Thread: Purgatory: Personal Relationship with Christ? Huh? Board: Limbo / Ship of Fools.
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Posted by St. Sebastian (# 312) on
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What are people talking about when they say you have to have a personal relationship with Christ? What are they talking about when they say they have one and how much strength and comfort they get from it? I honestly don't understand (thereby betraying that I don't have one, I suppose). I'm not comfortable with the "me and my 'ol pal, Jeeze" attitude. I can't really see God as a "pal" or even a friend. I'm in a very disconnected place right now, but even when I'm "connected" (meaning attending church regularly, praying regularly)I'm not sure I could say I have a personal relationship with Christ. Does that just mean feeling His Presence sometimes? I invariably feel joy when I receive the Holy Mysteries (sometimes for a second, sometimes for a few minutes, sometimes longer, but, so far, I never receive without feeling something). Does that count? I don't know if I have a personal relationship or not, because I don't know what people mean by the phrase. I gather that many or most consider it essential to salvation, which is a bit worrisome. Do you have one? How do you know? What do YOU mean by that?
[edited thread title for archiving]
[ 10. January 2006, 04:43: Message edited by: RuthW ]
Posted by AdamPater (# 4431) on
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I don't understand it either, especially if I try to understand it
A minister once told me that a personal relationship with Jesus is just like any other personal relationship, which puzzled me: Jesus doesn't have coffee or share pizza with me like my other personal friends (honestly not meaning to be trivial).
I know I have thought that I had a "personal relationship with Jesus", but when I stopped to think about it, any meaning seemed to centre on the emotional responses I felt, and which were largely open to manipulation and invention given access to appropriate music and other material. So I stopped even thinking about the term, and try to get on with being a Christian (whatever that might seem to mean from time to time).
Posted by Janine (# 3337) on
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I guess I usually mean that a personal relationship with the Christ -- as in, being redeemed by Him as elder brother/firstborn/kinsman-redeemer --
Having made a personal, conscious surrender to His Lordship --
Is a bit different from having a connection, however comforting, however involved, with the institution known as His church.
The latter can mean many wonderful things -- but you can lay claim to it and enjoy it and get a lot out of it, without ever having personally, yourself, fallen at His feet and submitted to His right to claim you.
Sure, some people sound like they're talking about their Handy Dandy Pocket Jesus with the Special Clip-On Sin-Eraser --
It's just that we've digested what we can of Scripture, and have come to realize the intimate, individual, personal claim on our hearts from the Messiah. We don't mean it to sound all trite and sound-bitey. Sorry if it does.
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
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quote:
Does that just mean feeling His Presence sometimes? I invariably feel joy when I receive the Holy Mysteries (sometimes for a second, sometimes for a few minutes, sometimes longer, but, so far, I never receive without feeling something). Does that count?
Yes. But that's not all of it, just as having "snuggly" feelings toward one's significant other isn't all there is to having a healthy, committed personal relationship with that person. A personal relationship also presupposes living and speaking as if one's Beloved matters in an immediate, significant way in one's life, and isn't just an abstraction or an occasional encounter.
All of us who have been called into relationship with Christ have a personal relationship with Christ -- the Christ who knows us better than we know ourselves, who adopts us as sisters and brothers into the household of God. But I think the problem with certain strains of contemporary Christianity is that it can't make the distinction between a personal relationship and a private relationship -- my pastor refers to the latter as "me-n-Jesus under the blanket with a flashlight." We're not only called into a transformative relationship with Christ, but also into relationship with the other people of God. And...we are also called to do justice and act mercifully in the world -- to be engaged in the world, not wrapped up in what another pastor-type friend of mine calls the "My Boyfriend Jesus" Syndrome.
P.S. In my own life, I have found that putting effort into my prayer life -- following a pattern of fixed prayers, extemporaneous prayer, and so on -- as well as regular devotional reading of the Bible (as opposed to the thinky analytical reading I tend to do) has exponentially deepened my experience of closeness to Christ. A good book on this topic is Loving Jesus by Mark Allen Powell, a NT professor at Trinity Seminary in Columbus. It's an Augsburg Fortress book.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
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Jesus has never had pizza with me, either, AdamPater. Or called me on the phone. Or put His arm around my shoulder.
Members of His Church have done all those things, however.
The latter seems far "real" to me than any hypothetical "personal relationship with Jesus".
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
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I think some of you are being perhaps overly dismissive of the idea that one can have an authentic experience of being loved/cared for/communicated with by Christ.
If you read the lives of the great saints of the Church, you will note that they had what might be called a personal relationship with Christ.
The thing is -- subjective experience is not the measure of Christianity, or of the quality of one's own Christian life. Christ calls us into relationship through our baptisms, and keeps us there in the context of the Church -- the community of the people of God. And, furthermore, Christ calls us to be "little Christs" for our neighbors. And the great people of faith I cited would be the first people to point out these things.
I think an overemphasis on a "personal relationship" with Jesus is a product of a culture of extreme individualism, where we've become increasingly inward-turned and focused on our own subjectivity.
Posted by Ian Climacus (# 944) on
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I heard a talk which made mention of the difference between a personal relationship with Jesus and an individual relationship with Jesus.
The Orthodox speaker, so you can probably see where this is going and where my beliefs lie, said the Orthodox answer to "Do you have a personal relationship with Jesus?" is "Yes!" However, we do not have an "individual" relationship with Jesus: at least in Orthodox eyes, we meet him through the church (which Mousethief made reference to).
I think "personal" has now taken on the connotation of "individual" -- me and Jesus and we're alright. I don't subscribe to that interpretation; I am called to a relationship with the thrice-blessed Trinity however, and in that sense I see it as personal.
I have a similar view as St Sebastian in that I don't seem God as my 'buddy', but I think LutheranChik is right on the money when she says the Saints had a personal relationship with Christ. There can be an overemphasis which, as she said, leads to individualism, but I think a personal relationship with God is necessary and I'd say we have it. I think the "Jesus is my buddy" is a rather extreme version of the 'personal relationship'.
Ian.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
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quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
If you read the lives of the great saints of the Church, you will note that they had what might be called a personal relationship with Christ.
And this is why they are great saints, and I'm merely a mediocre sinner.
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on
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quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
If you read the lives of the great saints of the Church, you will note that they had what might be called a personal relationship with Christ.
And this is why they are great saints, and I'm merely a mediocre sinner.
Work on it a bit and you can be a great sinner, like me.
I like what Ian's Orthodox speaker said about the difference between a personal relationship and an individual relationship. I feel like I have a personal relationship with Jesus, but he's not All Mine and I don't think I would have that relationship if the church had not shown the way.
Posted by whitelaughter (# 10611) on
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quote:
Originally posted by St. Sebastian:
What are people talking about when they say you have to have a personal relationship with Christ? What are they talking about when they say they have one and how much strength and comfort they get from it? I honestly don't understand (thereby betraying that I don't have one, I suppose). [snip] I invariably feel joy when I receive the Holy Mysteries (sometimes for a second, sometimes for a few minutes, sometimes longer, but, so far, I never receive without feeling something). Does that count?
That *definitely* counts.
By definition, a personal relationship will be different from that of others; you are an individual, and Jesus is going to treat you as an individual.
What Jesus' friendship means to me? As you've already realised, it's not a beer and skittles friendship. (However, remember that your mortal friends are made in the image of God and that Jesus regards your treatment of the poor and defenceless as the way you treat him! Treat your friends with the care and awe you would Christ and you'll find Christ in your circle of friends).
Jesus has always been there for me in crisis. No one else can say that. My family was useless, and I've only mastered the art of finding decent friends in the last few years (mostly taught by Himself). When life has been pointless, my hopes shattered, my energy gone - a faint presence was there, caring whether I lived or died; whether I cared or not. It was faint; I think the only reason I could sense it was that everything else was dead.
I learnt to trust that presence, and to live in the knowledge that He'd be there next time. That trust caused His presence to flower - or at least made me more open to Him.
And then - for completely different reasons, I was convinced I was probably going to Hell. I'd seen so many 'religious' people water down their beliefs into mud that it seemed likely that the Hell & brimstone preachers were the last people true to God's teachings - or that more likely, even they had watered down God's truth. And I knew that the worst criminals are the people most convinced that they're completely justified, so any beliefs that I or others weren't scum were more likely proof of my depravity than they were evidence of hope.
I was terrified of Hell, until a thought drifted into my head - it'd didn't matter if I went to hell, so long as Jesus stayed with me!
Of course, I immediately realised the implications of that - both the fear of hell and the fear of going to hell faded like mist, and I laughed myself silly while my heart danced with gratitude.
And I changed. You know how speak of being alone in our minds? In the house of my mind, there is a guest room, where Jesus comes to visit. All too often, I'm too busy to listen - and I realise I'm still treating him as a guest rather than my Lord. But it is a friendship, based on shared experiences: or more accurately based on the many messes he's pulled me out of.
Mind you, it's not enough. I desperately need to be closer to Him. Hopefully other people's stories will make me realise what I need to do to be a better friend to my Lord.
In a nutshell -
When all possible hope is gone, the Impossible Hope is there! You won't have the strength to look or the energy to care, but you will know.
After a few crises, it becomes easy to trust Him. Trust is essential in friendship.
When you're facing down disaster, He's got your back - and that makes the problem bearable (not necessarily solvable, but at least bearable).
When you've been through those three stages, you'll be a better friend than I, and be closer than I to the best friend you'll ever have.
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on
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Lutheranchik: quote:
If you read the lives of the great saints of the Church, you will note that they had what might be called a personal relationship with Christ.
The only bothersome version of this, IMO, are the female saints who have had personal, visionary weddings with Christ with wedding rings and all. I think some women just can't let go of the idea of That Special Day even if they've decided to be virgins for Christ. And it gives me sort of the vision of Christ as some kind of potentate like King Solomon with a mess of chaste concubines. Ew.
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on
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Personal relationship with Jesus means exactly 'what it says on the tin'.
It means that you have a communion with him, a conversation in prayer, that you have the promise of his presence and his love within your heart.
It means that in a profound way, he knows your name and you walk with him in faith.
As far as the personal bit goes, it means that it's something that is real to you, experienced at first hand rather than because you joined in with the crowd. It's a way of expressing a relationship with God that you yourself have accepted as opposed to assuming you have a faith because your family/culture/religious habits are Christian.
As far as being a friend, did Jesus not say, "I no longer call you servants, I have called you friends?"
"You're my friend and you are my brother,
Even though you are a King.
I love you more than any other,
So much more than anything."
And from one of my favourite hymns (O sacred head):
What language shall I borrow
To thank thee dearest friend
For this thy dying sorrow
Thy pity without end?
O make me thine for ever
And should I fainting be,
Lord, let me never, never
Outlive my love to thee.
To have a deep, conscious, individually expressed, experience of friendship with the Lord Jesus Christ doesn't have to descend to the 'Jesus is my boyfriend' level but can be a wonderfully profound love that can be expressed or sustained with or without sacraments.
[ 10. November 2005, 08:24: Message edited by: Mudfrog ]
Posted by BanneR LadY (# 10505) on
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I had a very personal and life changing encounter with my Saviour 26 years ago. I was newly married, and had just had an argument - a very nasty and circular sort of argument with my spouse. To my disgust he took himself off to bed, and left me to stew in my own poison. I was feeling hurt, misunderstood and extremely disillusioned with his responses. I took myself out on to the balcony to let off some steam. And I remember asking the night sky "What on earth do I do now? I've signed that rotten bit of paper - I'm committed - but all I want to do is run away - what do I do?"
A small thought trickled through my mind - "well, I suppose a Christian would pray." At that stage I had only just begun going to church; but I came back inside, knelt down on the seagrass matting in front of a bomby old armchair and began to tell God exactly how I felt. I had no idea what praying was, and that was the best and most honest thing I could do. And when I had finished, I just sat back on my heels and waited - because I didn't know what else to do.
The only way I can explain what happened next is to say I knew I was not in the room alone. And it felt as though Jesus was sitting in the armchair. The most amazing feeling began to wash over me - I felt enfolded in love. It was like being a small child picked up and sat on His lap and everything negative in me simply drained away. Because that is what overwhelming Love does. Nothing negative can stay in that Presence. One by one He dealt with all my insecurities (and I had a mountain of them) and they drained away too. And when I was totally at peace, the Presence simply faded away.
I sat in the chair for a long time, just amazed. And then, because I was sleepy, I went to bed. In the morning I was the first one awake, and I lay there wondering if it had all been real. But then I felt this vast well of Love inside me that hadn't been there before, and I knew it was.
My other half, however, had known nothing of this, and he opened one eye very gingerly because he didn't know whether he was going to be hit by a pillow, a jug of water, or a barrage of words considering how we had parted company the night before. It is his testimony that I really did encounter something special that night - because he went to bed leaving a screaming shrew behind him and woke up to what was an angel of light by comparison.
Did I SEE Jesus? I had my head bowed and my eyes shut and if you had paid me a million dollars I could not have opened them, I felt so utterly small and unclean. I was such a baby Christian I had not even read all of Genesis - but when I did get to Isaiah, I really understood his words "Woe unto me for I am a man of unclean lips" That's what it is like before God, but
His love is real. His presence is real. Desire it with all your heart.
Posted by Custard. (# 5402) on
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I guess I'd want to ask how you understand passages like this:
quote:
15"If you love me, you will obey what I command. 16And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be with you forever— 17the Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him. But you know him, for he lives with you and will be in you. 18I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you. 19Before long, the world will not see me anymore, but you will see me. Because I live, you also will live. 20On that day you will realize that I am in my Father, and you are in me, and I am in you. 21Whoever has my commands and obeys them, he is the one who loves me. He who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love him and show myself to him."
(John 14:15-21, NIV)
quote:
16I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, 17so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, 18may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, 19and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.
Ephesians 3:16-19 (NIV)
For me, a personal relationship with Christ means that by his awesome grace, Christ dwells in me by his Holy Spirit, teaching me and transforming me more and more into his likeness.
God is personal, so of course it's possible, by his grace, to have a personal relationship with him. It's also mind blowing, and I completely agree that it is not something that should be treated lightly.
Posted by PerkyEars (# 9577) on
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For me a 'personal relationship' means a perceptable interactivity between me and a non-theoretical God who is a) really out there and b) actually interested in me.
Obviously this interactivity is not of the same sort as having a beer with friends. But it's "the same" in that it is a two-way thing. We try and love, trust, worship, obey, learn, and He supports, teaches, surprises and (a thousand times boggle) loves us back.
How we carry out our side of the relationship obviously varies hugely - so it's not really surprising that how he interacts with us individually varies too. I would say for me it happens in assorted ways - through sensing His presence, through feeling drawn towards certain other people and groups, through changes He makes in me, through prayer, through the patterns of how things go, how questions are answered in surprising ways. All of the above are complicated, subjective things and yet it all adds up somehow to a sense that one is interacting with a real Person.
quote:
I invariably feel joy when I receive the Holy Mysteries (sometimes for a second, sometimes for a few minutes, sometimes longer, but, so far, I never receive without feeling something). Does that count?
Yes!
quote:
And this is why they are great saints, and I'm merely a mediocre sinner.
I strongly think its utter bollocks that the 'personalness' of ones relationship with Jesus is a measure of sanctity. I do experience it as personal but I am in no way more holy than any newbie Christian. Actually I would say that sometimes (often) people who are given more obvious evidence of his action and presence in their lives have it because we are the doubting Thomases and we need it.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
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Mudfrog; in my evangelical charismatic days I tried to have, and desperately wanted, what you describe.
It never happened, and I have to conclude it's not for everyone.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
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Personal relationship?
I would say I have a personal relationship with Jesus and that I've felt his active care many times - just to get that out of the way first.
But what do I mean by "personal relationship".
Here's an example of a non-personal relationship. In the UK, there is a personal allowance of £4,000 plus. That means I can earn this much every year and not be taxed. Very generous. But I don't feel a personal relationship with Tony Blair. I don't feel that he has individually picked me out of the crowd and handed this gift to me. No, I just get it because I a UK taxpayer - one of the millions.
With Jesus, I feel that he has forgiven me all of my sins. I feel like I am part of the body of Christ and receive that forgiveness as one member of the body. But much more than this, I feel he has individually singled me out as well - that he has taken the trouble to get to know me for who I am and has forgiven my individual sins as well as the corporate sin of mankind.
Incidentally, I am always impressed with my kid's teachers who do this. The ones that don't just teach the class (though of course they do this as well) but teach the individuals. Come to think of it, that could stand for almost every profession.
Love,
Evo1
[ETA - almost forgot, if people tell you that you must feel you have a personal relationship to be saved, ask them how on earth they think they are helping you by saying that. FWIW I don't believe it.)
[ 10. November 2005, 09:02: Message edited by: Evo1 ]
Posted by hatless (# 3365) on
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quote:
Originally posted by PerkyEars:
For me a 'personal relationship' means a perceptable interactivity between me and a non-theoretical God who is a) really out there and b) actually interested in me.
