Christianity

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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

IC wrote:Poison kills. So eat carefully.
I do not perceive that you are in a position to make judgments about “poisons”. I know, however, that you think that you can. Indeed your entire shtick is as a lecturer to the benighted and those “in Satan’s grip”.

The battle that you set up here, and the one you invest heavily in, is a form of hyper-righteous LARPing. You are not really here to discuss things, nor to build bridges to other people and their different concepts.

And for this reason your apologetics fail. And when you invest a decade in failing apologetics, one begins to wonder what you are really up to.

In contrast to you, and because I notice these flaws, I learn as a result that another path must be chosen.

Having read your thoughts for many years I have noticed area where you are invested in non-truths that may also be ‘lies of a sort’. Your own condemnation condemns you.

Yet you are absolutely convinced that your version and interpretation of Christianity, and indeed of the core ‘message’ in it is thoroughly right and truthful. I think you may well deceive yourself.

It is a curious, but suspect position that is taken by many Christian religious zealots: that Jesus Christ himself smiles down on the noble long-suffering efforts of his disciples.

But that is the essence of your LARP.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 5:05 pm
IC wrote:Poison kills. So eat carefully.
I do not perceive that you are in a position to make judgments about “poisons”.
Then I guess you'll eat.
MikeNovack
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Re: Christianity

Post by MikeNovack »

Oh goody, Christians vs Christians about who is Christian. Well at least just talking/arguing about it rather than killing each other (as has happened in the past)
Belinda
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 12:19 pm
Belinda wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 11:42 am You are a Thomist and you should say honestly what you are in simple language.
So you say. I am uncertain “what I am” yet what I do defend is the notion transcendent value and obviously the realm of the metaphysically intelligible. My views are likely far more synthetic and ‘bridging’ than you can conceive.
"transcendent value" you say. Transcending what exactly ? If you prefer not to be misunderstood you need to be explicit.
'To transcend ' is a transitive verb.

I had written "To revert to final cause as a remedy for the world's ills is like trying to stuff a spirit back in the bottle of history." If you are not certain what you are it's high time you faced existential facts.

The fact we all especially need to face is that political allegiances change during man's past ; one's view of man's past needs constant revision. A political "package" or a metaphysical "package" that suited a lot of people seventy years ago is likely not to suit many today. and may lead people astray in minor and in important matters ' .
Last edited by Belinda on Thu Sep 04, 2025 6:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

MikeNovack wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 6:00 pm Oh goody, Christians vs Christians about who is Christian. Well at least just talking/arguing about it rather than killing each other (as has happened in the past)
Actually, religion is a very small cause of wars...no more than 8% in history can even remotely be interpreted as "religious." Of those, half are due to one solitary religion...Islam. The remaining 4% includes all other religions in human history...Hinduism, Sikhism, Buddhism, Mormonism, animism, polytheism, Catholicism, Judaism, etc. That's according to the totally secular and scholarly "Encyclopedia of War" (3 vols.) We might also add that many very conservative "religious" groups have caused no wars at all: there are no Quaker or Mennonite wars, for example.

So you're repeating a myth. Sorry.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 5:31 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 5:05 pm
IC wrote:Poison kills. So eat carefully.
I do not perceive that you are in a position to make judgments about “poisons”.
Then I guess you'll eat.
It is typical of you to thoroughly blow off the important points in a person’s post with a stupid repartee.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

MikeNovack wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 6:00 pm Oh goody, Christians vs Christians about who is Christian. Well at least just talking/arguing about it rather than killing each other (as has happened in the past)
This is technically wrong: I was raised in a non-practicing Jewish family by JewBoos. (Jewish Buddhists …)

If Christianity has substance and validity it is in my opinion to be understood though Logos and Intellectus.

