Transubstantiation as viewed by other faiths (and Catholics)

10,335 Views | 141 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by Dies Irae
Sapper Redux
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Zobel said:

Because dualism and Plato specifically were explicitly rejected. Neo Platonism was a pagan philosophical reaction to Christianity.


Except the philosophy clearly influenced their thinking.

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20700314
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43251185
https://www.jstor.org/stable/27076609
https://www.jstor.org/stable/24644894
https://www.jstor.org/stable/44645981
https://www.jstor.org/stable/26778528
Dies Irae
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Sapper Redux said:

Zobel said:

Because dualism and Plato specifically were explicitly rejected. Neo Platonism was a pagan philosophical reaction to Christianity.


Except the philosophy clearly influenced their thinking.

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20700314
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43251185
https://www.jstor.org/stable/27076609
https://www.jstor.org/stable/24644894
https://www.jstor.org/stable/44645981
https://www.jstor.org/stable/26778528
Is this what message board conversation has devolved into? "I don't have a rebuttal but let me bombard you with links that actual smart guys said and you can read them and I'll declare victory".
FIDO95
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AG
Fair points. I got a little tunnel visioned in limiting metaphysical to spiritual matters.

In regards to these more broad metaphysical studies in relation to the physical world, the Stephen Meyer interview on Joe Rogan was excellent. Here is a segment of that conversation on evidence of God:



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Sapper Redux
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Dies Irae said:

Sapper Redux said:

Zobel said:

Because dualism and Plato specifically were explicitly rejected. Neo Platonism was a pagan philosophical reaction to Christianity.


Except the philosophy clearly influenced their thinking.

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20700314
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43251185
https://www.jstor.org/stable/27076609
https://www.jstor.org/stable/24644894
https://www.jstor.org/stable/44645981
https://www.jstor.org/stable/26778528
Is this what message board conversation has devolved into? "I don't have a rebuttal but let me bombard you with links that actual smart guys said and you can read them and I'll declare victory".


Huh? Zobel made a claim that Neoplatonism and Christianity were in opposition. The research done by philosophers, historians, classicists, and theologians says the exact opposite of his claim and I provided a tiny selection of different perspectives showing that link. Just a generic JSTOR search of "Neoplato*" and "Christian*" provides over 20,000 journal articles, and the overwhelming majority are discussing how Christianity was, at different times in its evolution, influenced by and drew from Platoism.
one MEEN Ag
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AG
Sapper Redux said:

Zobel said:

Because dualism and Plato specifically were explicitly rejected. Neo Platonism was a pagan philosophical reaction to Christianity.


Except the philosophy clearly influenced their thinking.

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20700314
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43251185
https://www.jstor.org/stable/27076609
https://www.jstor.org/stable/24644894
https://www.jstor.org/stable/44645981
https://www.jstor.org/stable/26778528
Well pack it up folks, we've got six catholic academic publications from the 2000s that says otherwise.

Catholic theology is definitely more interested in rubbing elbows with philosophy than orthodoxy. So not surprised there. Also, 'christian platonism' and 'rethinking' right off the bat signals this is headed down the wrong path. We're not trying to examine the claims of the church directly, but just building off of a stack of those claims that reach all the way into the 2000s.

The church tangled with plato's ideas because of its popularity at the time. Just like the tangled with Arianism or any other heresy. You see bits and pieces of church fathers attempting to explain plato through the lens of the Christian God but it only goes so far. Seems that orthodox churches were way faster to put the kabosh on examining God through a framework outside of Christianity.
Sapper Redux
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one MEEN Ag said:

Sapper Redux said:

Zobel said:

Because dualism and Plato specifically were explicitly rejected. Neo Platonism was a pagan philosophical reaction to Christianity.


Except the philosophy clearly influenced their thinking.

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20700314
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43251185
https://www.jstor.org/stable/27076609
https://www.jstor.org/stable/24644894
https://www.jstor.org/stable/44645981
https://www.jstor.org/stable/26778528
Well pack it up folks, we've got six catholic academic publications from the 2000s that says otherwise.

Catholic theology is definitely more interested in rubbing elbows with philosophy than orthodoxy. So not surprised there. Also, 'christian platonism' and 'rethinking' right off the bat signals this is headed down the wrong path. We're not trying to examine the claims of the church directly, but just building off of a stack of those claims that reach all the way into the 2000s.

