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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger Nicholas Fulford said...

The emergence of the fundamentals occurred in the late 19th and early 20th century of the United States in response to the higher criticism of the Bible and the perceived threat of evolution to the Christian narrative. From that dark fertile ground the literalist dogma grew as a fear bred strain - increasingly divorced from both reason and the emotional base of love which was the heart of Christianity in practice. This legalism is a strangling vine that crushes the life blood out of what is most distinguishing about Christianity in its best forms. A Christianity that is fearless and radical in its expression of love is all but dead. Perhaps it is time to cull the dead wood from the tree, to remove the strangling vine and allow the radical love which is the sap to rise from the ancient roots.

If an outsider (me) - who once was a Christian - can see this so clearly, why is it so difficult for those who suffer from this malady to see it. Ah, it is the problem of being too close to the problem, to not seeing the storm because in the midst of it, it has become the new normal.

If Christianity did what I am suggesting, those withering on the parched ground of nihilism would drink deeply from that which they secretly desire; an end to nihilism.

26 November 2015 at 14:16

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@Nicholas "why is it so difficult for those who suffer from this malady to see it."

I think your own case answers the question - because IF you try to abandon legalism WITHOUT reforming the underlying metaphysics (Final Participation, as Barfield calls it) THEN you slide-out of Christianity into apostasy.

This is why I spend so much time harping-on about metaphysics!

26 November 2015 at 15:30

Anonymous Anonymous said...

As someone a few months into the practice of becoming Eastern Orthodox (from a Protestant denomination), I deeply appreciate this profound and eye-opening post! All I can add is, "Yes! Exactly!"

26 November 2015 at 17:55

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Humble obedience is the essence of Christianity. "Literal" is a curious word for it.

27 November 2015 at 06:58

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@DL - The 'literal' refers to that which is being obeyed - not the obedience.

It means that the Christian life is conceptualized rather like a set of laboratory instructions.

To the modern mind, the only two ways to understand something are in such a 'literal' way; or esle as purely subjective/ arbitrarily made-up.

Barfield's work (following Goethe and Steiner) is to say there is a stage beyond this: direct apprehension of real knowledge by the imagination.

27 November 2015 at 07:23