I definitely explored (traditional) Catholicism precisely because it contains all sorts of ‘logos’ elements and also precisely because it definitely contains elements of far more ancient metaphysics. I have tremendous respect for Catholic social doctrine and the structure of the Tridentine liturgy (the Mass) traces upward ascent.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 6:54 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 5:31 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 5:05 pm
I do not perceive that you are in a position to make judgments about “poisons”.
Then I guess you'll eat.
It is typical of you to thoroughly blow off the important points in a person’s post with a stupid repartee.
I didn't see any important points. All I saw was a bunch of ad hominems and nutty speculations. If you had something substantive to say, maybe I'd spend some time on it. As it is, it's not worth even typing this much.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 7:00 pm I was raised in a non-practicing Jewish family by JewBoos. (Jewish Buddhists …)
Well, that's at least interesting.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Belinda wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 6:13 pm "Transcendent value" you say. Transcending what exactly ? If you prefer not to be misunderstood you need to be explicit.
'To transcend ' is a transitive verb.
How odd that the term “values that are transcendent’ needs explanation. There are lower-order values (money, the stuff one needs to live, one’s entertainments, etc.) and there are higher-order values like the commitments of friendship, or marriage (as sacrament), and many other concerns that derive from active principles one believes in, is committed to. Also there are values in respect to ‘the life of the soul’ and also duch ideas or notions such as ‘salvation’ and ‘justification’ or ‘grace’.
I had written "To revert to final cause as a remedy for the world's ills is like trying to stuff a spirit back in the bottle of history." If you are not certain what you are it's high time you faced existential facts.
I cannot say I am attempting to ‘remedy the world’s ills’, maybe that is your bag?

It definitely seems to me that preoccupation with what Christians and other religions regard as “final causes” should be some percentage of one’s gamut of preoccupations.

I am uncertain if you, my dear, understand where you have arrived to if your major point of reference is modernity. I do not think it really has much to offer of genuine substance.

And your metaphor of “stuffing a spirit back into a bottle” seems merely silly. What you see and describe has little relationship to what interests or impels me.
The fact we all especially need to face is that political allegiances change during man's past; one's view of man's past needs constant revision. A political "package" or a metaphysical "package" that suited a lot of people seventy years ago is likely not to suit many today. and may lead people astray in minor and in important matters’.
Hmmmm. I tend to recognize and ‘believe in’ values and concerns that are eternal and likely not ever to change.

That is one reason I will never stop saying that the values defined by Christianity and Greco-Christian philosophy cannot and will not ever be dismissed nor become outmoded.

Among some people (not you necessarily) it is an observation that enters one ear, passes through an empty space, and exits the other ear …
Last edited by Alexis Jacobi on Thu Sep 04, 2025 9:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 9:09 pm I didn't see any important points. All I saw was a bunch of ad hominems and nutty speculations.
I think you bullshit yourself. And this is just one more dismissive repartee.
promethean75
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Re: Christianity

Post by promethean75 »

"That is one reason I will never stop saying that the values defined by Christianity and Greco-Christian philosophy cannot and will not ever be dismissed nor become outmoded"

Heck, you could say that values like not killin folks, hard work ethic, respect for property, compassion, reverence for family, etc., existed universally in cultures thousands of years before either of those things you mention even existed at all, i reckon.

Hard 'ta say a set of values come frum sumthin' that don't even exist yet, mm-hmm.

Seriously, why do i feel like slingblade every time i come to this'n here forum?
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

promethean75 wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 9:52 pm
It is related of Cortes that, when he withdrew from Mexico, he left behind him an ass, which, being a strange animal to the natives, was at once taken to the village and worshipped as a god.
Belinda
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 9:21 pm
Belinda wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 6:13 pm "Transcendent value" you say. Transcending what exactly ? If you prefer not to be misunderstood you need to be explicit.
'To transcend ' is a transitive verb.
How odd that the term “values that are transcendent’ needs explanation. There are lower-order values (money, the stuff one needs to live, one’s entertainments, etc.) and there are higher-order values like the commitments of friendship, or marriage (as sacrament), and many other concerns that derive from active principles one believes in, is committed to. Also there are values in respect to ‘the life of the soul’ and also duch ideas or notions such as ‘salvation’ and ‘justification’ or ‘grace’.
I had written "To revert to final cause as a remedy for the world's ills is like trying to stuff a spirit back in the bottle of history." If you are not certain what you are it's high time you faced existential facts.
I cannot say I am attempting to ‘remedy the world’s ills’, maybe that is your bag?

It definitely seems to me that preoccupation with what Christians and other religions regard as “final causes” should be some percentage of one’s gamut of preoccupations.

I am uncertain if you, my dear, understand where you have arrived to if your major point of reference is modernity. I do not think it really has much to offer of genuine substance.

And your metaphor of “stuffing a spirit back into a bottle” seems merely silly. What you see and describe has little relationship to what interests or impels me.
The fact we all especially need to face is that political allegiances change during man's past; one's view of man's past needs constant revision. A political "package" or a metaphysical "package" that suited a lot of people seventy years ago is likely not to suit many today. and may lead people astray in minor and in important matters’.
Hmmmm. I tend to recognize and ‘believe in’ values and concerns that are eternal and likely not ever to change.

