Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Apr 01, 2024 10:04 pm
1) not good enough reason to reject the central doctrines. I might assume that you have a prejudiced view on the doctrines. Have you studied them in depth yourself?
The point is not necessarily to reject the central doctrines on this point alone. However it fits with what I think is a metaphysical bias, against sex, and any system or belief + organization that does not address this issue and consider that it's coming out of the metaphysics is going to have other problems also. In a sense I could call it a form of decadence and decay that is connected to the metaphysics. I know it isn't necessarily connected to the central doctrine you focus on. However if we are talking about having the Catholic Church be the restorative force for society, that organization is not coming just with grace and the incarnation.
2) yes, there is no way around that. But there is also a description of that debt which makes it, I think, easier to understand.
Well, the way around it would be not to have it. I think it's a toxic message and is part of the CCs incarnation package.
3) extraordinarily positive things were brought into European existence because of the Church. These, naturally, are not part of your knowledge-base.
Why are they not part of my knowledge base? I am focused on objections to the CC becoming a central power again in general in the West. I am not writing a treatise on the CC influence in general. The issue you thought was interesting was why only one person here would be open to the CC retaking this role. So, I am giving reasons I think they would be resistant to that, including my own reasons and presenting these in my own way of thinking about it - others might present the same objections in different language. There's no need to assume my ignorance of things I am not writing about.
4) that's an extension of point 2)
Yes, they are connected. It's not the message of a loving father.
5) you'd have to explain more. This could be taken in different ways.
the immanent is devalued, the transcendent is given the prime value. This arises in a number of ways. Number six is related to this. I think the influence of the Abrahamic religions added to a sense of distance from nature - nature as the dark other - that has led to problems with how we treat the environment, to a sense of alienation from our home, to not understanding how a good and regular relationship with other species (plants and animals in their natural ecosystems) is actually part of our mental health. The Abrahamic religions have made us strangers here.
[5-1/2) Does anyone wonder what nefarious things Harry Baird is up to?!?]
I believe you've mentioned him before and I assume it's not the actor you mean. You can link me to a post of yours where the relevant nefariousness is described. Or let me know here what you mean.
6) false assertion. You have not been exposed to the full spectrum of Catholic doctrines.
It's not a false assertion. Large, complicated belief systems/organizations like the CC can do contradictory things, but given Jesus' separation of church and state and also realms of value, the average person is taught by the CC to consider this realm fallen. The eyes are focused on the long term prize which is not here. The CC itself has obviously been political in a variety of open and hidden ways. The issue is of course complex and there are phenomena like LIberation Theology in Latin America. The CC does a lot of moral influencing through a variety of relationships with secular organizations. But the average parishioner is being discourage implicitly from the political. Of course many engage, often on social issues.
7) it is not at all hard to conceive of hellish experiences brought about by error. And if the soul is taken as *immortal* then a time in hellish realms can be easily understood. What is very hard to accept is eternal punishment.
Yes, from a loving father no less. It is a threat that undermines people's well being at a fundamental level.
8.) that seems a modern trope and I am not sure if I agree that Catholic doctrines create imbalance. In fact I am uncertain what you mean.
We've got a male deity creating the universe. You have him coming as a male incarnation. The Holy Spirit is neutral as far as I can tell. That's unbalanced. I do appreciate the role that Mary gets in the CC as a kind of emergence from that imbalance towards balance - though her greatness will always be coupled with accepting a lot of things (yes, kindness and mercy and in a sense almost an advocate through which one can perhaps find more mercy than via the male deities(deity), but it's still out of balance. There is no equivalent female portion of divinity to God/Jesus.
And yet people asking about your views seemed to annoy you.
Only when there is a stubborn instance or something that seems like a demand.
[/quote]You reacted categorically, as if it was odd that your ideas were what I was asking about. Then I read that you have come to clarify your own views.