This is the closest to my understanding of it. I don't go for the 'me and my mate Jesus,' stuff - it's imaginary friend territory. On the other hand, our knowledge of God can't just be at the objective level. God is not a thing to be inspected, discussed and thought about. God can only be known if approached by the whole of us, with all our fears and cares uppermost. There is only any meeting with God in so far as there is challenge and change in us. It has to make a difference, otherwise God is just a word or idea or philosophical toy.
Posted by Evangeline (# 7002) on
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To me, I feel assured of my personal relationship with Christ through amazing personal response to prayer. Ever since I started praying, when I was about 6yo despite not belonging to a church going family, in my darkest moments I have been saved by God reaching out to me despite my backsliding and sin even with the knowledge of God's incredible goodness to me personaly. I could not be a Christian merely by some sort of intellectual assent to the bible (whatever that means) if it wásn't for God's personal answers to prayer.
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
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Mudfrog posted:
quote:
Personal relationship with Jesus means exactly 'what it says on the tin'.
It means that you have a communion with him, a conversation in prayer, that you have the promise of his presence and his love within your heart.
It means that in a profound way, he knows your name and you walk with him in faith.
As far as the personal bit goes, it means that it's something that is real to you, experienced at first hand rather than because you joined in with the crowd. It's a way of expressing a relationship with God that you yourself have accepted as opposed to assuming you have a faith because your family/culture/religious habits are Christian.
And then Karl LB said
quote:
Mudfrog; in my evangelical charismatic days I tried to have, and desperately wanted, what you describe.
It never happened, and I have to conclude it's not for everyone.
I'm with you all the way there, Karl! I tried, in my fundie days, oh! how I tried, to imagine Jesus beside me, holding my hand, whispering in my ear, whatever, and just couldn't! If I expressed this to anyone they accused me of not being "baptised in the Spirit", or even of not being a "proper Christian" because I couldn't have "made a proper committment to Jesus".
I don't think the "warm fuzzies" are for everyone. Not that it's wrong if that's your thing - just that some of us are different.
So now I do what Jesus told us to do - pray to God the Father, thank him for his Son, do my best to follow the teaching of Jesus (which best is not good enough), and hope there really is a life after death.
If that isn't enough - tough!
Posted by Teufelchen (# 10158) on
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Here's a thought which may interest you (or not): Jesus may not have pizza with us, but he does break bread and share wine with us. Although we ritualise it, the sacrament of communion is a manifestation of our relationship with Christ which is at once personal and cosmic.
T.
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on
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Yeah, wot about the Eucharist? How much more personal can you get (with apologies to Mandy in LoB)
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
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Eucharist? Personal, yes. Relationship, yes. But not personal relationship. Somehow that phrase has connotations that are more than the sum of its parts.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
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quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Eucharist? Personal, yes. Relationship, yes. But not personal relationship. Somehow that phrase has connotations that are more than the sum of its parts.
???
Is this a political correctness thing then? Sorry, you have totally lost me here.
[ETA, just tickled myself imagining karl getting married and the words: "do you take this woman to be your lawful wedded wife" and him saying, "Lawful: yes Wedded: yes but not Lawful, Wedded"]
[ 10. November 2005, 10:21: Message edited by: Evo1 ]
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
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And I'm trying to get what on earth political correctness has to do with this. But let's let that one slide.
All I'm saying is that the word "personal" has certain connotations, and the word "relationship" has others, but the phrase "personal relationship" has completely different connotations. Is that so hard to understand?
Perhaps by "political correctness" you meant that "political" means one thing, "correctness" another, but put together they mean something completely different. If so, then you're on the right track, yes.
For example, suppose I'm spared and I get a telegram from the King (for so it will probably be) on my 100th birthday.
It's personal, because it's addressed to me. It represents that there is a relationship between me and the King - monarch and subject. But it doesn't mean I have a personal relationship with the King.
[ 10. November 2005, 10:27: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on
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Would 'personal encounter' be more helpful?
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
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quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
It's personal, because it's addressed to me. It represents that there is a relationship between me and the King - monarch and subject. But it doesn't mean I have a personal relationship with the King.
Good analogy, let's tale it a little further. Is that even if the King took to writing to you every week and you were regularly chatting with him?
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
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Possibly, but it's still of the "was that God? Might have been, not sure" type.
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on
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I really hope this doesn't kill the thread stone dead, because I'm sure there's plenty more to be said, but a very good thread on this subject is preserved in Limbo:
Personal Relationship with God - Is it a myth?
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on
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I think, if we're honest, that's what all of us vaguely evo/charismatic types would say - or at least darned well ought to say: "we think that was God, but we can't be sure because He doesn't (ATM) have flesh and skin with which to touch us"; all part of this 'seeing through a glass darkly' thing, I guess.
[ETA - reply to Karl's last post]
[ 10. November 2005, 10:40: Message edited by: Matt Black ]
Posted by o00o (# 3147) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Karl LB said
quote:
Mudfrog; in my evangelical charismatic days I tried to have, and desperately wanted, what you describe.
It never happened, and I have to conclude it's not for everyone.
I'm with you all the way there, Karl! I tried, in my fundie days, oh! how I tried, to imagine Jesus beside me, holding my hand, whispering in my ear, whatever, and just couldn't! If I expressed this to anyone they accused me of not being "baptised in the Spirit", or even of not being a "proper Christian" because I couldn't have "made a proper committment to Jesus".
I don't think the "warm fuzzies" are for everyone. Not that it's wrong if that's your thing - just that some of us are different.
I am so glad to hear other people say this. I grew up in a conservative evangelical church and have never really felt whatever it is everyone else seemed to feel that caused them to shut their eyes, raise their arms in the air and look ernest. In my blackest moments I have thought that the whole lot was a fraud and just psychological manipulation of guilable people in an emotional environment.
I think it is dangerous to insist that a 'personal relationship with God' is essential for salvation. As a result of hearing this week in week out all the good Christian disciplines I built in to my life (quiet times, church twice on a Sunday and once in the middle of the week, etc etc) were driven by guilt, and desperate attempts to get whatever this elusive personal telephone to Jesus was, rather than anything positive.
Posted by Demas (# 24) on
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Is there a difference between a 'personal relationship with God' and a 'personal relationship with Christ'?
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
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Teufelchen: YES! You know, I was actually in bed last night when I thought about that "pizza with Jesus" comment, and it suddenly occurred to me that we have bread and wine with Jesus every week. (Obviously this insight wasn't enough to rouse me out of bed and log onto the 'puter again.)
quote:
For me a 'personal relationship' means a perceptable interactivity between me and a non-theoretical God who is a) really out there and b) actually interested in me.
Yes; exactly. And I believe I have that; in fact, after several years of active hostility toward Christianity, this "perceptable interactivity" with a definitely non-theoretical God who was out there, interested in me and in fact not about to give up on me was what got me to say, one restless evening, "All right -- you win. You win!" (And then I said, to myself, "Oh, shit " -- kind of a C.S. Lewis, most-reluctant-convert-in-Christedom moment. But it got better. )
So I've had, and have, the experience of Christ made present to us in the context of the Church, in Word and Sacrament and in other people "being Christ for me"; and I've had that more intimate experience of close interaction with God through prayer and meditation. And from my perspective, the former is not only as important but more important than the latter; just as in a life partnership, it's the working out of one's relationship every day, which isn't always an easy or pleasant or romantic thing, is more important than "peak experiences." I cherish my little treasure of peak experiences with God, but if I had to depend on them to bolster my faith, I wouldn't be here.
And, finally, just to touch on something Ian said several posts ago -- Mark Allen Powell puts it this way: "Our relationship with Jesus always has a personal element, but it's never private."
Posted by hatless (# 3365) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Demas:
Is there a difference between a 'personal relationship with God' and a 'personal relationship with Christ'?
And do people speak of a personal relationship with Mary, or Gregory of Nyssa?
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
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Demas asked
quote:
Is there a difference between a 'personal relationship with God' and a 'personal relationship with Christ'?
Only in as far as I simply cannot even begin to imagine a relationship with an almighty, omniscient,creator etc. etc. God, who is huge, but can't be measured, etc., whereas Jesus was incarnate, and ate, slept and otherwise functioned as a normal human being. I can, just, imagine, being there with him 2000 years ago, (always thought I was the Martha sort ) but having the same sort of relationship now, with someone who "isn't there", can't touch me, maybe listens, but doesn't reply in a voice I can hear, by letter, phone or email, well, no.
Like I said, we are all different.
Posted by hatless (# 3365) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Demas asked
quote:
Is there a difference between a 'personal relationship with God' and a 'personal relationship with Christ'?
Only in as far as I simply cannot even begin to imagine a relationship with an almighty, omniscient,creator etc. etc. God, who is huge, but can't be measured, etc., whereas Jesus was incarnate, and ate, slept and otherwise functioned as a normal human being. I can, just, imagine, being there with him 2000 years ago, (always thought I was the Martha sort ) but having the same sort of relationship now, with someone who "isn't there", can't touch me, maybe listens, but doesn't reply in a voice I can hear, by letter, phone or email, well, no.
Like I said, we are all different.
It's the other way, for me. I can't imagine a personal relationship with Mary or a 'saint,' and only sort of with Jesus in so far as I relate to God in him. It's the relationship with God that I see as personal - in a way that actually makes me properly personal.
It's the fact that God doesn't reply in any reliable way that is part of this. God just isn't there in that way. When we seek God, but realise that we don't know what God is like or likely to be doing, then we open our eyes that bit wider and can discover him. Only it's a new realisation every time we encounter God, so that it makes sense to talk about God coming to us.
Posted by Alan Cresswell (# 31) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
It's personal, because it's addressed to me. It represents that there is a relationship between me and the King - monarch and subject. But it doesn't mean I have a personal relationship with the King.
Good analogy, let's tale it a little further. Is that even if the King took to writing to you every week and you were regularly chatting with him?
Somewhere in there is something I believe to be important about our relationship with God/Christ. That is He is Lord and King, and deserves to be treated with the due reverence that that position holds. So, our relationship with Him can never be casual unless, in His love, grace and mercy, He choses to casually drop by. But, that's contingent on Him, not us, so that casual encounter may be life changing, wonderful and special - but probably isn't for everyone. And, will be different for everyone. Let me recount one such incident in my life. When I first arrived at university I got in before most other students, so come dinner time I was the only person on my corridor going down (the others either not yet arrived, or still unpacking, or out to dinner with parents), and sat on my own at the end of a table. A few minutes later two obvious second years came and asked if they could sit next to me (the dining hall was busy because two different halls were using it that day), they were talking about what they'd been up to during the vacation. They turned to me, saw my id card with my name on it and said "Alan Cresswell! We've just been to a meeting of Methsoc people talking about you" (it turned out no one had ever had so many letters sent to the chaplain saying "this guy is coming and may be interested in joining Methsoc" - minister and lay worker at home, leader of the Crusader group I was in, my own "I'm interested" plus my "I'm interested" notes to the CU forwarded to the chaplain). So, after dinner I was entertaining two new friends in my room (and, finding out the first rule of uni is that you need more than two mugs) when the Methsoc person who was supposed to come see me turned up, quickly followed by CU reps. That's the sort of thing I believe God graceously does when we need it. But, we're each going to experience that in different ways and at different times; and some of us may not need to experience that at all.
The other bit is that even though He's Lord and King, He's approachable. The "personal" bit of the "personal relationship" is that we don't need to find some emissary to see the King for us. We don't even need to arrange an appointment through some secretary. Not that that right to just walk into the throne room of God means that there's any loss of due reverence to Him.
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
I've picked up on a kind of reluctance on the part of some to dare to believe that Jesus Christ -- the Cosmic Christ of that great hymn in Colossians, "for whom and through whom all things were made" -- takes a personal interest in them, or is accessible to them.
Perhaps serendipitously, I'm in an online book discussion group on liturgy as prayer with Dr. Lisa Dahill, Professor of Theology at Trinity Seminary in Columbus, who wrote a neat little book on the spirituality of corporate worship called Truly Present -- her areas of interest are liturgics, the theology of worship, etc. Anyhow, we've been talking about self-attack -- the self-talk we do to ourselves that tells us we're not "good enough" to be in church, not "good enough" to seek a close relationship with God, etc. She cites the story in Scripture where the disciples have had a bad night fishing, and Jesus comes along and tells Peter to throw their net over on the other side of the boat. Peter does, and the net is so filled with fish that the boat starts to sink, and the terrified Peter says something to the effect of, "Get away from me, Lord, because I'm a sinful man." Of course Jesus doesn't get away from him; quite the opposite.
God always comes down ; God doesn't expect you, nor can you, work your way up to some special, "worthy" place to receive God. Now, how God comes down in each of our lives, I think, is different, so one person's experience will not be another's. But I would truly caution people here to not think that they're somehow closed off from God's intimate presence because there's something wrong with them or not "holy" enough about them or whatever. Trust me on this.
Posted by Custard. (# 5402) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by hatless:
Is there a difference between a 'personal relationship with God' and a 'personal relationship with Christ'?
Ummm - no. Both are a way of talking about how God works in us through his Holy Spirit.
quote:
Originally posted by Demas:
And do people speak of a personal relationship with Mary, or Gregory of Nyssa?
Not as far as I know. But then, they didn't promise to live in us by the Holy Spirit.
In terms of knowing how an experience was God, I'm more conservative than charismatic. I'd say we know it's what God is saying if it's in the Bible... Warm fuzzies can be a consequence of relationship with God, but are not an essential part.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
It's personal, because it's addressed to me. It represents that there is a relationship between me and the King - monarch and subject. But it doesn't mean I have a personal relationship with the King.
Good analogy, let's tale it a little further. Is that even if the King took to writing to you every week and you were regularly chatting with him?
Love,
Evo1
That would start to be a personal relationship. However, since God doesn't write to me every week, and we don't have chats (at least not two-way ones), the point is moot.
Posted by St. Sebastian (# 312) on
:
Thanks, everyone, for the wonderful posts. Just wanted to say I'm not ignoring the thread, but it's a busy day in Hell and I don't have time to digest it all and post something worthwhile. But I will!
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
That would start to be a personal relationship. However, since God doesn't write to me every week, and we don't have chats (at least not two-way ones), the point is moot.
Sorry, I was being analogous - as I thought you were - you were originally talking about the Eucharist I think. (I added the bit about chatting (prayer)) So would you like to further the analogy on this basis? It was yours after all.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by chukovsky (# 116) on
:
This is hard...
I think I can work out more easily what it is like to have a personal relationship with God the Father because, after all, he is my Father. Even if I don't have any direct communication with him or experience of him, he made me, he cares for me, he holds me when things are bad.
I'm not in the slightest bit convinced a personal experience has a whole lot to do with salvation. Perhaps it's something that bolsters those with weaker or younger faiths, but then since they have weaker or younger faiths they tend to assume their experience is the "right" one? This would be why, although by no means everyone who has a personal "experience" is evangelical about having one, some people are and wonder why some other people don't.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
That would start to be a personal relationship. However, since God doesn't write to me every week, and we don't have chats (at least not two-way ones), the point is moot.
Sorry, I was being analogous - as I thought you were - you were originally talking about the Eucharist I think. (I added the bit about chatting (prayer)) So would you like to further the analogy on this basis? It was yours after all.
Love,
Evo1
I don't see any analogy between a personal letter from someone and the Eucharist.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
Er?
You were explaining how the Eucharist was both personal and showed a relationship element but was not a "personal relationship".
When I questioned you on this, you used the analogy of a King sending you a letter.
Now as you have now accepted that repeated receipts would indicate a personal relationship, and given that many Christians receive the Eucharist on a regular basis, I am wondering why you now appear to be distancing yourself from your own analogy?
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
I did not link the telegram from the King directly with the Eucharist.
Lessee...
My payslip. I get one every month, and it's personal. But I do not have a personal relationship with the payroll department.
Posted by scoticanus (# 5140) on
:
I talk to Him quite a lot, either formally in church and "at prayer" or just when going about my daily business, and I have the feeling He listens.
So it feels like a personal relationship.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
I talk to Him, but I don't "feel" He listens - i hope He does. He certainly doesn't talk back. That's why it doesn't feel like a personal relationship.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
I did not link the telegram from the King directly with the Eucharist.
Lessee...
My payslip. I get one every month, and it's personal. But I do not have a personal relationship with the payroll department.
Right, your example of the King was not analogous to the Eucharist. Are you suggesting that the pay slip scenario is? I'll hang fire with my response to a yes here since I just got burned with the King one.
If not, would you like to give me something you think is analogous so that I might understand what you are getting at when you deny that the personal and relationship elements of the Eucharist are indeed a "personal relationship?"
Posted by Real Ale Methodist (# 7390) on
:
I'm a little concerned about how quickly people throw aside the idea of God having Pizza with us. Surely the point is that God IS there when I'm having pizza, and he IS there when I go for coffee. Where-ever we go Jesus comes with us, whther we acknowledge His presence or not.
Having accepted the fact that he's there then one can recognise what I would call my personal relationship with God. Which is the quiet support and confidence I gain when thinking about Him at hard times, or its the joy I feel when I see Him in the world around me. As for a direct relationship on the usual terms, I experience that every time the Holy Spirit works through both friends and strangers; its what i feel every time I know I am not alone. In this it is a really mundane everyday faith. I don't for a second believe it is essential for salvation, but I wouldn't go without it for a second.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
I did not link the telegram from the King directly with the Eucharist.
