Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 4:49 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 9:36 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 2:22 am
That's pretty hard to do on an anonymous forum. Quite an achievement, really.
I'll consider it a badge of honour.
I don't think you would get the satisfaction you anticipate by getting me to believe in God, because I would still be unable to go along with the things you say it entails.
A funny thought: "satisfaction" was never on my mind. I would be pleased for your sake, of course, but in no way self-congratulatory on my own behalf. Personally, I have nothing to gain. But okay.
The approach to morality and the subservient attitude would be completely unacceptable to me, so what would be the point?
"I will not serve." That's a quotation. James Joyce’s
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), spoken by Father Arnall in his sermon:
“Lucifer, we are told, was a son of the morning, a radiant and mighty angel; yet he fell: he fell and there fell with him a third part of the host of heaven: he fell and was hurled with his rebellious angels into hell. What his sin was we cannot say. Theologians consider that it was the sin of pride, the sinful thought conceived in an instant: non serviam: I will not serve. That instant was his ruin.”
It's not a Biblical quotation, of course. The sentiment may not be incorrect, however, nor the anticipated outcome of that declaration. One has to be very careful when one declares one's unwillingness to bow to the supreme Source of goodness, light, truth and morality. The alternatives may be mistaken for freedom, but they generally turn out to be forms of enslavement that dwarf in magnitude any loss of freedom entailed by humbling oneself to serve all that is good and right.
That's because we are tyrants to ourselves, really: our vaunted self-determination generally turns out to be enslavement to our lower impulses, our pride, our lust, our rebellion and our instinctive perversity, which turns out to be far more ensnaring and demanding than anything else. In our ardent self-love and jealousy for our independence, we find our relationships destroyed, our ambitions all wasted, and our bodies decayed...and then we die.
Because everybody dies.
And what then?
As far as the Bible, it seems to me to be plausible that the Bible is a recorded archive from humans of thousands of years ago. So they called God their "King" because when the Hebrews were writing there were kings and pharaohs, etc. So that's what humans called God, perhaps today we ought to look at God as our president and call him President God. And since a President is not a dictator but rather an executive who carries out the law of the land, God is the executive who carries out the commandments of the land. So the Bible is a bit of a story of kings nested within a King.
I mean what you wrote above about Lucifer being cast out of heaven could ultimately be traceable to the motif of a member of society who would not serve his tribal leader or tribal elder and the elder, instead of killing him, exiled him.
In a sense the Bible mimics life and life mimics the Bible, like a new programming language can cause a computer to execute a different sequence or execute the same sequences differently.
Perhaps the Bible is the very first history book. And the very first history book didn't talk about computers or presidents or anything like that. The first history books recorded what were there at the time. Of course, human beings behave much the same. We've had the same instincts and desires and act them out in the same world as we always have, so there are repetitive patterns, such as some not serving and being exiled for it.
But the real question is, does God
exist? Was the universe created by what amounts to an uber human, an all knowing, all powerful, all capable God? Or is God, perhaps the first ever mortal king and the Bible a recorded allegory of the first ever mortal king's behaviors.