A
Areopagite
Guest
Indeed. However, if one could not figure out how this was true, could he correctly say, “Reason shows that this is impossible.” I would say no. Or, if he is reasonable would he say, “Even though I can’t see how swinging around the flail faster would be easier to control, I also can’t show by reason that swinging it slowly would be easier. It just seems to me that slower would be easier, but I guess … I can’t technically prove that it would be.” This is, I think, essentially the situation with Divine Mysteries. They may appear crazy at first, but we can’t demonstrate that they are.I think the problem obtains in working through “appears contradictory”. In the show you were watching, I suspect a quick demonstration by the guy with the flail might have been sufficient for you (or I) watching to see that paradox resolved. Perhaps we’d have to handle the weapon ourselves, but the point is that the “apparency” is demosntrated in that case, shown to be a superficial conflict, a bit of counter-intuitive dynamics we can prove out.
I hear you. I suppose the truth that “divine mysteries merely appear to be contradictions but are not actual contradictions” is something that cannot be known naturally. However, the way to try and debunk these alleged supernatural claims is to try and show that the mysteries are more than appearance but real contradictions … and this entails not just saying “I can’t see how this could be true” but rigorously laying down the logic. But (the claim is) one cannot do that (i.e. cannot prove that these mysteries are absurd), just as that confused person can’t prove that swinging the flail faster is not actually easier.In theological questions, reducing this ostensible contradiction to a matter of mere apparency is often very difficult to do, in my experience.
But perhaps the claim (that one cannot disprove a Christian Mystery) is wrong … but to prove the claim is wrong, it must be clearly demonstrated to be wrong and not merely asserted without strict logical argumentation.
I kind of repeated myself a lot there, but hopefully in one its rotations, it was clear.
Once again, if you show a logical contradiction in a Christian mystery, no theological override will save it. It is true that theology says that “No Christian Mystery is contradictory” but that claim would be wrong if someone proved that a Christian Mystery IS contradictory. But until that happens, the claim stands.It does make sense as a clarification. Your last statement there – there is no never any contradiction, even though we are unable to prove or disprove the actuality of seeming contradiction, seems a problem. Doesn’t follow directly, although I suppose this is where you are applying a theological override – there cannot be a true contradiction, so there is not a true contradiction?