Lessee...
My payslip. I get one every month, and it's personal. But I do not have a personal relationship with the payroll department.
Right, your example of the King was not analogous to the Eucharist. Are you suggesting that the pay slip scenario is? I'll hang fire with my response to a yes here since I just got burned with the King one.
If not, would you like to give me something you think is analogous so that I might understand what you are getting at when you deny that the personal and relationship elements of the Eucharist are indeed a "personal relationship?"
The payslip is a closer analogy. Are you going now to try to prove that I have a personal relationship with the payroll department? I can assure you I don't, not of the kind that the phrase "personal relationship with God" implies to me.
RAM - you refer to:
"Which is the quiet support and confidence I gain when thinking about Him at hard times"
and "the joy I feel when I see Him in the world around me."
If I experienced either of those, then I'd see a basis for the concept of "personal relationship". But I don't. Indeed, the universe seemed extremely Godless for example last night when I had an anxiety attack about the whereabouts of Mrs Backslider and the Backslideret. I felt terribly alone, powerless, and totally without any support, divine or otherwise. Someone as powerful as God, if He were into personal relationship, surely would have made His presence felt? He didn't. He doesn't. There is no personal relationship between me and Him.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
eta. - Evo, if you're going to play silly buggers with semantics to prove that my own words imply I do have a PRWG, then forget it. I don't see the point in you persuading me that what I don't call a PRWG is one. The fact is that whatever relationship I exist in towards God, which you might call a PRWG, and I don't, does not seem like one to me, nor is it the satisfying thing other people on this thread describe it as.
It doesn't look like a duck, doesn't quack like a duck, so I'm not inclined to say it is a duck.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
I've picked up on a kind of reluctance on the part of some to dare to believe that Jesus Christ -- the Cosmic Christ of that great hymn in Colossians, "for whom and through whom all things were made" -- takes a personal interest in them, or is accessible to them.
LutheranChik, two of my four children have Asperger Syndrome (a form of autism), and a third has many traits in that direction. And I can promise you that God is not accessible to them in a way that creates warm fuzzy feelings. It just doesn't work that way for them. The feelings of personal connection, of bonding, of belonging, just don't come easily to people on the autism spectrum at all, even with human beings that they see and touch and talk with regularly. And for those feelings to happen with someone that they can't see and touch and talk with -- it may not ever happen. And even if it happens, they're not likely to trust those feelings.
That doesn't mean that they don't have a relationship with God -- but rather that it's going to look and feel different from the relationship that others have. Their relationship with God will likely be focused far more on doing than on feeling.
For people to insist that this is the only, or the best, or the right way to have a relationship with God are excluding autistic people from having a relationship with God by defining it in a way that they may never experience. You're placing a heavy burden on them by expecting them to be just like you.
Karl is right -- "personal relationship" means far more than "a relationship with a person." I have a relationship with the janitor at work, but it's not a personal relationship. Personal relationship implies intimacy, closeness, warmth -- things that I don't have in my relationship with the janitor, and that some people aren't ever going to feel in their relationship with God.
And that's okay. God isn't just the God of neurotypicals. He's also the God of autistics.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
The payslip is a closer analogy. Are you going now to try to prove that I have a personal relationship with the payroll department? I can assure you I don't,
Rest easy Karl, I promised I'd keep my mouth shut didn't I - you can rely on me for that
As an employee of the company, I might easily say that you have a personal relationship with the company - why else would it buy you a gold watch after 50 years service?
But that aint a good analogy either I'd say. A better analogy with the Eucharist might be my mum, who every Sunday, with her own hand, used to slave over a hot oven and gave me and my brood a meal. Not because I had worked for it, or because I was entitled to it by right/law/anything else you might want to add, but because of her love for me.
Now that was personal and there was a relationship there. I can understand that analogy with the Eucharist. But the fly in the ointment is that it is also a "personal relationship". But then, what else really could the Eucharist be? If it wasn't, why accept it?
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Suddenly the veil falls from my eyes.
I found out a few years ago that I have AS. 'nuff said.
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
A PRWC isn't the same as having Christ at my beck and call: "I feel bad, Lord -- come and cheer me up." "I'm in trouble! Fix it!" I've had very low times in my life where I do believe that Christ made self present to me in a very "up front and personal way"...but by the same token I've had similarly sad or traumatic experiences where I had to "walk by faith and not by feel." But was Christ absent from me in those times? No. I believe he always stands by us, no matter what. And recall that he too felt alone and abandoned by God. Why would I think that I'm somehow entitled to an easier time of it on earth than Jesus Christ?
I'm really getting a little troubled, not so much by people's doubts about Christ's immediate presence in their lives, but by what sounds like outright hostility to the idea. Ever read the Book of Job? -- is it your job to dictate God's rules of engagement to God?
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Evo - go back and read what Josephine posted. It sums it up very well. Especially her last two paragraphs.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
eta. - Evo, if you're going to play silly buggers with semantics to prove that my own words imply I do have a PRWG, then forget it. I don't see the point in you persuading me that what I don't call a PRWG is one. The fact is that whatever relationship I exist in towards God, which you might call a PRWG, and I don't, does not seem like one to me, nor is it the satisfying thing other people on this thread describe it as.
It doesn't look like a duck, doesn't quack like a duck, so I'm not inclined to say it is a duck.
Methinks the gentleman doth...
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
LC - Christ may well be present in my day to day life. The point here is that PRWG implies to me that I'd be conscious of it, not just accepting that it is true by faith. I'm not, hence I do not identify with the concept of PRWG.
Again, read Josephine. She knows. We aspies don't work emotionally like other people do. Relationships are quite concrete things for us. We really need graspable conversations, touch, words.
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
The really delicious irony of this dialogue, for me, is the fact that because I'm a Lutheran who takes my Lutheran theology seriously I have been lectured, more times than I can count, by some of my more evangelical brethren and sistren online, that I can't possibly have a Personal Relationship With Christ. How odd that I've now been called, apparently, to defend that concept.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
eta. - Evo, if you're going to play silly buggers with semantics to prove that my own words imply I do have a PRWG, then forget it. I don't see the point in you persuading me that what I don't call a PRWG is one. The fact is that whatever relationship I exist in towards God, which you might call a PRWG, and I don't, does not seem like one to me, nor is it the satisfying thing other people on this thread describe it as.
It doesn't look like a duck, doesn't quack like a duck, so I'm not inclined to say it is a duck.
Methinks the gentleman doth...
...tell it like it is. Speak honestly. Be himself.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Karl is right -- "personal relationship" means far more than "a relationship with a person." I have a relationship with the janitor at work, but it's not a personal relationship. Personal relationship implies intimacy, closeness, warmth -- things that I don't have in my relationship with the janitor, and that some people aren't ever going to feel in their relationship with God.
I think this is narrowing the phrase somewhat. I can have a personal relationship without having any of these things. You seem to be talking about a close personal relationship.
I'd say you do know the janitor personally and hence that you have a personal relationship with him of sorts. Pinning the meaning onto what you believe is "implied" by the words does not mean everyone else has to abide by them.
The youngest son of ten who gets to talk to his dad, say about as much as you talk to the janitor has a personal relationship with his dad - just not a very close one.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Karl is right -- "personal relationship" means far more than "a relationship with a person." I have a relationship with the janitor at work, but it's not a personal relationship. Personal relationship implies intimacy, closeness, warmth -- things that I don't have in my relationship with the janitor, and that some people aren't ever going to feel in their relationship with God.
I think this is narrowing the phrase somewhat. I can have a personal relationship without having any of these things. You seem to be talking about a close personal relationship.
I'd say you do know the janitor personally and hence that you have a personal relationship with him of sorts. Pinning the meaning onto what you believe is "implied" by the words does not mean everyone else has to abide by them.
The youngest son of ten who gets to talk to his dad, say about as much as you talk to the janitor has a personal relationship with his dad - just not a very close one.
Love,
Evo1
Evo, you're this close to a call to Hell here, not because of what you're posting in and of itself, but because of your refusal to listen.
To us aspies, what you call a "close personal relationship" is what a personal relationship is. If it's not close - if we can't see, physically touch and talk to the other person, then the relationship is purely academic. Without the physical aspect, it's not a personal relationship. Please, before I call you to Hell and test some new swear words on you, just accept that this how we are wired.
Consequently, when people talk about a PWRG, I'm looking for tangible things - very strong feelings, not just vague hopes. Uncontravertable results of prayer. That sort of thing. Not coincidences that can be interpreted however you want it to be. For me, and from what Josephine says, other aspies, that is not, and cannot be, "personal relationship".
Read this, again:
The feelings of personal connection, of bonding, of belonging, just don't come easily to people on the autism spectrum at all, even with human beings that they see and touch and talk with regularly. And for those feelings to happen with someone that they can't see and touch and talk with -- it may not ever happen. And even if it happens, they're not likely to trust those feelings.
And keep reading it until you actually gain some insight.
[ 10. November 2005, 14:06: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
Posted by tclune (# 7959) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
I think this is narrowing the phrase somewhat. I can have a personal relationship without having any of these things. You seem to be talking about a close personal relationship.
I'd say you do know the janitor personally and hence that you have a personal relationship with him of sorts. Pinning the meaning onto what you believe is "implied" by the words does not mean everyone else has to abide by them.
The youngest son of ten who gets to talk to his dad, say about as much as you talk to the janitor has a personal relationship with his dad - just not a very close one.
This strikes me as too cute by half. Does anyone honestly believe that all those people exhorting us to have a personal relationship with Christ mean that we should have a distant personal relationship? That we should know Jesus in the same casual way that we know the doorman of a high-rise? Much of the misgivings that those who are squeemish about this phrase have is based on a true perception that there is a strong emotional element in this kind of religous experience.
John Wesley and the early Methodists were accuesed of "enthusiasm" (a word that delights me) because the feeling was that their faith was based too much on emotion. This is not a new dichotomy among faithful people. Having a personal relationship with Christ isn't necessarily the way that all Christians would choose to mainfest their faith. There is nothing wrong with that. Allowing other people other ways to experience and express their faith seems to me to be a sign of Christian maturity. Similarly, acknowledging that the thing that makes them uncomfortable is, indeed, a significant part of one's own faith expression is equally appropriate.
--Tom Clune
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on
:
Seriously starting to wonder if I have Asperger's myself now ... Not only do I not have a clue what people are on about when they talk about their personal relationship with Christ, I also don't have a clue what they might possibly mean.
For myself, if it isn't (in Mousethief's terms) a pizza* and an arm round the shoulder, it's not what I'd call a personal relationship.
* OK, the pizza's negotiable.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Evo, you're this close to a call to Hell here, not because of what you're posting in and of itself, but because of your refusal to listen.
To us aspies, what you call a "close personal relationship" is what a personal relationship is. If it's not close - if we can't see, physically touch and talk to the other person, then the relationship is purely academic. Without the physical aspect, it's not a personal relationship. Please, before I call you to Hell and test some new swear words on you, just accept that this how we are wired.
Not sure where this has come from Karl, I'm talking about the definition of personal relationship and not even contemplating the wider issue of what that means in our Christian walk - maybe you should read what I have written with this in mind.
So I would say, in the case of the janitor, you can see, touch and hear him. It is personal - like it or not. I'd even say that we are having a personal relationship (in some sense) and hence your getting wound up!
To follow your logic, you seem to be saying that the youngest son of ten does not have a relationship at all with his dad.
It so happens that I do know something about AS. (I heard that the guy in both our Avatars may also have been a sufferer)
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by tclune:
This strikes me as too cute by half. Does anyone honestly believe that all those people exhorting us to have a personal relationship with Christ mean that we should have a distant personal relationship? That we should know Jesus in the same casual way that we know the doorman of a high-rise? Much of the misgivings that those who are squeemish about this phrase have is based on a true perception that there is a strong emotional element in this kind of religous experience.
No Tom, at this point I am discussing what is meant by "Personal Relationship" in general. The difference seeming to be that I say Josephine has a personal relationship with her janitor (however distant) and she flatly denies that she does.
Why is this relevant to this thread? Well, if we are not all clear what we all mean by "personal relationship" how can we discuss meaningfully about a personal relationship with God.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
Oh dear! I often feel like Karl does, well, about God and/or Jesus, but I am not autistic!
I have had "personal relationships" with people in the past. But they've either died, gone away or let me down. So I tend not to trust people now. And God isn't there when I need to feel him. And he doesn't send me letters, or phone me or whatever.
I have to believe he is there - or there is no point in anything. And slowly I am beginning to see him in others. But feel him? No. Hear him? not any more.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
And I'm saying that I cannot for the life of me see why I would describe the relationship between me and an untouchable, invisible, undetectable God as a "personal relationship", without, as you appear to have proposed, completely severing the phrase from all the connotations it has in my lexicon. What's the point of redefining a term to mean something totally different to what I normally take it to mean so that I can say I have one? It doesn't change the actual relationship I do have, does it?
The reason I'm wound up about this is that for feckin' years I believed my Christianity was desperately lacking, sub-standard, and possibly completely spurious because I didn't have this PRWG that everyone else raved about. Now I finally understand that the easiest thing to do is simply reject the concept for myself, because what it is possible to have with a non-tangible deity can never have anything to do with "personal relationship", with all the connotations that "personal relationship" has.
Posted by chukovsky (# 116) on
:
Karl, although I wouldn't tell you to label what you have differently to how you wish to label it, I'm not sure that a personal relationship necessarily means that you have a personal experience of that relationship. I think you can know that a relationship is there, by faith, for example by knowing intellectually that God cares for you, without necessarily having an emotional experience of that relationship.
I have had a few, brief, fleeting moments of emotional experience of God but, by and large, my relationship to him is experienced through faith, and existed before any such spiritual experience, which came much later. But, as I say, it is primarily characterised by a knowledge that he cares for me as His child, rather than any friendship-type equality thing with Jesus.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
I'm not sure that a personal relationship necessarily means that you have a personal experience of that relationship.
That's exactly what it means to me. Possibly because I have AS, possibly because I'm simply working with a different linguistic lexicon. Whatever. More to the point, most of the people I've known who banged on about their PRWG certainly gave the impression it was experiential.
quote:
I think you can know that a relationship is there, by faith, for example by knowing intellectually that God cares for you, without necessarily having an emotional experience of that relationship.
That's simply not what I call a personal relationship. It's a faith position, an axiom, even. Not a personal relationship. It's intellectual, as you say. Relationship is emotional.
[ 10. November 2005, 14:27: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
And I'm saying that I cannot for the life of me see why I would describe the relationship between me and an untouchable, invisible, undetectable God as a "personal relationship", without, as you appear to have proposed, completely severing the phrase from all the connotations it has in my lexicon. What's the point of redefining a term to mean something totally different to what I normally take it to mean so that I can say I have one? It doesn't change the actual relationship I do have, does it?
The reason I'm wound up about this is that for feckin' years I believed my Christianity was desperately lacking, sub-standard, and possibly completely spurious because I didn't have this PRWG that everyone else raved about. Now I finally understand that the easiest thing to do is simply reject the concept for myself, because what it is possible to have with a non-tangible deity can never have anything to do with "personal relationship", with all the connotations that "personal relationship" has.
Please don't feel that I am implying in any way that your faith is lacking - we all work out our own salvation - but I sort of feel you are shouting about not having something when actually you do!
This 'personal relationship' stuff is not really the fuzzy, warm, hand in hand thing you assume some evos to be talking about.
Of course it's true that diety is intangible, etc.
Of course it's true that normal personal relationships involve eyes and ears and hands and all the other sensory stuff that makes for interpersonal relationships.
But I'm not sure that realy that's what we are saying.
When we talk about 'personal' we are talking about you, not Jesus. Personal means your 'experience'; I guess it's a phrase that was invented as an answer to the nominal church goer who had no inward faith, rather a mere outward, cultural conformity. Personal faith, relationship, religion simply means a faith that has been internalised.
As far as the relationship bit is concerned, well, that has more to do with 'standing' than anything else. Our relationship with God has little to do with feelings and a lot to do with redemption and acceptance.
The PRWG is therefore a phrase that basically speaks of appropriating the work of redemption for oneself rather than mere mental assent to the doctrine.
The only thing I can think of Christian doctrine is the Methodist doctrine of assurance where the redeemed can 'know' within himself that he is indeed forgiven and accepted by God. Wesley spoke about how he felt his heart 'strangely warmed' when he realised that he was indeed a redeemed man.
Please be encouraged by this.
I am sure there are times when you do feel 'blessed' and full of faith. Many people do; but other times their faith is just a quiet assurance that God is present.
That to me is a PRWG.
Blessings...
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
And I'm saying that I cannot for the life of me see why I would describe the relationship between me and an untouchable, invisible, undetectable God as a "personal relationship", without, as you appear to have proposed, completely severing the phrase from all the connotations it has in my lexicon. What's the point of redefining a term to mean something totally different to what I normally take it to mean so that I can say I have one? It doesn't change the actual relationship I do have, does it?
No it doesn't, not at all.
