TheLightWithin
...through a glass, darkly
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It came up on the forum last year, from somebody, that we should do a thread on theological headcanon.
Headcanon is personal belief that may not line up with official canon or catechism.
I think we were talking about what attracted us to an interfaith forum, and many people said they wanted to know what others believed and why. Idiosyncratic personal beliefs and ways of thinking are certainly a window into what and why.
This can also lead to discussion of convictions many have about personal freedom, religious freedom, and so-called heresy, which we can talk more about as we go on.
The word “headcanon” is often used around fan responses to fiction.
See What Goes On In Fans' Heads With "Headcanon"
Fanon - TV Tropes
Theology is different from fiction, but what it has in common with fiction is how much it is about Ideas and how much it uses Imagination, Idiosyncrasy, Intuition, Inference etc.
For our purposes heacanon can include misimpressions or misunderstandings we had as kids, or any idiosyncratic conclusions we drew about spirituality, theology, or religion.
I thought it would be intriguing to swap stories about religious ideas we now believe or maybe used to be believe as kids or young adults, that we now know is definitely not official teaching.
I will start (see ongoing thread)
Headcanon is personal belief that may not line up with official canon or catechism.
I think we were talking about what attracted us to an interfaith forum, and many people said they wanted to know what others believed and why. Idiosyncratic personal beliefs and ways of thinking are certainly a window into what and why.
This can also lead to discussion of convictions many have about personal freedom, religious freedom, and so-called heresy, which we can talk more about as we go on.
The word “headcanon” is often used around fan responses to fiction.
See What Goes On In Fans' Heads With "Headcanon"
Fanon - TV Tropes
Theology is different from fiction, but what it has in common with fiction is how much it is about Ideas and how much it uses Imagination, Idiosyncrasy, Intuition, Inference etc.
For our purposes heacanon can include misimpressions or misunderstandings we had as kids, or any idiosyncratic conclusions we drew about spirituality, theology, or religion.
I thought it would be intriguing to swap stories about religious ideas we now believe or maybe used to be believe as kids or young adults, that we now know is definitely not official teaching.
I will start (see ongoing thread)
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