Cross Reference
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To the weak became I as weak, that I might gain the weak: I am made all things to all men, that I might by all means save some. 1 Corinthians 9:22 (KJV)
So much for farmer speak.
So much for farmer speak.
I spent every summer of my teenage life and most other vacations on my aunt's dairy farm. Naturally, the cows are as described but hormnes make the back productive more than 1/4. That wasn't why his comment was crude, it is simply a crude analogy for a thread about the nature and character of God. That and city-folk don't generally understand the nature of farm analogy, especially when much of it surrounds basal forms of repetition (we didn't say 'teat' everyday, even when I was milking or helping, every day). On TOL, I think this sort of talk is discouraged both because of the infrequency, and because of the unnecessity makes it crude. My particular concern was not to get debase when discussing the nature and character of God. We don't have to compare anything in this particular thread to the more crude descriptors of life and a lot of our youngsters as well as a few insensitive older males have no clue where to draw the line nor how to rise above the crude or unacceptable once that door is opened. It seems best, I believe, just to avoid such and say it without analogy. "'-Ism's' are problematic and get in the way" is much more effective and appropriate for this thread, imo. Because analogy isn't given, the actual point isn't lost in homology.I don't think he meant anything CRUDE about it... Just descriptive... Cows have 4 udders which are milked, and the two in front give 3/4 of the milk, and the back two still give milk, but not very much... So when a calf gives suck, he feasts on the front teats, and only gets a little when suckling those in the back... 1'n'1 is a farmer/rancher, where "sucking hind tit" is a common emphatic way of saying "forsaking what is better or more for the sake of that which is less or worse"...
Now that he knows you were offended by it, I doubt you will hear it from him again...
Arsenios
It is crude farm talk probably not appropriate for TOL. I really don't want this thread that uplifts our God and His Character to get basal either. Please refrain. Thank you.
I have appreciated your questions and open-ness to discussion, not derailing the thread up until this.
No,not you derailing. That wasn't what I meant by 'until.' Poor choice of words. I hope most of that conveyed as positive with only a slight pointing out that dairy lingo would likely not be understood and to forego it, is all.Derailing?
So please forgive my lack of patience for those who have hindered the gospel.:wave:
Virtually every belief or view is (or can be) an ism, though.
My concern is ascribing God more than one eternal divine sentient volitional consciousness (especially the Holy Spirit), regardless of labels.
Binitarianism is closer than mainline Trinitarianism.
My concern is ascribing God more than one eternal divine sentient volitional consciousness (especially the Holy Spirit), regardless of labels.
What you will find as you progress is that there is an interpenetration of person with person that is ongoing... And that the Divine Essence is unutterably beyond any consciousness that it creates, has, or is or may be... Reducing God to Ultimate Consciousness falls into the category of anthropomorphics, because we are self-aware of our own consciousness of awareness... Apophatic Theology forbids ascribing even this to the God Who created it in us... At very best, it would be an image, but not the reality...
The issues are huge here...
Thanks to 1M1S for the reminder of that sentence of yours...
I have seen it a few times before, and finally picked up on it a little...
Arsenios
So that more than one conscious person being one unknowable God is not all that strange as it seems to you now... This is but patristic descriptive and empirical theology... The only way to prove it is to 'go there'... And I can't afford the ticket!
Arsenios
Here is where we differ, for I insist God spoke to us in these last days by His Son to reveal Himself to us rather than conceal Himself from us. Therefore, I consider apophaticism a valuable tool rather than a mandatory limitation of restraint.
God's inherent transcendent essence is indeed unknowable; but hypostatically joined to Christ we partake of His divine nature, which is of His essence. I don't acknowledge false mystery, and we can intuitively by revelation know everything that His energies have given ecomony.
And this would also work in the inverse. By your standard, one could never know there were three eternal centers for sentient volitional consciousness, either. So that would prevent the individuality of the alleged hypostases as anything considered "persons", and also call into question the long-iterated mutual love between them in any manner resembling quantitative threeness AS "persons".
I abhor Reductionism (or Deconstructionism), so I don't "reduce" God to Ultimate Consciousness at all. My approach is purely inquiry, not reduction; and God's inherent aseity and phenomenology can be approached since it's relative to His physis rather than His ousia. We may intuitively know of the functionalities of His Logos, but not His immutable nous itself.
We MUST commune with Him in His timelessness from temporal time, and that only happens because we're translated into Christ and He has gone to prepare that place for us. Sheathed in the scabbard from which the Rhema (as His hypostasis) sword was thrust as/by His Logos.
ALL isms suck hind tit, including any form of trinitarianism.
Epignosis.
Even after all the words of Jesus and the Apostles, it cannot be fully grasped.
He gives it to us as we need it.
I caint just call him up on the bat phone and make him give me what I want.
Especially those of us who strive for the mastery, which I sometimes wish he hadn't made me that way, must first be partakers.
I aint never been no time clock puncher and it carries over into my spiritual life.
Never went and tried to buy that gift either.
Just tryin' to give an idea of that territory I was talkin' bout the other day.
You be the first like minded brother I met on the narrow road that came up from the other side.
You gotta special place in my heart too.
This defies being able to apophatically address the quantity of volitional consciousnesses to even address a numerical quantity.
I'll let you and AMR hash this part out, but if it doesn't come up, I'll want to revisit it in another thread, but this thread isn't about binitarianism. For this purpose of this thread: Christ Jesus our Lord said 'he' regarding the Spirt and is distinct from the Father Who would send Him, in Our Lord's own words. He is also enumerated in many scriptural passages that demand, I believe, that Binitary cannot be tenuable.My concern is ascribing God more than one eternal divine sentient volitional consciousness (especially the Holy Spirit), regardless of labels.