We have been trading at cross purposes - I hadn't got around to this yet - though this seems to have been heavily at the forefront of your mind.
quote:
The reason I'm wound up about this is that for feckin' years I believed my Christianity was desperately lacking, sub-standard, and possibly completely spurious because I didn't have this PRWG that everyone else raved about. Now I finally understand that the easiest thing to do is simply reject the concept for myself, because what it is possible to have with a non-tangible deity can never have anything to do with "personal relationship", with all the connotations that "personal relationship" has.
(Can I remind you that a little further up I said "[almost forgot, if people tell you that you must feel you have a personal relationship to be saved, ask them how on earth they think they are helping you by saying that. FWIW I don't believe it.)"
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Nah, MF, I'm shouting about Evo insisting that I take what you described and describe it as a PRWG, when I can't for the life of me think why I'd want to use what is for me, with my linguistic lexicon, and for others, going by their posts here, a completely misleading phrase.
You describe an appreciation of a status - which is a mental state. PR means, to me, an emotional state. It seems almost a category error to use the phrase PRWG to describe it.
YMMV.
You say, I should add, that "I am sure there are times when you do feel 'blessed' and full of faith"
Don't be so sure.
[ 10. November 2005, 14:44: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
"Nah, MF, I'm shouting about Evo insisting that I take what you described and describe it as a PRWG, when I can't for the life of me think why I'd want to use what is for me, with my linguistic lexicon, and for others, going by their posts here, a completely misleading phrase."
You're being a bit naughty there Karl, can you lead me to where I did that?
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on
:
Just read the post about the experience of faith not beinmg emotional. Karl, is that what you are looking for? An emotional experience with God?
Actually I guess it isn't because you seem to believe there isn't one available.
All I would say is that we all have different personality types and any 'emotional' relationship someone might have with God is merely their emotional response to the quiet assurance the Holy Spirit gives.
If we are talking about feeling assured that God is present, some people respond emotionally, some don't. That is not to say that only the emotional people have a PRWG. Some very stoical and practical people have a vital and strong faith - it just doesn't affect them emotionally.
If we look for emotion as the benchmark for Christian experience I guess we will be disappointed. Feelings might come as a response, but they don't make or prove the relationship with God.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
"Nah, MF, I'm shouting about Evo insisting that I take what you described and describe it as a PRWG, when I can't for the life of me think why I'd want to use what is for me, with my linguistic lexicon, and for others, going by their posts here, a completely misleading phrase."
You're being a bit naughty there Karl, can you lead me to where I did that?
So, insist is a bit strong. Sue me.
quote:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Karl is right -- "personal relationship" means far more than "a relationship with a person." I have a relationship with the janitor at work, but it's not a personal relationship. Personal relationship implies intimacy, closeness, warmth -- things that I don't have in my relationship with the janitor, and that some people aren't ever going to feel in their relationship with God.
I think this is narrowing the phrase somewhat. I can have a personal relationship without having any of these things.
I can't. That's the point, really.
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on
:
If you don't like the phrase, don't use it. It's not in the creed is it? It's not in the Bible.
You decide what makes and proves your acceptance by God and your place in his family, decide on a phrase that describes that and stick by that definition.
Posted by Callan (# 525) on
:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
quote:
That's simply not what I call a personal relationship. It's a faith position, an axiom, even. Not a personal relationship. It's intellectual, as you say. Relationship is emotional.
Actually, it seems to me that people who say that they have a personal relationship with God believe that they have a personal relationship with God, which is inseparable from faith. That, effectively, involves holding certain propositonal beliefs: to wit, that God exists and that He is, in some sense, a personal reality. This may, or may not, be attended by certain emotions.
Now it seems to me that the emotional content of faith is to a certain extent seprable from the intellectual content. There is such a thing as the dark night of the soul. Many of us have days where we think the whole thing is entirely hopeless. Even Jesus cried out on the cross that God had deserted him. Which is why the Catholic tradition puts so much emphasis on spiritual disciplines. The most important prayers are not the ones we pray when we are in a happy Jesus-is-my-boyfriend mood but the ones we mutter through gritted teeth when we really don't feel like it. Faith is not a warm Spirit-Of-We-Feeling but an acquired reflex.
Which is why the rhetoric of having a personal relationship with God is problematic. The language of personal relationships implies a close friendship or a happy marriage. Faith may, at times, acquire that emotional content but to expect it to have those characteristics all the time is like expecting to spend all your married life feeling like you did on honeymoon. It's not realistic and even if it were your nervous system couldn't cope. Faith is really about believing stuff because you think it's true and doing stuff because you think it's right. If that makes you miserable all the time you should seek spiritual direction urgently but if you don't feel that you're in a close friendship all the time then that's normal. If someone asks me whether I have a personal relationship with God, well, I think I know what you mean by that and I suppose I do but it is only a metaphor for something radically different from what we would normally consider a personal relationship and it is not always the most apt metaphor.
[ETA - 'you' in this context means generic 'you'.]
[ 10. November 2005, 14:52: Message edited by: Callan ]
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
So, insist is a bit strong. Sue me.
The point being that I don't remember cross referring you to MFs post at all. I think you are imputing some of your assumptions onto me. (And I could never sue a brother)
quote:
I can't. That's the point, really.
I can't let the delicious irony go here. We have never met, you have never heard me speak, you've never touched my hand. We have never shared intimacy, closeness or warmth. And yet you have been so moved by our exchanges that you were on the verge of calling me to Hell. From your side of the fence, I'd say this has to be a personal relationship we are enjoying here. QED.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
Just read the post about the experience of faith not beinmg emotional. Karl, is that what you are looking for? An emotional experience with God?
It's what I used to look for. Everyone else seemed to be having one. And I don't say that simply because they used the PRWG terminology.
quote:
Actually I guess it isn't because you seem to believe there isn't one available.
I am open to the possibility, but so far, in over twenty years of Christianity... I've had my emotions manipulated, but I don't think a true emotional experience of God would leave a nasty hangover.
quote:
All I would say is that we all have different personality types and any 'emotional' relationship someone might have with God is merely their emotional response to the quiet assurance the Holy Spirit gives.
Or doesn't give, as the case may be.
quote:
If we are talking about feeling assured that God is present, some people respond emotionally, some don't. That is not to say that only the emotional people have a PRWG. Some very stoical and practical people have a vital and strong faith - it just doesn't affect them emotionally.
Well, feeling assured that God is present is quite an alien experience to me. At best I manage about 70% belief that He exists, but this is a different thread.
quote:
If we look for emotion as the benchmark for Christian experience I guess we will be disappointed. Feelings might come as a response, but they don't make or prove the relationship with God.
Something I think we can agree on.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
I can't let the delicious irony go here. We have never met, you have never heard me speak, you've never touched my hand. We have never shared intimacy, closeness or warmth. And yet you have been so moved by our exchanges that you were on the verge of calling me to Hell. From your side of the fence, I'd say this has to be a personal relationship we are enjoying here. QED.
Love,
Evo1 [/QB]
Like I said, we clearly have a very different understanding of "personal relationship". I'm also angered sometimes by what governments in countries I know little of do, but I don't have a personal relationship with Robert Mugabe. God forbid.
But even BBS exchanges are considerably more concrete than any interaction I have with God.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Like I said, we clearly have a very different understanding of "personal relationship". I'm also angered sometimes by what governments in countries I know little of do, but I don't have a personal relationship with Robert Mugabe. God forbid.
Let's go over the terminology again.
Robert Mugabe & Karl
Personal: No
Relationship: suppose might just get there.
Evo & Karl
Personal: apparently very
Relationship: shipmate:shipmate
Personal Relationship? I'd say has to be by definition but for personal reasons and associated connotations, you seem reluctant to admit this.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
Karl, I understand what you mean; I really do. I've had so many Baptists (sorry if any are reading this) and their theological allies pounding me over the head about my perceived lack of "personal relationship with God" that that phrase makes me brux my teeth; if I were talking about my own faith walk with someone outside this particular discussion, it would not be the phraseology I'd use, because it's too loaded for most people, myself included.
But let's deal with the semantics here. Can I get an agreement from the others here assembled that by PRWG we, here in this conversation about our own faith walks, do not mean My Boyfriend/My Buddy/My Pal Jesus, "under the blanket with a flashlight"? That our relationship with Jesus is something much more complex and not exclusively or even primarily referencing warm and fuzzy feelings about the Lord and Savior? Right? Can I get a witness?
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Like I said, we clearly have a very different understanding of "personal relationship". I'm also angered sometimes by what governments in countries I know little of do, but I don't have a personal relationship with Robert Mugabe. God forbid.
Let's go over the terminology again.
Robert Mugabe & Karl
Personal: No
Relationship: suppose might just get there.
Evo & Karl
Personal: apparently very
Relationship: shipmate:shipmate
Personal Relationship? I'd say has to be by definition but for personal reasons and associated connotations, you seem reluctant to admit this.
Love,
Evo1
Or simply because it doesn't feel like a personal relationship? It's this sort of implication of an ulterior motive that is pissing me off here. The reason I don't call this a personal relationship is because it isn't one. It'd be a personal relationship, possibly, if we knew each other well and were discussing this over a pint. As it is it isn't, not by a long chalk.
Why are you unable to accept that we have different understandings of "personal relationship" and instead start implying ulterior motives and start using emotive language like "admit", like I know you're right but won't admit to it?
Hell is looking close, again, boyo.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
Can I get a witness?
LutheranChik, the word witness is pregnant with connotations so I'll second you instead.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
LC - I'm afraid that for me this stretches the meaning of "personal relationship" well beyond breaking point.
I should add, for Evo's benefit, that the relationship generated by our exchanges here, whilst a long, long way from being a "personal relationship", is a darned sight closer than what I have with God, who tends not to reply to my points.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Hell is looking close, again, boyo.
Well I am kind of bored now,
You just made yet another erroneous (imho of course) analogy (that's the Mugabe one), you can't blame me for pointing it out (but perhaps you do)
Love,
Evo1
[ 10. November 2005, 15:25: Message edited by: Evo1 ]
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Hell is looking close, again, boyo.
Well I am kind of bored now,
You just made yet another erroneous (imho of course) analogy (that's the Mugabe one), you can't blame me for pointing it out (but perhaps you do)
Love,
Evo1
Read for comprehension. It's your implication that I'm refusing to "admit" that this exchange constitutes a personal relationship that's pissing me off.
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on
:
Sorry, but since when did PWRG = feeling something all the time?
Occasionally I feel my relationship with God, but mostly not. That doesn't change the fact that he is a person (or three) and I have entrusted my life and future eternity to him. That is a personal relationship. It doesn't work or feel like many of my other relationships; he is God after all. But haveing entrusted myself to Him it seems pretty personal and like we have a relationship.
I don't like the phrase much for other reasons though as it can obscure the communal nature of God's covenants to his people plural.
[ 10. November 2005, 15:28: Message edited by: Leprechaun ]
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Lep - I agree a personal relationship doesn't have to be about feeling something all the time, but at the core a personal relationship is based on an emotional attachment to a person, mediated through tangible two-way communication, at least for me.
This just isn't a very good definition of my relationship to God.
[ 10. November 2005, 15:36: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Read for comprehension. It's your implication that I'm refusing to "admit" that this exchange constitutes a personal relationship that's pissing me off.
That would be fun, a Hell thread which says, "He says we are having a personal relationship and it is just making me so annoyed. I would really like to see that.
Oh, I just looked up Personal Relationship on WordReference.com and it apparently means: "a relation between persons". Seems to make sense to me.
I'll leave you alone. Hope I haven't annoyed you too much,
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Spiffy da Wonder Sheep (# 5267) on
:
I don't have Aspergers, but I am a kinesthetic learner (which means I learn best by doing and get right mixed up if you give me too many verbal and/or written directions, figure out your learning style here). For someone who's kinesthetic, relationships are all about what you do: how many phone calls, how many emails, how many gifts, how long you talked at dinner, et cetera.
One of the reasons I'm in a liturgical church is because there are tangible, physical actions that connect me again and again to God. I don't do it for the daily warm fuzzies, though. I score very low on interpersonal on that learning style test, though.
I have had a few powerful experiences of the love of God, but those were during periods of my life that I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy's dog. What was said way back at the beginning of the thread about personal vs. individual relationship really struck home for me.
Also, a tangent that was brought up earlier: if you read a lot of the more flowery, fruity, fluffy Rosary sites on the Internet, you get people discussing the BVM in similar terms that a lot of evangelicals discuss their 'personal relationship with Jesus'.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Interesting link; I scored highly on musical, but actually I'm not a great musician; I'm too physically unco-ordinated (interestingly there's a strong co-morbidity between AS and dyspraxia; it seems that when we're kids the universe wants to ensure that if we can't irritate the hell out of our schoolmates with the AS they can beat the shit out of us for being crap at sports instead)
I always find it difficult to distinguish between a statement I'd like to be true and one that is on these tests
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on
:
Linguistic: 8
Logical-Mathematical: 6
Spatial: 6
Bodily-Kinesthetic: 7
Musical: 11
Interpersonal: 5
Intrapersonal: 9
I was crap at sports and bullied at school too
Posted by dinghy sailor (# 8507) on
:
Sorry, but where's the link?
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on
:
The "here" in the second line of Spiffy's post
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on
:
In Spiffy da Wonder Sheep's post a few posts up, first paragraph, "here" of "figure out your learning style here)."
(Haven't replicated the link in this post 'cause I'm heading out and fear muddling up the UBB.)
[cross-posted with Matt Black!]
[ 10. November 2005, 16:23: Message edited by: Autenrieth Road ]
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by dinghy sailor:
Sorry, but where's the link?
In Spiffy's first paragraph of her last post to this thread.
Linguistic: 9
Logical-Mathematical: 2
Spatial: 4
Bodily-Kinesthetic: 3
Musical: 12
Interpersonal: 8
Intrapersonal: 5
Not sure how accurate that is....
(Crossposted with lots of people)
[ 10. November 2005, 16:26: Message edited by: Papio. ]
Posted by Callan (# 525) on
:
Given that I've posted recently on this thread, I ought not to host. Posting as a shipmate, therefore, can I suggest that if people want to compare their results on Spiffy's survey they do so in the circus. Obviously a discussion about the relationship between learning styles and styles of faith is entirely within the remit of Purgatory.
Doubtless an uncompromised host will reiterate this advice formally, should the need arise!
Posted by tclune (# 7959) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
I always find it difficult to distinguish between a statement I'd like to be true and one that is on these tests
The key to happiness is to decide that there is no difference, and live accordingly.
--Tom Clune
Posted by quantpole (# 8401) on
:
Well I'm one of those Baptist types that LutheranChik referred to earlier. At churches and youth groups when I was growing up there was quite an (over)emphasis on the PWRG. Looking back on it I do think it was overplayed, and there wasn't enough talk about corporate aspects of faith. Incidentally, when discussing PWRG it was never really in relation to a warm fuzzy feeling, but the churches I went to didn't really do Jesus is my BF type songs either.
My take on PWRG: God has acted to save the world, yes, but also and in a very real way to save me personally. I know that some people see that as a bit 'I'centric but i do believe it to be true nevertheless.
Posted by St. Sebastian (# 312) on
:
I don't mean to interrupt the impending outbreak of hostilities, but I interrupted my labors in the bowels of hell to see where the thread was going (and boy is it going!) and want to post while I'm able to keep my mind wrapped around it a little.
I'm with the the people who have a hard time with relationship with Someone who doesn't have skin. During the Eucharist, I feel His Presence. But it's sort of like having someone I respect a great deal, have heard a lot about (and who has heard about me, say via mutual friends) notice me in a crowd and stop briefly to give me a smile and a quick hug as he bustles by. The rest of the time, my "relationship" is pretty much intellectual and a faith-choice. Life would be a shrieking obscenity without God and the promises of Christianity (to me, of course). But, as others have said, I've always felt my faith deficient to the point of not being valid because I don't seem to have what others do in their PRWG. Nor do I understand how they derive so much help and comfort from it. Is it just the comfort of knowing God's in control and all shall be well? That doesn't work well for me because (a)I'm afraid I'll bollocks up His best-laid plans for me and (b)I still have to wade through the shit. This isn't the attitude I see in the PRWG contingent, and many of them have all but said I'm not a Christian because of it. I just can't see how that works (not that I begrudge them that it works for them). Maybe I just haven't gotten from my head to my heart, and that's what you have to do for a PRWG.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by PerkyEars:
For me a 'personal relationship' means a perceptable interactivity between me and a non-theoretical God who is a) really out there and b) actually interested in me.
I think this is if not a good definition, at least a sine qua non of PR: it must at the very least be a perceptable interactivity.
I perceive myself doing a lot toward God. I don't perceive God doing a lot back.
Posted by cocktailgirl (# 8684) on
:
Mousethief, why do you keep on doing it then? (I don't mean that in a confrontational way; I'm interested in why you keep on with God when you don't perceive God 'doing a lot back').
FWIW, I think pursuit of a warm fuzzy feeling can be a false idol. Christianity is about seeking God, not some emotional state.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by cocktailgirl:
Mousethief, why do you keep on doing it then? (I don't mean that in a confrontational way; I'm interested in why you keep on with God when you don't perceive God 'doing a lot back').
