As we have all noticed — over long, dreary years! — the Christian thing is endlessly debated and recycled and hardly any part of it is resolved to satisfaction. Why? Because the philosophical mind is not the mind that (in the ultimate, and possibly the more important sense) can benefit from internalized understanding. For this reason, if the metaphysical (and supernatural) element is put to the side, yes, all that remains is historical and socio-political and socio-philosophical musing over the travels and interactions of Paul and academic analysis of what happened, what it led to, the formation of the Early Church and all that. If all that is merely “studied” it is certainly interesting, but rather dry as it pertains to the inner element, the influence of the supernatural potency, and everything associated with spiritual and ‘faith’ processes.Dubious wrote: ↑Wed Apr 08, 2026 4:27 am True in a sense but within the narrative of historical fact such laminations become superfluous if one want's to understand its true history without the metaphysics which is mostly used to inflict meaning. Such would be a different subject with a different intent, its conflation being the error.
But here is the key: mental musing and intellectual rumination on such topics is activity essentially on the periphery of all that is “spiritual” and “mystical”. And though it is not much delved into in those letters of Paul, I think we must suppose that there did develop, if you will, an oral tradition within these communities similar to what is communicated in (for example) the yoga traditions of the East. I.e. a “science” of devotion, meditation and prayer. You can only study so much material before you have to make some sort of decision to involve yourself on a psychic, psychological level. Now, with that said I am pretty sure you are familiar with, say, Jungian psychological “practices” that involve paying attention to, indeed evoking, response and communication from “inner dimensions” (Jung would say from the “unconscious”).
Once such an “activity” begins, which is applied mysticism, there a “relationship” (with inner, perhaps mysterious forces) is initiated. As you know people involve themselves artistically and nearly with their whole soul in such probings. And the quality of the experience this practitioner has always depends on the quality of that individual. Or in any case in something in that individual.
For this reason, and certainly in the early Greek world, the monastic traditions evolved. To some extent “intellectual” in focus — competent, literate, ‘sensitive’ to all schools of 1st century philosophy and mysticism — but with emphasis on cultivation of spiritual experience. Therefore the metaphysical aspect is shown to be paramount within the practicing community.