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Old 04-05-2008, 05:26 AM   #21
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Xianity, the expression of a classical human existential crisis of being in the now, able to look back and to look forward, moulded in the context of powerful empires, and expanded to the whole universe.

http://www.glasgowmuseums.com/venue/...id=4&itemid=68
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Old 04-05-2008, 10:26 AM   #22
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I have a theory. The trinity may originally not have been an external projection of godhead in three persons--indeed it makes no sense to me as such. I don't know it for a fact but I can imagine that somewhere along the line a human being faced an enormous dilemma. He or she reached deep inside for strength and courage and said: in the name of all there has ever been and all there will ever be, let my decision at the critical hour be right and do honor to the past and future. Now, if one were to express that formula as a solemn invocation people would make when facing great life-direction decisions, one might use figurative language. For instance, instead of calling the past the past, a patriarchal culture might express the past as "the father". Typically then, the future might be characterized as "the son". And between the past and future is the present where the spirit of all is invoked in conscience to make decisions which seek to honor both past and future. As the poetic license begins to lose connection with its originator--in other words people hear of such a solemn invocation and express it without knowing that it is figurative and begin to give it their own literal presumption of what it means. To me it makes a great deal of sense to consider the past, consider the possible future and strive to be the best example of the best spirit in the moment between past and future to do the best thing. A person might say, figuratively, "in the name of the father (the past) and the son (the future), let the spirit of forever live in me now--now that circumstances have chosen me to decide actions which lives and futures depend upon. As time goes on and the expression loses its connection with its origins, it could be misapplied externally to mean three literal figure--a god father, a son of god and some contrived magic dove in between that no one really understand but just accepts. It makes sense to me but usually when I express my insight on this I get treated to some valueless history lesson which doesn't change my intuition. I had one person even reply: you sir, are an idiot. Well, nail me to the cross of I'm wrong. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
This is a very interesting analysis, I have never thought of it like this. At first reading, I thought it seemed far fetched, but reading it over again today it's starting to make sense. The Father had the starring role in the OT, and has been since before the beginning, then the Son shows up, whom, through his work is given everything for ever without end, and the Spirit is here making sure we make it from past to future.

Fascinating indeed.

In what way would this view be accepted psychology?
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Old 04-05-2008, 11:08 AM   #23
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In what way would this view be accepted psychology?
See the above link to Games People Play.

In fact it is getting more interesting, as the latest brain research is that we as humans use the same brain circuits for the past and the future!

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Future recall: your mind can slip through time
  • 24 March 2007
  • From New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe and get 4 free issues.
  • Jessica Marshall
IMAGINE your next vacation. You are relaxing on a beach, waves lapping at the shore, a cool breeze wafting through the trees and the sun caressing your skin. Fill in the details. What else do you see? Now, remember yesterday's commute. Again, a picture emerges. You are on the train or in your car, or maybe just wandering from your kitchen to your desk. Can you remember what you were wearing? Perhaps you have forgotten that part already.
Without breaking sweat, you can hurtle yourself backwards or forwards in time in your mind's eye - what is known as "mental time travel". One of these visions really happened and the other was fantasy, yet the act of conjuring them up probably felt very similar. It's as if, embedded somewhere in your brain, there is a time machine that can take you forwards and backwards at will.
Neuroscientists and psychologists are starting to think so, too. After more than a century of focusing on just one aspect of mental time travel - remembering the past - these scientists are turning their minds to a bigger question: what if we have been looking at only half the picture? What if the thing we call "memory" works both ways, helping us both recall the past and imagine the future?
The idea makes intuitive sense. When you imagine yourself on a beach, you draw on your experiences of past trips to the ocean, conjuring up a familiar scene and then filling in the details. Maybe memory provides the raw materials for these sorts of jaunts.
The idea increasingly makes scientific sense, too. Evidence is accumulating of an intimate mental connection between recalling the past and imagining the future. Neuroscientists and psychologists have found that people who have lost their memories also lose their ability to imagine the future, and that the brain regions that are used for remembering are also used for imagining. These similarities may help explain some of our memory's weaknesses, and even suggest that we are built to spend much of our lives engaged in mental time travel.
http://www.newscientist.com/channel/...ough-time.html
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Old 04-05-2008, 11:32 AM   #24
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I have a theory. The trinity may originally not have been an external projection of godhead in three persons--indeed it makes no sense to me as such. I don't know it for a fact but I can imagine that somewhere along the line a human being faced an enormous dilemma. He or she reached deep inside for strength and courage and said: in the name of all there has ever been and all there will ever be, let my decision at the critical hour be right and do honor to the past and future. Now, if one were to express that formula as a solemn invocation people would make when facing great life-direction decisions, one might use figurative language. For instance, instead of calling the past the past, a patriarchal culture might express the past as "the father". Typically then, the future might be characterized as "the son". And between the past and future is the present where the spirit of all is invoked in conscience to make decisions which seek to honor both past and future. As the poetic license begins to lose connection with its originator--in other words people hear of such a solemn invocation and express it without knowing that it is figurative and begin to give it their own literal presumption of what it means. To me it makes a great deal of sense to consider the past, consider the possible future and strive to be the best example of the best spirit in the moment between past and future to do the best thing. A person might say, figuratively, "in the name of the father (the past) and the son (the future), let the spirit of forever live in me now--now that circumstances have chosen me to decide actions which lives and futures depend upon. As time goes on and the expression loses its connection with its origins, it could be misapplied externally to mean three literal figure--a god father, a son of god and some contrived magic dove in between that no one really understand but just accepts. It makes sense to me but usually when I express my insight on this I get treated to some valueless history lesson which doesn't change my intuition. I had one person even reply: you sir, are an idiot. Well, nail me to the cross of I'm wrong. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
This is a very interesting analysis, I have never thought of it like this. At first reading, I thought it seemed far fetched, but reading it over again today it's starting to make sense. The Father had the starring role in the OT, and has been since before the beginning, then the Son shows up, whom, through his work is given everything for ever without end, and the Spirit is here making sure we make it from past to future.

Fascinating indeed.

In what way would this view be accepted psychology?
Thanks. You made it worthwhile. IF you let it resonate a little more you may see as I that this has nothing whatever to do with a god. It has only to do with the human being. A person calls upon the past for cues, examines the future for implication and acts in the present. If he or she makes up a poetic expression or applies some caricature to the the saying and teaches it to others, those others may not understand the figurative nature of it and may begin to suspect that the idea is to "beg" a literal personage instead of calling upon the whole of the human past for inspiration. That unfortunate leap becomes wholly defeating--the change from seeking message from human actions for inspiration to take human action to merely surrendering responsibility to an intercessor to take over. But of course, there is a subordinating power to institutionalizing the model which calls upon a personage of god rather than the inspiration of venerable ancestors. This I believe to be likely no accident but somewhere along the line a technique for subordinating people en masse to believe that they are low and their decisions meaningless and inept. To all those who have immersed themselves in study of all this and think I'm all wet, I say, enjoy your view from inside the box. This is what I feel and see and you won't dissuade me.
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Old 04-05-2008, 11:45 AM   #25
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IIRC, some Hellenistic or Roman Jews used "Holy Spirit" also. It's a bowdlerization of "Spirit of God"; Jews have a long tradition of avoiding saying God's name directly.

Yahweh may not even have been God's original name; it likely means something like "the being". But like many euphemisms, getting used a lot made its users think of a euphemism for it, so it became, "the Holy One", "the Holy Name", shorted to "the Name", etc. In particular, YHWH came to be written with the vowels of Adonai ("Lord"), for the purpose of indicating that pronunciation; this caused it to misunderstood as "Jehovah", and often translated as "the Lord".

One can see this bowdlerization in the New Testament also, where Matthew uses "Kingdom of Heaven", while Mark, Luke, etc. preferred to use "Kingdom of God". Matthew is the most Jewish of the Gospels, and bowdlerizing "Kingdom of God" to "Kingdom of Heaven" fits very well with that.

As to pneuma meaning "breath", lots of words for "ghost" or "spirit" or "soul" originally mean "breath"; it was widely imagined that breath is some sort of vital force. English "ghost", German Geist, Latin spiritus, Greek pneuma, Slavic dukh, Sanskrit atman, Hebrew ruach and nephesh, etc.