Faith.
Posted by PerkyEars (# 9577) on
:
This thread is starting to depress me!
I think the PRWC is leaned on far too heavily by evangelical theology, and I think the reason is this. Christians like to have some way to provisionally sort out the 'properly' converted from the 'need preaching to'. With sacramental styles its easy enough, once they sign up to the rituals you can relax and let God sort em out from there. But if you don't believe in sacramental initiation, then you need to measure something else, and evangelicals have ended up trying to label the inner states of people coming to faith. To understand why evangelicals get so het up when you challenge the idea that the PRWC is neccessary, you have to understand that they don't have anything else with which to tell if someone is in or out. If you can be ok with God 'without' certain subjective experiences, then where do you draw the line? Are people who seem to enjoy the ritual but not appear so emotionally commited 'real Christians'? Are the people who seem to vaguely think it's a good idea 'real Christians'? The scarey idea that God is ok with a 'much' broader set of people than you like to think he is soon raises it's head. I can see why Evo1 doesn't want to let it go, because I'm afraid I've experienced feeling defensive, deflated and dissilusioned at finding out that some of my experiences are not some sort of blueprint for how it should be. I can also imagine how infuriating it must be for people who genuinely don't feel these things to be told they are not proper Christians.
I enjoy my evangelical church because I am pretty emotional about it and understand where people are coming from when they talk about definite conversion experiences and so on - it's nice to be among people who don't think I'm nuts. But I really worry about nailing my colours to the mast as an 'evangelical' in the long run - because I see this preaching of the 'neccessary' PRWC is alienating many people in the long run.
quote:
Can I get an agreement from the others here assembled that by PRWG we, here in this conversation about our own faith walks, do not mean My Boyfriend/My Buddy/My Pal Jesus, "under the blanket with a flashlight"? That our relationship with Jesus is something much more complex and not exclusively or even primarily referencing warm and fuzzy feelings about the Lord and Savior? Right? Can I get a witness?
I think we're on the same page LC.
But what *is* this 'Jesus is my boyfriend' mentality people all refer to?? I don't think I've ever come across it. Could I be an unwitting sufferer! I find the phrase icky in the extreme, but I definately have a lot of warm fuzzy feelings and I'm getting paranoid *I'm* doing it wrong and enjoying myself too much.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by PerkyEars:
I can also imagine how infuriating it must be for people who genuinely don't feel these things to be told they are not proper Christians.
Thank you!
Posted by tclune (# 7959) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by PerkyEars:
But what *is* this 'Jesus is my boyfriend' mentality people all refer to?? I don't think I've ever come across it. Could I be an unwitting sufferer! I find the phrase icky in the extreme, but I definately have a lot of warm fuzzy feelings and I'm getting paranoid *I'm* doing it wrong and enjoying myself too much.
I can relate to that phrase in particular in my response to praise music. I confess to having a negative reaction to it. I don't see it as particularly new -- one of my mother's favorite hymns is "In the garden," which is pretty solidly in the "Jesus is my boyfriend" camp to my way of thinking.
I guess I'm suspended between the two poles of this thread -- I would not consider my faith real if it lacked a strong emotional element, and yet I find the "Nobody does it better" swoon songs, or being slain in the spirit, etc., highly suspect. I guess it's awfully hard to rise above one's own limitations on these things, and realize that other people may have a deep and abiding faith life that simply manifests itself differently from mine...
--Tom Clune
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
:
quote:
What are ....to have a personal....relationship etc etc
Forgive me for interrupting into this rather interesting exchange. Assuming that all the rumours are true. There can be all kinds of relationships,like with ....janitor...Payroll.. neighbour upstairs (no pun intended... )etc. Even an atheist can have a relation with a "nonGod". It depends on
1. The nature of relation s/he has with his/her church. 2. The effect of cultural inputs etc. 2. His/her personality etc.
Could range from the king whose letter I received to that of mother/child. Every one can answer for himself. I cannot judge for you. And personally cannot conceive of it but one may very well have very warm personal feelings for "Jesus". Obviously there is no substance to this kind or relation. It is unilateral. If "Jesus" will save, He will do so on the basis of my actions and not whether I felt distant or woozy. It is interesting to hear about others feeling/experience. Bannerlady, Whitelaughter, Mudfrog et.al. have it.
Why did I not have what they have? Reckon like I missed that boat some place. Or could it be that the styling preferances might change next year and the whole idea looks old fashioned and crappy, just like the Corvette of '65 vintage, and so passe, and therefore not to worry but to just wait it out.
But if anything, this vaporous personal relation, if it exists, should very soon condense into love (and a willingnes to sacrifice) for other human beings, ( or else is fake) for He only provides its rubric.
Pax vobiscum
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
quote:
If "Jesus" will save, He will do so on the basis of my actions and not whether I felt distant or woozy.
Actually, Jesus has already saved you independently of any presumed "good conduct points" on your part. The question is whether you're yet aware of that.
[tangent alert off] Carry on!
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
quote:
Originally posted by cocktailgirl:
Mousethief, why do you keep on doing it then? (I don't mean that in a confrontational way; I'm interested in why you keep on with God when you don't perceive God 'doing a lot back').
Faith.
Ok. ISTM that if you have faith in God, then you have a personal relationship with him. If he is a "person" and you trust/rely on/have faith in him then that is a personal relationship.
We seem to have got into a circular discussion here about faith feeling different to different people. I don't think that's any biggy.
But when I say PRWG I mean faith.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
I have faith that the police department will respond if I dial 911 but I wouldn't call that a personal relationship, even though every officer on the force is a person. You're bending the definition of "personal relationship" beyond all reasonable limits.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by adamant azzy:
Or could it be that the styling preferances might change next year and the whole idea looks old fashioned and crappy, just like the Corvette of '65 vintage, and so passe, and therefore not to worry but to just wait it out.
If you have one you just can't stand anymore ('65 Corvette, that is), I'd be happy to take it off your hands.
Posted by Callan (# 525) on
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I think we're arguing about whether we can say that the expression 'Personal relationship' adequately describes what is going on here. One lot are saying: I am a person, God is a person, I have faith in God, ergo I have a personal relationship with God. Another lot are saying personal relationship implies a degree of affective closeness that cannot really exist in this situation.
I think personal commitment might be a better expression because it signals something relational inasmuch as it implies that this stuff matters but doesn't have the affective baggage of PRWG.
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
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quote:
OP'd by Lutheranchick...Jesus has already saved you independently of any presumed.....
Thank You. Thank You indeed. What a great relief! Now I can go back to my philandering ways.
Pax vobiscum
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
We seem to have got into a circular discussion here about faith feeling different to different people. I don't think that's any biggy.
But the language we use to express or describe our faith in Christ is a biggy. It's a biggy because St. Sebastian and Karl aren't the only people who have ever felt that their faith was deficient or non-existent because everyone around them was saying they had this "personal relationship with Jesus," and made to feel that, if they were a Christian, they had to have one, too, and in their minds and hearts, they couldn't find anything that felt like a personal relationship with Jesus.
I think that kind of language drives people out of the Church and away from God. Not everyone, of course. But those who don't naturally have and can't manufacture the feelings that everyone else seems to have. I think it's both hurtful and harmful. In short, I think it is a big deal.
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
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quote:
OP'd by Callan... I think personal commitment might be a better expression
Are the goal posts being changed?
Pax vobiscum
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
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quote:
But what *is* this 'Jesus is my boyfriend' mentality people all refer to?? I don't think I've ever come across it.
Perky Ears, try a heavily Charismatic church!
The "song" that made me heave every time it came along, about every other week it seemed, is
"By your side I would stay;
In your arms I would lay.
Jesus, lover of my soul,
Nothing from you would I withhold.
Lord, I love you, and adore you;
what more can I say?
You cause my love to grow stronger
With every passing day."
None of it was true. So I didn't sing it. Trouble was, there were those who would come and "minister" to me if they saw me sitting there, not singing!
Let's face it, there are those who feel, and those who think; those who look for warm fuzzies and those that keep their emotions tucked under.
But we are all Christians. Don't judge me on what I feel, or don't feel, or, more likely, what you think I should feel.
Posted by Callan (# 525) on
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Not really, I'm just searching for an expression which suggests that St. Sebastian and Karl take their faith as seriously as Leprechaun or Lutheran Chik.
[ETA - In response to Adamant Azzy]
[ 10. November 2005, 18:29: Message edited by: Callan ]
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
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Adamant: It's not about earning points by doing stuff. There is nothing you can do to earn points. Forget about the points. Jesus has earned them for you.
The question then becomes (and this is, really, slouching back toward the subject at hand...just work with me, people) how do I respond in love and gratitude to God's love for and graciousness toward me? I'm saved! Yes! But saved for what? THAT is where the good works come in. You've just put the cart before the horse.
And we do that because... we are now in a transformative relationship with Jesus Christ. A trust relationship , as one of my Presby pastor friends puts it.
For all of us here, however we feel about Jesus from day to day, we are in a trust relationship with him.
Relational . Thanks, Callan...that was a word I was searching for in the context of this conversation.
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on
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quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
I think that kind of language drives people out of the Church and away from God. Not everyone, of course. But those who don't naturally have and can't manufacture the feelings that everyone else seems to have. I think it's both hurtful and harmful. In short, I think it is a big deal.
I agree with you about the importance of language, and I agree with Callan that "personal commitment" might be a better term. But lots of things churches do are hurtful and harmful. I find closed communion hurtful and harmful, and it's one of the main reasons I won't be Roman Catholic or Orthodox. I'm sure there are things my church does that are hurtful or harmful that I wouldn't want to change. So if some churches want to insist on "personal relationship with Christ," it's hard to argue solely on "hurtful and harmful" grounds that they shouldn't; it might be as important to them as closed communion is to the ecclesiology of the Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
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But then I've heard hurtful comments on here about my having a "personal relationship" as I recall, this was before I'd even declared the fact - it was just assumed of me. What's the difference?
Words are words. The political correctness I mentioned earlier seems to be coming out here. I am getting the feeling that some would prefer us not to use the term "personal relationship" because of the abuse of a minority.
[as an aside, I may have felt affronted at the comments against me had it not been for the fact that the person was suggesting that this was a new phenomenon and that members of Jesus' family would not have had a personal relationship with him - that was just too rib tickling an argument to get upset with]
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
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Evo1, I'm sorry if I gave that impression. I don't dislike the term primarily because of the way Aspies feel about it; I dislike the term because it is inaccurate.
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on
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quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
I have faith that the police department will respond if I dial 911 but I wouldn't call that a personal relationship, even though every officer on the force is a person. You're bending the definition of "personal relationship" beyond all reasonable limits.
But the nature of faith in God is different from that in the fire department surely?
Sure, we may not FEEL it, and I'm more than happy to say you feel it differently from me. I'm not even particularly attached to the personal relationship language, for some it is an ill chosen idiom.
But the language the Bible/church has used to describe our "relationship" to Christ is intensely close - we are in union with him, our closeness to him is a reflection of the trinity's closeness to each other. These are part of faith. So you don't agree with one modern metaphor for it. I'm not bothered. But I don't think that metaphor stretches too far no matter what you feel about it. Like I say, ditch it if it doesn't work for you.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
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quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
So if some churches want to insist on "personal relationship with Christ," it's hard to argue solely on "hurtful and harmful" grounds that they shouldn't; it might be as important to them as closed communion is to the ecclesiology of the Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches.
Granted. But we don't usually dismiss the objections of those who are hurt by our closed communion by saying, "It's no biggie." We recognize that it is a big deal, and while we can't change it, we can at least attempt to explain our position and to mitigate the hurt that arises from it.
I know that the people who find religious language puzzling or off-putting also have a responsibility to understand what is meant. Saying that Mary is the Mother of God doesn't mean that we think she is the source of the Godhead, and it would be nice if those who think that's what we mean would believe us when we say what we mean by it. So maybe people like Karl and St. Sebastian should accept that those who say "personal relationship" don't mean anything at all about intimacy and warmth and feelings, if that's not what the people who use that term mean by it.
The problem is, in my experience, that is what many people do mean by it. Not here, perhaps. But I had a friend who was subjected to an attempted exorcism because he didn't get emotional and he said he never felt the presence of God.
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
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Lutheranchick. ...This is from your website......
quote:
primary goal in being the Church is to proclaim the very good news of God's unconditional, no-strings-attached Yes! to a loving relationship
If that was so, there would be no point in Heaven and Hell and the day of judgement. And. Everybody is saved ( except I hope Satan)
And having complete, seamless and water proof arguments which still does not mean that they are correct.
Pax vobiscum
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on
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quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Granted. But we don't usually dismiss the objections of those who are hurt by our closed communion by saying, "It's no biggie."
Josephine, I apologise as you obviously found this offensive.
It is no biggy to me that people's emotional experiences of faith are different. Honestly.
But I did not mean to dismiss your objections as no big deal so I apologise.
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
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quote:
OP'd by Josephine.... I know that the people who find religious language puzzling or off-putting also have a responsibility to understand what is meant.
But why should the burden lie on those who are put off by the language. Isnt it right that the speaker should say what he means and keep it simple?
pax vobiscum
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
Josephine, I apologise as you obviously found this offensive.
It is no biggy to me that people's emotional experiences of faith are different. Honestly.
But I did not mean to dismiss your objections as no big deal so I apologise.
Thank you, Leprechaun. I misunderstood what you meant by "it's no biggie." I see now what you meant. Thank you for the clarification, and for the apology.
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
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Adamant (good handle, BTW, it would seem): I'm sorry that you seem to envision salvation as a zero-sum proposition where extending God's grace to the "unworthier" somehow devalues your own, and that you seem to want to send other people to The Bad Place...but since this isn't really the appropriate time or place for a short course in Lutheran theology, I'll direct you to Luther's "Bondage of the Will" -- an oldie but goodie about why we can't lift ourselves up by our bootstraps -- or "Baptized, We Live: Lutheranism as a Way of Life" by Daniel Erlander (Augsburg Fortress), or "Reclaiming the 'L' Word": Renewing the Church From Its Lutheran Core" by Kelly Fryer (Augsburg Fortress). Just for starters.
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
Getting back to the topic at hand: I can't help but observe that this conversation sounds like a group of adult children at one of those infamous family gatherings where frictions arise, starting to argue about their relationship with their parents: "Mom always liked you best!"
I think God meets us where we are, and God relates to us in the way that God can best reach us. And that relationship is going to look different for each person. And I think that the Church, throughout history, has helped us in this relationship by providing so many important relational touchstones: Word and Sacrament; the act of worship; Christian fellowship; our personal spiritual/devotional disciplines. These things are all conduits, if you will, of God's love and care, and I think that different parts of the puzzle will resonate in different ways with different people. And that is okay. So why are we ranking one another's set of touchpoints with God, if you will, or getting defensive about our own in relationship to other people's?
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on
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quote:
Originally posted by Ian Climacus:
the Orthodox answer to "Do you have a personal relationship with Jesus?" is "Yes!" However, we do not have an "individual" relationship with Jesus: at least in Orthodox eyes, we meet him through the church (which Mousethief made reference to).
I think "personal" has now taken on the connotation of "individual" -- me and Jesus and we're alright. I don't subscribe to that interpretation; I am called to a relationship with the thrice-blessed Trinity however, and in that sense I see it as personal.
These are important points, and it speaks very well for Orthodoxy that we can expect Orthodox to be the first to make them.
In Being as Communion John Zizioulas goes even further. According to his thinking (which is the church's thinking as he understands it), the word "individual" (referring to you or me or someone else) should have no place in our spirituality, and is a dangerous concept in any context. The trouble with it is an implied solipsism: an assumption that any living entity exists in isolation, or that if it did, it would mean anything. To begin with, we worship the Holy Trinity, three persons in relationship.
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
And in my adventures elsewhere on the Internet, I find people with a really poor grasp on the nature of the Godhead, who try to separate the Persons in a way that is sometimes startling. Certainly Jesus Christ is, as an Orthodox friend of mine points out, "God with skin on" and is thus easier for us to wrap our heads around...but as you note, the PRWC language tends to ignore the rest of the Godhead. And I think this may be partly a function of worship and devotional styles in churches that may affirm the historic creeds in theory but who don't say them or talk about them or teach people what they mean.
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
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quote:
OP'd by Luteranchick..... worship and devotional styles in churches that may affirm the historic creeds in theory but who don't say them or talk about them or teach people what they mean......
I fully agree. But they can't open their lips on the issue because it straight away clashes with their other teachings.
Pax vobiscum
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
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quote:
OP'd by Lutheranchick..... Want to send other people to The Bad Place......
But if your daughter was raped and killed by a fiend you would not want the same? Right?
Sorrowful.
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
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quote:
OP'd by Alogon..... I think "personal" has now taken on the connotation of "individual
I agree with you here that Personal does not amount to a private relationship.
I believe that the historic fathers of religion realised that we could easily fall into the trap of conceiving of an impersonal, cold God out there who merely judged and punished. A remote and fearful creature. They emphasized the personal in him as a way to emphasize his closeness to human affairs. That is, a "personal" vs. "Impersonal" I'm not sure if I have the language correct. So please interpret it as best as you can.
