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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Anonymous GunnerQ said...

"In other words - for many people The spiritual problem of modernity is alienation"

I've been thinking about alienation. The reality is sinking in, that American society has no place or concern for the American people, Christians particularly. We're just replaceable inhabitants to all the Powers That Be.

I scanned a headline about a city in Florida installing multiple license plate readers with the help of some Federal grant money. When locals complained, police replied that they already scan license plates manually, so the cameras aren't anything different.

Never mind the difference between checking a specific license plate, and maintaining a database of everywhere a license plate goes. The important part here is the police department didn't bother to ask the people they would using the technology on, err, "on behalf of", if they wanted it. The police wanted it, so they did it, and when the locals complained, their objections were dismissed. This, in a state with a reputation for conservatism. Whatever that is these days. It ain't "representative government".

Your vote won't matter. Your voice won't be heard. You aren't wealthy enough to buy respect.

Christianity has become like that, too. Sure, you can go to church. Sing songs. Bake cookies for the holiday festival. But you'll never be allowed to participate. You'll never be allowed the chance to teach, or even speak uncomfortable opinions, or be a leader of some group. Gifts of prophecy, healing and (lay) leadership won't be granted opportunities. You'll never be a hero unless you take a bullet for the pastor, and it won't be his fault if he's ever offended a single enemy of God.

Even when you get a chance to communicate with an authority figure, your words don't get heard. The politician, police chief and pastor all listen to you only long enough to cast a word-spell designed to make you go away.

Perhaps people are creating "middle grounds" as a cope to the reality that the institutions no longer care about them. As you've pointed out, we must approach God directly at this point in time, without institutional or ritual assistance. For most people, that's very hard. That's why those institutions and rituals were created in the first place.

One can almost forgive them for lashing out and experimenting with alternatives, except that what God wants has never been those institutions and rituals. He's always wanted us to own our faith, to internalize it and approach God on our own initiative.

This might be the hardest time to be a Christian... but perhaps, this is also the time that God is most pleased with our efforts. We face a world from which we are wholly alienated, and instead of negotiating with the world, we remember that God said it would be this way.

31 October 2023 at 00:43

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@GQ - I think you may be talking mainly about what used to be called Civil Society in the 1990s - the layer of institutions between the state and the individual, and the idea that they should be distinct from the state.

Civil Society was theorized to distinguish totalitarianism from - whatever the other thing was. But the CS idea was taken up and made into a thing, and adopted by George Soros... and anyway, civil society (in the UK) has been substantially destroyed since the millennium by the usual New Left mixture of mandatory bureaucracy and regulations, subsidies and taxes - so all clubs, professions, institutions etc. are now officially supposed to pursue the Litmus Test issues as their primary function.

Anyway - my stuff about the Middle Realm was supposed to be more psychological than sociological; more about the spiritual than the social; the idea (or belief, or practice) that there is a necessary layer of spiritual reality in between the individual and God - that we cannot relate directly to the divine or to reality, but only via this Middle Realm.

I think these Middle Realm possibilities have dwindled to ineffectuality, and we are faced with either an unmediated relationship with the divine - or none at all.

Much the same could, indeed, be said of society.

31 October 2023 at 06:55

Blogger Inquisitor Benedictus said...

What about the internet? You seem to be acting as a mediator here in a kind of cyber-spiritual hermitage. Monk/hermits have long served as "spiritual professionals" in a larger religious-institutional context. Blogs like this one serve a similar function in a global spiritual-religious temperament which is an amalgam of traditional religious, humanistic, and esotericist influences. This online "noosphere" is part of an emerging middle-realm of human intersubjectivity and spiritual communication (of both good and evil spiritual entitie).

2 November 2023 at 17:03

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@IB - I'm not sure what point you are making about the internet. Are you suggesting it serves as a spiritual Middle Realm of the same kind as the church or systems of symbol and ritual?

2 November 2023 at 17:43