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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@Unknown/ KatM -

"If more and more people just say "no" to evil (or repent their consent to evil) that is a first step toward freedom from the slavery of evil."

Indeed. Especially repentance. We are all sinners (i.e. not fully aligned with God), and most of us are too weak to say no to all temptations or expediencies - yet anybody can repent at any time; if only sin is acknowledged.

17 July 2023 at 22:39

Anonymous Michael Baron said...

The theology is somewhat different, but the distinction you're drawing here somewhat resembles certain Sanskrit terms. Nirguna-Brahman is God without qualities/distinctions, the formless absolute, the omni-being which cannot be described by terms suggesting an opposite. This is opposed to Saguna-Brahman, God with qualities/distinctions, which is the personality of God which, in the Vaishnava sects, consistently favors and assists the Devas (demigods; in Tolkien's terms: the good Ainur and the Valar) over the Asuras (often translated as demons, but in some cases that isn't quite appropriate).

15 August 2023 at 02:53

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@Michael - The theology is indeed "somewhat" different! In other words, the *aims* are almost completely different. But more fundamentally, the nature of God I am trying to express is not captured by this distinction except superficially, almost accidentally. I derive this mostly from Mormon theology, which arose from 1830 onward in the USA, and was something genuinely new in the world - in terms of its metaphysical structure and theology.

15 August 2023 at 07:12

Anonymous Michael Baron said...

I have some vague awareness of basic Mormon theology, its notion of exaltation, and the emphasis on embodiment in heaven as you often talk about. I can see the uniqueness you point out in terms of the whole, coherent system of metaphysics and soteriology, but it's not enough to shake me from my view that Christianity, in all its forms, more or less has the same conception of salvation as the Vaishnavas wherein one gains eternal life in God's Kingdom due to His guidance and grace. Where you emphasize embodiment, they emphasize the difficulty of describing such a state, but they still speak of it as a physical-like paradise with animals, plants, birds, etc.

15 August 2023 at 15:11

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@Michael - It is probably pretty simple to discern.

You just need to ask yourself: Do you want to be resurrected to eternal life in Heaven after your death, to be achieved by following Jesus Christ? - Or, do you want something else?

15 August 2023 at 15:51

Anonymous Michael Baron said...

Whatever our differences of opinion, thank you for your writings and your careful replies to my comments

15 August 2023 at 17:03