Howdy, everyone. This is my first post here. Glad to have found this site.
I'm a self-professed liberal Christian (for the most part), and I have been hanging out recently on a discussion site for a very conservative Christian group in my local area, using the admittedly provocative name "Liberal Christian". Despite the name, however, I am sincerely interested in dialog with the people on the board, but I seem to have made a bad first impression, at least with one particular person. (It doesn't seem to have been very hard, however!)
This person does a lot of the more provocative conservative posting, and he has twice now stated that he does not intend to waste any more of his time responding to me. (Yeah, he couldn't seem to resist getting drawn back in once.) But I think I'm beginning to understand his position. He seems fairly well-read, and several times has referred to the Hegelian dialectic. If I am reading him right, he seems to believe that because it is a secular path and therefore can never lead to "Truth" as Christians believe it, that it is therefore anti-Christian, and a waste of both of our time to engage in. He seems to believe that all Liberals accept this dialectic as a way (maybe the only way?) to truth, and are therefore deceived. (I've also detected this strain of anti-philosophy in books like "This Present Darkness", which I read once for a book club but thoroughly disliked on several levels.)
Anyway, I know enough of Hegel to know his idea of the dialectic (thesis - antithesis - synthesis, ad infinitum), but am not overly familiar with his writings. I was hoping that there may be people here, of any spiritual persuasion, who could speak to their intepretation of Hegel and the relationship of his philosophy to religous faith, either as Hegel may have seen it, or as you or others may interpret it.
My own general view, not specifically of Hegel but of philosophy in general since its break from its theological roots, is that it's not so much "anti-Christian" as it is "a-Christian", that is, not concerned with religious faith. I think most Christians (at least that I know) would agree that faith does not require rational proof in order to be believed. Since rational proof is one of philosophy's main concerns, faith is pretty much by definition something philosophy doesn't concern itself with. I don't think this means that it is anti-faith, it just speaks to a different kind of truth. Is this a waste of time, in the way that Paul implies that the Greeks debating endlessly in their public square are blind to the Truth he is bringing them?
Or is my correspondent just rationalizing his dislike of debate and cloaking it with theological correctness?
I'm a self-professed liberal Christian (for the most part), and I have been hanging out recently on a discussion site for a very conservative Christian group in my local area, using the admittedly provocative name "Liberal Christian". Despite the name, however, I am sincerely interested in dialog with the people on the board, but I seem to have made a bad first impression, at least with one particular person. (It doesn't seem to have been very hard, however!)
This person does a lot of the more provocative conservative posting, and he has twice now stated that he does not intend to waste any more of his time responding to me. (Yeah, he couldn't seem to resist getting drawn back in once.) But I think I'm beginning to understand his position. He seems fairly well-read, and several times has referred to the Hegelian dialectic. If I am reading him right, he seems to believe that because it is a secular path and therefore can never lead to "Truth" as Christians believe it, that it is therefore anti-Christian, and a waste of both of our time to engage in. He seems to believe that all Liberals accept this dialectic as a way (maybe the only way?) to truth, and are therefore deceived. (I've also detected this strain of anti-philosophy in books like "This Present Darkness", which I read once for a book club but thoroughly disliked on several levels.)
Anyway, I know enough of Hegel to know his idea of the dialectic (thesis - antithesis - synthesis, ad infinitum), but am not overly familiar with his writings. I was hoping that there may be people here, of any spiritual persuasion, who could speak to their intepretation of Hegel and the relationship of his philosophy to religous faith, either as Hegel may have seen it, or as you or others may interpret it.
My own general view, not specifically of Hegel but of philosophy in general since its break from its theological roots, is that it's not so much "anti-Christian" as it is "a-Christian", that is, not concerned with religious faith. I think most Christians (at least that I know) would agree that faith does not require rational proof in order to be believed. Since rational proof is one of philosophy's main concerns, faith is pretty much by definition something philosophy doesn't concern itself with. I don't think this means that it is anti-faith, it just speaks to a different kind of truth. Is this a waste of time, in the way that Paul implies that the Greeks debating endlessly in their public square are blind to the Truth he is bringing them?
Or is my correspondent just rationalizing his dislike of debate and cloaking it with theological correctness?