Primitive Christianity Revived, Again
"I believe that just about all of the world's religions are full of myths and superstitions, but behind them all lies a vital truth. I don't believe that the religions themselves know what this truth is, but the truth is there nevertheless. By contrast, I would say that atheism, though free from the falsehoods, myths, and superstitions of the religions, has no insight into the important truths that the religions dimly but incorrectly perceive. Thus I think of atheism as blind and the religions as having vision; but the vision is distorted. Atheism is static and is not getting anywhere; the religions with all their faults (and the faults are many!) are at least dynamic, and are slowly but surely overcoming their errors and converging to the truth...
"More specifically, my religious views come close to the idea of William James -- that our unconscious is contiuous with a greater spiritual reality... (whether it is personal or impersonal, conscious or unconscious or superconscious... is not for me to say.)"
[Raymond Smullyan, Who Knows? ]
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I happen to believe that I, and Raymond Smullyan, are slowly but surely overcoming our errors and converging to the truth -- which I personally find to be, if not 'superconscious', a t least far ahead of _me_ when I catch an occasional glimpse. Anyway, I really like this passage!
Lately I find myself far more willing to bear with a great deal of the prevalent Quaker incoherence (as well as those plausible-yet-dubious traditional notions people love to apply so dogmatically, so cut-and-driedly) due to basically the same idea -- that crazy religious ideas (even atheism) are gifts of God towards each human being's progress, representing a slightly-closer approximation which at least somebody has found to make his way forward a little clearer (at least to him.)
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Could it be that if what Keith is suggesting is entirely possible, and since Jesus himself provided an example of doing so, and since Jesus held out the probability that others will eventually do so as well - then this is no mere lark. Rather, it is the whole vision, hope, and purpose of Jesus' whole being that others will be One with the divine as he was (is).
Whenever I doubt the probability or even the possibility "that people can know meaning, purpose, identity, conscious, and awareness without being influenced by or in regard to outward beliefs, systems, and institutions", I remember that Jesus did so himself and said so will others. Then I realize when I am not in that place in my head and heart, it is entirely my ego that is afraid of letting go of control so I my become a full manifestation of the Light, so that the 'mind of Christ', the eternal Light that is the Source of all creation - can fully fill my being.
To deny that this transcendence can and will occur is to deny the core message and being of Jesus. Ironically, Christianity has been in denial of his core purpose for being for nearly 2000 years now.
Keith, -- First I say that I'm not convinced that something can happen; and then you say that therefore I'm convinced that it can't happen.
~C(SH) == C(~SH) ?
No, the logic entirely escapes me.
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Meanwhile Howard Brod sayeth that Jesus was in precisely this condition, that "being one with the Divine" means "being entirely without ideas-about 'being one with the Divine'."
No, "being one with the Divine" is hardly the same thing as "having ideas about" -- but clearly doesn't preclude such ideas, unless you want to say that Jesus spoke about being one with God entirely without thinking anything... (which would suggest that God has no ideas either?) Where did you say the idea came from?
Then they (the "magistrates") ran into many words; but I told them they were not to dispute of God and Christ, but to obey him. [1650] - George Fox.
Context: he is street preaching again and someone (an "officer") drags him before the magistrates. He speaks to them which results in an argument with him about his beliefs and the above is his response. It results in a 6 month sentence (which he serves). At the end of the sentence he is hauled before the magistrates yet again and offered his freedom if he will sign a document promising to take up arms against Charles Stuart should he invade England to take back the throne. He declines and is physically assaulted by the judge who then orders him re-imprisoned for his insolence.
Seems to me this is proper salt and light to this particular thread.
If I remember this rightly (from his _Journal_) what he says is that they offered him a commission; he wasn't so much supposed 'to sign a document promising' as to actually take command of a group of soldiers & lead them off to kill people in a still semi-active war. He then tells them what they can do with their commission.
Some people think that disputing is a bad; and some think it's sometimes a religious duty (Jews & Tibetan Buddhists according to Rodger Kamenetz); and I just says, "a person's gotta do what a person's gotta do." Whether or not one looks good in the process.
A lot of disputing falls into an adversarial mode which sheds all the light of an octopus fight; but if the people involved really want to get to the How-It-Is of a matter, exploring disagreements should be helpful.
I think that stories can be normative but that we need to be careful when we take them that way. It is in their very nature to be particular and to expand them to the universal often does violence to them. So no, I do not believe that it is always wrong to argue about our faith. And if I were to suggest that Fox never did so I would suspect there are people here who know the early Quaker writings as well or likely better than I do and would flood me with counterexamples.
I think the story I cited can serve as something of a warning however. My reading of Fox and the early Quakers is that they were taking in anti-Augustinian turn. Augustine defined "faith" in terms of propositional agreement — "thinking with agreement". Fox shifts things toward faith as faithfulness (though I suspect he would prefer the term "obedience"). When our arguments go on for too long they can become a substitute for right living. And I think this is what Fox was getting at with his example.
I am remembering a passage from the Imitatio Christi. It is more important to feel compunction then to be able to define it.
Propositions can contribute to understanding, but don't constitute understanding.
"Faithfulness" is not "right living" -- and neither of these things are substitutes for what I think Fox was trying to convey, but natural consequences of it -- of something people have a great many words for -- but no words adequate for wrestling it to the ground. (Jacob got off lightly with that sprained hip, yes?)
That is, I think, what we've been arguing "about" -- but I suspect that it gets expressed in a great many ways, that there are many partial findings of it along the various ways that lead in that direction...
& getting stuck in any of these isn't such a bad thing, but is partial.
I would need to back track and locate the posting I was responding to. It is not immediately visible to me.
I was responding (initially) to a set of postings which seemed more epistemological than theological - about how our beliefs impact/structure our experiences. I myself am something of a social constructivist (i.e., my experience of drinking my morning coffee is socially constructed - even more so my spiritual experiences. But the conversation seemed to be moving into technical areas. It made me think of Fox -- which I had been reading that same morning for totally other reasons -- and the irony jumped out at me.
BBS-style conversations (like this one) approximate but are not identical to real-time face-to-face conversations. We are not always in the same head space the next day. I tend to respond to overall impressions. Perhaps I simply sensed more heat than light and incorrectly read the situation. No one else here seems to feel so.
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