when he did

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fhansen~Aristotle’s purpose was that of “trying to fortify an unsustainable belief”. Sorry, wasn’t thinking necessarily of Aristotle.

~*arrived at a position that it was reasonable that a transcendent creator-god would exist-and I agree. * I like that you said “arrived at a position.” That is distinct from “Proved.” My contention, though, is that however “reasonable” such a position might be, it is inadequate as a tool for discernment.

~and while reason alone certainly is inadequate for that purpose- it’s nonetheless a part of the human make-up and without it we wouldn’t have the means to even ask the right questions or begin the quest. Yes, I agree with that. What concerns me, though, is that while reason, and with it, religious thought, which is “reason” based on belief as distinct from fact, those both being useful scaffolding, the edifice of scaffolding is mistaken for actual insight.

~OTOH you maintain that people have always had access to God directly but I don’t know how accurate this is-even if it seems that it should be so You even now have this ability beyond your thoughts about God as codified in your religious thought. Try it, discover, and then decide.

~The fall and mans subsequent devolution into sin as described in the OT could be a description of mans state or disposition of a voluntary journeying away from direct realization of God, preferring that separation. It’s not necessarily religion that’s the enemy-we can be our own worst enemy. The “fall” of man is vastly misinterpreted. We might have talked about this before. as well as the dynamic that you state follows, which again is a superimposition of christianist interpretation on the map aspect of that story. And though religion may not completely be the enemy, the Abrahamic religions are enough of a side track to be dangerous and potentially deadly, despite the ability some had to see through them, eg, Aquinas near the end.

~while our faith teaches us to ask, seek, and knock, many prefer beer and football. Yes, and that is fine. But some seek sincerely, and have only the exoteric aspect of the Church to “aid” them. Such was my case, but fortunately I discovered what it was that the popularization the Church promotes came from. I’m only advocating that there be clearer guideposts for those ready for more, without the commensurate and usual blockages.

~you seem to think it’s not even within the realm of possibilities. I see her as a vessel holding a treasure we must reach out and grab and you seem to see her as having little or nothing positive to offer-or of misrepresenting herself as the treasure itself. Of course it is within the realm of possibility. Just not the realm of probability. And yes, jhansen, she is a vessel holding treasure, but she is wearing a chastity belt. There are far easier and more direct approaches that circumvent the historicizations and conjecturings the Church offers as teaching. I prefer to go direct. Had I stayed in the Church, I surely would have drowned. I can only speak for myself, but many factors indicate to me that life would be simpler if the Church copped to what she actually knows and what she actually is.

~“I found thee not, O Lord, without, because I erred in seeking thee without that wert within.” Blessed straight. But the Church is fundamentally invested in its public teaching in adoring, worshiping, and seeking a God without, even in the guise of looking within. The Church objectifies God and Jesus, thus making understanding impossible. Augustine got through that.

But here is a trick of insight. I could in some instances say word for word what a devout religionist might say, and have a radically different intent or understanding of those words. (look up the root meaning of “radical,” 🙂 )
 
This is a good question with plenty of room for reflection. Just one reflection that can be drawn is that Jesus, the Son of God, was born under the reign of Augustus Caesar, known as the Son of God. Jesus was also a contemporary to and rejected on behalf of Barabbas, literally the Son of God, thought to be a leader of the Zealots who were militantly trying to resurrect an independent Jewish homeland.

Is it coincidence? Or was God trying to say something by contrasting our Lord with the most successful and long lived of the emperors who brought many years of peace and prosperity to Rome? And with a popular leader of a party militantly trying to defend the honor of the Jewish nation?

And by the way, coming from Galilee would have apparently seemed as unlikely to any thoughtful scholar of the time, since the region was half paganized, as the origins of the Lord in the backwaters of the Roman Empire seem unlikely to us today. What does it appear God was trying to say in these arrangements he made?
 
Good example, Biggie, of how the human mind will connect dots without regard to completeness of information. Thank you for posting such a thing for our education.
 
Good example, Biggie, of how the human mind will connect dots without regard to completeness of information. Thank you for posting such a thing for our education.
Hey, you’re welcome, but the contemplation was offered by Pope Benedict, who contends that scripture makes it clear our Lord was born at a specific place in time and for God’s reasons. God chose the contrast with Augustus Caesar to indicate, as St. Paul wrote, “the wisdom of the world is utter folly to God”, you know the relative failure in a worldly sense of the Son of God vs. the relative achievement and success of the Filius Dei, Augustus. God chose the contrast with Barabbas to make clear that God’s Kingdom had arrived in the person of Jesus, the Son of God, a kingdom distinct from political and cultural kingdoms of Barabbas, the popular “son of God”. You know, making the point that the cross is a sign of contradiction, or that as was observed of Jesus, “We have piped for you and you did not dance.” And finally the hidden nature of Christ’s origins, to give life to the metaphor of the mustard seed. I know for sure this all jumped out at you long ago, but silly me, the thought still fascinates me.
 
Perhaps, Biggie, you misunderstood my intent? Yes, it did jump out at me, but I came to a radically different conclusion, one that bypasses faith.
 
