Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Thu Nov 25, 2021 10:11 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Nov 25, 2021 9:25 pm"Raggedness" is what one gets when there are a lot of pretenders, fakes and hangers-on. But it does not speak to the integrity of the core...the theology in question, or the values and practices of those who actually take it seriously. It does speak to the confusion that inevitably results when mankind is simply encouraged to make up religious terms for themselves, and to call them whatever they wish.
I have a few comments . . .
One thing I noticed about your position -- that is as a Non-Denominal Christian -- is that you avail to yourself a position from which you skip over, or leap over, everything that Christianity actually
is
What "is" Christianity? That's the real question.
Is it what you always assumed it was, or is it what the Carpenter of Galilee said and taught?
It can only be one or the other, because "everthing" that is associated with the institutional church, as you will know from history, is
not that.
...it seems to me that you avail yourself of a sort of theological luxury to be able to declare now what Christianity actually is.
Not at all. I will not even take a stand on some definition I have made up. Rather, I advocate for the right of Jesus Christ to define what it is.
And as I said before, if what I think ever departs from what He said, then it is certainly I who am wrong.
The notion of Christianity is founded on and grounded in the person of Jesus Christ -- a specific personality. And all specific personalities such as yours and mine are perspectival personalities.
I would only add one word: "all specific
earthly perspectives, such as yours and mine, are perspectival." But please continue.
It is as if when we visualize the now risen, now ascended personality of Jesus Christ, who is also described very abstractly as logos that existed before creation manifested, we must imagine a Person who decides and judges all specific events.
Why would we have to "imagine" a Person who actually lived? And if we merely "imagine" Him, and it turns out that's different from what He Himself is, what value does that have?
Human "imagination" is the problem. We've got to stop merely "imagining," and ask God to help us to
know Him -- both as He actually is, and as the Scriptures reveal Him to be.
My "imagination" needs the discipline of the Word and the teaching of God's Spirit...or it will surely never be more than mere "imagining."
So the ones that say "We possess the true, original and proper Christianity" also must control,
No; they must bow to the Word of God and His self-revelation, and surely they have no special warrant to "control" anything. One key element of Christianity is surely this: Christ, not I, is the Source of truth and rightness. My "control," or that of self-appointed ecclesiastical authorities, means nothing. It's not legitimate.
Yet the actual fact of the matter is that there are specific Christianities, and though it becomes absurd to say it, various Christs.
It is absurd to say it. There is but one Christ, surely. And the diversity of "imagined" Christs does not count a single stroke against that. It just means that people "imagine" strange things sometime.
It's like I was saying earlier. If somebody asked me if I knew Alexis Jacobi, and I said "Yes," but then described you as a huge Yorkshireman with a beard like a rhodedendron bush, or, on the other hand, as a ten-year-old Chinese trans acrobat, what would the logical assumption be? That there were many "Alexis Jacobis"?
Or merely that I didn't know you at all?
So there is the actual religion of Christianity,...which appears to be Catholicism...
I was surprised, when I first went to university, that people actually thought that. From a Christian perspective, I had long known it to be absolutely untrue. While I'd met private Catholics who were also Christians, I knew even then that most were not, and the clergy were definitely not. All one had to do is look at historic Catholic theology, and there was no doubt anymore.
But I also understand now why people made that mistake. It's because Catholicism is simply the largest institutional body to claim that Name. As such, they were easy for historians to find. They left tons of documents (and burned most of the documents of the people who disagreed with them, and some of the actual people as well, of course). They left huge architecture, various public institutions, an imprint in secular philosophy, much art, and a whole lot of other stuff, as well. And so they became quite simply the easiest group of people claiming the name "Christian" for the secular historian to locate and study. So it was easiest to take Catholics at their word, and say, "Well, since that's the biggest thing around, it must be real Christianity."
Unfortunately, it's not. Size does not make truth. Ease of study does not indicate rightness. And to study the Bible and compare it with Catholic theology, well, one becomes totally certain that whatever the Catholic Church is, even today, it's not what's in the Bible. It's something else.
And Catholicism knows it. That's why the Papacy subscribes to the Doctrine of Progressive Revelation, meaning that they think the Pope and councils have authority not only to interpret Scripture, but to change it as they wish. They mock Protestants for having a "static revelation," and claim that theirs is "dynamic" or "growing," and that that makes it better.
