Hi Radarmark —
Have you come across Karl Rahner?
I'm just now beginning to look into him.
In many ways, Rahner strips the inherent duality of Platonism out of Christianity, in some ways accusing it of replacing the corporeal beings looking at shadows dancing on the walls (the Myth of the Cave) with spiritual beings looking at shadows on the walls ...
Rahner argues that it is in
this world that Christianity is realised, and comes to perfection in the social interaction of man, who's task is to realise and fulfil the potential of created nature — this is what man is and does — and that the aim is not a disembodied existence in some pseudoPlatonic upper realm. (This is a huge and somewhat inaccurate simplification.)
Ben, there are a lot of differences of opinion about this. Some believe Jesus purposefully blended Judaism with Greek Cynicism.
I doubt that, personally.
The issue then is that apart from Irenaeus, all the Fathers of the early Church were Platonists, and, as had been said, when they think, they platonize.
Rahner's position accords with some of the latest research into the Christian Mystical Tradition, which argues that the tradition is widely misunderstood, in that contemporary readers assume the mystics to be recounting the experiential, and that 'mystical experience' is and can be experienced ... close reading of the Fathers, texts like The Cloud of Unknowing, Eckhart and others actually refute the much-sought after idea of the experience of the Other.
They argue the Other is, infinitely and absolutely, other and cannot be approached or experienced — there is nothing, that is no thing, no form, no entity, to approach; no thing, no form, no entity to be experienced (all experience is subjective and sentimental, and all the great mystics point to the non-experiential).
The Other is realised here and now, in how we relate to ourselves and how we relate to each other. That's all that matters. Jesus seemed to make the same point, His heroes were the Centurion who's faith was an example to all, the Widow at the Temple, the Publican at Prayer — none of them were Platonists, esoterists, or whatever!
This correlates with many teachings, Sufi, Daoist, Buddhist. It's called 'Transcendental Thomism' as many defend it by arguing from Aquinas.
Zen saying:
Before enlightenment, chop wood, carry water; after enlightenment, chop wood, carry water.
Christian (apocryphal) saying:
Love God and love your neighbour, for where your neighbour is, God is.
In closing, might I add that Rahner does not dispute (as some might assume from this) the Doctrine of Christianity — if anything, the meaning and the implication of the Rites become 'more real' as it were — Rahner is one of the most brilliant writers on the Trinity, for example ... but they do stay closer in idea and expression to the Judaism of Jesus' day — closer in the sense of less 'crowded out' by later hellenic thought.
Of course, this message is lost today.
The Imitation of Christ by Thomas Kempis used to be a best-seller ... but it's far too simple, far too down-to-earth, far too love-thy-neighbour and devoid of the 'whoo-hoo' to hold any attraction for most contemporary seekers who, in reality, seek 'extraordinary experience' purely for the sensation.
God bless,
Thomas