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Replying to post 29 by shnarkle]
This seems to agree with what Paul says regarding sending those who are unrepentant to the devil to let him deal with them that their soul/ spirit (I can't remember the exact terminology off hand) be saved on the day of judgement. So effectively it is the body that is consigned to the grave while the spirit is saved.
This is a fair, though somewhat cursory, assessment. Fleshed out, the theology goes considerably deeper.
This is also a pervasive idea throughout other religions as well. It's nothing new, but effectively points out that none of this is real. It's just an illusion, or a deception.
First, I’m surprised that you find this idea pervasive. Have never heard of this before. Could you provide some sources? Not that I don’t believe you, just that virtually everyone else I’ve run into the last 20 years has treated the idea of the symbolic representation of salvation as a "parts and whole" metaphysic as some new heresy.
Second, can you elaborate what you mean by the allegorical system
“ effectively points out that none of this is real. It's just an illusion, or a deception�? Seems to me you either don’t understand the implications of the theology or entertain some metaphysical notions unusual to Christian thinking, or maybe some of each.
There is only Christ, and these separate identities we all hold onto are nothing but silly ideas.
Again, I’m unsure of your meaning. What sort of “separate identities� do you mean that are silly ideas? As to one Christ, I also don’t understand how or why this fits with the rest of the sentence. Do you suppose I somehow divide Christ into parts, or see more than one Christ?
It works, but it doesn't negate that God does in fact fit vessels (i.e. physical bodies) for destruction. I think we can see this as early as God repenting of ever making man in the flesh I Genesis.
We may be talking past one another here, shnarkle. I don’t disagree with the idea that God allows or even pre-plans to allow certain individuals in history to follow their natural path toward evil in accordance with an overall plan. Not sure where the hiccup is, but I don’t think we’re in any serious disagreement here.
It also does away with one's own free will as a factor in salvation which is what these OP's are all pointing out.
By “it� I assume you mean the symbolic organization I contend for? This is an astute observation about free will, though, as on the surface the idea of a true-false value mechanism operating in a whole-parts structure in the soul is, left to its own devices, decidedly static and deterministic. The problem is I think reasonably addressed by an ontology wherein the deterministic feature is interrupted in some measure by volition as a natural non-empirical causative force by which one is able to make what might be called “degrees of infringement� on the resolute nature of value forces. In short, I hold to the traditional view that the intellect with its limited power of volition impedes the deterministic process that inorganic matter is subject to.
This is a compatibilist view, the mutable operating under the supervision and within the constraints of the immutable. I.e., man has limited freedom to make moral choices in time, but is ultimately and inexorably being drawn to the spiritual cleansing of salvation.
But the process of a value-fragmented soul being cleansed plays a crucial role in salvation that you may have missed. It replaces the common definition of free will as
“The power of making free choices unconstrained by external agencies“ with the concept that having falsity fragmentally removed from the soul changes the will to being
freed of hindrance to move in the only logical, reasonable direction one would ever want to go: toward the perfection of restoration to a wholly true state.
As the soul is being restored to an increasingly true state, existence in this superior state of ‘truth-bearingness’ produces dispositions, motives, reasons, etc. and the actions peculiar to them that are ever more truth-oriented. The fractional removal of falsity eradicates tension that prevents adherence to truth.
When Jesus told His apostles,
"…I sanctify Myself, that they themselves also may be sanctified in truth…for those also who believe in Me through their word; that they may all be one; even as Thou, Father, art in Me, and I in Thee…� (Jn 17:19-21) We are sanctified literally in and by the power of truth, so that all may, in being made wholly true in essence ourselves, be brought to unity with Truth [God] Himself. As we’re being cleansed, our resistance to God is being melted away and replaced with the power of adherence to His will. (To the extent this happens in time, we refer to it as “sanctification�.) In the end, we find that the dictionary definition of free will is really just an explication of our desire for anonymity as per Isa 14:1-20, whose metaphoric truth most Christians are unable to face: we are individually the morning star, satan, wallowing in sin created by falsity in our essence. As falsity rises from static pathology to active evil capacity in the animation of the intellect, it produces the "bad" part of us. The entire 14th chapter of Isa (and many others in the OT prophets) is metaphor dedicated, methinks to the explication of this principle. It identifies the two natures of man, the true (good) and false (bad). Most can’t look the “horrible thing� in the eye and have to remain chained in the literal, where Satan takes on the more comforting feature of “otherness� as a fallen angel we can blame our evil on.
Sorry, I digress. True freedom of the will isn’t in being able to choose as we wish from among alternatives, it’s having the hindrance to choosing the only way one would reasonably and rationally choose removed. One only stands against absolute Truth because our falsified souls cause us to rebel. Who in their right mind rejects perfection?—and perfection is just the wholeness of truth.
Thoughts?