Thus, the Holy Spirit is literally the Holy Breath.
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Old 04-05-2008, 04:29 PM   #26
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You are not making this up, are you Clive ?

Jiri
I am quite serious and actually Rarebird's comments feel correct and are a logical extention of how I am thinking.

Rarebird also makes sense in terms of my xian experience - The Father somewhere back then in control, the comforter with us now, the coming son to create a new heaven and earth where the lion will lay down with the lamb.

And Rarebirds view is accepted psychology.
I really can't speak to Rarebird's comments overall. The actual theological development of the Trinity concept proceeded from a very different angle, which had nothing to do with the schema that Rarebird proposes. In one aspect I agree, and that is the Trinity represented a concept of Divinity relating to humanity and deeply "committed" in the relationship. This aspect of immediate accessibility of God (by larger mass of humanity) appears to have been a prominent feature of the Apocalyptic period in which Jewish mysticism and gnosticism abounded. In the sectarian, communal search of God, which this era popularized, the 51st Psalm probably played a great role in shaping the thinking about and devotion to the Holy Spirit:


Behold, I was shapen in iniquity; and in sin did my mother conceive me.

Behold, thou desirest truth in the inward parts: and in the hidden [part] thou shalt make me to know wisdom.

Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean: wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.

Make me to hear joy and gladness; [that] the bones [which] thou hast broken may rejoice.

Hide thy face from my sins, and blot out all mine iniquities.

Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me.

Cast me not away from thy presence; and take not thy holy spirit from me.

Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation; and uphold me [with thy] free spirit.

Psalm 51:5-10


Within the early Christian milieu, the Holy Spirit of course was the agent through which Jesus and the truth of the gospel were revealed to the ones God favoured (1 Cr 12:3). In the adoptionist Mark's narration the Spirit descends on Jesus like "a dove" on his baptism, and then drives him into the wilderness. Holy Spirit, the early Christians believed, gave them (or some of them) extraordinary capacity for doing miraculous deeds, healing, prophesizing, and speaking in foreign languages without having to learn them. When Simon Magus, the archsorcerer, sees what people can do when Peter puts the Holy Spirit into them, he wants the recipe (Acts 8). Peter rebukes him but this still does not resolve the mystery of Simon wanting something which obviously has some utility other than being an altar boy goody twoshoes.

So what was it in modern terms ? Could a community agree on some pure abstract "invention" which had no reference to their lives ? No, sir.

I agree with the late professor Maccoby that the Jesus-professing movement would have been dead and buried soon after Jesus had its leadership not suceeded in popularizing the manifestations of the Spirit, and convincing a large audience that they vouched for the coming end of ages. This is roughly the meaning of Pentecost in Acts 2. In the modern medical view, the Spirit would be seen as manic excitement and beliefs about the same. Whether the spirit would be judged holy or unclean would depend on the outcome of the hypermanic episode. (1 Cr 10:4-5) Paul was coming out ok from of his bouts of furious madness (Gal 4:13, 1 Cr 2:1-5 would refer to the depressive agitation), so people believed - seeing the man whole again - that the mystery of the Spirit and the Christ Body seen by it was for real. You see, when Paul was coming back , he seemed completely normal and sounded strangely wise. Not only was he not ashamed of his condition that made him seem like a foolbut he even went so far as making it a warranty of God's wisdom (! 1 Cr 20/27).

Here are the NT (and GT) allusions to the "drunken" mien of agitated manics relating to the Spirit

-------------------------------------------
(4) Elation -> Appearance of intoxication
-------------------------------------------

note: the appearance of intoxication, in a subject not ingesting an intoxicating substance, is often a diagnostic clue for presence of spontaneously elevated serotonin levels. Serotonin has been called the body’s natural psychedelic drug.

