactions in the here-below. And I have certainly seen with my own eyes how rapidly people 'fall' and how consequential this is to their lives.

Is my stance elitist? In every sense emphatically yes. And it is necessarily so. And for this reason I made reference to Ortega y Gasset in The Rebellion of the Masses:
"If from the viewpoint of what what concerns public life, the psychological structure of this new type of mass-man be studied, what we find is as follows: (1) An inborn, root-impression that life is easy, plentiful, without any grave limitations; consequently, each average man finds within himself a sensation of power and triumph which, (2) invites him to stand up for himself as he is, to look upon his moral and intellectual endowment as excellent, complete. This contentment within himself leads him to shut himself off from any external court of appeal; not to listen, not to submit his opinion to judgment, not to consider other's existence. His intimate feeling of power urges him always to exercise predominance. He will act then as if he and his like were the only beings existing in this world; and, consequently, (3) will intervene in all matters, imposing his own vulgar views without respect or regard for others, without limit or reserve, that is to say, in accordance with a system of 'direct action'."
"It is not a question of the mass-man being a fool. On the contrary, to-day he is more clever, has more capacity of understanding than his fellow of any previous period. But that capacity is of no use to him; in reality, the vague feeling that he possesses it seems only to shut him up more within himself and keep him from using it. Once for all, he accepts the stock of commonplaces, prejudices, fag-ends of ideas or simply empty words which chance has piled up within his mind, and with a boldness only explicable by his ingenuousness, is prepared to impose them everywhere.… Why should he listen if he has within him all that is necessary? There is no reason now for listening, but rather for judging, pronouncing, deciding. There is no question concerning public life, in which he does not intervene, blind and deaf as he is, imposing his 'opinions.' "
Because I have these views I must, as always, take responsibility for them. I am therefore placed in a position where quite often the things I say and assert get 'reacted to' with vehemence. But so far no one has made a successful argument against the sort of ideas the Ortega y Gasset works with. (And obviously I have been influenced by him a great deal).
From the Bhagavad Gita: 24 Therefore let the scriptures be your guide in what to do and what not to do. Understand their teachings; then act in accordance with them.
Dubious: Isn't this also what the IC types strive to do within 'their' scriptural beliefs?
The *IC types* are men who are locked within a specific tradition and who solidify a 'zealotry' of a specific sort. What I recommend is examining the metaphysical ideas that stand behind the specific declarations. The picture offered by a religious presentation is confused with the content (or the meaning & value) referred to. As you clearly see, as we all see, Immanuel Can will not be moved. He has locked himself into a specific (Evangelical Protestant) stance and cannot make the comparison necessary to other religious and philosophical systems. That is a failure in my view.

Christianity suffers as a descriptive metaphysics because it is bound up in crude pictures and all that I say is defined by Hebrew Idea Imperialism. The strategy of overpowering people with fear and guilt in order to have your way with them. But this does not mean -- again in my view -- that all its content can simply be dismissed. But this assertion I make is better expounded by René Guénon who attempts a more comprehensive, perhaps a more removed and universal, metaphysical vision.

So I say: Yes, we do have to 'understand what the scriptures' are speaking about (taking the Vedas as a whole and certainly what the Rishis expounded) and arrive at the core or the kernal of meaning. It has to do with what a person does in the face of Existence and Being. That is expressed in Vedanta as 'sat-chit-ananda'. These ideas transcend any specific religious form and also time and place. It is an attempt to arrive at a transcendental perspective.
And yes! Sex is the basis of life allowing for all its possibilities to assert themselves. On this planet, what else can it be! Without sex there is no one to read scripture and no one to have written any. Without sex good and evil and all the shades between wouldn't exist!
I am not sure where you are going with this. But I will say the following. Examine what is happening on a world-level as access to pornographic imagery rips through established, and necessary, social conventions. Porn is intensely destructive because it hooks a very basic and very powerful compulsion. So let's not become confused about what we are talking about. In all religious ethics sexuality is described as requiring restraint. There is a sound reason for this. But 'regulation' has to be accepted and especially because it is necessary for family life. Unrestrained sexual expression is immensely destructive. I cannot myself find anything of value in it that I'd be required to defend.

