I suspect I should address this post to bananabrain directly, but all are welcome to comment.
Christianity should - in my view at least - have developed a 'theology of the body' and by extension a 'theology of the world' which would have served to prevent, or at least limit, the environmental and ecological disasters and deprivations that face us today.
Christianity also professed a profound mistrust of 'profane philosophy' and yet, it seems to me (woefully ignorant of Hebraic philosophy) that had we stuck a little closer to our Judaic roots and not embraced the Hellenic (for all that we decried it) we might not have inherited a view of the flesh that often seems more founded in 'gnostic' philosophical systems than the meaning of Incarnation.
Not to get too involved in discussions of duality or the soul vs body debate - which might spread the debate too thin - do we think that Christianity, informed by Judiac philosophy, might have arrived at a more wholistic view of the human being?
Corollary - I have read that the Hebrew 'basar' means body and soul as a unity, whereas neither the Greek nor the Latin has an equivalent phrase that carries quite the same meaning (or does anthropos suit?)
Thomas
Christianity should - in my view at least - have developed a 'theology of the body' and by extension a 'theology of the world' which would have served to prevent, or at least limit, the environmental and ecological disasters and deprivations that face us today.
Christianity also professed a profound mistrust of 'profane philosophy' and yet, it seems to me (woefully ignorant of Hebraic philosophy) that had we stuck a little closer to our Judaic roots and not embraced the Hellenic (for all that we decried it) we might not have inherited a view of the flesh that often seems more founded in 'gnostic' philosophical systems than the meaning of Incarnation.
Not to get too involved in discussions of duality or the soul vs body debate - which might spread the debate too thin - do we think that Christianity, informed by Judiac philosophy, might have arrived at a more wholistic view of the human being?
Corollary - I have read that the Hebrew 'basar' means body and soul as a unity, whereas neither the Greek nor the Latin has an equivalent phrase that carries quite the same meaning (or does anthropos suit?)
Thomas