The church tangled with plato's ideas because of its popularity at the time. Just like the tangled with Arianism or any other heresy. You see bits and pieces of church fathers attempting to explain plato through the lens of the Christian God but it only goes so far. Seems that orthodox churches were way faster to put the kabosh on examining God through a framework outside of Christianity.


You could try engaging with this in good faith. I chose more recent articles to show that this is not some old or fringe approach, but still very much the scholarly mainstream and hardly limited to just Catholics. Yes, the western church will get the lion's share of attention in Euro-American scholarship, but it's hardly limited to Catholicism and the links go back to the earliest days of the Church. Augustine in particular is so thoroughly influenced by Platonic philosophy that it's impossible to address his writings without a grasp of Neoplatonism.

Further, the Church can make policy or theological statements all it wants, the nut and bolts of how statements are constructed and, more importantly, the philosophical basis for how they are understood and interpreted, does not allow you to just take them at face value. Sorry, but Plato is baked into Christianity from the beginning, just as Hellenism was baked into late second temple Judea and Judaism.
Zobel
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AG
Ha - nice search dump. Did you just link the first six articles with neoplatonism as a keyword?

Pre-Christian philosophies weren't unknown to the fathers, and many fathers were trained in pagan schools and were keenly aware of their teachings. However, Christianity stands against these religious/philosophical schools. Like anything else there are continuities and discontinuities, where Christianity agrees sometimes with one, then with portions of the other. For this reason the Christian east always held these philosophies at arm's length, considering them of value while categorizing them as "outer knowledge" vs the "inner knowledge" of the faith.

It's no secret that the west had considerable theological drift after the great schism, and that the reintroduction of this "outer knowledge" was met with great interest. It restarted projects to synthesize Aristotle or Plato with Christianity which had been long-abandoned in the east as futile... because they are not the same and confess mutually exclusive truths or axioms.

If you're tracing the history it begins with classical philosophy paralleled with the various Judaisms in the pre-Christian era. You can see the attempt to synthesize the two by Philo, for example, who re-interpreted Plato in the light of the Hebrew scriptures (and considered that Plato was derivative of Moses). However, Philo's interpretation of Plato would not have been accepted by his contemporary Greek Platonists.

Then you get Christianity which is itself a continuation of a particular Judaism, probably grouped in with the Pharisaical tradition but not exclusively so, which contains in itself a particular interpretation of the Hebrew scriptures. As this tradition grew it encountered other philosophies and borrowed language to refine its expression - but this is not the same as amalgamating other views. It also explicitly stood against the teachings of pagan philosophies, rejecting Aristotelian metaphysics and Platonic metaphysics while also retaining portions of both as far as they aligned with the Christian faith.

Next you get the pagan reaction against Christianity, which includes Neoplatonism. Neoplatonism itself is an attempt to answer Christian rejections of Platonism, and has continuities with both, and specific points where it stands against Christianity. Practice of the two are mutually exclusive. You cannot be a Neoplatonist and a Christian at the same time.

Then much later in the medieval period you get a kind of revived interest in classical philosophical schools AND later philosophical schools including various flavors of Neoplatonism. There were active Platonists in the east even during the Renaissance, like Plethon, who seemingly nearly single-handedly reintroduced Greek scholarship to the West. Neoplatonism's "influence" on the West is itself a kind of counter-reaction, as Neoplatonism is itself a reaction against Christianity. Was it a pure re-thinking of Neoplatonism back into a Christian frame? No - and the impurities of the process are on display in this thread. But that doesn't mean Christianity per se was influenced by Neoplatonism.

Anyway, that was a long way to reiterate what I originally said - dualism and Plato specifically were explicitly rejected by Christianity. I will double down on that and say you can't be a dualist and a Christian.

Sapper Redux
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I'll write a longer response when I have time, but your arrogance is palpable. No, those are not the first six articles. I tried to offer a brief overview of the variety of analysis. And your own comment essentially admits the importance of Platonic and Hellenistic philosophy to early Christian theology without being able to admit as much.

Quote:

Practice of the two are mutually exclusive. You cannot be a Neoplatonist and a Christian at the same time.