I think it is a misconstruement of the concept to convert him into a "Pally Jees".
And then by the way I could just as well have a personal relation with the Holy Mother.
pax vobiscum
Posted by PerkyEars (# 9577) on
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quote:
I believe that the historic fathers of religion realised that we could easily fall into the trap of conceiving of an impersonal, cold God out there who merely judged and punished. A remote and fearful creature. They emphasized the personal in him as a way to emphasize his closeness to human affairs.
Who are these 'historic fathers of religion' of which you speak? And did they or did they not believe in God, as a real being, as something more than a concept? If they did not, then they can't have been very honest men, if instead of trying to disabuse people of the notion of the existence of God, they elaborated the concept even further! If they did believe in a God - do you not think they would be concerned with trying to find out what that being was actually like rather than what it might be a good idea to teach people?
[ 10. November 2005, 20:26: Message edited by: PerkyEars ]
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
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quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
quote:
Originally posted by cocktailgirl:
Mousethief, why do you keep on doing it then? (I don't mean that in a confrontational way; I'm interested in why you keep on with God when you don't perceive God 'doing a lot back').
Faith.
I actually just said the word, "Amen" out loud while sitting here in my office.
And I never use that word.
-Digory
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by adamant azzy:
quote:
OP'd by Lutheranchick..... Want to send other people to The Bad Place......
But if your daughter was raped and killed by a fiend you would not want the same? Right?
Yes but that is because of the hardness of my heart and my own inability to forgive. God supposedly has no such inability.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
But the nature of faith in God is different from that in the fire department surely?
Yes, of course. On the other hand, when I call the fire department, a human being on the other end of the line actually answers me and talks with me in a REAL two-way conversation. My faith in the fire department requires far less faith than my faith in God, if you get my drift.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
But then I've heard hurtful comments on here about my having a "personal relationship" as I recall, this was before I'd even declared the fact - it was just assumed of me. What's the difference?
Words are words. The political correctness I mentioned earlier seems to be coming out here. I am getting the feeling that some would prefer us not to use the term "personal relationship" because of the abuse of a minority.
[as an aside, I may have felt affronted at the comments against me had it not been for the fact that the person was suggesting that this was a new phenomenon and that members of Jesus' family would not have had a personal relationship with him - that was just too rib tickling an argument to get upset with]
Love,
Evo1
It's ironic to think that people are trying to force their personal understandings of a phrase onto others, explaining to them that their relationships are indeed very personal even if they don't admit it.
The Eucharist is not a personal relationship. I don't even know what that would mean. I don't typically eat any of my friends on a regular basis. And if a friend of mine has died, I don't eat them either, nor do I still consider myself to have a personal relationship with their spirit even if I do spend some time, as often as I do it, in remembering that friend.
One and only criteria for having a personal relationship with Christ: saying so.
If someone says they don't, they don't. And neither statement ("I do" or "I don't") should carry any implications from others. (Hahahahaha yeah right I know.)
-Digory
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
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I really sympathesize with those that don't like it when people use the term "personal relationship" to infer that when others don't feel warm and fuzzy feelings that they are some how inadaquate or inferior [Christians™]. I think it has been used (and is being used) to suggest that those people are lacking as a Christian and I don't think this is biblical or what Jesus was about either.
Personally, if I used the term "personal relationship" to describe what is between me and another person - well, it really sounds strange to me. And I know I'm a little bizarre myself because I talk to God while driving but I still know that S/He is really Holy and Big but still I would feel a little arrogant to claim a "personal relationship" with Jesus - as if I have him in my pocket or I figured everything out about God or something.
<tangent> Earlier this year, before I <hem> stopped going to church - I really wanted to get more involved and learn how to serve in the church. So I was given a couple of papers to fill out about "my faith in Christ" or something like that. I think the first question was "When did you start having a personal relationship with Jesus and were born again?" It took me a month to figure out that question. I really gave a lot of thought. I couldn't answer it because I just don't see my faith that way. For me, its not all clinical like "When was last doctor's exam and check-up?"
I know that other people explore and explain their faith differently. And that's okay because every human being is different and that's cool and I really learn from the way people experience their faith in different ways.<end tangent>
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
quote:
If "Jesus" will save, He will do so on the basis of my actions and not whether I felt distant or woozy.
Actually, Jesus has already saved you independently of any presumed "good conduct points" on your part. The question is whether you're yet aware of that.
[tangent alert off] Carry on!
See, I find this attitude completely arrogant (I don't mean that LutheranChik is arrogant at all - I mean the idea expressed). I just find the idea that God will save me without considering my choice flat out arrogant and disrespectful. Frankly, I don't want to be with a god that doesn't offer me a choice whether to be with him in eternity or not.
[ 10. November 2005, 21:26: Message edited by: Joyfulsoul ]
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Joyfulsoul:
Frankly, I don't want to be with a god that doesn't offer me a choice whether to be with him in eternity or not.
Don't be put off. The Lutheran God isn't the only one on the market.
Posted by AdamPater (# 4431) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Joyfulsoul:
... I was given a couple of papers to fill out about "my faith in Christ" or something like that. I think the first question was "When did you start having a personal relationship with Jesus and were born again?" It took me a month to figure out that question.
<oh-I'm-clever-tangent>Some years ago, while looking for a church in a new town, I was left unable to respond when I was asked over coffee "So, Mr Pater, when did you come to know the Lord?" It was only the next day that I figured out that my response should have been "Brother, the Psalmist suggests to me that the good Lord knew me in my mother's womb, and I've found my acquaintance with him has grown since then."
</oh-I'm-clever-tangent>
[ 10. November 2005, 21:42: Message edited by: AdamPater ]
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by AdamPater:
<oh-I'm-clever-tangent>Some years ago, while looking for a church in a new town, I was left unable to respond when I was asked over coffee "So, Mr Pater, when did you come to know the Lord?" It was only the next day that I figured out that my response should have been "Brother, the Psalmist suggests to me that the good Lord knew me in my mother's womb, and I've found our acquaintance has grown from there."</oh-I'm-clever-tangent>
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Joyfulsoul:
I just find the idea that God will save me without considering my choice flat out arrogant and disrespectful. Frankly, I don't want to be with a god that doesn't offer me a choice whether to be with him in eternity or not.
If I see you drowning in a lake, and happen to be riding in a helicopter, would you like me to phone down to you first and give you a choice about being saved before I lower down the rope ladder?
Better yet, if you ever happen to be unconscious, should I attempt to get your permission before attempting CPR? If you don't respond, should I leave you under the argument that I did not want to arrogantly violate your sense of free will, and therefore left you there to die?
No offense meant, and not trying to derail the thread's aim, but I wanted to respond to your tangent.
-Digory
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
That might be a good analogy, Professorkirke, if I were drowning and unconscious.
I believe God provides salvation to all, but it requires us to accept it to be saved. There is no salvation without God's work (it's not Pelagianism) but there is also no salvation without our voluntary acceptance (it's not Calvinism).
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
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Professor Kirke,
I think this is a great tangent. Should we start another thread about it?
Posted by OliviaG (# 9881) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
Better yet, if you ever happen to be unconscious, should I attempt to get your permission before attempting CPR? If you don't respond, should I leave you under the argument that I did not want to arrogantly violate your sense of free will, and therefore left you there to die?
...
-Digory
<first aid tangent> According to my first aid training, an unconscious victim gives implied consent. <end first aid tangent>
I do honestly believe that if there is a big salvation-fest at the end of time, not only will there be some surprises at who is there, but some of those folks will be surprised themselves. I don't think it's safe to assume that if you don't feel you have a relationship with God, that means God doesn't have a relationship with you. Your God's mileage may vary. OliviaG
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
quote:
Don't be put off. The Lutheran God isn't the only one on the market.
That hardness of heart thing again?
That statement was rude, condescending, hurtful to a Christian with the same Lord, who stands under the same cross, and altogether not becoming for this particular forum. Not to mention nonresponsive to the topic thread.
If anyone wants to do Lutheran theology with me I'd be most happy to do it via e-mail. Not on this topic thread. And I think the Moderator here would agree with me.
Posted by Janine (# 3337) on
:
I like the way you divided the ideas, Callan.
quote:
Originally posted by Callan:
... One lot are saying: I am a person, God is a person, I have faith in God, ergo I have a personal relationship with God...
Not me. More to it than that. The way you said that there, it sounded almost like, "I am a mammal, the third wildebeest on the left in the National Geographic special is a mammal, therefore me an' ol' Beestie are having lunch next Tuesday."
quote:
... Another lot are saying personal relationship implies a degree of affective closeness that cannot really exist in this situation...
Maybe they've never had or wanted or witnessed a healthy, actual example of one of these relationships.
quote:
I think personal commitment might be a better expression because it signals something relational...
"Commitment" is OK but "relationship" isn't... I can be committed to God but have no actual relationship, no interaction with Him?
Can He be committed to me? If He can, why would not the personal committment of God to the individual Me not imply some sort of interaction, some sort of relational state?
When I run across a Scripture that seems to imply to me a personal, individual interest in me on God's part, is it only metaphorical?
quote:
... inasmuch as it implies that this stuff matters but doesn't have the affective baggage of PRWG.
One man's baggage is another man's light burden and easy yoke.
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on
:
IME, I’ve found phrases (usually from people who would as soon exorcise you as say “hello”) such as “are you saved”, “have you accepted Jesus as your personal saviour” &c. to be shibboleths meaning “do you believe exactly the same things, the same way and carry out the same practices that I/we do?” . And when my response to the latter part of the “equation” is “no” (and because of my varied life-experiences I shy from these because to me it has connotations of abuse, manipulation and thought-control), it is taken that I therefore reject the notion of “salvation” and Jesus’ role in this and I am deemed to be in the camp of Satan (or at least checking out the sleeping bags in the Malebolge branch of Millett’s).
It’s the subjective assumptive fallacy here that I find irritating:
being saved (X) MUST = (Y) chorus singing, waving arms, slaying in spirit etc.
As a child, brought up in what was then termed “low” CofE, I saw people kneel & rest their heads in their palms and imagined they were feeling something really out of the ordinary (altered state of consciousness or really, truly, communing with, talking to/being spoken to by, God.) And I didn’t “feel” this ergo something wrong with me. Changes of incumbents brought what would now be called an AffCath style which was much more appealing to me, combining reason & ritual - too late for me by then - afflicted with the pissed-offedness of the post-pubertal teenager!
I have two friends who are of the evo persuasion. One believes that any Biblical criticism is the work of the Devil and does not accept even the idea that her pastor’s exposition is AN interpretation of some sort and her conversation is often just a repetition of jargon phrases; the other respects the way I think and feel and sometimes says she learns from me and therefore I respect the way she is and I KNOW I learn from her though neither of us would feel comfortable in each other’s worship traditions. It’s quite interesting that I am very fond of both of them and they of me.
I think I’m in good philosophical company if I do not put all my trust in “feelings” but as for religious faith, I will get nowhere if I cannot relax the boundaries of provable rationalism.
I guess what I’m saying is that anyone who tries to “unchurch”, “dechristianize” or “demonize” me because I don’t go along with their “True Way” ain’t no way to win a convert!
Posted by whitelaughter (# 10611) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
quote:
Originally posted by adamant azzy:
quote:
OP'd by Lutheranchick..... Want to send other people to The Bad Place......
But if your daughter was raped and killed by a fiend you would not want the same? Right?
Yes but that is because of the hardness of my heart and my own inability to forgive. God supposedly has no such inability.
Were that the case, Hell would be empty.
The people who hate child molestors the most aren't the victims, nor their relatives, but the poor counsellors who love enough to devote themselves to healing the victims. "God loves you" gets screamed at us from every quarter, but somehow people like to forget the idea that God loves our victims, loves more than we can imagine. You'll regularly hear people saying "I don't believe in a God who sends people to Hell", but only from those who've never got their finger out to help others; a few years trying to help a rape victim, or being there for some poor sap going through heroin withdrawalm, will grind that belief out of anyone.
Of course, the complainers will never do so, they're having to much fun being smug to care about the broken ones around them.
Tangent over, back to the original topic:
Do you really think Jesus wants to listen to a "yes it is/no it isn't" diatribe? Well, we're gathered in His name, so He's online. Whether you sense His presence or not, He's here, so make sure that you're happy with the idea of his having to wade through your posts.
And then you may find His presence far more real than you ever imagined.
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
Whitelaughter: Thank you for the reality check.
I think the Lord might be comparing this topic thread with that little dust-up, many years ago, about who gets to sit next to him in his reign -- some of the disciples vying for the preferential seating, other disciples yelling at those disciples, etc. "The more things change, the more they stay the same."
Have mercy.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by whitelaughter:
The people who hate child molestors the most aren't the victims, nor their relatives, but the poor counsellors who love enough to devote themselves to healing the victims. "God loves you" gets screamed at us from every quarter, but somehow people like to forget the idea that God loves our victims, loves more than we can imagine. You'll regularly hear people saying "I don't believe in a God who sends people to Hell", but only from those who've never got their finger out to help others; a few years trying to help a rape victim, or being there for some poor sap going through heroin withdrawalm, will grind that belief out of anyone.
Of course, the complainers will never do so, they're having to much fun being smug to care about the broken ones around them.
Whitelaughter, I know that you are still an apprentice. Nevertheless, responding to this, even in a Purgatorial style, would derail this thread, and I'm not sure I can respond and remain Purgatorial. But I am not willing to let this go unchallenged, so I am starting a Hell thread. Please do me the favor of joining me there.
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on
:
posted by whitelaughter:
quote:
You'll regularly hear people saying "I don't believe in a God who sends people to Hell", but only from those who've never got their finger out to help others; a few years trying to help a rape victim, or being there for some poor sap going through heroin withdrawalm, will grind that belief out of anyone.
Well, I’m not at all sure about the ontological status of Hell but I have “got my finger out” to help those who have experienced your examples and have myself been a “victim” of them and it has not ground out belief, oddly, but has led me to seek God more. So what’s that about I wonder?
Also from whitelaughter
Well, we're gathered in His name, so He's online. Whether you sense His presence or not, He's here, so make sure that you're happy with the idea of his having to wade through your posts.
What a very excellent point. I’ve had leanings towards a particular denomination/expression of faith for many years yet it’s only since my active participation on these boards that I’ve made a move to do what is necessary to fulfil this. Thanks. There’s a thread somewhere asking “which poster is the Queen of England?” Maybe we should ask “which poster is Jesus?” And maybe, in a body-of-Christ, Spartacus sort of way, we would all have to reply “I am” and totally flood the boards and crash the server
Posted by Dobbo (# 5850) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
REAL two-way conversation.
A personal experience of mine
I was living in a foreign land (England) , my overdraft was overdrawn , and I went to the midweek prayer meeting , the person leading talked about God caring for us (1 Peter 5 v 7).
I went home to my digs and turned the verse back to God in prayer. I had a peace that night that I had not had for some time. The next day I received a tax rebate from the Inland Revenue.
Now to a Scot that truly is a real two way conversation. That I will always attribute the intervention of God and not down to a mere set of coincidences.
Does the definition we are "friends of Christ" rather than having a PRWG make it any easier . I think in essence, to me, it is similar and certainly has a much more biblical construct - John 15 v 15.
If that is so - Christ being perfect - what does that mean in respect to His friendship towards us. It says He is closer than a brother in one text.
Does God care for us only corporately or is there a possibility He looks down at this individual and knows every hair on my head (admittedly He does not have to count as many now as He used to).
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Joyfulsoul:
Professor Kirke,
I think this is a great tangent. Should we start another thread about it?
I'd love to, but I'd be worried that it may be DH stuff. Callan (or other hosts), what do you think?
-Digory
Posted by Duo Seraphim (# 256) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
quote:
Originally posted by Joyfulsoul:
Professor Kirke,
I think this is a great tangent. Should we start another thread about it?
I'd love to, but I'd be worried that it may be DH stuff. Callan (or other hosts), what do you think?
-Digory
This is the tangent you mean?
Good topic. I've been down to the corral and called its name - it's not a Dead Horse at all.
Duo Seraphim, Purgatory Host
Posted by Custard. (# 5402) on
:
The key is the fact that the Holy Spirit inhabits God's people.
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
LutheranChik,
I'm very sorry that I poorly worded my opinion so offensely on your sharing of your understanding of God's mercy and love in relation to salvation and heaven. I have the utmost respect for you and really do appreciate what you have to say. I do not think that we worship a different God. I do have a different opinion on salvation and choice and I'll try to not be so sloppy and offensive.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
It's ironic to think that people are trying to force their personal understandings of a phrase onto others, explaining to them that their relationships are indeed very personal even if they don't admit it.
The Eucharist is not a personal relationship. I don't even know what that would mean.
One and only criteria for having a personal relationship with Christ: saying so.
If someone says they don't, they don't. And neither statement ("I do" or "I don't") should carry any implications from others. (Hahahahaha yeah right I know.)
-Digory
I can't see any irony here at all.