Lk 1:15 For he will be great before the Lord and he shall drink no wine nor strong drink and he will be filled with the Holy Spirit…

Acts 2:14-17 But Peter, standing with the eleven, lifted up his voice and addressed them ‘Men of Judea and all who dwell in Jerusalem, let this be known to you and give ear to my words. For these men are not drunk, as you suppose since it is only the third hour of the day; but this is what was spoken by the prophet Joel: And in the last days, it shall be, God declares, that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions and your old men shall dream dreams

Jn 2:3-10 And when they wanted wine, the mother of Jesus said to him, ‘they have no wine’. Jesus said to her, ‘Woman what have I to do with thee, my hour has not yet come…Jesus said to them, ‘fill the jars with water’. And they filled them up to the brim. He said to them, ‘now draw some out, and take it to the steward of the feast’. So they took it. When the steward of the feast tasted the water now become wine and did now where it came from (though the servants…knew), the steward of the feast called the bridegroom and said to him, ‘Every man serves the good wine first; and when men have drunk freely; then the poor wine; but you have kept the good wine until now.’

1 Cor 10:4 For they drank from the supernatural Rock which followed them, and the Rock was Christ.

Eph 5:18 And do not get drunk with wine, wherein is excess but be filled with the Spirit

Th (13) Jesus said, ‘I am not your master. Because you have drunk, you have become intoxicated from the bubbling spring which I have measured out.

Th(108) Jesus said, ‘He who will drink from My mouth will become like Me. I myself shall become he , and the things that are hidden will be revealed to him.

Jiri
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Old 04-06-2008, 03:01 AM   #27
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So the breath of god, thought to be the life force, becomes slowly transmogrified into a holy spirit and then a Third Person.

A new sect thinks it has had the breath of god come amongst them at Pentecost.

Might Pentecost be the real beginning of xianity, with the Jesus stuff a later add on to join up the dots between heaven and earth and explain why the Holy Spirit had come?
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Old 04-06-2008, 10:31 AM   #28
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John 3,5 (NAS)
Jesus answered (to Nicodemus), "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God."

from Catho Encyclopedy :
Quote:
That Christ instituted the Sacrament of Baptism is unquestionable. Rationalists, like Harnack (Dogmengeschichte, I, 68), dispute it, only by arbitrarily ruling out the texts which prove it.
<snip>
When, however, we come to the question as to when precisely Christ instituted baptism, we find that ecclesiastical writers are not agreed. The Scriptures themselves are silent upon the subject. Various occasions have been pointed out as the probable time of institution, as when Christ was Himself baptized in the Jordan, when He declared the necessity of the rebirth to Nicodemus, when He sent His Apostles and Disciples to preach and baptize.
<snip>
It is true that St. John Chrysostom (Hom., xxviii in Joan.), Theophylactus (in cap. iii, Joan.), and Tertullian (De Bapt., c. ii) declare that the baptism given by the Disciples of Christ as narrated in these chapters of St. John (John 3 and 4) was a baptism of water only and not of the Holy Ghost; but their reason is that the Holy Ghost was not given until after the Resurrection. As theologians have pointed out, this is a confusion between the visible and the invisible manifestation of the Holy Spirit.
from wiki :
Adolf von Harnack (1851–1930), was a German theologian and church historian. Though the four gospels have been regarded as canonical since Irenaeus in the 2nd century, Harnack - like earlier German scholars - rejected the Gospel of John as without historical value regarding Jesus' life:

"In particular, the fourth Gospel, which does not emanate or profess to emanate from the apostle John, cannot be taken as an historical authority in the ordinary meaning of the word. The author of it acted with sovereign freedom, transposed events and put them in a strange light, drew up the discourses himself, and illustrated great thoughts by imaginary situations. Although, therefore, his work is not altogether devoid of a real, if scarcely recognisable, traditional element, it can hardly make any claim to be considered an authority for Jesus’ history; only little of what he says can be accepted, and that little with caution. On the other hand, it is an authority of the first rank for answering the question, What vivid views of Jesus’ person, what kind of light and warmth, did the Gospel release?"

A late addition to John 3 ?
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Old 04-06-2008, 01:48 PM   #29
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Von Harnack's conclusion reminds me of what Isaac Asimov said in the New Testament volume of Asimov's Guide to the Bible. He stated that one could think of John as something like one of Plato's Dialogues, where Plato used Socrates and other real people as literary sockpuppets. But by comparison, he seemed to think, the Synoptics have much more of the historical Jesus Christ.

