- Apr 30, 2013
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Thank you for taking your time to carefully answer my questions, I myself struggle to find my own standing between the literal/historical/the physical 'actual happened event' and then the spiritual/symbolic/arketype dimensions.
I like Johnathan Pageau,who's eastern Orthodox. He believes for example, as I understand him, both in the physical resurrection and in the symbols. That many if not all things happening around us has Symbolic meanings behind them. We see and understand the world much through symbolism.
I am not familiar with Pageau but I can tell you, as somebody that spent time in the OCA and knew people that went to St. Vladimir's, alot of Orthodox clergy in the US, in the Greek church and OCA, are taught the same sort of curriculum regarding form and higher criticism of the Bible, that clergy of liberal Protestant denominations would receive.
So I'm curious, you don't think Lewis believed in the physical resurrection of Jesus body? With spiritual, does that mean something that is more in the realm of "beneficial thinking"?
No. It has to do with the fact I don't accept dualistic metaphysical presuppositions behind the notion that the only kind of real resurrection would be a "physical" one.
Like some truth, that is told in a spirtual manner to unlock new psychological insights of new potential of what it means to be human and how to act in a higher state of consciousness? If that makes any sense.
No, though I wouldn't exclude that altogether in its implications.
Doesn't the Bible say that Jesus new body was spiritual, as he could walk through things, not limited to the physical boundaries. Would you interpret that as historical, or something that didn't actually happened but is more Symbolic of some other truths?
No.
It goes on to say that he ate food and so on, to further tell the story that he wasn't some ethereal creature, but perhaps in a way had substance.
Those stories may not be completely historical on that point, since they only appear in one Gospel. But I don't think it really matters, either way.
What do you think of theologians that tries to prove or disprove the resurrection, are they doing it from a misunderstanding of what the authors tried to say about the Symbolic implications?
I haven't encountered any theologians trying to disprove the resurrection. Some Biblical scholars perhaps, but not theologians.
Those trying to prove, will point towards the ladies first seeing Jesus, post-mortem appearances to the disciples and the 500 people.
Those trying to disprove will tell you those 500 might have hallucinated, form their naturalistic world view that cannot allow such events at all cost. Miraculous one time events don't happen, even though the universe did. Or that Jesus had a twin etc.
They need to explain how otherwise healthy people just hallucinate something.
I also consider it a possibility that Jesus appearance, at least in some cases, was of the type we call an "after death communication". Either way, it has no bearing on my faith, owing to my metaphysical commitments. The resurrection really isn't about resuscitated corpses, and the modern controversy about it hasn't done alot of good to make Christianity any more credible or relevant, in my mind.
One thing to keep in mind is that I can accept some degree of mystery in religion. I don't think we have to have clear-cut answers on everything. A religion without the possibility of doubt isn't going to be very compelling for most people.
If I may ask, where do you land exactly? At one point you seem open that a guy physically healed people by some super-natural powers, but you don't believe that power could rise him from the death? Or what do you mean?
It's not that I doubt the power of God. I just don't believe we live in a three-tiered universe where Jesus flies up to heaven like a UFO. Ancient people may have thought of the world in terms of such a universe, but I don't see myself obligated to do the same.
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