Except the research clearly shows that's not the case. Maybe claiming the titles is exclusive. The philosophical principles are not, and Christianity liberally borrowed from the arguments and claims of the Neoplatonists.
Dies Irae
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Sapper Redux said:

Dies Irae said:

Sapper Redux said:

Zobel said:

Because dualism and Plato specifically were explicitly rejected. Neo Platonism was a pagan philosophical reaction to Christianity.


Except the philosophy clearly influenced their thinking.

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20700314
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43251185
https://www.jstor.org/stable/27076609
https://www.jstor.org/stable/24644894
https://www.jstor.org/stable/44645981
https://www.jstor.org/stable/26778528
Is this what message board conversation has devolved into? "I don't have a rebuttal but let me bombard you with links that actual smart guys said and you can read them and I'll declare victory".


Huh? Zobel made a claim that Neoplatonism and Christianity were in opposition. The research done by philosophers, historians, classicists, and theologians says the exact opposite of his claim and I provided a tiny selection of different perspectives showing that link. Just a generic JSTOR search of "Neoplato*" and "Christian*" provides over 20,000 journal articles, and the overwhelming majority are discussing how Christianity was, at different times in its evolution, influenced by and drew from Platoism.
What is the point of discussing if you're just going to link dump? Let me just cut and paste the entire life works of Averroes, St.Thomas Aquinas, and Anselm of Canterbury and you'll see that I'm right.
Zobel
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AG
Save your time, I already put in more energy than it's worth. Live and don't learn, that's me. Let's fast forward to where you tell me I don't know what time talking about, call me an anti-Semite, ignore my rebuttals and sourcing and declare victory.

Bottom line - Neoplatonism as a general category teaches an impersonal God. Platonism teaches dualism. Christianity is fundamentally incompatible with both. The end.
one MEEN Ag
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AG
Sapper Redux said:

I'll write a longer response when I have time, but your arrogance is palpable. No, those are not the first six articles. I tried to offer a brief overview of the variety of analysis. And your own comment essentially admits the importance of Platonic and Hellenistic philosophy to early Christian theology without being able to admit as much.

Quote:

Practice of the two are mutually exclusive. You cannot be a Neoplatonist and a Christian at the same time.


Except the research clearly shows that's not the case. Maybe claiming the titles is exclusive. The philosophical principles are not, and Christianity liberally borrowed from the arguments and claims of the Neoplatonists.
Look,

Your argument is basically on the same tier as, 'Islam, judiasm, and christianity all believe in the same God!' Just because you and the church fathers can spot similarities, and address them does not mean its the foundational essence of the religion.

And you're looking at this from the lens of catholic post schism. Thats not the church fathers. And even honing in on one idea of any of the church fathers doesn't make them the arbiter of it. And again, the catholic church is way more into trying to express christianity through philosophy than the orthodox church. The orthodox are going to say this is all wrong and futile. The catholics are going to celebrate the half of Christianity that they can stuff into neoplatonism, ignore the half they cant, roll out the mission accomplished banner, and celebrate how they've built a bridge connecting christianity into pagan thought. Champaign reception to follow on the top floor of the ivory tower.

If you really want to get down to brass tacks, the continual push into philosophy versus the arms length approach of the orthodox church is a huge defining difference between the two. You can't sit here and say that, 'its christianity neeneer neeneer neeneer! You're going to get orthodox believers to just flat out say thats not the faith tradition of the apostles nor what they accept. Thats why you think its arrogant for Zobel to hand waive academic papers while you consider it the foundational source of truth. The whole pursuit is futile.
Aztec1948
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Just guessing here, but was it instituted to accommodate pagan religions in the area that performed human sacrifices/blood rituals? Much like Mary being "deified" to appease the local goddess worshipers?
"I have been told that we have recovered technology that did not originate on this".-Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intelligence-Chris Mellon

“Behind the scenes, high-ranking Air Force officers are soberly concerned about UFOs. But through official secrecy and ridicule, many citizens are led to believe that unknown flying objects are nonsense.” Former CIA Director, Roscoe Hillenkoetter, public statement, 1960.
Zobel
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AG
No
The Banned
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1. Faiths will always poke at each other because each one believes (or at least should believe) they have the one true faith. When one believes that, it's going to naturally cause some degree of friction. Take the Eucharist. If the baptists are wrong, they are roundly rejecting the institution Christ left us. If they're right, then Catholics are idolators. Makes sense that they may poke back and forth