The ideas expressed in Vedanta (and in the Vedas) have a very coherent and sensible view of sexuality for the life of a householder. For those with more concentrated spiritual aspirations there are of course more rigorous controls imposed.
That was already clear to Nietzsche but does it have to be religious in the sense of requiring deities to complete the definition. Put another way, does religion require a pantheon of gods to manifest itself as somehow sacred?
When one examines the origin of god-concepts -- let's take the Vedic and the Grecian as examples -- one finds that the gods derived from observations of natural phenomena. Or really from concepts that presented themselves in natural phenomena. One example that struck me when I was examining the origin of Indian beliefs was that of the Dawn: Uṣás:
She repeatedly appears in the Rigvedic hymns, states David Kinsley, where she is "consistently identified with dawn, revealing herself with the daily coming of light to the world, driving away oppressive darkness, chasing away evil demons, rousing all life, setting all things in motion, sending everyone off to do their duties". She is the life of all living creatures, the impeller of action and breath, the foe of chaos and confusion, the auspicious arouser of cosmic and moral order called the Ṛta in Hinduism.
I choose to focus on the concept that animates the picture. And again if Existence and Being become the focus then the *meaning* of our appearance in a world where there is 'dawn' can be examined in many different ways. What does it mean when taken at a pure, existential level? A great deal I'd say.

But you are very right: to have converted Ushas into a cartoon-image that gets hung on some shop-keepers wall is not a very intellectual, nor even a profoundly intellectual, relationship with whatever 'dawn' can mean and must mean.

Again: we have to go back to the very origins. We have to see things again in a new light.
Belinda
Posts: 10548
Joined: Fri Aug 26, 2016 10:13 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Harbal wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 1:33 pm
Belinda wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 12:40 pm If you become a Unitarian it's respectable for you to formulate your own belief system.
Perhaps IC and I could reach a compromise, and both become Unitarians. :)
Unitarians whom I know would welcome both IC and you.
User avatar
Alexis Jacobi
Posts: 8301
Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2021 3:00 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

seeds wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 11:37 pm ...was to drive home the point that the darkness and hatefulness implicit in those images has its roots (its foundational underpinning) in precisely the same sort of thinking that you...

(or at least of those you have been recommending to us)

...seem to be promoting.
And I will repeat, once again, that you are fundamentally wrong. And why you are fundamentally wrong can be presented and expounded quite simply. However, it will require as a first task the dismissal of your images. Not because the Klansmen or the Whites in the picture you presented were not involved in hatred, but rather because the right and indeed the requirement to preserve *what one is* is a fundamental one.

But what is required when dealing with zealots like you who are 'possessed' with simplistic and emotionalized ideas is a dismantling of both simplistic reduction and also idea-emotionalism. And that, my friend, is a difficult task! Why? Because the ideas you hold to have become "wedded" to your identity. To counter-propose to the ideas you present as if they are inarguable is to confront something extremely central to your own self. You have 'invested' in it to such a degree that it overshadows the capability of thinking things through.

So again I refer to an example that we can examine and consider: Japan and Japanese culture. We need an example so the base concept can be examined. Do I have to repeat what I have already stated? This people and this culture is within its rights to define itself and defend itself on all levels and that includes the somatic. Extend this right to an Indian tribe in the Americas. Extend it to Nigeria. Extend it to a Black Brown or Yellow person saying "I want my children to look like me" and "I want to preserve what I am because I have a right to value it" and you will -- you yourself! -- see and understand what I mean. Or better put *what is meant*. Because I do not invent this meaning or the right. It exists as a right.

