- Mar 28, 2023
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Christianity no longer favours transcendence, it seems. It is becoming more and more a worldly ideology, just like Islam. Jesus announced the Kingdom of God, which is "not of this world" (John 18:36) and "comes not with observation" (Luke 17:20-21). Despite all, it is here and all around us. So, it is an invisible Kingdom. It is often said that "Jesus brought the kingdom of God to earth". Sadly, it is interpreted as the Church and God's rule on earth, or in the worst case as "Christian society". This is not what Jesus meant. He pointed at the transcendent Kingdom, which had come closer to earth. Now it was within reach, and it still is. Jesus Christ is the ruler of this Kingdom.Do you have a definition of "transcendence" that you are using to say that Christianity favors transcendence and everyone else does not? If not, your claim seems rather ad hoc. For example, does transcendence = otherworldliness? On that basis perhaps folks like Elon Musk or Gnostics favor transcendence?
The Kingdom of God is central to the message of Jesus. Both he and Paul say that it is a spiritual Kingdom. Thus, we cannot interpret it in worldly terms. Nevertheless, modern theologians and preachers insist that it is the community in Christ, or whatever, because they are so mundane and boring.
Once I awoke in the middle of the night by a voice calling my name twice. I wasn't startled at all, but remained wholly calm. Just then the moon came wandering out of the trees and shone right into my room. I was awakened so that I could revere the presence of the moon. It was a moon angel, possibly Ergediel, who awoke me. I saw a glimpse of the Kingdom of God, which is ever-present. Christianity has this side to it, which Jesus introduced, but which has been repressed as superstition. Augustine has an angelology; but this is not something that the modern rationalistic theologian cares about.
Transcendence can also be understood in the more abstract sense as the unknowability of the divine realm, as in apophatic theology. It is useful as a theological concept, but not very helpful in the life of ordinary people. It seems that we need both these concepts of transcendence, the "nearby" transcendence of Jesus and the "afar" transcendence of Pseudo-Dionysius.
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