Not really. Sometimes I do, sometimes I don't.
Anyway, I'll do better(...or will I?)
Sorry...I misunderstood your point.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 21, 2021 6:14 pmThat is not what I meant. What I referred to is that for thousands of years the prophecies to which we refer were suspected, intuited, imagined and perceived as being close, just around the corner, and in every period where there were wars, conflicts, disasters, and other such events, it was imagined that the end of the world was nigh.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Nov 19, 2021 11:05 pmNo, I wouldn't say that was fair.
The deciding factor is not subjective...it's either objectively true or objectively false. The only way a prophecy can "be what people want it to be" is if it's so vague as to describe nothing...like daily horoscopes. If it's at all specific, then a prophecy is simply true or false.
I did not say that prophecy was what people wanted it to be, but rather that they in fact had no choice but to try to attempt to interpret the prophecies they read about, or which other people talked about, as having direct bearing on their lives, the situations around them.
There's some truth in that. But it's a small difference. Christians were always told that the goods and plaudits of this world are transient and of little ultimate value. So in a sense, we might say that every Christian should always be living with that sense, regardless of whether prophecies of the apocalpyse are far or near.And as always this sense of foreboding had a 'Christian' function: to induce a sense of instability in them. If they were complacent about *the world* and themselves in that world they would not be able to find the motive to sever their hopes and longings from a mutable platform and turn instead to God and higher metaphysical ideas (or realities).
I think this is certainly true for secularists, utopians, and progressivists, among others. It must be very frustrating to see one's "heaven-on-earth" slipping from one's grasp, and to fear that each mounting crisis and tragedy bode the possible failure of all one's plans.But the essential factor is the sense that the foundation, the understructure of life in so many areas and senses is unstable. It seems to produce a form of desperation.
Yes.Obviously, with advent of the Great War and the destruction that followed (so I have read) faith in the continuity of *civilized* life was severely affected. I read not long ago someone who had written that the sense of trust in life itself as a stable platform in Europe changed dramatically as a result of that shock. He said that one would have had to have lived prior to 1914 to have known that sense of faith and comfort that life offered, which as substantially shattered after that terrible war -- and of course those that followed it.
That's it. That's the point.In my view it is clear that the modern era seems to be one of acceleration in all areas, but though it is said that life improves and gets better with every passing advance, it does seem to me that people generally sense that things get that much more insecure, and that it is not really possible to have great faith in these developments.
Well, and fair enough.This interests me, of course, because I sense that (certainly in the US, I am uncertain how other people perceive it) the loss of faith in an understructure the world provides leads to a tremendous and mounting psychic insecurity. It seems to me this insecurity and angst lead to an internal condition of susceptibility to *hysteria*.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Nov 21, 2021 5:53 pmThis world is valuable, a creation of God, the stage on which the drama of human history and salvation is to be played out; and it's held in stewardship, as a gift of God, so it's not to be despised.
I suppose you will agree that it is not an easy thing to believe in that there is another world that is radically distinct and different from this world?
I actually think it's pretty reasonable. I admit it's not what everybody does, but the more one thinks about it, the more sense it makes.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Nov 22, 2021 2:37 pmI suppose you will agree that it is not an easy thing to believe in that there is another world that is radically distinct and different from this world?
Do you think it true that there is no evidence we can refer to of such a world-beyond?
Well, the Christian belief is that there indeed has been such a Man.And it must be taken on faith alone since, unless I am wrong, there is no Earth resident who has been to the world beyond and returned and no descriptions of what it is like . . .
Yes. Of course. If I thought otherwise, could I be a Christian?Do you think it possible for Heaven’s residents to communicate with Earth residents? Is there a line of communication?
I'm believing that they are. And I think they're very intelligent questions, and precisely the right sorts of questions. So I am happy to give you the answers I believe are true, and leave them in your judgment as to what you make of them. I appreciate your frankness and directness, and I think you sincere. And it seems to me, such a person deserves straight answers.These are genuine questions. It seems true to me that many do not ask sincere and direct questions about (permit me the term) the mechanics of these metaphysical descriptions.
People can make 'sense' of all kinds of things via self-affirming, self-serving repetition. Thinking about something a lot doesn't equate to clarity or truth.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Nov 22, 2021 3:10 pm...the more one thinks about it, the more sense it makes.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Nov 22, 2021 2:37 pm I suppose you will agree that it is not an easy thing to believe in that there is another world that is radically distinct and different from this world?
I actually agree with you. (But then, I am neither Lutheran nor Calvinist.) Both made the terrible mistake of mirroring the sort of clerical hierarchy they had learned from Catholicism; and it was only a matter of time until both went corrupt, therefore.owl of Minerva wrote: ↑Mon Nov 22, 2021 4:33 pm It was inevitable that the humanism of the evangelism of Luther and Calvin would deteriorate into secular humanism. It was too extreme and unbalanced.