To straighten out your misunderstandings of my exchanges with Karl, it was him that called the Eucharist personal and a relationship - I'm not sure I agree (though you seem to assume I did). I was simply trying to get him to explain how given he said this, he didn't feel it was a personal relationship. With his own example he seemed to agree that repeated "letters from the king" may constitute a personal relationship but let's not get back into that.
I never made any assertion of whether he had a PRWG - you will see he seemed to think I did but when I asked him to explain why, he couldn't.
I find your idea that if someone says they don't have a personal relationship then tht's it they don't pretty thin. Bill Clinton and David Blunkett would just love to live by your rules I'm sure. If I'm playing chess with someone and casually ask, "How long have you been playing chess" and they say, "Oh, I never play chess, I've never heard of it" I've a right to be a little bemused.
As for your dig about a personal relationship with Christ, I have never made any such assertion. All I have done is say once and repeat it - and now repeat it a sceond time - that I don't think a personal relationship with Christ is necessary for salvation - perhaps you never read that.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
[qb]explaining to them that their relationships are indeed very personal even if they don't admit it.
One last thing, where you referring to someone other than me when you said this or was it just your exagerative style? I say this since I don't remember accusing anyone of having a "very personal relationship".
Posted by Duo Seraphim (# 256) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
[qb]explaining to them that their relationships are indeed very personal even if they don't admit it.
One last thing, where you referring to someone other than me when you said this or was it just your exagerative style? I say this since I don't remember accusing anyone of having a "very personal relationship".
Getting close to fighting here - take it to Hell if that is the case.
Duo Seraphim, Purgatory Host
Posted by Ian Climacus (# 944) on
:
Just coming back to this:
quote:
Originally posted by Demas:
Is there a difference between a 'personal relationship with God' and a 'personal relationship with Christ'?
This is one thing that always worried me slightly, looking back, at my life B.P. [before the Plot ™ ]. Perhaps it's projection, perhaps it was just me, but God equalled Jesus alone in my mind, and perhaps this is what gets my back up when I hear the term 'personal relationship with Christ'. Whenever I thought of God, Jesus was it -- the Father and the Holy Spirit were very much in the background.
For those who have and rejoice in a personal relationship with Christ as is being described by Evo, LutheranChik and others..., is this relationship different to your relationship with the other members of the Trinity? Can one have a personal relationship with the Father? with the Holy Spirit? Or does the incarnation of the the Son of God allow a different form of relationship?
[I hope you can understand what I'm asking!]
Thanks,
Ian.
[ 11. November 2005, 10:41: Message edited by: Ian Climacus ]
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Ian Climacus:
For those who have and rejoice in a personal relationship with Christ as is being described by Evo, LutheranChik and others..., is this relationship different to your relationship with the other members of the Trinity? Can one have a personal relationship with the Father? with the Holy Spirit? Or does the incarnation of the the Son of God allow a different form of relationship?
[I hope you can understand what I'm asking!]
Thanks,
Ian.
[I hope so too Ian.] Well, can I do the evo thing and answer this in Jesus' words when one of his disciples said something like, "OK, we know you, you are one of us, but can you introduce us to the father so that we can know Him in the same way?" Here's what he said:
"Don't you know me, Philip, even after I have been among you such a long time? Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, `Show us the Father'? 10Don't you believe that I am in the Father, and that the Father is in me? The words I say to you are not just my own. Rather, it is the Father, living in me, who is doing his work. 11Believe me when I say that I am in the Father and the Father is in me; or at least believe on the evidence of the miracles themselves." Jn 14:9-11
So all though I'd not really thought about it, I'd say that my personal relationship is with God in this way.
In fact, I'd probably say something like: my relationship is with God the Father, through Jesus the Son, in the Power of the Holy Spirit.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Demas (# 24) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
Well, can I do the evo thing and answer this in Jesus' words when one of his disciples said something like, "OK, we know you, you are one of us, but can you introduce us to the father so that we can know Him in the same way?" Here's what he said: [ Jn 14:9-11]
Evo1, do you pray to Jesus, or to the father as Jesus instructed the disciples to?
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Demas:
Evo1, do you pray to Jesus, or to the father as Jesus instructed the disciples to?
I sense a trap here (but not in a supernatural way )
I pray really as I feel led to. Sometimes to the Father, sometimes to Jesus, very very rarely to the Holy Spirit alone though sometimes to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
I presume you refer to the Lord's prayer though I stand to be corrected. A good prayer I'd say, but this was again before Pentecost. We read in the epistles that Jesus is our mediator before God and that he will be with us, I don't really see any problem with taking him at his word.
Who do you pray to Demas?
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Demas (# 24) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Demas:
Evo1, do you pray to Jesus, or to the father as Jesus instructed the disciples to?
I sense a trap here (but not in a supernatural way
No trap - I'm just assuming that one aspect of a personal relationship with God would be who you prayed to. Since you say that you pray to all the persons of the trinity: would you say you have a personal relationship with each of them? Are they different personal relationships?
Though I am sorely tempted to start a Purg thread on your comment that the Lord's prayer became less relevant or important at Pentecost!
(I would tend to pray to God as God rather than to any particular person of the trinity.)
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Demas:
No trap - I'm just assuming that one aspect of a personal relationship with God would be who you prayed to. Since you say that you pray to all the persons of the trinity: would you say you have a personal relationship with each of them? Are they different personal relationships?
No, the same one, as Jesus said, if you see Him, you are seeing the Father. Presumably if you speak to Him, you are speaking to the Father. As an example, I just had to talk to a friend of mine - a surgeon - in a professional capacity. The personal relationship was no different though I normally speak to him as a friend, I was now speaking to him as my doctor.
quote:
Though I am sorely tempted to start a Purg thread on your comment that the Lord's prayer became less relevant or important at Pentecost!
Sorely tempted you may be, but it would not be based on truth would it? I never said what you suggest. I included my "but" since you seemed to be suggesting that as Jesus said we should pray to the Father before Pentecost that somehow it might not be valid to pray to the Son. Perhaps I am wrong. I did not say it became less relevant or important.
quote:
(I would tend to pray to God as God rather than to any particular person of the trinity.)
No doubt just as effective, I can't say I lay any importance on this.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
To straighten out your misunderstandings of my exchanges with Karl, it was him that called the Eucharist personal and a relationship - I'm not sure I agree (though you seem to assume I did). I was simply trying to get him to explain how given he said this, he didn't feel it was a personal relationship. With his own example he seemed to agree that repeated "letters from the king" may constitute a personal relationship but let's not get back into that.
I never made any assertion of whether he had a PRWG - you will see he seemed to think I did but when I asked him to explain why, he couldn't.
I find your idea that if someone says they don't have a personal relationship then tht's it they don't pretty thin. Bill Clinton and David Blunkett would just love to live by your rules I'm sure. If I'm playing chess with someone and casually ask, "How long have you been playing chess" and they say, "Oh, I never play chess, I've never heard of it" I've a right to be a little bemused.
As for your dig about a personal relationship with Christ, I have never made any such assertion. All I have done is say once and repeat it - and now repeat it a sceond time - that I don't think a personal relationship with Christ is necessary for salvation - perhaps you never read that.
To ease Duo's mind, I never intended for this to be any kind of fight with you, Evo. We've been over things before, and I think we both know that we argue differently, and you know that I'd like you to take it a little easy because your style can be a bit abrasive.
My point wasn't specifically for you. It was a general one, though inspired by some of your comments. But I hardly think that you were the only one who agreed with what you said--so my comments were for anyone who silently assented to your position along the way, as well.
The point boils down to this: if you and I were playing chess, and I said I never play chess, you could be "bemused" if you like, but even in that case, there'd be no reason to try to prove to me that I do in fact play chess. If I say I don't, then that's only affecting me, right?
But a BETTER analogy, as we like to find, wouldn't be about the playing of chess. If, while we played, a man came up to me several times and whispered something into my ear, and each time I whispered something back, and then he left. Afterwards, you'd ask me "Is that a close friend of yours?" I might reply, "No, he's not a close friend of mine at all. He's close, because he whispers in my ear, and he's a friend, because I've known him for a little while, but I wouldn't consider him to be a close friend of mine."
The conversation could and probably should end there. But what I see is that people want to go further, and suggest to me, "Well he's come up to you several times now, and he's whispering in your ear. Usually only close friends do that, so I'd say he's probably your close friend. How can you say he's 'close,' and he's a 'friend,' and yet not be a close friend? It doesn't make sense. You should refer to him as your close friend. That's what you're really saying, I think."
It's just not necessary. I don't really know if I consider myself to have a personal relationship with God/Christ. I certainly don't need anyone telling me that I do or that I don't, though.
-Digory
PS Trust me, I'd be making the same argument if someone came into this thread and started trying to tell you all (that believe this way) that you don't really have a personal relationship with Christ because it's not possible for anyone to do so. It's PERSONAL. That's the point.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
To ease Duo's mind, I never intended for this to be any kind of fight with you, Evo. We've been over things before, and I think we both know that we argue differently, and you know that I'd like you to take it a little easy because your style can be a bit abrasive.
Nor me Digory.
quote:
My point wasn't specifically for you. It was a general one, though inspired by some of your comments. But I hardly think that you were the only one who agreed with what you said--so my comments were for anyone who silently assented to your position along the way, as well.
That's kind of the problem, what did I say? When did I assert that anyone must have a PRWG? A quick reference would be very helpful cos I just don't think it's the case.
quote:
The point boils down to this: if you and I were playing chess, and I said I never play chess, you could be "bemused" if you like, but even in that case, there'd be no reason to try to prove to me that I do in fact play chess. If I say I don't, then that's only affecting me, right?
But you see from your choice of words, you seem to be accusing me of trying to prove something when I was really only trying to exercise a couple of examples/scenarios/analogies to a conclusion. Next time we are playing chess, I promise not even to mention it .
quote:
But a BETTER analogy, as we like to find, wouldn't be about the playing of chess. If, while we played, a man came up to me several times and whispered something into my ear, and each time I whispered something back, and then he left. Afterwards, you'd ask me "Is that a close friend of yours?" I might reply, "No, he's not a close friend of mine at all. He's close, because he whispers in my ear, and he's a friend, because I've known him for a little while, but I wouldn't consider him to be a close friend of mine."
There's a couple of things going on here. Firstly, you firstly seem to be using the twin meaning of the word close (in proximity, in emotional terms) I would say we can't really do this for this analogy on the basis that it is not consistent with what we are talking about.
Secondly, I'm not sure that only my close friends whisper in my ear - in fact, it is normally my enemies that do this.
quote:
The conversation could and probably should end there. But what I see is that people want to go further, and suggest to me, "Well he's come up to you several times now, and he's whispering in your ear. Usually only close friends do that, so I'd say he's probably your close friend. How can you say he's 'close,' and he's a 'friend,' and yet not be a close friend? It doesn't make sense. You should refer to him as your close friend. That's what you're really saying, I think."
I think if you were telling me that you and this person were actually really close (in an emotional way) and that he was a friend, it would be a fairly safe bet - in the normal run of things - to conclude that he was a close friend. If not, I should assume there is some good reason why not.
quote:
It's just not necessary. I don't really know if I consider myself to have a personal relationship with God/Christ. I certainly don't need anyone telling me that I do or that I don't, though.
You know how defensive I can be. Just to be sure, that's not what you are saying I am doing is it?
Love,
Evo1
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
That's kind of the problem, what did I say? When did I assert that anyone must have a PRWG? A quick reference would be very helpful cos I just don't think it's the case.
You didn't, Evo1. Nobody is suggesting you did, so don't worry about it.
quote:
...you seem to be accusing me of trying to prove something when I was really only trying to exercise a couple of examples/scenarios/analogies to a conclusion.
But the scenarios you lay out, you do so in ways that you are implying that the other person should come to a conclusion that you think flows from your scenario. Which is a lot like presenting evidence to someone in hopes that they will come to a conclusion, which is a lot like trying to prove something. I know that may not be your intent, but it's how it is coming across, not just to me, but to all of the people who seem to keep "misunderstanding" you and your posts.
quote:
Firstly, you firstly seem to be using the twin meaning of the word close (in proximity, in emotional terms) I would say we can't really do this for this analogy on the basis that it is not consistent with what we are talking about.
Which I am pretty sure is what Karl LBS was trying to say: there is a difference between a personal relationship and a relationship that happens to be personal, just like there is a difference between a close friend and a friend who happens to be close.
quote:
quote:
I don't really know if I consider myself to have a personal relationship with God/Christ. I certainly don't need anyone telling me that I do or that I don't, though.
You know how defensive I can be. Just to be sure, that's not what you are saying I am doing is it?
Not specifically. I think it's what many people are implying when they try to explain to people like Karl, Josephine and others that some of us may have a personal relationship with God/Christ, as they understand it, already, when some of these people simply don't feel as though they do. That's all.
Not that people are saying you MUST have one to be saved, but just in implying that you DO have one, when you don't feel as though you do, is overstepping boundaries in some ways. Please just tell us why you feel like you* do, if in fact you* do. That will be perfectly interesting and a wonderful addition to a good, healthy discussion about the phrase and its origins re: the OP.
-Digory
*to clarify, "you" here is general and not specific.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
But the scenarios you lay out, you do so in ways that you are implying that the other person should come to a conclusion that you think flows from your scenario. Which is a lot like presenting evidence to someone in hopes that they will come to a conclusion, which is a lot like trying to prove something. I know that may not be your intent, but it's how it is coming across, not just to me, but to all of the people who seem to keep "misunderstanding" you and your posts.
You may almost have a point, if of course it was me coming up with the analogies - in the main, I'm just taking those of others (though the chess one was originally mine I accept)
Evo1 wrote:
Firstly, you firstly seem to be using the twin meaning of the word close (in proximity, in emotional terms) I would say we can't really do this for this analogy on the basis that it is not consistent with what we are talking about.
PK wrote: Which I am pretty sure is what Karl LBS was trying to say: there is a difference between a personal relationship and a relationship that happens to be personal, just like there is a difference between a close friend and a friend who happens to be close.
Now you are doing it, you say a relationship that happens to be personal is not a personal relationship? Please, give me one example of this.
That of course isn't what I said in my quote though is it, I was saying that the word close has two different meanings: close in proxmity, close in intimate terms. Perhaps to answer fully you could give me two different meanings of the word "Personal".
How long do you reckon we can keep this going?
Love,
Evo1
[ 11. November 2005, 19:20: Message edited by: Evo1 ]
Posted by (gracia) (# 1812) on
:
from Tom Clune:
quote:
I guess it's awfully hard to rise above one's own limitations on these things, and realize that other people may have a deep and abiding faith life that simply manifests itself differently from mine...
Amen and amen I think a corollary is that the ones doing the scoffing and judging would be better served by wondering about those fingers pointing back at oneself.
from josephine:
quote:
For people to insist that this is the only, or the best, or the right way to have a relationship with God are excluding autistic people from having a relationship with God by defining it in a way that they may never experience. You're placing a heavy burden on them by expecting them to be just like you.
I don't see what you see, Josephine. I don't see those who assert they do have a personal relationship with Christ, saying that's the best or only. (I'm talking about here on the Ship, not about in the Loony Tune versions of religion that people love to use as a straw man). Maybe I missed it, and you can point it out to me if you wish.
Quite the opposite, in fact. One here expressed his opinion that PRWG people may possibly have their doubting natures to thank for it. Many parables to that effect, like Prodigal Son, lost sheep, etc.
OTOH, I do see those who say they do NOT have a personal relationship with Christ, scoffing at the possibility that anyone might - and I am talking about here, on the Ship, in this thread.
EXAMPLE from MT:
quote:
Evo1, I'm sorry if I gave that impression. I don't dislike the term primarily because of the way Aspies feel about it; I dislike the term because it is inaccurate.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
You have mistaken my intent, I fear. My point was not that a personal relationship with Christ is not possible. It is that the term was being misused. Some people have spoken of their own relationships in terms that fulfill the reciprocity requirement (and clearly I have to take their word for it, as I can't get inside their heads and experience what they experience).
But others have described relationships (for want of a better term) that do not meet the reciprocity requirement, and yet insist they are "personal relationships". These are the ones who are misusing the language (in my ever-so-humble opinion).
I do not deny the possibility, or the actuality, of people having what I would call a "personal relationship" with God/Christ. What I do resent from (some of) these people is their insistence that I must, or do, have the same when I know that I do not.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by St. Sebastian:
What are people talking about when they say you have to have a personal relationship with Christ? What are they talking about when they say they have one and how much strength and comfort they get from it? I honestly don't understand (thereby betraying that I don't have one, I suppose). I'm not comfortable with the "me and my 'ol pal, Jeeze" attitude. I can't really see God as a "pal" or even a friend. I'm in a very disconnected place right now, but even when I'm "connected" (meaning attending church regularly, praying regularly)I'm not sure I could say I have a personal relationship with Christ. Does that just mean feeling His Presence sometimes? I invariably feel joy when I receive the Holy Mysteries (sometimes for a second, sometimes for a few minutes, sometimes longer, but, so far, I never receive without feeling something). Does that count? I don't know if I have a personal relationship or not, because I don't know what people mean by the phrase. I gather that many or most consider it essential to salvation, which is a bit worrisome. Do you have one? How do you know? What do YOU mean by that?
