To love God, and love one's neighbour ...Ok, let me ask this then: Freedom to do, say, think or feel what?
... in a closer context, the 'Freedom' offered by Scripture is to become one with God, not in the sense of personal annihilation or extinction, but Union. In Patristic parlance this is 'theosis' or 'divinisation' — and in the orthodox context it is to become one with the Father, in the Son, by the Holy Spirit.
And the way of it is Love.
My previous comments are in blue:
That highlights the issue we have with those who try and incorporate gnostic 'systems' and/or esoteric 'orders' that are fixed to a hierarchy of levels through which the person is obliged to ascend, step by step, be degree, etc ... all they're doing is putting invented barriers between man and God. In the end they all become elitist, as is only too evident if one examines their histories. These structures are external to the heart.
I think you agree with this bit.
The reason why there are so many systems is man's knowledge is not absolute, so he constructs according to the insight and capacity of the intellect. It's a left-brain thing, to render his experience and his reflections intelligible.
Why not? I am sure you would agree that man's knowledge is not absolute? So you seem to disagree with the working of the intellect. OK. But I would suggest it's sound science.No, I cannot agree with this.
Actually, I think this is absolutely key to the discussion.
God cannot be comprehended absolutely, so we can only 'know' two things: The first is what we can assert philosophically of that which we would call 'God' were such to exist, and
The second is that which we can assert in faith, the content of which is what each tradition would call its 'revelation', with the proviso that even the data of Revelation needs necessarily be mediated to man according to his ability to comprehend what is being revealed.
So in both cases, man takes data received, through his physical or spiritual senses, and orders things accordingly, according to the intellect.
In the Christian tradition, it is axiomatic that is the self-revelation of God, what is made known to man is always in some sense, analogous to the actuality of the Divine, because the Divine in the fulness of Itself is utterly beyond all human comprehension — so as close as one gets to the truth of the matter, one can always get closer, and what was true before, is not relative and contingent ... and as Eckhart, the Prince of Mystics has said, where God and man meet in the urgrund — all distinction ceases to exist ...
So all orders, hierarchies, domains, levels, etc., are constructs according to the comprehension of truth, they are not true as such, they are ways we perceive the truth...
... the problem arises when one insists then that 'truth' is determined by the construct, which is putting the cart before the horse, and this is nowhere more evident than when the data of one tradition is interpreted, in effect systematised, to fit the other.
That was the point I was making.What I do agree with is that often enough, those who are too attached to hierarchies do certainly become elitist, their thinking becomes rigid, and this only sets up the ability to abuse our earthly power ...
In some aspects, yes. Leadbetter and Krishnamurti is another classic example, so none are innocent, and none can throw stones ... I was hoping we could discuss this without insulting each other's faith and intelligence.The Catholic Church throughout the centuries is one of the BEST examples of just this sort of abuse...
I would reject that caveat. It's imposing a structure on the Divine which is, by nature and definition, free of all determinations. Nor is God 'apportioned out' amongst creatures and the Cosmos.I would almost agree that such structures are external, but with the caveat that they are not external to the portions of God's Being in which and Whom we live, move and have our being.
This is my very point. We start of with structures that help us understand the divine, and then somehow the divine is determined according to the structures, which is an inversion. That is ever the risk, and that is the error that the gnostics, and many esoterists, make regarding Christianity.
In the absence of structure, because Christianity in the first instance is not about structures, etc., people impose their own upon it. And when they come from without, they bring their own in with them. So you inform me that Jesus Christ of the fith of whatever according to this or that ... but that's all alien to what He said, what He taught, and what His apostles transmitted to their followers ... Irenaeus' critique of 2nd century gnosticism is an object lesson in just such an error.
But that is my very point. It seems to me it is you who bring an inordinate amount of baggage to the doctrine: a scan through your post and there's:You see, there is an overlap here. It is not that God is out there, somewhere, and in some magical yet inexplicable way we partake of that Divine Nature ... with a dozen complicated Greek words, or Sanskrit terms, needed to explain the relationship.