Absolutely true. And you use the right model from which to criticize them for what they chose to do. Again, I agree....their competitive stance in relation to their opponents, and condoning of their executions, was a far cry from Christ’s “Father forgive them for they know not what they do.”
As well, to believe that there is no hope; that good and evil will always be equal is defeatism and is in accordance with the Manichaeism view.
That's Calvinism. And I agree it's a fallacy, and, I would also say, a heresy.That some are chosen; an elect
No, that's a non-sequitur. That does not follow at all.There is evil without a doubt, it is a given. To think that humans do not have the will or power to resist it is to doubt in the goodness of God...
That's just the old Humanism, the one that took such a beating from WW1 and 2 (and has had several good beatings since, of course.) Good does not prevail in humanity, because human beings are not aligned with good themselves, and cannot be trusted to be.A progressive view that no matter how joined the battle is between good and evil, good will prevail if aligned with by a humanity
Yes. Jesus Christ.owl of Minerva wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 12:42 am You are critical of other branches of Christianity so I am curious as to what Evangelical Christian category you belong to. Did it have a founder?
The problem is not "faith alone," which is a Biblical axiom. It's what's called "The Prosperity Gospel," which is actually a materialistic belief system, one that Christ Himself taught us is contrary to His values. And you're right to be skeptical of the hucksters, the salesmen and the liars.Many people, both believers and non-believers, are skeptical of evangelism because they view its ‘faith alone’ philosophy as dubious and its prosperity doctrine as similar to medieval indulgences, and prosperity as a marker of the elect as similar to a cargo cult. They are dubious of Televangelists and their prosperity from large donations. It appears as if religion is used to promote business. In the U.S. conservative Christians support fellow evangelists such as Bush and Trump...
A hierarchy is not necessarily a bad thing when decisions are made by a group with a leader by consensus and not by a single individual.
I agree that salvation is not fated but chosen. I am not clear on what “biblical salvation” means.
No, I'm no Gnostic, and there are many disagreements between Christians and Gnostics that make them essentially very different.Gnosticism emphasized personal spiritual knowledge above the orthodox teachings, traditions, and authority of traditional religious institutions. That appears to be the view you are espousing. That they disdained the world was not good as it is where salvation is to be worked out.
Humanism is an overemphasis on the human to the exclusion of all else.
Native peoples rightly saw their place and duty was between heaven and earth: Spirit and Nature, maintaining balance between both.
"Social justice" has nothing to do with ancient cultures. It's nothing that's existed before the rise of the Frankfurt School of the Neo-Marxists in the last century. It's a completely different form of superstition.Not believing in social justice is not a virtue.
To believe that human beings do not have the will or power to resist evil is to believe in a fatal flaw in the creation of a just God.
Humans did not create good or evil.
You are quite correct.Your view of humans is quite pessimistic and is one that is not shared by most religious leaders or most religions.
Ah, the 'outside'.Immanuel Can to owl wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 2:03 am The difficulty for you, looking at things from the outside, is this: how are you to know what a real Christian is, and is not?
Ah, the 'core' of truth.Immanuel Can to owl wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 2:03 amThe closer one gets to the core of truth about that, the more charlatans, fakers, pretenders, salesmen and hucksters there seem to be.
The way you come up with this transparent stuff to serve yourself and justify your claims is fascinating.Immanuel Can to owl wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 2:03 am But if we think about it, that's exactly what we should probably expect: namely, that the majority of deceptions are going to be clustered around the truth. That's because deceptions get stronger as they get closer to the truth; and deceptions that are far from the truth, from the facts, from the essence of an answer, are always the least plausible deceptions, right?
Oh, is that a 'fact'? Or maybe deceptions are just very creative delusions that serve people. And maybe people don't see through deceptions NOT because the deceptions are so close to the truth, but because the people are very gullible and foolish.Immanuel Can to owl wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 2:03 amIn fact, the most powerful deception, the one that's hardest for anybody to see through, is always the one that sticks closest to the facts of every point it can
Atheist themselves proudly say that Atheism consists of only one claim. And if they're not lying, there's nothing more to know. But I actually know a ton about it: because while they rarely read my literature, I read lots of theirs.
Absolutely. Try it sometime. If you come home late, and somebody asks you, "Why aren't you here on time?" then don't try to tell them, "I was abducted by a UFO." That's too far from the truth. If you want to deceive them, there will be a whole cluster of things you can say, all of them much closer to the truth: "The car had a flat," "I was prevented by an emergency that came up," "My watch broke," "I thought we said we'd meet later," "The traffic was terrible..." There are always the most functional lies closest to the truth. Wild exaggerations are too detectable.Oh, is that a 'fact'?Immanuel Can to owl wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 2:03 amIn fact, the most powerful deception, the one that's hardest for anybody to see through, is always the one that sticks closest to the facts of every point it can