Touchstone~
For some – not all – but many here, for example, the apologetic tells us much more about the apologist than it says anything about God, reality or the listener. It just signals a kind of fundamentalist mindset where the complexities and nuances of an alternative are too terrifying or nauseating to bear. If it’s true, and it’s hard, there’s an interest in avoiding the truth, for anyone. Fideistic religion caters to that interest, and nurtures it, apologetically in just the same way as we see from Mystic Banana, the conceit that says: life without God is meaningless, futile, defeated.
There is SO much in these few pages of post that contain gold. And they are left mostly unplucked, I guess due to the momentum of the argument and the fact that we’re not all on my back patio knocking back some killer sarsaparilla.
The above is a key statement that touches on many dynamics that are of crucial importance no matter what your mental assessment vis a vie Diety might be. First it implies, as is known, that religious matters, as are all matters, a dynamic of inner experience and interpretation whatever the alleged external world might be, even despite the commonality of an agreement such as “that is a tree.”
Second, that in religious mindsets, though it exists somewhat differently in other paradigms, there is a pathological sanction of consequence that disables the ability to self-observe, that quality being what makes us uniquely human. The implications of that one fact are astounding in their depth, scope, and results.
And third, the bit about Mystic Banana’s conceit is accurately assessed as being part of the, at least Cathonlic, paradigm and is known to be false.
As a sidebar to that last one, I had an extensive conversation with an atheist yesterday that was moving and compelling. And surprisingly, or not, his atheism in its methods of analysis and many conclusions about human nature were concurrent with my, and as far as I can tell at this point, Touchstone’s. most interesting to me was his description of how he was able to carefully and painfully disassemble the dogmatic box of his birth religion (Christian) and free himself from it. Whether or not I agreed with his ultimate conclusion about Deity, which is agnostic, I was deeply impressed with the degree and kinds of self awareness and principled honesty he utilized in his reflections.
Chief amongst these was his adamant insistence on the necessity of morality based on the idea of mutuality and reciprocity. We might express that idea as The Great Commandment or as the different forms of the Golden Rule. I have worked in the remodeling business with this man for years, and if anything has impressed me about his dealings is his open honesty with his clients and his neutrality in presenting options to the homeowner. That is always done as if it was his own house and he was thinking out loud about all of his options, advantageous to his personal business or not, and regardless of how much money is on the table.
I was also moved by his assessment of the probability in his eyes of never seeing again (in an alleged afterlife) the people he loved and cared for or whom he appreciated to various degrees and wasn’t in contact with as much as he would like. For him it made each moment with friends, family, and strangers all that much more precious. He is therefor completely present with who is with him at any time. That is very unlike some folks I have met who have an agenda of whatever ilk when you are within three feet of them.
So all in all I treasure this man as a true friend, and one who has taught me much about clarity, honesty, and other virtues well beyond the ability of my dogma spouting “friends.” In fact, I’d rather have a good tete-a-tete with him than listen to a sermon or go to confession. I learn more, it is all applicable to virtue and growth, and it is great fun. And he is not the only atheist/agnostic I know who has these values and makes formal religionists look like pale shadows in comparison.
So I’m fed up with the false piety that many on here have that knocks the possibility of someone outside their faith having worth or value in matters of virtue and humanity. And as I’ve said before, imo this sort of “atheism” is superior by far to the adamantine entrenchment of faithers hiding behind dogmatized and formulaic mental strictures. some of you make these people out to be idiots and morons. I submit that the dynamic described above, that statements often tell more about the speaker than their topic might very well apply to some of you. And that picture reflects as well on your Church. Think deeply therefore before you mouth teachings that you have not come to or found agreement with because of you own profound inner life.
Jesus said, “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.” And the little children are the innocents who are simple and honest in their lives untainted by the intellectualisms of the myriad religions bandied about as if they were living Truth. Is it any wonder that without consultation so many invariable come up with remarkably similar understandings of the higher dynamics of virtue? Ya gotta wonder.