2. Enh. The majority of the church was in favor of or leaning towards the Arian heresy until the Church shot it down. There have always been mistaken believers, either due to poor formation or bad preachers.
one MEEN Ag
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AG
The Banned said:

1. Faiths will always poke at each other because each one believes (or at least should believe) they have the one true faith. When one believes that, it's going to naturally cause some degree of friction. Take the Eucharist. If the baptists are wrong, they are roundly rejecting the institution Christ left us. If they're right, then Catholics are idolators. Makes sense that they may poke back and forth

2. Eh. The majority of the church was in favor of or leaning towards the Arian heresy until the Church shot it down. There have always been mistaken believers, either due to poor formation or bad preachers.
Great point. If you look at the commentary surrounding St. Spyridon and the Arian controversy during the first counsel time you'll read things about how they couldn't come up with concise, neat and satisfying defense against Arianism that would shut it down.

It took two things to really put an end to Arianism: a miracle and time.

St. Spyridon's miracle of the clay shard during the debate basically ended a deadlocked debate. And then it took a long long time to see Arianism to go away. And that is the view of the church. If you're wrong, a way to tell if its wrong is that it will eventually fall away because God will not allow the church to disappear or be defeated by lies.

Sapper, that is why I personally think the philosophy underpinnings is ultimately silly. The church didn't start because of thinkers. It started because of Jesus and his miracles. Miracles and prophecy showed the way of the church. OT and NT. The church is founded and advanced by those who showed great devotion to God, not philosophical minutae.

If you struggle with miracles, you're going to lean on philosophy to explain a God that doesn't interact with you. If you have miracles, who cares about how Christianity compares to pagan secular beliefs about God and how they think God arranged the world.

Divine Liturgy is at 10 this Sunday. Everyone's welcome.
Sapper Redux
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one MEEN Ag said:

The Banned said:

1. Faiths will always poke at each other because each one believes (or at least should believe) they have the one true faith. When one believes that, it's going to naturally cause some degree of friction. Take the Eucharist. If the baptists are wrong, they are roundly rejecting the institution Christ left us. If they're right, then Catholics are idolators. Makes sense that they may poke back and forth

2. Eh. The majority of the church was in favor of or leaning towards the Arian heresy until the Church shot it down. There have always been mistaken believers, either due to poor formation or bad preachers.
Great point. If you look at the commentary surrounding St. Spyridon and the Arian controversy during the first counsel time you'll read things about how they couldn't come up with concise, neat and satisfying defense against Arianism that would shut it down.

It took two things to really put an end to Arianism: a miracle and time.

St. Spyridon's miracle of the clay shard during the debate basically ended a deadlocked debate. And then it took a long long time to see Arianism to go away. And that is the view of the church. If you're wrong, a way to tell if its wrong is that it will eventually fall away because God will not allow the church to disappear or be defeated by lies.

Sapper, that is why I personally think the philosophy underpinnings is ultimately silly. The church didn't start because of thinkers. It started because of Jesus and his miracles. Miracles and prophecy showed the way of the church. OT and NT. The church is founded and advanced by those who showed great devotion to God, not philosophical minutae.

If you struggle with miracles, you're going to lean on philosophy to explain a God that doesn't interact with you. If you have miracles, who cares about how Christianity compares to pagan secular beliefs about God and how they think God arranged the world.

Divine Liturgy is at 10 this Sunday. Everyone's welcome.


Everything has a philosophical underpinning. And the early church theologians were extremely interested in the theological minutiae. You can try to separate the doctrine from the human philosophies as much as you want, but it's all there at the base along with the historical, sociological, and geographical context. It's all there to help explain why certain strains of thought faded and others developed. It also helps explain why divisions that emerged became irreconcilable. Platonism, particularly Neoplatonic arguments, are foundational to Christianity, well before Rome and the East drifted apart.
Sapper Redux
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Zobel said:

Save your time, I already put in more energy than it's worth. Live and don't learn, that's me. Let's fast forward to where you tell me I don't know what time talking about, call me an anti-Semite, ignore my rebuttals and sourcing and declare victory.