I also suggest examining zealous anti-racism (so-called). Anti-racism and the guilt-borne declaration that *diversity* is moral and non-diversity immoral can easily be punctured when it is closely examined. To propose 'cultural diversity' as a social value represents the first step in the destruction of what is diverse. It is a mind-fuck. It is a public relations deception. It is obviously untrue. But here's the key: to say what I have just said, in today's climate, will be taken as recommending a social-cleaning project in which people are rounded up and incinerated. I mean this quite literally.

And this is why you yourself pull up those images! This is the 'core' of your argument. But -- and here is another key -- you present yourself as being 'right'. You operate with a moral bludgeon. Will you become capable of seeing this? I do not think so. Why? You are too invested in the use of the bludgeon and you are too invested in the emotional binding that attaches you to it. These statements will rouse in you a will to fight! Your core zealotry will become inflamed as if I've poured on it rocket fuel.

Now -- what exactly am I proposing here? Nothing more than to see through these public relations constructs that, in my view, have mostly -- not entirely but mostly -- been put into motion by the Progressive Left and Marxist who have, in fact, a specific agenda. Thus what I am proposing involves seeing things in a larger framework.

If I stay in the *conceptual clouds* as Iambuguous says (I do not agree with his militant assertion but let's put that aside) I do so because it is the sane an proper place to be. You have to get clear about the concept first.

And I repeat once again that the ideas of Renaud Camus are sound, coherently and justly expressed, and if they are read without initial intellectual blocking and with an open mind they will be seen as being valid and also moral.

I have no idea what all of this means in the larger picture of America. I am as much in the dark about that as anyone. However, I will say that social conflict that will not be resolved except through Draconian methods or social conflict and violence is likely to be in the cards. Just as we are now seeing the beginning of it, my sense is that it will continue. Do I make this happen because I describe it? No. I simply describe it.

I have two titles that I'd suggest you examine. One is One Mighty and Irresistable Tide: The Epic Struggle Over American Immigration 1924-1965 (Jia Lynn Yang), and A Field Guide to White Supremacy (Kathleen Belew). These are the works of extreme activists who have, in my opinion, a Marxist base. That is my opinion. They are radical Progressive-Left activists and for this reason their proposals should be examined.

I describe your *ideology* as being an extreme expression of American manifest destiny having been coopted by Marxian concerns (Americanism + Marxianism). This is a problematic statement since Marxism is now a hot word and all hot words are inherently problematic. I do so because I notice this operative ideology very strongly in Yang and Belew. It is my business to examine these things and to arrive at statements about what they propose through seeing what motivates them. It is not my business to devise a political plan to oppose them.
Last edited by Alexis Jacobi on Sat Jan 14, 2023 3:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27604
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Lacewing wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 6:48 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 7:40 pm
Lacewing wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 6:31 pm
You base your beliefs on what you imagine.
Having trouble reading? :lol:
You seem to be foolishly suggesting
Who are you...Cathy Newman? :lol:
cathy-newman-meme.jpg
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 6:19 pm I thought you didn't "believe" anything. 8)
I don't.
Well, since every human being believes things, it's pretty funny you think you believe you don't. :wink:
User avatar
Lacewing
Posts: 6722
Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2015 2:25 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Lacewing »

attofishpi wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 8:32 am
Lacewing wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 7:53 am It's unfortunate that this is the reality you seem to be experiencing.
WAS, experiencing - past tense.
You said this is why you drink so much, so that sounds like the reality of it all is still an issue for you.
attofishpi wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 8:32 am
Lacewing wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 7:53 amIt is not the reality that other people are experiencing.

So, your conclusion about what God is and how that applies to everyone else is false.
You are the one making that absurd conclusion - I never stated that what God has done to me applies to everyone else!! This is half the reason I don't talk to you, because you draw absurd conclusions continously that I simply don't have the patience to correct.
Well, it has certainly appeared that you 'correct' people when you insist that there's a god. Do you think God exists for other people whether they realize it or not?
attofishpi wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 8:32 amBTW: This was a conversation between me and Promo - who WAS INTERESTED so stop telling me to STFU about my experiences
Perhaps you forget what you've said, and then you get upset by how people respond. I simply asked why you post the things you do if the responses are upsetting to you. A lot of people here get characterized in all sorts of ways for the things they say.

