L
Lion_of_Narnia
Guest
That there are actual academics who devote their lives to studing the Hellene mythos, granted. I admit the possibility of a individual academic here and there bing a believer in the Hellene gods, yeah But actual “departments” dedicated to proving their objective existence I would have to see. Also, Western civilization also derives from Hebrew, Celtic, & Scandinavian-German sources–especially the Hebrew in regards to religion and morality. The greek gods & religion thereof were like all the other Indo-European mythos fairly regional–with no indicationn they were to be applied or understood outside the culture. Odin is NOT Zeus (can be argued Jupiter is NOT Zeus either). Caesar’s Gallic Wars is a sometimes laughable early ethnocentric idea to force the Celtic gods into Roman labels… In contrast, even before the actual Incarnation, Jewish messianic prophecies indicated the worship of the ONE God would be eventually understood and undertaken by the gentiles (non jewish world). Christianity, especially the Catholic (“Universal”) Church is the on-going fullfillment of this promise.I beg to differ, at least in my own case. I worship the Gods of the Greeks, the ancestral Gods who live at the fons et origo of our civilization, and who, I believe, have always been here for those with eyes to see… and there are entire university departments devoted to studying the evidence of the faith in and works of my Gods.
Perhaps a knock on the door, through an unexpected and therefore, less-guarded position. Myself, I had to return to the faith through the influence of fantasy literature–especially Tolkien & Lewis (natchOf course, when I had my synagogue experiences, I had already been actively pagan for a number of years, and was visiting the synagogue more out of my longstanding interest in comparative religion… And in all my years of intense Christian preparation, I never had a Christian mystical experience. But maybe thisis the infamous exception that somehow “proves” the rule?
The classic “deist” position is monotheism–and that His existence is verifiable by an examination of the natural world. What you seem to be re-stating is the post-modern religion as “personal mythic truth” position–or the “god” of psychology—in which wiccan Ronald Hutton as an anthropologist can call Wicca “valid” while recognizing it’s roots in the late 19th century, only coalesing after WWII.Exactly. Taking that to the next logical step, I take the “classical” deist position that all religious experience is ultimately subjective, and your experience - or the experience of the Biblical authors, or of the writers of Greek myth if it comes to that - should not be, indeed CANnot be, taken as absolutely authoritative.
Which leads me to the obvious question - if you reject personal spiritual experience as insufficient, what is the basis on which you personally choose to accept Catholic teaching as authoritative?
- As author, former atheist Anne Rice put it in her afterword to Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt the case for a “mythological” Jesus was a thin one, full of contradictions, buttressed by bias and suppositions of academics who attacked the claims of the Gospels for reasons that had little or nothing to do with their autheniticity and reliability. An honest examination of the texts indicates they were written VERY close to the period described; 200+ years of linguistic and comparitive text ananlysis shows a reliablecopying so we can be darn certain we have the words REALLY close to how they were first written and the original writing was far too soon to be “mythologized”