Since he was likely expressing the conventional wisdom of the more secular sort of Bible scholars when he wrote, that makes me wonder how common this viewpoint is.

Although Jesus mythicism is rare, it would appear that the conventional wisdom among such Bible scholars is that the Gospels are rather intimate mixtures of fact and fiction. Is that a reasonable assessment?

That would make Jesus Christ like such notables as Socrates and Pythagoras, about whom our primary sources also have intimate mixtures of fact and fiction. Is that also a reasonable assessment?

Some people may find it surprising how skeptical historians sometimes are, because we usually don't see the sources that they work from. Romulus and Remus are nowadays dismissed as mythology by most people, but ancient historians like Livy and Plutarch treated those twin brothers as real, historical people, even if modern ones don't.
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Old 04-06-2008, 07:47 PM   #30
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Hello, here's what I think the Holy Ghost is:

It is first and foremost:
- the "shekinah" concept of the OT in its broadest form. But especially the particular "Spirit/Presence/Glory of God" which normally travels in a physical cloud and dwells in the temple, tabernacle or mountain.


which comes from:
- the general pagan 'catalyst force of Generation/creation'. Regarded as the external force which encompassed some or all of these concepts, phenomena and symbols:
Photosynthesis (the life-giving power of sunlight as they understood it), sexual attraction, fertility, Amor/Cupid, love, feminine beauty, bird, dove, wings, the love/fertility goddess, the creators consort, feminine aspect of the creator, serpent, ankh, wisdom and sometimes word, breath or voice of the creator. Typically embodied in the beauty of the moon and especially the planet Venus, it can dwell within water and in wombs: the moon, the earth, arks, caves and caverns and in sun- and moonbeams (heavenly light).


and later:
- the concept of light as the physical and intellectual enlightening presence/force of the "Divine Wisdom" of the creator


and finally interpreted in relation to:
- the hellenistic concept of Logos ('word', 'reason', 'rational action', where 'logic' comes from), the abstract force of rationality that governs the universe.
Interpreted by Philo Judaeus (20 BC - 50 AD) as the intermediary between God and man spoken of in the OT as Gods Word, Spirit or "Gods Presence" in the temple that the prophets lament the absence of and awaits the return of.

The Holy Ghost in the NT is various "modern" theological interpretations of the shekinah from the "old religion" (which was slowly and surely being surplanted by the new rationalist and humanist ideas which had saturated the hellenistic hegemony) including God's Word, Spirit, Glory, Presence, Voice, Breath, Finger, Face and Gods Wisdom. God's (long awaited) intermediary with the world. This Logos scripture interpretation by the hellenistic Jewish allegorists particularly in Alexandria was unpopular with mainstream Judaism, especially as formulated by Philo (whose writings Paul can only have been familiar with).

The Platonic "presence of the good" (see "Sun Metaphor") is an early cornerstone in the later Holy Ghost/Jesus, I think. Where Jehova becomes "the good" (God) who's intermediary is light, rationality, the Logos, Jesus.
The author of I John proclaims that "God is light". You might even say that a 1000 years before Plato and 1500 years before the author of I John, Akhenaten seemed to have had the same idea (as the Rosicrucians believe).

So the Greek allegorists and stoicists shaped the rational enlightening philosophy and the "Logos" which Philo made into Jehova's intermediary which in turn Paul and John made into the messiah/passover sacrifice redeemer of sins, through whose resurrection you could be initiated/resurrected/reborn into the mysteries of Gods kingdom and saved when the world was going to come to an end within 20-30 years or so.
The "firstborn son of God" I think Philo called the Logos. It seems that Jesus became the flesh and blood Logos (which not only means 'word' but also an 'action' or 'utterance') and the Holy Spirit remained largely as the shekinah and the pagan concepts of the divine fertility force of love/life/joy described as the dove. I dont know, but as far as I understand there's quite a bit of confusion even in the NT as to the exact nature of the Holy Spirit, the different authors seem to have different ideas. And even more confusion comes from the early church. I dont know but I think the truth is somewhere in between all this.
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