I'm not interested in adopting anyone's particular ideas, beliefs, or methods. Structure does not impress me. Value is demonstrated by how they're using whatever method they're using... and what that produces. If their product sucks... if their life sucks... if their attitude sucks... why would I give a crap about their methodology and beliefs? Clearly, they are on a convoluted path of some sort, and the reason for that appears to be to serve themselves in some way. They are welcome to their trip... and good luck to them!

A lot of people on this forum tell others that their own trip is a truth that somehow applies/matters or should apply/matter to others whether those others realize it or not. Why can't the Universe be immense enough for everyone to have their own divine or specific experience?
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27604
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harbal wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 10:43 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 2:48 am
I hear people say that, and I understand what gives that impression. Those who have only the OT can easily get focused on matters of sin, alienation, judgment and so on, because the OT really identifies the problems, but gives the solutions only in a shadowy, anticipatory way. So it can come across as very negative -- especially if one has no part of its fulfillment in the NT in view.

But the longer I study the Bible, the more convinced I am of its wholeness. I don't find two Gods there...just one. But I do find two different periods of history, two different states of human affairs relative to God, a much more explicit revealing of spiritual dynamics, and a lot more of the solutions are worked out in the NT.

However, I think it takes both testaments to get a real sense of that. So what you're saying makes some sense.
But even with the NT there is the matter of what happens to non-believers. I'm not exactly sure what is supposed to happen to them, and there seems to be quite some disagreement among Christians about it,
Not really. But that impression depends on how far you widen your understanding of who a "Christian" really is. If you include Universalist "churches," like, then there are some who do, indeed, disagree with both Christians and the Bible about what is going to be the lot of unbelievers, and yet who style themselves as "Christians" nonetheless.

But the elasticity of inclusiveness always has limits. If a man calls himself "faithful" while sleeping around, he's exceeded the limits of the definition of "faithful," no matter how he self-identifies. If an Atheist believes in God, he's exceeded the definition of "Atheist," even if he keeps using the word. If a woman styles herself a Rhodes scholar, while having no Rhodes scholarship, she's exceeded the definition of "Rhodes scholar." And so on.

So the question becomes, are Universalists, since they deny both the Christian consensus and, far more importantly, the explicit teachings of the Word of God, still entitled to be considered speaking as "Christians"? And that's for you to say, not me...since you'll have your own functional definition of what a "Christian" is, no doubt. But they wouldn't make mine.
...but you always imply that it is something pretty bad. Now that would be a real stumbling block for me, were I considering becoming a Christian.
Alright, I hear you on that. Lots of folks, I think, find that troubling.

But I want to make sure I hear you fully, and hear you aright. So may I ask, when you say it's a "stumbling block," what particular concern would bother you? Would it be the lack of universalism, the lack of everybody simply being let off the hook? Or would it be the fact that you don't believe God should allow people to make bad choices? Or would it be the cartoonish idea of a kind of Purgatorio of flames and devils that we get from popular-culture depictions of Hell, or maybe from Hieronymus Bosch paintings? Or...?

People take different kinds of issues with that idea, and depending on how they happen to see it, and what they've come to believe that "Judgment" means or entails. I can't know beforehand what the precise nature of your concern is. Can you help me out, there?
User avatar
Lacewing
Posts: 6722
Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2015 2:25 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Lacewing »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 3:47 pm I thought you didn't "believe" anything. 8)
Lacewing wrote:I don't.
Well, since every human being believes things, it's pretty funny you think you believe you don't. :wink:
You've lost track of the conversation once again through your willful detours.

We were talking about an afterlife. I don't believe anything about an afterlife.

