Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Dec 16, 2022 4:12 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Fri Dec 16, 2022 3:55 pm
I say that Catholicism-Christianity is a Greco-Christian thing.
I understand why you say that, now.
For you, "Christian" means "Roman Catholic," which goes back, through people like Aquinas, to Aristotle. And you're right: Catholicism is a syncretism of pagan sources and Jewish thought, the "Roman" and the putatively "universal." It's a Romanized clerical institution with universal political ambitions.
[...]
The reason I got into the discussion and was pressing for your definition was simply that I could tell you didn't know anything accurate about Christian theology. I was merely at pains to see that I helped you get better, more accurate information as to what "Christian" really entails. I don't feel I need to "oppose" you, and certainly not because you fail to be a "fanatic." You don't represent any kind of threat or problem to me.
You might be able to understand what my view of Christianity is however you would not ever be able to accept it as either accurate or true. So it is important to note, at the outset, that any idea you have about Christianity, its matrix, will be driven by your specific religious conviction which, as you know, I define as 'fanaticism'. You must also object with vehemence to that term because as a religious fanatic your view of what Christianity is and who Jesus of Nazareth is is the only view or interpretation possible. So your fanatical orientation, your a priori, locks you into an interpretive vicious circle. And one hundred percent of your efforts here on this forum involve you in a defense of your fanatical interpretation.
In my case I am not either situated generally nor specifically within that system. I do not have a *faith-position* that corresponds to yours and I am not here operating as a preacher and apologist (you are) and so when I offer a view or a perspective of what *Christianity* is (I really should use a plural: both Christianities and also Christs) that does not concord with yours you have no choice but to see me as 'ignorant' and incapable of offering a 'definition' as you call it.
Now, and additionally, your rather militant Protestantism forces you, as has been the case historically, to take an extremely biased and extremely critical position of Catholicism. I am not and never have been a Catholic. However I have examined this social and cultural conflict and, according to my research, I have determined that most of Protestantism operates out of this prejudice and bias. There are many reasons for this and some of them *sound*. Except that once one is on the outside of either Christianity one is outside of the controlling and determining need to favor either one or the other. And this is more my position at this point.
What I can say, and with certainty, is that if one wishes to understand Christianity one must, one has no choice in the matter, but to focus on the Greek-Hebrew world and the cultural incident when rebel Hebrews brought a new religious mode to the Gentile and the Greek world. This examination, and one with reduced bias, is closed to you. One must state this and then explain why this is. Doing so one explains
you. But what I say, which is also intolerable to your ears, is that you are in a sense a false-Christian. I mean this in the sense of a relatively modern variant insofar as Protestant radicalism has 500+ years of existence. In my own view Protestantism can be looked at with an interposed lens of *appreciation* and *admiration* in some aspects; but it can also be critiqued. Again, I do not perform either of these as a 'believer' since I see Christianity as a 'story' and not so much a 'truth'. But since you set a sort of *trap* -- in fact I set it up so that you'd step into mine -- I am here explaining what 'Christianity' is.
To understand the Judean rebellion against state and theological authority one has to examine the religious and cultural matrix out of which the very early Christian movement arose. Essenes, Zealots, Nasaraeans, Mandaeans, etc. It is necessary to see state Judaism as a rigid power-structure that could not open itself to radical new trends. What interested me about very early Christianity and pre-Christianity was its practical mysticism and zealotry. A movement of people going their own way with extreme adamancy. To turn, literally, *against the world* and to live within a completely oppositional stance. It is strange but also amazing.
But more important, for the Occident, is in the clash and the fusion that occurred when Hebrew mysticism and Hebrew idea-imperialism encountered the Greek intellectual and religious world. The way conceptual orders were *translated* from one epistemological center, with all sorts of variants, into an entirely different *world* -- and then what was born out of that. The world of those early centuries, and the way that selections
out of that were brought into a certain *harmony* is where Christian-Catholicism was born. It is a synthesis. It has always been such.