But on this point both Protestants and Catholics agree: where the Catholic Church went, doctrinally, was not conformity to
Torah or the New Testament. It was
innovation, and innovation by bishops, popes and prelates.
So no, the Catholics were not, and are not, the Christians. The Catholic Church itself (and you will know this if you know the history) did not even exist until after Constantine established it post 312, even though there were many Christians before that. Catholicism began as a compromise with paganism in Rome (hence the word "Roman,") and continuted as a domineering political system aiming at world control (hence the word "Catholic" which means "universal").
But then along comes the Protestant revision,
Well, that's the first most history books mention. But there were plenty of others before. The problem was that the Catholics wiped most of them out. They had names like "Cathars," "Waldenses," "Bogomils," and so on. And the Catholics wiped them out so thoroughly that in some cases, all we have left of them is whatever the Catholics themselves decided to write about them in order to justify killing them off -- not the most reliable record, of course.
But we know about a few...like the Waldenses, for example. And they were most certainly a kind of Protestant-before-Protestantism, a set of movements aiming at returning to a simple, more humble and Biblical Christianity.
And then, of course, there were other groups the Catholics worked to wipe out, too...not least the Jews and the Huguenots...but I don't think there's any reason we would mistake their actions for "Christian," do you?
So who is the one who can come along, now, and adjudicate the 'true theology'?
Jesus Christ.
You skip over, or seem to skip over, the actual origins of Christianity,
I think I've addressed that somewhat above.
...and you seem as well to skip over the 1,000 years of Mediaeval Christianity where, for Europe at least, it was defined.
I don't skip it at all: I see it for what it is. It's secular history, written based on the assumption that "Catholic" means "Christian": and you're quite right that Europe was heavily shaped by that error. It's an error nonetheless.
But I would understand why, if your interest were in reviving Europe, you might look to Catholicism as some sort of well of values that you could tap for ideas. That makes a certain amount of sense, since both Europe and Catholicism developed together.
However, I think that idea is a bid doomed, if you don't mind me saying so.
As you well know the developing (third millennium) Christianity is non-European.
It is. But then, Christianity was never "European" legitimately in the first place. It's a Jewish religion, really, and after that, it has only secondary reference to any other culture. Its impact has been global, to be sure; and there's a legitimacy to any culture adopting Christian practices, because Christianity is not inherently culture bound.
Messiah is for everyone. For the Jews first, but then for the Gentiles.
"He came to those who were His own (the Jews), and those who were his own did not recieve Him; but to as many as did receive Him (both Jews and Gentiles) He gave the right to become sons of God, even to those who believe on His Name." (John 1)
It will become, and be, something else altogether. Though it will be grounded in the Bible and in modernity.
Does that really make any sense to think?
I mean, "modernity" is a single phase of Western history, fairly recent, and already claimed to have faded into other things, like Postmodernity. So what sense does it make to say that the eternal Word of God is fated to be, or ought to be interpreted through Modernity? It makes as much sense as to say it's to be interpreted through Medievalism or Communism or Consumerism...which is to say, no sense at all.
If it's God's word, what would make us imagine it would be so transient?
My point is perhaps different from what you imagine it to be.
Perhaps. But my imaginings are unimportant. The truth matters, and the truth is in Christ.
Therefore, one must choose a 'Christianity'
If "one" chooses it, you can be sure it's not "Christianity."
But I have to accept that other people are doing something similar. Therefore the God that they believe they stand in relation to -- which we conceive of as singular, particular, exclusive and 'one' -- can only be understood through the multiplicity of different people, in different regions, with different needs and indeed intentions.
All that really argues for, I must say, is that people are confused. The multiplicity of opinions has nothing to do with whether or not there is a truth.
to make up religious terms for themselves, and to call them whatever they wish
In many different ways there is no way around having to do just this. But I would not use the term 'make up' but rather 'interpret'. That is why I used the term hermeneutics.
Well, "hermeneutics" as it was originally conceived, was a theological word, a Christian word, with a definite referent. It meant "interpretation of Scripture." It did not mean "interpretation according to anything anyone wants to think."
It's only since "the linguistic turn" in Postmodern philosophy that "hermeneutics" has even meant something a secular person could be said to be trying to do.
We must not mistake a Postmodern metaphor for the substance of the thing itself, I think.