C
Cavaradossi
Guest
Out of curiosity, have you read John Zizoulas? Not all Orthodox theologians are philosophical slouches. I’m not sure that it’s wise to promote Aristotelian metaphysics as being the framework for existence.As a philosopher and amateur (Christian) theologian (as Islamic theology doesn’t count), I love the Byzantine (pun intended) and absolutely systematic nature of Catholic theology, especially that of the great Angelic Doctor himself.
I think that’s part of what Blessed John Paul II meant when he spoke of “both lungs” of the Church, that the traditionalism and mysticism of the East could act as a corrective for the liberalism and rationalism of the West, and that the rationalism, philosophy and theology and modernism of the West could act as a corrective to the over-traditional, fideistic mysticism of the East: that each church has gone too far in its respective direction, and together, they are balanced and perfected.
The Orthodox have taken traditionalism and conservatism possibly too far, and have definitely taken fideism and mysticism too far to an extreme, with much of the modern practice being based on it (hesychasm and the essence-energies distinction/Tabor light), and the Catholics have taken liberalism and rejection or at least discontinuity and radical reimagining of sacred Tradition too far, and could use some of the mysticism to balance out the legalism/rationalism.
Fideism is easily and rightly rejected once one realizes that the modern mechanistic philosophy is false, and, if the mechanistic philosophy is true, the Christian God can not exist, and blind faith is all that is possible. And then a realization that the Ancients were greater philosophers than us (scientists in the 21st century are asking and trying to answer questions the pre-Socratics answered 2700 years ago), and the Aristotelian realist philosophy (often noted as a type of “Real Essentialism”) as elaborated by St Thomas Aquinas is true, as it has the greatest descriptive power and correspondence with reality of all competing philosophies, and, that if the Aristotelian real essentialist philosophy is true, God is a necessary truth (it is impossible for God to not exist) and there is an absolute morality and a natural moral law that our reason can discover, and that only after our reason has brought us this far, and established that all of the truths of faith are true, and that revelation is possible, do we need to supplement with faith in trusted authority (the warrant for the authority is a book in itself) for truths accessible through divine Revelation alone, such as the Trinity.
Albeit there’s a good philosophical argument for the Trinity as well: essentially, if God is absolutely singular, the world was created out of tyranny and vanity instead of out of love (I don’t think anyone’s taken up this argument before).
- prayerfully seeking ordination to the diaconate.