Bottom line - Neoplatonism as a general category teaches an impersonal God. Platonism teaches dualism. Christianity is fundamentally incompatible with both. The end.


Bottom line: the Church fathers disagreed and used Platonic and Neoplatonic frameworks for their theology. Particularly Origen, Augustine, and Dionysius.

https://iep.utm.edu/origen-of-alexandria/#:~:text=Origen%20of%20Alexandria%2C%20one%20of,his%20treatise%20On%20First%20Principles.

https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/augustine/

https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/pseudo-dionysius-areopagite/#AfteSignInfl

But certainly not just them.
Zobel
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AG
This shows a shallow understanding of what it means to be a Platonist vs a Christian. I wrote above that when the fathers encountered antagonistic or different religious traditions they took what was good and left the bad. St Paul did as much at the Aeropagite. St Augustine is no different. The article you linked says as much - "In his first works Augustine epitomizes his own philosophical program with the phrase "to know God and the soul" (Soliloquia 1.7; De ordine 2.47) and promises to pursue it with the means provided by Platonic philosophy as long as these are not in conflict with the authority of biblical revelation (Contra Academicos 3.43)."

You're making an anachronistic mistake by separating theology from philosophy - something the ancients did not and would not conceive of. The very idea of becoming a lover of wisdom has a different meaning for a Christian than a pagan. The ends are different, the means are different - it doesn't matter if some of the organizing principles or mechanisms are shared. Plato and Aristotle have different views on many things - Christian theology borrows from one, then the other, rejects a part of one then the other. Saying St Augustine is a platonist is nonsense because he believed in a bodily resurrection, something any platonist would find ridiculous (see again St Paul in Athens!). He also wasn't a Neoplatonist because he believed in an immanent and personal God. Emphasizing the commonalities while ignoring the explicit and mutually exclusive points is completely meaningless. St Augustine was a Christian, not a Neoplatonist. Where they differ is precisely where the distinction is made. You can't take Confessions' affirmation of the role of outside philosophy without also taking City of God's affirmation of the superiority of Christian philosophy, or as he puts it "true philosophy".

I mean for Pete's sake it's even in the standford article you linked. "Augustine sharply criticizes the "philosophy of this world" censured in the New Testament that distracts from Christ (Colossians 2:8). In his early work he usually limits this verdict to the Hellenistic materialist systems (Contra Academicos 3.42; De ordine 1.32); later he extends it even to Platonism because the latter denies the possibility of a history of salvation (De civitate dei 12.14)."
Sapper Redux
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Quote:

You're making an anachronistic mistake by separating theology from philosophy


I'm not the one claiming Neoplatonism and Platonism are completely separate from Christianity and I'm absolutely not separating theology and philosophy. I'm saying much of your metaphysical theology is derived from a Neoplatonic base. It's interesting how you're cherry picking from what I linked to while ignoring that the basis of their arguments are rooted in Platonism and Neoplatonism. The articles are extremely explicit about that. I've never said they were pure pagan Neoplatonic thinkers. I said their philosophy (and theology) is rooted in Neoplatonic thought and you can't separate Christian metaphysics from its Platonic roots.
Zobel
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AG
And I'm saying that is nonsense. Good chat.
Dies Irae
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one MEEN Ag said:

Sapper Redux said:

I'll write a longer response when I have time, but your arrogance is palpable. No, those are not the first six articles. I tried to offer a brief overview of the variety of analysis. And your own comment essentially admits the importance of Platonic and Hellenistic philosophy to early Christian theology without being able to admit as much.

Quote:

Practice of the two are mutually exclusive. You cannot be a Neoplatonist and a Christian at the same time.


Except the research clearly shows that's not the case. Maybe claiming the titles is exclusive. The philosophical principles are not, and Christianity liberally borrowed from the arguments and claims of the Neoplatonists.
Look,

Your argument is basically on the same tier as, 'Islam, judiasm, and christianity all believe in the same God!' Just because you and the church fathers can spot similarities, and address them does not mean its the foundational essence of the religion.

