C
Contarini
Guest
But in the first place, if as I’m arguing your “transcendent” isn’t really “transcendent” by the standards of historic Christian theology, then your use if the term is misleading.No worries at all Edwin.
The Transcendent is indeed an alien world. We do not know what exists in there or the nature of beings that reside in that world.
All that my argument is claiming is that for one to even consider a person as being able to know the Transcendent therefore requires them to be from the Transcendent. For us to then be convinced that they are indeed from the Transcendent, they must produce us with some form of act that shows they capability over this world (or that they are not bound by this world).
Now is it possible that there are Transcendent beings that cannot bend the rules of this world? Yes, but if these are the only being that existed, we cannot ever know the Transcendent and frankly it is not worth our time i.e. A being that cannot have any power over this world wouldn’t be that important for our consideration anyway. We might as well spend the time to achieve immortality on earth.
As for whether what I said violates Christianity, it does not in the sense that everything said is reasonable for anyone who starts without Christianity. We cannot speak of an incarnation because that is a fact of FAITH. It is not an apriori discovered fact before assent but a fact that is accepted after assent.
So nothing here violates the Christian sentiments. In fact, everything I said will lie outside the boundaries of Christian doctrine since it deals with coming to know whether Christianity or any other religion is true/worthy of assent.
Even more importantly, I just don’t see why your transcendent is that interesting or important.
And far more, if Jesus is just a being from another world, then He can’t save us and it would be idolatry to worship Him.
The “transcendent” isn’t a general category that happens to include God; it is a name for the reality of God which cannot apply to anything else. And it isn’t “alien” although it (or rather He) is the Wholly Other. God is both wholly Other and intimately present to all creation.
I’m not sure how much we actually disagree and how much we are just coming to the question from different angles.
Edwin