Perhaps, Biggie, you misunderstood my intent? Yes, it did jump out at me, but I came to a radically different conclusion, one that bypasses faith.
Maybe I’m a little slow. I tried to understand your former post in this context and I’m still lost. Interested in understanding your thoughts, that’s all …
 
Sorry, Biggie, I’m not a great fan of christianism and of the kinds of explanation that you put forth, as such things are built on imagination and stories not founded on fact. That is to say that they are myth stylized by the Church to appear as history, which act made them impotent from their original purpose. And by “myth” I do not mean fairy tales or useless yarns. I mean that, like the parables, they were originally meant as maps which then the Church then passed as the territory itself. I’m saying that the parables of Jesus are parables within the parable of the Jesus story which itself is ancient in its aspects. In this regard, such explanations as you give are beside the point of the original intention of the Gospels.
 
Historical evidence agrees with the life of a man called(named) Jesus. Philosophy agrees with the moral teachings of Jesus. Believing in salvation is a personal decision.
 
uhhhh… What historical evidence? Nazareth wasn’t even a village until some many years after the alleged Ministry. Some philosophies agree with the moral teachings attributed to Jesus, but they are ancient before Him. Salvation is a word definable in several ways.
 
Pope Benedict XVI teaches in his insightfull book ‘Jesus of Nazareth’

The Roman temples and their various gods had grown stagnant. The rites no longer offered a sense of mystery and the worship had become mechanistic. Religion in Rome was an obligation required by the state that was practiced in order to fulfill an obligation as a citizen. The dynamic spirituality introduced by Jesus filled the void and took little time to reach the top rung of secular power. The pantheon of gods had long exhausted their ability to produce the spirituality able to attract worshippers.
 
Wow. That sounds like the congregation at my Mother’s Catholic Church…
 
Sorry, Biggie, I’m not a great fan of christianism and of the kinds of explanation that you put forth, as such things are built on imagination and stories not founded on fact. That is to say that they are myth stylized by the Church to appear as history, which act made them impotent from their original purpose. And by “myth” I do not mean fairy tales or useless yarns. I mean that, like the parables, they were originally meant as maps which then the Church then passed as the territory itself. I’m saying that the parables of Jesus are parables within the parable of the Jesus story which itself is ancient in its aspects. In this regard, such explanations as you give are beside the point of the original intention of the Gospels.
Don’t know what “christianism” means. … but, oh … I see where you’re coming from now. Needless to say I think that while many may debate theology, the history is beyond dispute. And I see none more qualified to provide the “original intention of the Gospels” than the Church. So I won’t derail your thread. Thanks.
 
Actually, Biggie, you haven’t the foggiest of where I’m coming from, or you couldn’t remain a Catholic. But that is fine. We each have to move from where we stand.
 
Actually, Biggie, you haven’t the foggiest of where I’m coming from, or you couldn’t remain a Catholic. But that is fine. We each have to move from where we stand.
Or rather stand and stop moving. Not possible anything you could offer on any level could persuade me against Catholicism. Interesting you should think you possess a truth so revolutionary. A heaven containing only one person cannot be a heaven.
 
Yes, you can stand on Principle and move in awareness. And I have no intention of swaying you from Catholicism. That is not in my power, nor would I want it to be. As for a heaven containing only one person, what the heck are you talking about???
 
Yes, you can stand on Principle and move in awareness. And I have no intention of swaying you from Catholicism. That is not in my power, nor would I want it to be. As for a heaven containing only one person, what the heck are you talking about???
Well if your “truth” can only be understood by you, your reward for following it would be a lonely one indeed.
 
Actually, I am far from being alone in this understanding, Biggie. Nothing lonely here. But like Bernard of Chartres, circa 1130, I can say "“We are like dwarfs standing upon the shoulders of giants, and so able to see more and see farther than the ancients.” In fact, what I am saying is consistent with what is not only older than christianism, but what it was originally derived from.
 
We all share the same genesis experience. The true myth expresses the genesis event without the distortions imposed by fallen flesh. Various branches of the human family remember it from the decendants of Adam particular to them. Decendants with their particular experience and their own version of what was true, false , right wrong about our selves at the beginning… In the measure they point to that genesis event is the measure they point to truth.

That beginning of human history, history remembered and passed down, recalls who we were. Our true selves were once happening. Seperated from God by our disobedience we lost our selves and we could at best remember and preserve the memory of who we were as we passed it down the generations. Myth can only point to the truth of our genesis but that event did happen and is the foundation of religion. In as much as myth pointed to the beginning it guided the moment and prepared man for his end. Human history begins with a life threatening experience. Human religions consequently suffer the baggage common to families traumatized by the sting of death and suffering.

Myth points to Truth but the beginning and the end happened! In both, the beginning remembered, and the all encompassing end that is both remembered and present in every moment, are Truth that happened, two events that can be desribed as one that all true myth points to. We begain united with God we end united with God. In as much as myth recalls authentically the genesis of man it will point to our end . At both events we are united to our true selves because at both events we are united to God.
 
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