Binitarianism is closer than mainline Trinitarianism.
You be the first like minded brother I met on the narrow road that came up from the other side.
You gotta special place in my heart too.
It is actually but descriptive of what is empirically perceived...
Three Lights are perceived with the nous,
And...
These Three are perceived as One...
Revelation, not conceptual positing...
Not figured out...
But...
Observed noetically...
Of God, we only know what He reveals to us...
Arsenios
I'll let you and AMR hash this part out, but if it doesn't come up, I'll want to revisit it in another thread, but this thread isn't about binitarianism. For this purpose of this thread: Christ Jesus our Lord said 'he' regarding the Spirt and is distinct from the Father Who would send Him, in Our Lord's own words. He is also enumerated in many scriptural passages that demand, I believe, that Binitary cannot be tenuable.
In a philosophical sense of logic, this isn't true. That is, to the best of my mental ability to grasp, creation ex nihlo isn't, then a duality of reality. It is yet the reality of God, just with temporal finite parameters. Go back to your line analogy: This would be the segment 'within' the line (that's an incredibly limited 2-D analogy so should be understood with severe limitations as far as analogy goes).Follow this sequence...
God is eternity (aidios). Nothing else is eternal (a line). Heaven is created sempiternity (aionios - a ray), along with the cosmos until it "fell" to be temporality (a line segment as aion/s relative to the tangible of the aionios as the ray).
God is inherent transcendent phenomenological and noumenological existence. Self-conscious and Self-existent. There is nothing else but God unless/until He speaks to create. (But even this requires time terms from us. God is not relative to where/when/what. He created those. He IS.)
All creation, including heavenly sempiternity and the cosmos (whether in sempiternal or fallen temporal state), is noumena that was instantiated and GIVEN phenomological existence (Ex Nihilo and any subsequent Ex Materia).
God doesn't inherently exist as noumena ONLY; so since creation is inherently noumena and is only given phenomena by the Rhema of God's dunamis, God cannot inherently have existence in creation since He is inherent phenomena and creation is carried forth and upheld BY that phenomena.
It 'looks' like dualism to me. The segment exudes from the eternal and is part of that eternal line from our analogy. The reference isn't the segment, it is the line. We as part of the finite segment, are constricted in our understanding of the eternal line (again as reminder, the line/segment is very limited in conveyance but perhaps simple enough that most can follow the point of it).So God's inherently phenomenological AND noumenological Logos and Pneuma were expressed/exhaled as the Son and Holy (hagios - set apart) Spirit in sempiternity. This singular two-fold procession is the noumena of the Logos and Pneuma, but with them retaining their inherent phenomena of uncreated Self-existence.
Again, if I am following you, this seems to confuse the simplicity of God. The Simplicity of God states that God 'cannot' be broken up into 'parts.' As such, I've always appreciated your correction of 'persons.' God is one being, indivisible (being might also convey a finite restriction, I 'think' anything numerical relates to a finite universe). "Hear O Israel, the Lord Our God is One" is an exclusion, rather than a numerical expression, primarily, I believe. The Hebrew word isn't just/only translated 'One' but also 'exclusive' or 'alone.'The Holy Spirit is God's noumena as Spirit, breathed forth to animate all life created by/through the Logos, which proceeded forth as the Son. God's inherent phenomena as Spirit is co-processed with the Holy Spirit as noumena into heaven as creation. He tents there as His everlasting abode, but remains transcendent to both sempiternal heaven and the comsos.
I don't believe that makes a 'binity' though. Remember the segment is 'within' the line such that is it subsumed by it. Again even "One" when referring to no beginning/no end, is beyond numerical expression. God is rather 'All.' Deuteronomy 6 is concerned with 'exclusive', I believe, rather than numerical.In His inherent transcendent Self-conscious Self-existence, God is a singular hypostasis underlying an ousia with a physis, outwardly having phaino as His prosopon. He has Logos and IS Spirit.
Yes, but when Jesus clarifies between Spirit, Himself, and Father, we have to account for those distinctions that a binity cannot accommodate, imho. I understand your point, because Spirit cannot be divided, but then we are back to simply a Modal God, expressed with distinction.The Holy Spirit is the noumena of His exhaustive Self-Conscious comprehension of Himself, apprehended by His own Logos. So when He spoke, both the Logos and Pneuma proceeded forth/proceedeth (exerchomai/ekporeuomai, respectively) when/as He instantiated creation.
I believe even you said Spirit is indivisible so there has to be consistency here. "Distinction" isn't 'apart from.' Again, back to the line/segement: A segment is still part of the line. It isn't separate from it, other than as the two reference points. That, btw, is how Christ Jesus was limited as man on earth. He was, according to the analogy, simply within the confines of the segment. Philippians 2 makes better sense if we understand that the constraint was simply between the segment points of entering and leaving earth (the physical with is the segment of the eternal).By His Logos, God partitioned and distributed (merismos - divided asunder) the noumena of Himself out from the phenomena of Himself into created sempiternity, which was given its phenomena (having only been noumenon as potentiality of existence in God's mind). The Logos and Pneuma are noumenologically the Son and Holy Spirit, being His own inherent phenomenological Self-existence and Self-consciousness.
This is fair, and certainly not all can grasp metaphysical thinking so God expressed Himself as plainly as possible, but it is much like trying to come up with language for clone between one and two expressions. It is very difficult and I do understand why Unitarians, Modalists, and even Trinitarians don't always follow along.From sempiternity (after the divine creative utterance), Father, Son, and Holy Spirit LOOK like three hypostases on that planar level of existence. But the Son and Holy Spirit in sempiternity are the two-fold qualitative hypostatic distinctions resulting from God's Logos and Pneuma proceeding as noumena into noumenological creation.