And you're looking at this from the lens of catholic post schism. Thats not the church fathers. And even honing in on one idea of any of the church fathers doesn't make them the arbiter of it. And again, the catholic church is way more into trying to express christianity through philosophy than the orthodox church. The orthodox are going to say this is all wrong and futile. The catholics are going to celebrate the half of Christianity that they can stuff into neoplatonism, ignore the half they cant, roll out the mission accomplished banner, and celebrate how they've built a bridge connecting christianity into pagan thought. Champaign reception to follow on the top floor of the ivory tower.

If you really want to get down to brass tacks, the continual push into philosophy versus the arms length approach of the orthodox church is a huge defining difference between the two. You can't sit here and say that, 'its christianity neeneer neeneer neeneer! You're going to get orthodox believers to just flat out say thats not the faith tradition of the apostles nor what they accept. Thats why you think its arrogant for Zobel to hand waive academic papers while you consider it the foundational source of truth. The whole pursuit is futile.
This is funny because it's true
Sapper Redux
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Zobel said:

And I'm saying that is nonsense. Good chat.


And the consensus in classics and philosophy is that you're wrong.
Zobel
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AG
I use pythagorean theorem. I must be a pythagorist.
Sapper Redux
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Zobel said:

I use pythagorean theorem. I must be a pythagorist.


It's one thing to use a single example independently verified from a thinker and quite another to use the philosophical framework and tools of a school to build and support your metaphysic and theology. You'd have to be a fool to deny your debt to Pythagorists in that case.
Zobel
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AG
I use logic and animal taxonomy, I must be an Aristotlean.
Sapper Redux
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Zobel said:

I use logic and animal taxonomy, I must be an Aristotlean.


Have you ever actually taken a philosophy course? Particularly one dealing with Augustine?
Aztec1948
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Zobel said:

No
I would certainly consider it. I would be extremely hesitant in blindly accepting the data provided by the Catholic sect.
One of the oldest and most effective control/intimidation systems over humanity on the planet today. Hopefully, that will eventually disolve.

Yes
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“Behind the scenes, high-ranking Air Force officers are soberly concerned about UFOs. But through official secrecy and ridicule, many citizens are led to believe that unknown flying objects are nonsense.” Former CIA Director, Roscoe Hillenkoetter, public statement, 1960.
Zobel
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AG
It's almost as if a framework or tools for analyzing a problem can be used with different axioms to come to wildly different conclusions.
Sapper Redux
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Zobel said:

It's almost as if a framework or tools for analyzing a problem can be used with different axioms to come to wildly different conclusions.


Except the late antiquity theologians were Platonists. Period. Augustine was blatantly quoting from and using pagan Neoplatonist thinkers to build his metaphysical arguments. The base is Platonic. Sure, you can reach a different conclusion, or use the framework for unique arguments from another person, but you're still within that philosophical tradition and dependent on its baseline assumptions. There's a reason Nietzsche called Christianity, "Platonism for the people." It's because Christian metaphysical beliefs were constructed and interpreted through a Platonic tradition.
747Ag
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AG
Dies Irae said:

one MEEN Ag said:

Sapper Redux said:

I'll write a longer response when I have time, but your arrogance is palpable. No, those are not the first six articles. I tried to offer a brief overview of the variety of analysis. And your own comment essentially admits the importance of Platonic and Hellenistic philosophy to early Christian theology without being able to admit as much.

Quote:

Practice of the two are mutually exclusive. You cannot be a Neoplatonist and a Christian at the same time.


Except the research clearly shows that's not the case. Maybe claiming the titles is exclusive. The philosophical principles are not, and Christianity liberally borrowed from the arguments and claims of the Neoplatonists.
Look,

Your argument is basically on the same tier as, 'Islam, judiasm, and christianity all believe in the same God!' Just because you and the church fathers can spot similarities, and address them does not mean its the foundational essence of the religion.

And you're looking at this from the lens of catholic post schism. Thats not the church fathers. And even honing in on one idea of any of the church fathers doesn't make them the arbiter of it. And again, the catholic church is way more into trying to express christianity through philosophy than the orthodox church. The orthodox are going to say this is all wrong and futile. The catholics are going to celebrate the half of Christianity that they can stuff into neoplatonism, ignore the half they cant, roll out the mission accomplished banner, and celebrate how they've built a bridge connecting christianity into pagan thought. Champaign reception to follow on the top floor of the ivory tower.