Are you getting dementia? I've wondered if you were pathologically dishonest or simply stupid. But maybe it's some sort of righteous dementia.
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27604
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Lacewing wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 4:03 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 3:47 pm I thought you didn't "believe" anything. 8)
Lacewing wrote:I don't.
Well, since every human being believes things, it's pretty funny you think you believe you don't. :wink:
You've lost track of the conversation...
Well, to be honest, you don't do "conversations." You do "creative rewrites." And you do "cavils." But you don't take your interlocutors seriously, or treat them thoughtfully. You simply look for openings into which you can insert misrepresentations and accusations. And you do that to all of us, not just to me.

Not that I mind, particularly, of course; I don't take any of it with any seriousness, because practically nothing you ever "rewrite" looks like something I actually said or intended. So it seems to me you're really only talking to yourself, anyway, badgering a mere construct you've thrown together out of your own prejudices. It's a "Cathy Newman" conversation with you, every time.

My conclusion: you're not a very happy person, and the world must not be a lot of fun for you. Nonetheless, every now and then, I dip back into coversation with you, to see if you've gotten any better. But so far...well, a real "conversation" with you has never been possible. You always seem determined to gripe, rewrite, and spout spite. And I really cannot imagine how that makes your life any good. Things must have been really rough for you, to make you so angry, pugilistic and hostile...that's all I can think.

But there are people one can talk with, and people who are in a state in which one can't. And you're the latter.
User avatar
Lacewing
Posts: 6722
Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2015 2:25 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Lacewing »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 4:20 pm
Lacewing wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 4:03 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 3:47 pm I thought you didn't "believe" anything. 8)

Well, since every human being believes things, it's pretty funny you think you believe you don't. :wink:
You've lost track of the conversation...
Well, to be honest, you don't do "conversations." You do "creative rewrites." And you do "cavils." But you don't take your interlocutors seriously, or treat them thoughtfully. You simply look for openings into which you can insert misrepresentations and accusations. And you do that to all of us, not just to me.

Not that I mind, particularly, of course; I don't take any of it with any seriousness, because practically nothing you ever "rewrite" looks like something I actually said or intended. So it seems to me you're really only talking to yourself, anyway, badgering a mere construct you've thrown together out of your own prejudices. It's a "Cathy Newman" conversation with you, every time.

My conclusion: you're not a very happy person, and the world must not be a lot of fun for you. Nonetheless, every now and then, I dip back into coversation with you, to see if you've gotten any better. But so far...well, a real "conversation" with you has never been possible. You always seem determined to gripe, rewrite, and spout spite. And I really cannot imagine how that makes your life any good. Things must have been really rough for you, to make you so angry, pugilistic and hostile...that's all I can think.

But there are people one can talk with, and people who are in a state in which one can't. And you're the latter.
We were talking about an afterlife, were we not?
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27604
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Lacewing wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 4:24 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 4:20 pm
Lacewing wrote: Sat Jan 14, 2023 4:03 pm
You've lost track of the conversation...
Well, to be honest, you don't do "conversations." You do "creative rewrites." And you do "cavils." But you don't take your interlocutors seriously, or treat them thoughtfully. You simply look for openings into which you can insert misrepresentations and accusations. And you do that to all of us, not just to me.

Not that I mind, particularly, of course; I don't take any of it with any seriousness, because practically nothing you ever "rewrite" looks like something I actually said or intended. So it seems to me you're really only talking to yourself, anyway, badgering a mere construct you've thrown together out of your own prejudices. It's a "Cathy Newman" conversation with you, every time.

My conclusion: you're not a very happy person, and the world must not be a lot of fun for you. Nonetheless, every now and then, I dip back into coversation with you, to see if you've gotten any better. But so far...well, a real "conversation" with you has never been possible. You always seem determined to gripe, rewrite, and spout spite. And I really cannot imagine how that makes your life any good. Things must have been really rough for you, to make you so angry, pugilistic and hostile...that's all I can think.

But there are people one can talk with, and people who are in a state in which one can't. And you're the latter.
We were talking about an afterlife, were we not?
We were.

But "were" is the operative word. You took it in a personal direction, which it seems you habitually do. However, I find that utterly uninteresting.
Post Reply