That is one reason I will never stop saying that the values defined by Christianity and Greco-Christian philosophy cannot and will not ever be dismissed nor become outmoded.

Among some people (not you necessarily) it is an observation that enters one ear, passes through an empty space, and exits the other ear …
"I tend to recognize and ‘believe in’ values and concerns that are eternal and likely not ever to change.

That is one reason I will never stop saying that the values defined by Christianity and Greco-Christian philosophy cannot and will not ever be dismissed nor become outmoded. "
At last! What you believe in in simple language.

You dislike the metaphor of pushing the spirit back into the bottle.
Literally, you disdain values that relate to world views, but believe in eternal values. So be it.

What I don't understand is how someone can be uninterested in the suffering in the world . Are you really not interested in existential dangers that face all of us? Really? Alexis:
I cannot say I am attempting to ‘remedy the world’s ills’, maybe that is your bag?
The word 'transcendent' seems to be a difficulty between us. To me it usually means transcending this relative world.
Good, truth , and beauty don't transcend this relative world but infuse this relative world. We get ephemeral glimpses of good, truth, and beauty. Educators bear responsibility to show glimpses of good, truth, or beauty.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Belinda wrote: Fri Sep 05, 2025 10:33 am At last! What you believe in, in simple language.
It’s more like this: every once in a while you become more open to understanding ideas and views that are foreign, and perhaps contrary, to your established views. When you become receptive, you succeed in understanding what is being said. Suddenly what is being said is no longer “turgid” but clear.

What I believe? As far as that question pertains to this thread what I believe is that metaphysical ideas and the realness of them must be paid attention to. Though we are ensconced in times that distain this. That we are in an age in which people’s concepts are molded by ulta-maternalistic modes of thought. As TE Hulme put it:
“We are all of us under the influence of a number of abstract ideas, of which we are as a matter of fact unconscious. We do not see them, but we see other things through them.”
What I believe, therefore, is that we can ‘take some steps back from our projected assumptions’ and attempt to see things by interposing different ‘lenses’.

(Are you having difficulty following, Belinda? Is my prose all on the sudden becoming ‘turgid’ again? Take a breath. Focus!)

I suggest examining not the surface of what our resident Evangelical (Non-Denominational) Christian religious zealot and fanatic declares, but penetrating under the surface and getting to the very core of the IDEAS expressed, or meant, when the figure of Christ is referenced. If we succeed here, we may feel less inclined to jettison the entire structure and we may be able to salvage what is of transcendent value there, and put to the side the mere ‘mess of pottage’ or the superficial packaging.
You dislike the metaphor of pushing the spirit back into the bottle.
Obviously, because you intend it critically and as a contradiction. “Spirit” has a very limited meaning in your lexicon, driven as you are by materialistic abstractions. And by ‘bottle’ you mean something like confining hierarchies of the Dark Ages

Your motivating predicates are quite obvious.
Literally, you disdain values that relate to world views, but believe in eternal values. So be it.
You have no idea as to what attitude I take to material concerns (human struggle, economic struggle, poverty, etc.) To know you’d have to ask. But yes, on the intellectual plane I definitely ‘believe in’ those values understood to be eternal.

Check!
What I don't understand is how someone can be uninterested in the suffering in the world. Are you really not interested in existential dangers that face all of us? Really?
Well, this I can tell you: I live in direct relationships and proximity to people far more in the midst of that struggle and suffering than you do. In South America (in urban centers) it is all around me. And in fact I have spent a full decade involved in specific melioration of a family mired in the limitations imposed by such circumstances. I have first-hand knowledge of what success can be and looks like.

I am aware of giant existential dangers but there is nothing I can effectively do about them.
The word 'transcendent' seems to be a difficulty between us.
Perhaps …
tran•scend (trænˈsɛnd)
v.t.
1. to rise above or go beyond the ordinary limits of; overpass; exceed.
2. to outdo or exceed in excellence, extent, degree, etc.; surpass; excel.
3. to be independent of or prior to (the universe, time, etc.).
v.i.
4. to be transcendent or superior; excel.
[1300–50; Middle English < Latin trānscendere to surmount =trāns- trans- + -scendere, comb. form of scandere to climb]
5. (Philosophy) philosophy theology (esp of the Deity) to exist beyond (the material world)
My sense about metaphysics inclines me to suppose they are transcendent to material existence. I.e. eternal. They transcend the entire manifestation.
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