G
Gaber
Guest
And I’ve been doing that all along, starting with the Jew who started it alll in your opinioon, and those few in the Church who didn’t drop the ball on Him. I’ve refered to manyu of them. What the heck are you misreading that you can say that at this late point in the conversation???An additional good sign here - - you’ve finally committed yourself to a positive affirmation of a Catholic source.
From an essay which I’ve only read this beginning of, but from a scholar of St. John of the Cross’ mystical theology:
That’s great. And there can be the illusion of safety in dogma, as you are expereincing. But there’s a darn sight more that is “propadeutic” to the mystical journey than the very dogma many use to hide from it. And how, pray, did all those who are not Catholic and have dogma or non dogma come to be in agreement with St. John as to the end of the journey?[while] our cognition of God through reason and revelation, then, is necessarily incomplete. The contributions of traditional theological disciplines are not, for that reason, understood to be irrelevant. To the contrary, St. John was well schooled in scholasticism at the University of Salamanca and relies a great deal on Dogmatic Theology as a propadeutic to the mystical journey. As a journey of faith, it is Dogmatic Theology which enables us to the reach the vestibule safely; it is the compass whose unchanging ordinals, divinely illumined, give us bearing in the dark night of the soul. Constituting, as it does, an index of truth in the form of dogmatic certainties, it provides essential definition in the face of gathering obscurity, and so disabuses us of error, which St. John sees as constituting one of the principal impediments to the soul in its journey to union with God.
johnofthecross.com/introduction-to-the-philosophy-of-st-john-of-the-cross.htm
I maintain that the journey is possible not becuase one is Catholic, that even hindering the prcess in some cases inmy opinion, but because we are all, each and every one, without exception, made in the image and likeness of God, and therefore have the identical rights and means to the path of inquiry, Catholic flavored or not.
So again, neither I nor anyone like me would or could do other than extoll those who are Catholic, or not, who have accomplished. Your appearant assertion that this is the first time I have commited myself to a positive affirmation of a Catholic source is both nonsense, and coupled with the way you put conclusions in my mouth, rather embarrasing, and revealing a defensive attitude worthy of the imperfection of your hyping of “design.”
The Source is God, not a particular allignment with a religious paradigm. And such a paradigm, whether religious or of any other kind, even grave depression or doubt, or even trauma, serves only to do what heavy reaserch does in the cases of intuitions that reveal truths about math, biology, chemistry, or even the Arts. The mind is for a moment short circuited so that Vison may occur.
The revelation is not* in *the religion, even if the discipliine of a particular religion led to the receptivity that allowed the descent of Grace. Aquinas, for instance. Then, of course, if one maintains the mental frame of expression of their original faith, which has now been replaced with something of actual expereintial Meaning, that is great. And it is common. But then scholars who have book learning and an agena tell y’all what to think about it instead of going there to find out for yourself. I’m going to make T-shirts for y’all that say "Vamos a ver!’ What size do you wear?