Well if you consider that the deification of man is the task that Christ was set by His Father, that's one way of looking at it. However, the reality is that Christ knows we are sows' ears — but we're His sows' ears (He preferred lost sheep, but then He was Jewish) and He loves us none the less.Christianity has the unenviable task of trying to make a silk purse out of a sow's ear.
Athanasius said: "God become man that man might become God" and "God came into man and not into a man" ... furthermore Gregory Nazienzen said "what is not assumed is not saved".
So man is saved as man, not as some meta-human silk purse. He does not need to know anything beyond Christ and His commandments, "But when he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will teach you all truth" John 16:13.
The difference is, Christians, and Christendom, have faith in God and the Power of the Holy Spirit. You insist that's not enough, and rely rather on human psychological constructs.
Still think that argument's nonsense. Nothing cannot become conscious or capable, and again why would God seek a relationship with nothing?The fact that we are nothing doesn't mean that we cannot become consciously something and capable of the more normal God/Man relationship.
And it fails to comprehend the Christian understanding of the soul.
Matthew 25:34
"Come, ye blessed of my Father, possess you the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world."
Ephesians 1:4
"As he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and unspotted in his sight in charity."
Acts 17:28
"In him we live and move and have our being"
Colossians 1:16-17
"For in him were all things created in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones, or dominations, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him and in him. And he is before all, and by him all things consist."
I don't understand why you're arguing that Christianity should be a certain way, when it's apparent you don't believe in it. And if you don't believe in it, why should a Christian listen to you?
Love God, and love thy neighbour. And leave yourself out of the picture.This is the idea. Without help from above we can do nothing. How can we prepare ourselves to receive help from above?
Exactly. But the living kernel cannot exist outside of the kernel, or apart from it.Christianity lives within Christendom much like the living kernel of life of the acorn lives within the shell of the acorn.
Sorry Nick, but this kind of statement is invariably bandied about by those who are unaware of the facts — Eckhart was never condemned. Might I also add that he held several important posts within the structure of 'Christendom' and was tasked with ensuring the orthodoxy of Catholic teaching.Meister Eckhart was initially condemned by the Church.
1260: Born.
1298: Prior of the Dominican convent at Erfurt and vicar-provincial of Thuringia.
1300: Lectures at the Catholic University in Paris.
1302: Master of Sacred Theology.
1301: Provincial of the province of Saxony.
1307: Vicar-general of Bohemia (and charged to reform its convents).
1311: Chair at Paris.
1314: Move to teach at Strasbourg.
1317: Prior at Frankfort.
1320: First professor of his order at Cologne.
1329: Died (at Avignon).
Eckhart on trial
1325: Charged at a general chapter of his order that some of the German brethren were disseminating dangerous doctrine. Pope John XXII ordered an investigation which declared in the following year that the works of Eckhart were orthodox.
1327: Acting independently, Archbishop Heinrich of Cologne undertook an inquiry. Eckhart appeals to Rome.
From the pulpit of the Dominican church in Cologne, Eckhart repudiated the unorthodox sense in which some of his utterances could be interpreted, retracted all possible errors, and submitted to the Holy See.
1329: John XXII, undoubtedly under pressure from the Archbishop Heinrich (upon whom he depended for support in a political dispute) issues the papal Bull In agro dominico. It condemns 28 articles from Eckhart’s teaching. It also attacks Eckhart’s character in its Preface. It does not formally declare that Eckhart had been a heretic (he personally has never been condemned).
Modern view
1987: Pope John Paul II says in audience:
"Did not Eckhart teach his disciples: "All that God asks you most pressingly is to go out of yourself … and let God be God in you" (cf Walshe Sermon 13b)? One could think that in separating himself from creatures the mystic leaves his brother humanity behind. The same Eckhart affirms that on the contrary the mystic is marvellously present to them on the only level where he can truly reach them, that is, in God."
1992: The Master of the Dominican Order (Fr Timothy Radcliffe), in a letter to the Chairman of the Eckhart Society (Peter Talbot Willcox), says:
"I wonder whether you know that we tried to have the censure lifted on Eckhart and were told that there was really no need since he had never been condemned by name, just some propositions which he was supposed to have held, and so we are perfectly free to say that he is a good and orthodox theologian."
According to one source, Eckhart does not need a 'rehabilitation' in the canonical sense of the word, since his person, his doctrine, his apostolate or his spirituality were not really condemned. The censured teachings were presented out of their context and impossible to verify, since there were no manuscripts in Avignon. The Bull even uses the caution of saying prout verba sonent, to protect both the author and his authentic thought.
Another investigation found Eckhart's doctrine perfectly coherent with the orthodox tradition of great theologians like the Cappadocians, St Augustine, St Thomas and others.
A third theologian, T Suarez-Nani, has proved that each of the censured propositions may be interpreted in a perfectly orthodox way.
Somewhat lengthy, but the point is that most probably ambition blighted his posthumous reputation, however Eckhart was defended, and his name carefully preserved, and now recognised, by what you would call Christendom.
You can't separate them.
The beliefs are in the Mysteries nothing other; the Mysteries are what we believe — you're introucing an artificial separation.The social organism of Christendom is based on beliefs while Christianity is based on being open to the mysteries
That's what Scripture says. Of course, they were 'just there' because they'd been with Him for years before.You think that the apostles in Acts received the spirit by just being there.
No. That's a psychological teaching, not a religious or revelatory one.Jesus was a teacher and taught how to get out of ones own way in order to be able to become open.
Ah, well, the gnostics tried that one on in the 2nd century, and we knocked it down with ease. The true oral tradition is what we call Apostolic Tradition, which ranks alongside Scripture in the teaching of the Church. Precisely the truth that you reject.Of course such things cannot be written down but is past on as an oral tradition
Thomas