iambiguous wrote: ↑Fri Apr 22, 2022 6:23 pm
Of course, the beauty of all this for Christians is that those like me have absolutely no capacity to provide evidence that their God does not exist. Or any other God for that matter. The whole point of belief here for Christians revolves around a leap of faith. More or less blind and more or less as a result of being indoctrinated as a child.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Fri Apr 22, 2022 7:44 pmYes in fact, you do. The entire world, the Earth and its systems, the galaxy, the Kosmos, the Universe -- all of these things, if you accept Infinite Regress, seem to indicate an originating idea (for want of a better description). But nothing about any aspect of this World actually gives any direct knowledge of God. If that God created all this, that God is weird indeed, and not Christ or God the Father.
But examine the Greek gods. They are far more linked to natural processes; to the ways that natural forces act and interact with each other. Then examine the gods of the African religions -- say Yoruba. These are gods of mountains, or rivers, of elements. Oshun for example corresponds to Aphrodite. In Africa Oshun rules *rivers* and fresh water. But in practical application Oshun rules 1) women of certain characteristics. Usually alarmingly pretty. Not very intellectual but very sensual. 2) everything that has to do with love, sex, the sexual act, love-affairs, and also money, gold and successful business.
There are other feminine prototype gods as well -- Yemaja for example seems to embody another type that is easily distinguishable. Usually darker, a bit more reserved than boyant Oshun. Very feminine but more motherly. Yemaja is associated with the sea (salt water).
Now I could also mention Eleggua. Ellegua corresponds to Mercury and is masculine. But being corresponded with Mercury this also means with Hermes. And Hermes rules communication and the passageway of communication. He also therefore rules the mind and the sort of intelligence of one who *sees*. In the Yoruba tradition they recognize that people's heads can get all messed up. They get unclear. Their thinking processes and their choices are bad. They wind up with legal troubles, relationship troubles, familily troubles, spiritual troubles essentially. The object of the Yoruba curandero is to *lift* that unclarity from that head. This is done through various sorts of purification -- literally cool balms applied to the head. The head has to be *purified* of bad energies and sort of reset.
And then that person, with a refreshed guidance-system, can plot new and better life-courses. It is very
practical spirituality. The things that are important are the things that are closest to the individual and his well-being.
So these are 'the gods of the earth' and in former times, among the Greeks, and in all primitive European cultures. these were the gods who were understood and evoked.
Sure, make note of any God or any Gods at all.
But: What
still is of interest me is bringing them around to this:
1] a demonstrable proof of the existence of your God or religious/spiritual path
2] addressing the fact that down through the ages hundreds of Gods and religious/spiritual paths to immortality and salvation were/are championed...but only one of which [if any] can be the true path. So why yours?
3] addressing the profoundly problematic role that dasein plays in any particular individual's belief in Gods and religious/spiritual faiths
4] the questions that revolve around theodicy and your own particular God or religious/spiritual path
This thread revolves around the Christian God. But I really don't make a denominational distinction in regard to the four factors above. All religious and spiritual paths [to me] are about finding and then sustaining a certain measure of comfort and consolation by connecting the dots
psychologically between objective morality on this side of the grave and immortality and salvation on the other side.
Christianity is clearly smack dab in the middle of that, right?
The Christian God may be "something else" for some, but not for me. He just happens to be [historically] among the most widely worshipped and adored Deities "out there".
IC actually believes that Jesus Christ and God the Father *exist* in some sort of *place* or locality. But what this means is, essentially, outside of himself. What he describes is the not-him and the Absolute Other. And that terrible God will eventually return, in a ball of fire or something similar, and literally, and physically, remodel the whole place and the entire cosmos.
Again, I'm not interested in what IC believes so much as what he can in fact demonstrate is in true about the existence of the Christian God.
And, as near as I can tell, his "proof" consists of the fact some believe that Jesus Christ was an actual historical figure "back then". That to him is proof enough that God in Heaven is Christian.
As for this particular "general description spiritual contraption" depiction of God...
But this is all absurd and *false* -- from one perspective. The God that is discerned (intuited, as well as felt) is only known through an intellectual processes (intellectus). The earth-bound brute, the one completely invested in earth-processes, cannot perceive this God that can only be encountered on the inner plane. This is why all spiritual paths involve some type of purification (and separation from earth-fields).
Essentially what I have outlined here is, I think, a sensible way to think about Christianity.
But if you say *There is no evidence that the Christian God exists!" you are totally mistaken and in so many ways! You have to think of this God as something that manifests itself through our psyche. And what Christianity has done through the psyche is all around you! Thus, you have to consider secondary effects.
The *inner turning* is only something you would experience on an inner plane.
...same thing. You believe it. Now, demonstrate substantively why I and all other rational men and women are obligated to believe it as well.
Besides, once you come around to recognizing that a belief in God revolves psychologically around the need to be -- to feel -- comforted and consoled in the face of just how ghastly the "human condition" can be [and not just in Ukraine] you can just nestle down into your faith. Hopefully all the way to the grave.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Fri Apr 22, 2022 7:44 pmThis is not good
seeing. I could say Once you resolve to genuinely encounter God on an inner plane your relationship to yourself as well as to other people and the outer world
will change. As a result of encountering another dimension (interiorly) other dimensions of possibilities open up (exteriorly). Your sense of the *terribleness* of the surrounding mechanical world will likely increase, not abate. And "comfort" will not necessarily be the result.
To me -- "I" rooted existentially in dasein -- this is just more spiritual mumbo-jumbo. Religious cant aimed at avoiding the four factors I note above. Bring your own Christian God there instead. Or here:
https://ilovephilosophy.com/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=186929
Indeed, your own narrative here is far, far removed from what I would hope to encounter in a philosophy venue.
On the other hand,
with so much at stake on both sides of the grave, I can also understand why some will cling to just about any rationalizations in order to tote God along with them all the way to the abyss.
Again, I would if I could.
I keep hoping for a miracle...that I will encounter an argument that really does jolt me back to my Christian roots.