'lesser' Kingdoms ... Teachers ... truly progressive, progressing Revelation ... a 5th ray mind ... 3rd eye or Ajna/brow center ... chakras ... ... Devas ... clairvoyant ... higher CENTERS of consciousness ...
.None of it is vital. Useful, for those inclined, but not necessary.
The Christian Tradition states it quite wonderfully, and simply, in the Parable of the Vine. "Abide in my love" John 15:6. Just love ... No need for all that other stuff.
Well here I would say you misunderstand my God, at least.And if our God is one of a truly progressive, progressing Revelation, wherein modern man CAN BE and IS expected to draw closer - closer even than during Christ's previous appearance among us - then we should remain open to the possibility that what I have just said is ... 'Gospel.'
For a start, none can walk closer than Christ, because Christ is God. All can walk with God in Christ, but overtake Him? "He is before all things, and by him all things consist" (Colossians 1:17).
Nor do we hold to a post-modern view of 'progress' that assumes 'evolution' along a linear path. We believe in the cycle, and the order of the ages.
Within that, Christian esoterism holds that the Word of God is Absolute, so its potential to reveal the Speaker is absolute; the only limitation is man's ignorance and intransigence. Even exoteric Christian doctrine insists (as exoterism necessarily does) that 'the good man' can attain to Divine Union according to the Grace of God. Clement and Justin both preached 'Christians before Christ' ... so we do not in that sense depend on some future date, for us man can aspire to the highest right here, right now...
I'm sorry, but that's just a construct to confirm a construct.As for the intricate hierarchies and orders of being which many esotericists stress, I would encourage you to look at these as a form of learning which appeals to certain types of intellects, or minds (what esotericists call a 5th ray mind, especially)...
Christian Hermeticism is one of my 'things', but it doesn't define what Christianity is, by a long shot, it's just one means of visualising certain concepts and dynamics.
I have delighted in such for many, many years, and will continue to do so, but there are other ways. I suppose the Eckhartian 'poverty' is calling me of late.
Really? It's is in Scripture ... I think it's because you look at it in a left-brain way ...I have probably heard a lot more about left brain, right brain distinctions, and the need for learning to integrate these two modes of perception/experiencing ... from New Agers, than from Catholics, Christians, or any other group of religious folk.
I agree, it takes all sorts ... but they do not define the truth.What I'm getting at, is that the very ideas you might wish to reject out of hand, or wish to suggest as being too heavily laden with hierarchies and rigid structures, modes of thinking which do not seem necessary for you (or perhaps, I would say especially, for those with mystical inclinations) ... ARE quite useful, even necessary, for others ...
Just the one in principle... I wonder if you see that? That is where I see the major difference. Christianity goes 'to the heart of the matter' always.(*how* many Songs of the Lord are there again, in this UNI-VERSE?), and our relationship to and with each other (and how many are there again, of me, or of you, or any, given individual?)...
So do you consider yourself God's equal, or better?I think it's the NEED, the feeling that one MUST make these distinctions, and that one MUST - even if it is with our last, dying breath - emphasize our being somehow LESS THAN the Divine ... this insistence upon focusing on man's MEEKNESS as compared with God's Unboundedness ... to which I react the most negatively, or feel as being MY biggest turnoff.
No one is asking you to. Nor am I necessarily calling them crutches ... but I am saying that if you want to understand Christianity, then you will have to learn to walk without them, because you don't need them ... they'll just get in your way.Yet I will not cast aside my mind's `crutches,'
And less in it ... if you could only see thathey, let's face it - There is more UNDER Heaven and Earth than is dreamt of in some high falutin', fancy schmancy, super-cooked-up philosophy, ol' Horatio!
Actually, it's just you on this one, friend.Horatio is you, and Horatio is me,
Thomas