C
chrisb
Guest
Grace and Peace KindredSoul,And please do not say that orthodoxy is stale and stagnate; there is nothing anticeptic in believing that God, in His infinite wisdom, would safeguard us in Truth. If one believes this, and therefore believes that the Trinity was not formulated in error, it is only Faithfulness to the Truth, not fear or stagnation of the Truth, that would keep one solidly within the orthodoxy.
No I am not saying that orthodox teachings of the faith is stale and stagnate but the simple regurgitating of them are unfruitful particularly for the uninitiated. It ceases to be illumination and becomes merely a triumphal show of intellectual entrenchment.
To elevate the formula as the truth would be idolatry of the Form in the place of it’s Substance. It is within the substance that the initiated must plumb in order to grow in communion with the One.
There is a traditional Semitic Saying which says: The sight of someone eating will not appease your hunger. The spiritual experiences of others cannot satisfy your yearnings.
For the Triadic-Form of Divinity to be one’s own it must be encountered first-hand in the mystical experience of the faith. My intellectual challenge is to seek this first-hand encounter in the realm of ideas but perhaps this is the Western Way of things and not the Eastern Way. Perhaps there exists a distinction between grasping the formula and experiencing the divine? I believe so personally, but I maybe in the Western Church Form has replaced Substance. The rigid fearful clinging to someone elses concept has replaced our own journey to encounter the experience itself. Such is called ‘blind faith’ (i.e. faith without it’s own eyes to see the truth first hand).
The early Church Fathers spoke dynamically about the Divine Nature and never stuck to predefined formulas nor appealed to authority outside their own personal insights. When one appeals to outside authority one is affirming that they don’t know but they have believe that someone else does and they are willing to take them at their word. I don’t believe this is Christianity…
Christianity is an invitation to encounter the Divine first hand and affirm the doctrines of the faith first hand. Such is the journey of all the God-Seers and Saints of the Church.
Appeals to external authority is the appeals of those who simply don’t know themselves. If the Holy Spirit is within us guiding us to all truth then we are not asked to appeal to external authority but the inner law written on our hearts and established through our encounter with the Divine.
No, the nature of the divine cannot be objectively studied and validated and so any affirmation fails to be a defense.But, my friend, it has been defended.
The asumption that contemplation of the self ‘must’ create a separate being-hood to establish a “Knower and the Known” relationship is Platonism and isn’t a necessary fact in our discussion. The One who is beyond being need not establish a copy of Himself in order to contemplate Himself. This is what you are affirming when you argue for the necessity of a dualism (i.e. Logos; Nous; Son).A deity who is not aware, who is not personal, who possesses no consciousness, is little more than a force of nature, or in this case, supernature; Such a one may as well be Gravity, or other phenomena that act without any thought of their own. When we say that God exists, we do not mean to say he is physically existing; but He does exist, and He is real. In this sense, He is a “Being” in the sense of “One that Exists.” His very name, “I AM” captures the essence that, whatever else is true of Him, He exists, and is the very pinnacle of Being.
Even if we were to agree that the Knower and the Known dualism is necessary, we as Christian don’t affirm a Realm of Ideal Being as Platonist do and so don’t have to affirm the begetting of a Person-hood (i.e. mirror of the One). We are at liberty to elaborate the Trinity is less than pure Platonist frameworks. Unfortunately the Council has set the formula of the Trinity within an unnecessary Platonist one but we, as Christians, are not concerned with the Form we should be concerned with our own encounter of the Substance the Form suggests with all it’s inherent intellectual weaknesses of human concept and language. Such is the whole point our Lord’s criticism of the rigorism of the Pharisees (the Letter Kills, the Spirit Heals).
[to be continued]