Right here I have mentioned something that is also *intolerable* to you as a means to define beginnings. It flies in the face of your fanatical adamancy because, obviously, it does not highlight Jesus as 'son of God' appeared among men and directing and controlling events from a spiritual center outside of time. The view I work with 'reduces' in this sense the Christian movement to any other expansive religious movement.
Our *Occidental world* in the largest sense, in the most important sense, was born out of this fusion. What disturbs you is seeing and explaining things in this way; giving greater validity to this interpretation than, as in your case, seeing history molded by the 'hand of God' toward the visionary historical end contrived by Christian religionists. Again, to understand you one must see and understand your religious fanaticism as the only means available to you from which to *interpret*. This is religious fanaticism
by definition. In this sense, and in this way, I regard you as
deranged:
de·range (dĭ-rānj′)
tr.v. de·ranged, de·rang·ing, de·rang·es
1. To disturb the order, arrangement, or functioning of: an asteroid impact large enough to derange the climate.
2. To upset (normal condition or functioning, as of a bodily organ).
3. To cause to be psychotic or otherwise severely mentally unsound.
[French déranger, from Old French desrengier : des-, de- + reng, line (of Germanic origin; see sker- in Indo-European roots).]
The more curious aspect of this state -- the state from which all your efforts here take place -- is that you see yourself as 'normal', as 'one of the good', as one of 'god's chosen', and as a vital actor not only in your family and community but on the world and geo-political stage. When your fanaticism get empowered by
Americanism (this requires a whole other definition) it lunges into extremely bizarre territories. Again all of this has to be discussed slowly and carefully.
So you see that according to how I present the case for the view of Christianity I open it up significantly rather than try to shut it down. Is my approach suitable or helpful for one solely interested in installing
religiousness in him? Say religious fanaticism similar to yours? That is, like the sort of faith that we notice among those who flock to Evangelical ceremonies such as those conducted by Benny Hinn and the thousands of Evangelical derivatives? No indeed! To what would one
convert under my influence?
What is the *end result* of the approach that I take? Is it good or is it bad? Is it helpful or harmful?
If I had to make some summarizing statement it would be something like this: religiously-oriented people need and require a religious platform or *myth-structure* in which to situate themselves. But the act of engaging with the self through prayer, meditation and exposure to elevated and elevating ideas will, generally speaking, result in a 'better' sort of human being. So when I was doing my research it became plain to me that the general Catholic social teaching and doctrine was a very admirable synthesis of practical applied ethics. I still feel that way. And this is why I once referred to
Liturgical Prayer: Its History and Spirit (Abbot Cabrol) as an extremely admirable condensation of an ethics that a person would do very well to incorporate and practice. I am not closed though to see similar Protestant compendiums in a similar way. But
I do not like much at all the relatively recent merger between Protestant radicalism and extremism with Americanism. And Christian and Evangelical Zionism is
abject in my own view. It might also merge into what I'd consider *evil*.
So what is and where is 'god'? I tend, still, to refer to Vedic notions of 'higher self' or 'atman' (some spark of divinity and revelatory intelligence inside of all living beings (not just human beings). I definitely veer way from Christian fanaticism and yet I have a certain respect of a sense of solidarity with some Catholics of a 'traditionalist' sort. Only because I have examined so much of the very earliest liturgical documents. The entire *Occidental body* is infused with this *stuff* as is all our art, music, literature etc. If we detach from that, we detach from so much that has *supreme value*.
People like you, who are religious fanatics, who incorporate zealotry and Americanism, who do exclude all other perspectives except your own, who are 'virulent' as well as 'deranged', are in my view destructive to the sort of understanding I propose is possible. My opposition to you is
principled though intolerable to your self-view. As "god's child" as "Jesus' mouthpiece" and all the rest.
However, my opposition to you will not allow me to devalue what is to be valued within Greco-Christianity. Nor can I go along with the sort of idea-imperialism that vilifies pagan concepts. It is an odd place to be in but it is the one that seems right to me.