If you really want to get down to brass tacks, the continual push into philosophy versus the arms length approach of the orthodox church is a huge defining difference between the two. You can't sit here and say that, 'its christianity neeneer neeneer neeneer! You're going to get orthodox believers to just flat out say thats not the faith tradition of the apostles nor what they accept. Thats why you think its arrogant for Zobel to hand waive academic papers while you consider it the foundational source of truth. The whole pursuit is futile.
This is funny because it's true
It's a felt banner, though.
Zobel
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AG
Christian metaphysical beliefs were revealed to mankind, not constructed. That's the whole crux of the matter. The fact that there is independent overlap between some of the foundational principles of Platonism and the teachings of the Torah don't make one derivative of the other - though from the 2nd century BC through the 2nd century AD you find Jewish, Christian, and neopythagorean writers making the claim that the Platonic philosophical tradition were constructed and interpreted through the Jewish tradition.
AgLiving06
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Two things can be true at once.

Neoplatonism was certainly something used by the Gnostics, but that doesn't mean the Church Fathers didn't use it as well.

Augustine is certainly seen as being a Neoplatonist.

That's not controversial I don't think?
Sapper Redux
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Zobel said:

Christian metaphysical beliefs were revealed to mankind, not constructed. That's the whole crux of the matter. The fact that there is independent overlap between some of the foundational principles of Platonism and the teachings of the Torah don't make one derivative of the other - though from the 2nd century BC through the 2nd century AD you find Jewish, Christian, and neopythagorean writers making the claim that the Platonic philosophical tradition were constructed and interpreted through the Jewish tradition.


So your argument is to retreat to an unprovable metaphysical claim about revelation? A claim which doesn't really stand up to historical scrutiny given what we know about the metaphysics of ancient near East religious traditions, including Judaism, and the claims about the nature of God and the soul made by late Antiquity Christian theologians like Augustine, Origen, and Dionysius (among others) that are very explicitly using the metaphysical arguments and assumptions of Neoplatonists to build their understanding of the Trinity and the relationship between the soul and the material.

Hellenism was a dominant cultural force for centuries, but the embrace of Platonism as the dominant foundation for metaphysical claims was a project of late Antiquity Christians and absolutely influences Christianity to this day, including Orthodoxy.
Dies Irae
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747Ag said:

Dies Irae said:

one MEEN Ag said:

Sapper Redux said:

I'll write a longer response when I have time, but your arrogance is palpable. No, those are not the first six articles. I tried to offer a brief overview of the variety of analysis. And your own comment essentially admits the importance of Platonic and Hellenistic philosophy to early Christian theology without being able to admit as much.

Quote:

Practice of the two are mutually exclusive. You cannot be a Neoplatonist and a Christian at the same time.


Except the research clearly shows that's not the case. Maybe claiming the titles is exclusive. The philosophical principles are not, and Christianity liberally borrowed from the arguments and claims of the Neoplatonists.
Look,

Your argument is basically on the same tier as, 'Islam, judiasm, and christianity all believe in the same God!' Just because you and the church fathers can spot similarities, and address them does not mean its the foundational essence of the religion.

And you're looking at this from the lens of catholic post schism. Thats not the church fathers. And even honing in on one idea of any of the church fathers doesn't make them the arbiter of it. And again, the catholic church is way more into trying to express christianity through philosophy than the orthodox church. The orthodox are going to say this is all wrong and futile. The catholics are going to celebrate the half of Christianity that they can stuff into neoplatonism, ignore the half they cant, roll out the mission accomplished banner, and celebrate how they've built a bridge connecting christianity into pagan thought. Champaign reception to follow on the top floor of the ivory tower.

If you really want to get down to brass tacks, the continual push into philosophy versus the arms length approach of the orthodox church is a huge defining difference between the two. You can't sit here and say that, 'its christianity neeneer neeneer neeneer! You're going to get orthodox believers to just flat out say thats not the faith tradition of the apostles nor what they accept. Thats why you think its arrogant for Zobel to hand waive academic papers while you consider it the foundational source of truth. The whole pursuit is futile.
This is funny because it's true
It's a felt banner, though.


With the faint strands of Marty Haugen echoing through the Contemporary art narthex
Zobel
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AG
I'm so glad you're here to explain my faith to me. Thank you.
 
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