Hashi Lebwohl wrote:danlo wrote:rus wrote:It's a pity that you take the position that because I admire him, he ought to be disdained.
It's humor man no one's disdaining him
Being able to communicate only in text prevents some humor from being understood.
rusmeister wrote:the individual, acting on his own authority in determining answers to the meaning of life, the universe, and everything - setting himself as the ultimate arbiter of truth - is basically always wrong
I disagree with this premise because if we are not allowed to determine the meaning of life for ourselves then that means that someone else decides for us what the meaning of life is. I refuse to give this power to someone else because they may get it "wrong" or they may choose some meaning for me that simply doesn't fit.
I am a Christian but I remain wary of organized religion simply because there is too much possibility for people, being human, to abuse their arbitarily-granted power given to them by other people. The Pope is the Pope only because he was the least objectionable person upon whom the College of Cardinals could agree, not because he has more knowledge or godliness than anyone else. I attend our church regularly but I will leave it in a moment if I see any wrongdoing by the leaders or I hear a message that isn't true.
Unfortunately, no, I do not want the context of that statement. It will simply give you more opportunity to try and utter some nicely-phrased insult in my general direction.
We haven't had much interaction hitherto. First I'll say that since quite a few people have openly dissed my favorite writers, it's hard for me to take any dissing of them here as humorous. It's only funny if it's absurd - and here it has been shown to be quite serious dissing. So I get that it may be funny to you and Danlo, because you really don't mean an attack on Chesterton (or Lewis) - but a number of other people here DO mean such attacks.
I largely agree with your general wariness of organized religion. I find, however, that logically, there must be an exception the the general rule that nearly all of them must be man-made and driven - and that is that if there is a divine truth, and God is, and the other dozen or more major propositions of Christianity are true, then it logically follows that there MUST be one institution that is NOT man-made, but actually divine in origin, and even being divinely guided.
In my case, I expect to see wrongdoing, even within the Orthodox Church, sooner or later, for the simple reason that "For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God". But the big assumption that seems to be sitting behind all objections to organized religion is that there must necessarily be people sitting behind the curtains who manipulate believers in their favor. I find that to be simply not true in regards to the faith that I accept. One of the biggest things I have learned is that Church leaders are totally bound by Holy Tradition - they can say or do nothing that contradicts that, without putting THEMSELVES outside that tradition, at which point I could, if thoroughly convinced of this, declare such leaders as schismatic, or even heretics. Just as any Anglican who actually valued his own tradition would and certainly should do in regards to this author and his book. If he is an active member of the clergy, he should be deposed immediately according to Anglican canons. But I do not believe the Anglican Church to be the true representative of the ancient Church established by Christ and built by the Apostles and maintained ever since by paradosis, so am not surprised that he gets away with this - all the more in view of the Anglican adoption of priestesses, fulfilling CS Lewis's predictions on what would happen, and the widespread acceptance, particularly within the US, of homosexual behavior among laity and clergy. The gradual folding of the Anglican Church is evidence that it has accepted as its guiding philosophy the paradigms of this world.
Furthermore, I never propose blindly turning over the guidance of my own thinking to "whoever" and never propose to turn my reason off. It remains on and active and continues to evaluate.
So to me, the idea that I necessarily blind and limit myself by accepting a greater authority than myself is not at all thought out - I agree that it could be true of any number of false religions - but know that there is a case where it is NOT true.
Lastly, it is interesting that you will interact with me in my own words, even though you may thereby be insulted by demonstration from a particular rational POV that the views you hold are inconsistent with truth and logic, but will not interact with a dead author who does exactly the same thing merely because he is dead. That is discrimination of the negative type, and highly undemocratic - and I think insufficiently self-critical as well. For my part, I will do battle with any words of any author, certainly those presented here, and do not discriminate against them simply because they are dead.
Hopefully, that gets something of a radically different POV across.
I don't mean that to distract from the issue of violence - but feel it necessary to clear the air there.
Back to violence, I will say that I was fairly solidly anti-death penalty on a categorical basis until quite recently - one of the few views that I have actually experienced a change on in recent years. It was Steve Robinson's podcast series on the death penalty that convinced me that there is a solid basis for supporting the death penalty (not that an Orthodox Christian need or must be pro-DP), or at least, for accepting it.
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)
"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton