Re: The testimony of the early church as toward the correct interpretation of our bib
Hi Linda
I wanted to thank you for your considered responses to my irksome remarks regarding "ancient wisdom."
I, too, could once quote W.B. Yeats at length. Or T.S. Eliot.
Great poets! (But questionable as philosophers or theologians.)
& & &
I'm bugged by people talking about "secret knowledge" buried in symbols.
Sumerian priests (and priestesses) had developed a calendar from a star-map of the sky. This was valid knowledge. Both scientific (observationally accurate) and practical (predicted optimal planting and harvesting time for the crops).
Like scientific jargon, these priests created an arcane symbolic shorthand for talking about these things between themselves (very elitist). But some priests also used this language as a magic formula to try to predict (to 'divine') the future in other ways. Bad idea. Or some used the symbols as a metaphor for a process of psychic growth, raising oneself above the mundane. Good idea, back then. But there are better languages for that today (psychological and biophysical), where the ideas have some scientific and sociological grounding. (Broad-based, peer-reviewed ideas that all people have access to. Not supposedly 'hidden knowledge' that a guy with a microphone and a slideshow can charge you an arm-and-a-leg to learn about.)
& & &
"As above, so below."
This is just me, Linda ... But I distrust this "spiritual/material" dualism.
The assumption ... That we each are imprisoned in the material world. And that to perceive this other reality, and to free oneself from one's material chains, one needs metaphors/symbols/allegories as the bridge taking one from ignorance to wisdom - metaphors one won't need once one gets there ...
Is all too pat for me, Linda.
It's a scam. It is a way of cheating oneself. It is a way of saying that "my daily, material life is not valuable."
The "spiritual" is right there. Just look. There is no bridge you have to cross. "Below/above" or materialism/spirituality is a phony dualism as far as I am concerned.
"God is there, at every moment in your day," is something traditional religions - from Christianity to Buddhism - will tell you.
And that is far closer to the Truth than any of the New Age nonsense I hear.
But then, what do I know, Linda? I have no intuition.
& & &
I may have taken the Myers-Briggs test once.
Reminds me of a friend who did my astrological chart, years ago. Lot of her results had murky relevance toward defining my personality, but there is one or two things that she really nailed. "That's me!"
Some years later, in a surly mood, a newer friend asked to do my chart. This time I lied. I pulled the year, day, and hour of my birth out of thin air. The results? ...
Lot of the results had murky relevance as regards defining my personality, but there is one or two things that this new friend really nailed. "That's me!"
I know employers give personality tests, these days. But I am skeptical of their ultimate value. I teach Science and History to schoolkids. I wear a different hat when I teach Science than when I teach History - wear a different personality. I write fiction, Linda, for fun. My personality is often ... whatever character I am most inside at that particular moment.
Sometimes this character, I'm inside of, even has an 'Intuitive' personality.
(So ... At the very least, Linda, I have some personal idea where 'Intuitives' come from. I'm not unsympathetic of your motives. I'm just highly skeptical of the results you get by juggling metaphors ... rather than employing more substantial, more modern tools - to get where you are going.)
Talk again,
P