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Betterave
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And yet you have left me the burden of trying to figure out what you might have been trying to say. [That burden is inevitable to some extent, sorry!] If my ponderings on your meanings are “absurd” then you could nicely deal with that by flat out telling what the “non-absurd” meanings actually are. [Have done.] You have simply made some vague references about mythology as allegory and how ancient Greeks have a different concept of worship than we do today.[No, please refer again to my actual comments.] Not once did you ever apply any of this to the OP’s question as to whether or not a modern day Catholic should worship the Greek gods. ****** You had opportunity after opportunity to clarify your own position, and yet you never did. [Clarification is a two-way process - break-downs can happen on either end of that process.]
I have never construed your concepts in light of the thread’s topic except to ask, “Is this what you’re trying to say?” or, “What is the point of this line of thinking?” If such questions were “absurd misconstruals” then at least I attempted in some way to apply your material to the topic at hand. That’s more than you ever did with it.
[They were absurd and sometimes “more” is too much.]
Then here’s a novel idea: Why don’t you tell me what you are trying to say? Why do I have to keep fishing for it? The OP asked whether or not we should worship the Greek gods? That’s the question you have not answered! ****** You have made nine posts over a course of five days and have yet to actually directly addressed the topic of the whole thread! [Wrong.] If you had no intention of addressing that question then why are you even participating in this thread to begin with? ****** If all you want to do is pick apart my comments, then why do so with the expectation that this debate not be in the context of the thread’s topic? [Don’t be silly]
In other words, you are criticizing the statements I made to Ridgerunner in Post #15. I said that I did not see why this discussion needs to examine Zeus from an allegorical interpretation rather than a traditional one, seeing that I felt the traditional one was more in keeping with what is generally regarded as Greek mythology (because an allegorical understanding was a movement away from mythology into philosophy). That is hardly denouncing the allegorical interpretation as being “defective”. In that exact same post I also clearly stated that I was “not taking a hard line stance” on the subject. The floor was open for someone to make a case for the allegorical viewpoint. And since then I have said, over and over again, that I was open to discussing the topic in terms of an allegorical understanding of Greek mythology. So, I’m a bit fuzzy here. Exactly what was the problem with what I said that launched what has become this colossal debate? [Refer to post 16, and sequelae.]
What spin? Oh, you mean when I would try to apply your statements to the actual topic of the thread and ask you if that is what you meant? As I have been saying, I wouldn’t have had to doing any of this “spinning” if you had done the application itself. [Have done.]
(Continued in my next post)