Q
Qoeleth
Guest
We are not simply souls being housed in bodies. A human being is single thing- consisting of a body and a soul. The body is entirely good, since it is created by God. In fact, the body has as much claim to be the real ‘I’ as the soul. A lot of ‘saints’ from the Dark Ages claim that the body is a burden and prison to the soul- but that is Platonism, not Christianity.
Now God has equipped our bodies with senses, which tell us what is good and bad. Our sense tell us that sleep, food, sex, etc. are good, but pain, injuries and sickness are bad. God has given us senses to guide us to what is right.
Our minds sometimes make mistakes (we can make erroneous judgments), but our bodies never (or hardly ever) do. If something feels painful, it is almost certainly bad for us (burning heat, sharp implements, acids), but if something feels good (pleasant food, soft clothing, wine), it is generally good for us (or, at pleast pleasurable). God made our bodies with the senses. He gave us the sense to guide us. He gave us the pleasurable things of the world as gifts of his generous Creation.
The old ‘saints’ said the senses were windows through which the Devil attacks the soul- but that is more Gnostic the Christian.
Hence, it follows from that we should follow our senses of whatever is pleasurable, and show honor to God by enjoying to the fullest all the pleasures of the body He has given us. Our ‘thinking’ morality can go wrong (as history shows), so let’s just follow our appetites- since God made us as bodies, and implanted good desires in us, and filled the earth and this mortal life with good things.
“Come, let us enjoy the good things there are, use this creation with the zest of youth; take our fill of the dearest wines and perfumes, let no one flower of springtime pass by. Let none of us forgo our place in the orgy, let us leave signs of revelry everywhere, this is our portion, the lot assigned us.” Wisdom 2:6-9
And God become incarnate- He took on flesh in Jesus Christ, who came eating, drinking, consorting with women, to show just how wonderful life in the body can be. Many saints, like Bonaventure, said Christ’s life on earth was continual poverty and pain- but the modernist approach is to imagine Christ as laughing, jolly, with a real sense of humour, eating and drinking, a prankster. This is what being human is all about.
This is the new Catholic theology! It is not about self-abnegation, or the spirit conquering the flesh- it is all about being fully human, embracing the desires of the flesh and the senses and all created things as gifts from God in the pleasure-garden of this earthly life!
Mortal life is not a bitter cup of suffering which must be drunk, or a cobwed, a prison, or a lie, or a bitter exile in the Devil’s country (as all those old ‘saints’ said), but it is a wonderful thing!
All those old ‘saints’ were just a bunch of heretics and ‘Gnostics’.
Now God has equipped our bodies with senses, which tell us what is good and bad. Our sense tell us that sleep, food, sex, etc. are good, but pain, injuries and sickness are bad. God has given us senses to guide us to what is right.
Our minds sometimes make mistakes (we can make erroneous judgments), but our bodies never (or hardly ever) do. If something feels painful, it is almost certainly bad for us (burning heat, sharp implements, acids), but if something feels good (pleasant food, soft clothing, wine), it is generally good for us (or, at pleast pleasurable). God made our bodies with the senses. He gave us the sense to guide us. He gave us the pleasurable things of the world as gifts of his generous Creation.
The old ‘saints’ said the senses were windows through which the Devil attacks the soul- but that is more Gnostic the Christian.
Hence, it follows from that we should follow our senses of whatever is pleasurable, and show honor to God by enjoying to the fullest all the pleasures of the body He has given us. Our ‘thinking’ morality can go wrong (as history shows), so let’s just follow our appetites- since God made us as bodies, and implanted good desires in us, and filled the earth and this mortal life with good things.
“Come, let us enjoy the good things there are, use this creation with the zest of youth; take our fill of the dearest wines and perfumes, let no one flower of springtime pass by. Let none of us forgo our place in the orgy, let us leave signs of revelry everywhere, this is our portion, the lot assigned us.” Wisdom 2:6-9
And God become incarnate- He took on flesh in Jesus Christ, who came eating, drinking, consorting with women, to show just how wonderful life in the body can be. Many saints, like Bonaventure, said Christ’s life on earth was continual poverty and pain- but the modernist approach is to imagine Christ as laughing, jolly, with a real sense of humour, eating and drinking, a prankster. This is what being human is all about.
This is the new Catholic theology! It is not about self-abnegation, or the spirit conquering the flesh- it is all about being fully human, embracing the desires of the flesh and the senses and all created things as gifts from God in the pleasure-garden of this earthly life!
Mortal life is not a bitter cup of suffering which must be drunk, or a cobwed, a prison, or a lie, or a bitter exile in the Devil’s country (as all those old ‘saints’ said), but it is a wonderful thing!
All those old ‘saints’ were just a bunch of heretics and ‘Gnostics’.