Without having read the four pages of discussion, I am simply going to answer the initial question (above, in case you forgot!) - speaking *for myself* the "personal relationship" with Jesus has built slowly over literally decades and it is very dependent upon how much time I give Him, so for most of that time it grew gradually, then I had a major life crisis 11 years ago and knew the only way through it was if Jesus carried me (almost literally).
I was completely broken as a human being. I think this is something of what David spoke of when he said, "A broken and a contrite heart You will not despise--" (Ps 51:17; see also Ps 34:18 and Isaiah 57:15). I suspect most people never get broken that completely, and the downside of being only *partially* broken (which, believe me, I would have chosen, given the choice!) is that we can mend our hearts too quickly. I believe a broken heart gives God access to our deep places. So during that crisis time (and it was a couple of years of very heavy stuff), I spent at least an hour reading the Bible and praying on a daily basis, often considerably more. So in my broken state, I was filling myself with God's word - asking Him every time, "please open Your word to me and open me to Your word."
I think that's a request God loves to honor. I didn't have an agenda, I didn't have a particular point of view, I just knew I was devastated and needed His help. And God started doing three things: first, speaking to me in scripture - bringing to mind a particular passage and applying it to a situation; second, bringing scripture to life in a profound way, including the sense of "underlining" it in front of me and applying those passages to myself or my situation; third, giving me images, mental pictures with spiritual interpretations. Some people get dreams from the Lord but I don't seem to be one of them - I'm talking about waking images.
In regard to reading scripture and having it become "bold" type, as it were (the best way I can explain it), I was not jumping around the Bible and I was not looking for such passages; I was not playing "Bible roulette" - I was following a regimen of scripture reading (and for about 7 years that included reading all of Psalms and all of Proverbs every month, which is a GREAT feeding discipline - takes some time, but less than you'd think, and it's very rich. You read the chapter of Proverbs that corresponds to the day of the month - so Proverbs 31 gets short shrift, but that's probably a good thing for Christian women who feel their shortcomings when confronted by the Proverbs 31 Woman! - and likewise for the Psalms, but you also add 30, 60, 90 and 120 to the day of the month - and you save Psalm 119 for the 31st. I recommend it highly and I'm longing to get back into it, myself). I also like reading the Bible cover-to-cover, like almlost any other book - it reads very differently when you read the whole thing instead of focusing on one book at a time and jumping around (you want to read it in fairly short order - it can easily be done in a month).
And then I'd pause and meditate upon the word - when something was confusing, I'd pray about it: "Lord, what's this about? what's going on here?" and sometimes I'd get immediate clarification and sometimes it would be days or weeks later, apropos of nothing in particular, when knowledge got 'dropped' into my head, so to speak. And I'd pray. I spent a lot of time wrestling with forgiveness and I know full well that I don't get into heaven on my own account (it's a pretty messed up account) and Jesus links our forgiveness by God with our forgiveness of those who've sinned against us - so, for MY sake, I really want to forgive the people who sin against me.
And in those prayer times, I started getting this picture of myself as a tiny baby, maybe 2-3 months, and Jesus was holding me in His arms and washing me clean - it was very specific and gentle and it took time. You know how little babies have folds of fat on their arms and thighs and they get funky in those folds? He would so carefully and lovingly wash my "folds" - it was very profound and very healing.
I'd never before seen myself as an infant in relationship to Jesus but hey, if that's how HE sees me, that's how it is. So coming to Him that *very* dependent child mode has been important. Now I'm usually a bit older - 3-4 years of age, I'd guess - sometimes I'm an adult, but lots of my interactions with Him are in child-mode.
I wish this meant that He told me, every day and every moment, what to do and how to decide things - I have great ambivalence about free will! And it's easy for me to get caught in my own stuff, to lose perspective and have a hard time making decisions, so having godly counsel on the outisde helps (a priest with the gift of wisdom is a real boon). But I definitely have a personal relationship with Jesus and it's very rewarding to me. I don't feel any of that "my buddy" stuff - no, He's my God, my Savior, my Father, my Teacher - not in stuffy way (I can run up and throw my arms around His legs! remember, I'm a *little* kid) - but there's no delusion that we're remotely on the same level.
Does this help or make any sense?
As to feeling His Presence in the sacraments, I think that's a part of it, that's a beginning place - it's God saying, "I'm here, I'm real - press in." It's an invitation to something more, I think.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Mudfrog posted:
quote:
Personal relationship with Jesus means exactly 'what it says on the tin'.
It means that you have a communion with him, a conversation in prayer, that you have the promise of his presence and his love within your heart.
It means that in a profound way, he knows your name and you walk with him in faith.
As far as the personal bit goes, it means that it's something that is real to you, experienced at first hand rather than because you joined in with the crowd...
And then Karl LB said
quote:
Mudfrog; in my evangelical charismatic days I tried to have, and desperately wanted, what you describe.
It never happened, and I have to conclude it's not for everyone.
I'm with you all the way there, Karl! I tried, in my fundie days, oh! how I tried, to imagine Jesus beside me, holding my hand, whispering in my ear, whatever, and just couldn't! If I expressed this to anyone they accused me of not being "baptised in the Spirit", or even of not being a "proper Christian" because I couldn't have "made a proper committment to Jesus".
I don't think the "warm fuzzies" are for everyone. Not that it's wrong if that's your thing - just that some of us are different.
So now I do what Jesus told us to do - pray to God the Father, thank him for his Son, do my best to follow the teaching of Jesus (which best is not good enough), and hope there really is a life after death.
If that isn't enough - tough!
I suspect one of the reasons why the church has split into so many pieces is because we have a hard time *allowing* that God works with us differently and as individuals. There is the temptation to say, "if *I* can have this, then ANYBODY and EVERYONE can have it, too" and it's not too big a step from there to saying, "and if they DON'T have it, there's something wrong with them--" So we cluster with like-minded and like-experienced people, which is a bit of a problem when the illustration is "the body of Christ" and a body requires different parts, a wide variety of parts - I fear we tend to have churches which are a collection of ears, or hands, or intestines and that we don't do enough interaction on a kingdom level, being too fragmented by denominations.
I've seen people do the, "you're just not trying hard enough!" reaction to the person who hasn't received a prayer language (which somehow makes it that person's failing instead of the sovereign Holy Spirit giving gifts as HE wills) - and I've also seen the other side of that equation go all defensively intellectual and dismiss the personal feeling side as self-manufactured and semi-delusional. The challenge is to stand in the tension and know God is God, we are not, and His gifts are His to do with as He pleases - not everybody gets "the warm fuzzies" and we can't track it to lack of diligence on the individual's part.
If you're doing what Jesus has told you to do, then there is no more to be done - no one can do more without running ahead and getting into another form of trouble!
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
Now you are doing it, you say a relationship that happens to be personal is not a personal relationship? Please, give me one example of this.
Look. I've spoken to my mailman. She is a person. I am a person. I have a relationship with her because we relate in that she brings my mail, and I say hello sometimes if I happen to see her. Relationship that is personal. Here, personal means "involving a person or persons". I do NOT, however, have a "personal relationship" with her. If someone asked me "Do you have a personal relationship with your mail carrier?" they would not be asking if my mail carrier is a person, and if I relate to her occasionally. They would be asking if I have a close, well-known relationship with her or not. Personal means close and intimate on some level.
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
How long do you reckon we can keep this going?
Not much longer, I hope. It's not going anywhere and is completely off the point by this time.
-Digory
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by o00o:
I grew up in a conservative evangelical church and have never really felt whatever it is everyone else seemed to feel that caused them to shut their eyes, raise their arms in the air and look ernest. In my blackest moments I have thought that the whole lot was a fraud and just psychological manipulation of guilable people in an emotional environment.
I think it is dangerous to insist that a 'personal relationship with God' is essential for salvation. As a result of hearing this week in week out all the good Christian disciplines I built in to my life (quiet times, church twice on a Sunday and once in the middle of the week, etc etc) were driven by guilt, and desperate attempts to get whatever this elusive personal telephone to Jesus was, rather than anything positive.
I am reminded of Jesus' explanation of His return in glory in Mt.25:31 and verse 37 specifically says, "Then the righteous will answer Him, saying, 'Lord, when did we see You hungry and feed You, or thirsty and give You drink?'" These are people who sound a little surprised that their good works to the least of Jesus' brethren were accounted as done unto Jesus; that sense of surprise gives me a hint of people who have been faithfully doing the right thing, whether they "felt" it or not. Nothing wrong with feeling it - but that can't be the basis on which we do it. These people were definitely SAVED.
And yeah, sadly I think that *sometimes* (only occasionally, I hope) there are a bunch of gullible people being emotionally manipulated.
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on
:
Jesus prayed 'Abba' (Dad) in the Lord's Prayer and in Gethsemane. He had a personal relationship with the Father by his very nature.
The Holy Spirit, the Spirit of sonship (adoption) enables us also to cry 'Abba' (Dad) when we address God. We are given a personal relationship with the Father.
Jesus said (following the Jewish truth) that we should "love the Lord our God with all our...heart..."
Jesus said, "I no longer call you servants, I have called you friends."
So.
We love God from the heart.
We call the Father 'Dad' (even if we call him Father)
We call Jesus our friend.
We pray individually, in secret, coming boldly to the throne of grace where we see our Father and our friend.
We might not seek an emotional relationship, but it sure is individual and personal.
And the wonderful thing is that we can experience this in the company of other children of God - that's what the church is for.
When we meet together for worship we come as a congregation - still with personal faith. But we can also meet with God 'privately', individually and with a depth of relationship that is heartfelt.
Posted by 12uthy (# 9400) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by St. Sebastian:
What are people talking about when they say you have to have a personal relationship with Christ? What are they talking about when they say they have one and how much strength and comfort they get from it? I honestly don't understand (thereby betraying that I don't have one, I suppose). I'm not comfortable with the "me and my 'ol pal, Jeeze" attitude. I can't really see God as a "pal" or even a friend. I'm in a very disconnected place right now, but even when I'm "connected" (meaning attending church regularly, praying regularly)I'm not sure I could say I have a personal relationship with Christ. Does that just mean feeling His Presence sometimes? I invariably feel joy when I receive the Holy Mysteries (sometimes for a second, sometimes for a few minutes, sometimes longer, but, so far, I never receive without feeling something). Does that count? I don't know if I have a personal relationship or not, because I don't know what people mean by the phrase. I gather that many or most consider it essential to salvation, which is a bit worrisome. Do you have one? How do you know? What do YOU mean by that?
IMHO I think it has much to do with what you take to the table rather than what you take from it.
You can look at it rather like a marriage, if you want to get married because you want that person to always be with you, then there is a question as to whether you truly love that person. On the other hand if you want to get married in order to make that person happy then you will be willing to make the personal sacrifices necessary to do so.
Of course there's nothing wrong in wanting both of these things but it generally takes time for one's true priorities to show through. If you want to make the marriage work long term you have to be willing to compromise your own will, for their sake.
If you want to have a relationship with God, you have to be willing to do some serious soul-searching. Ask yourself, what of my own attitudes and comforts am I willing to sacrifice in order to do what I percieve His will to be?
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
There are some really interesting things being posted here and some of it, from my perspective, looks like differences we bring to the definitions (language is, at best, an approximation, and we work to make it as precise as possible - but English especially is a living breathing thing and adapts to changing conditions!). Fr'instance, hashing it out over the doorman, I guess I wouldn't call that a "personal relationship" so much as an "acquaintance" - unless it genuinely grew into something more: knowing his wife & kids' names, visiting if he's in the hospital, that kind of thing.
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
quote:
I think you can know that a relationship is there, by faith, for example by knowing intellectually that God cares for you, without necessarily having an emotional experience of that relationship.
That's simply not what I call a personal relationship. It's a faith position, an axiom, even. Not a personal relationship. It's intellectual, as you say. Relationship is emotional.
As you say, I think there are different linguistic lexicons at work here (as well as loaded expectations), but I'm seeing both sides of this coin semi-simultaneously (kind of trippy, like a halibut with both eyes on the same side of its head). So, risking a flower-pot thrown at my head, I'd say "personal relationship" may simply be an unemotional description: I have a second cousin I've never met and while we have a family relationship there is no emotional content to it, "relationship" simply describes that the connection exists. So yes, one can argue that, by definition, God being a person and said Christian being a person and the transaction of the atonement having taken place and been received, they have a "personal relationship." That said, I don't believe that's the kind of relationship we're discussing here - this isn't really about the use of language.
I do wonder, Karl, how is it possible to be so sure that God doesn't talk back to you? (I think that was you) - Isn't it possible that the Aspergers impacts that, too...? just wondering.
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
12uthy said
quote:
IMHO I think it has much to do with what you take to the table rather than what you take from it.
You can look at it rather like a marriage, if you want to get married because you want that person to always be with you, then there is a question as to whether you truly love that person. On the other hand if you want to get married in order to make that person happy then you will be willing to make the personal sacrifices necessary to do so.
Of course there's nothing wrong in wanting both of these things but it generally takes time for one's true priorities to show through. If you want to make the marriage work long term you have to be willing to compromise your own will, for their sake.
If you want to have a relationship with God, you have to be willing to do some serious soul-searching. Ask yourself, what of my own attitudes and comforts am I willing to sacrifice in order to do what I percieve His will to be?
Can I get this quite clear, 12uthy? Are you saying that because I don't have a warm, fuzzy, friendly, personal relationship with Jesus it is because I haven't sacrificed enough/prayed enough/done enough soul searching/am not willing???
Because if you are, then I am calling you to Hell.
I thought this thread had at least established that we are all different and experience God in different, equally valid, ways?
(Even though at one time it looked like deteriorating into another Prof Kirke v Evo1 show! }
Perhaps, 12uthy, you would care to revise what you wrote?
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
The reason I'm wound up about this is that for feckin' years I believed my Christianity was desperately lacking, sub-standard, and possibly completely spurious because I didn't have this PRWG that everyone else raved about. Now I finally understand that the easiest thing to do is simply reject the concept for myself, because what it is possible to have with a non-tangible deity can never have anything to do with "personal relationship", with all the connotations that "personal relationship" has.
You know, I'd actually argue the opposite - not that your Christianity was substandard or lacking, but rather that your Christianity requires that you walk it out in a very pure form of faith, without the encouragement and consolation that some of us get from the "emotional experience" type of PRWG being discussed here. It's one thing for me to walk an obstacle course in the daylight and quite another for me to do it in the dark.
Posted by St. Sebastian (# 312) on
:
Just want to thank everyone for the discussion. It's been very helpful to me. I was equating "personal relationship" with "emotionally charged" or "emotionally fulfulling" relationship. I'm reassured that it doesn't have to be either (not that there's anything wrong with that)and whatever characterizes it for any individual won't necessarily be a consistent characteristic, though it may be predominant.
Thanks for your post, 12Ruthy. I didn't read it the way Nicomedia did, and it gives me something to think about (unless you meant it the way she read it )
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
:
Well.
No body has asked if the party of the second part wants to have this PRWHim. In any personal relationship something has to come from both sides. Mayhaps, is it possibls that one believes he has a PRWG but it is only his imagination as TPOTOP is not really a willing party?? Imagine a sinner like me claiming his personal attention. He will surely attend to me on the day of judgement. And it will only take a moment ( Thus a one moment long PRWG) for Him to send me to where I belong.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
I do wonder, Karl, how is it possible to be so sure that God doesn't talk back to you? (I think that was you) - Isn't it possible that the Aspergers impacts that, too...? just wondering.
How can I be sure that when I close my eyes I don't see Mickey Mouse? Because when I close my eyes I don't see Mickey Mouse, that's why. Maybe God does talk to Karl, but if Karl doesn't hear it, then it's just the same as God not talking to Karl, isn't it? Are you blaming Karl for not hearing God? That's kinda harsh, isn't it?
Posted by tclune (# 7959) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
Maybe God does talk to Karl, but if Karl doesn't hear it, then it's just the same as God not talking to Karl, isn't it? Are you blaming Karl for not hearing God? That's kinda harsh, isn't it?
That is certainly one way of looking at it. But my experience is that God has often spoken plainly to me and I have just not heard Him. Is reporting that experience a slam on Karl, or an observation on what it's like to be human?
--Tom Clune
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on
:
TClune: quote:
But my experience is that God has often spoken plainly to me and I have just not heard Him.
Isn't that rather like saying you've experienced not having an experience of God talking to you? Not nit-picking here, but this seems to fall in an area that gives me big problems with this kind of language.
Posted by Janine (# 3337) on
:
Sometimes you find out later that you missed what was His voice.
Maybe you finally settle a problem after a long, hard struggle, only to find that you could have gotten through it much less tattered and torn --
If only you'd listened to that little nudging voice inside, telling you to do XYZ about it.
But nooooo, XYZ seemed too simplistic or embarrassing to do, you dismissed XYZ and went with your more logical-seeming option.
Sometimes, down the line, looking back with 20/20 hindsight, that XYZ option has a God-golden aura about it.
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on
:
I'm really surprised that nobody's mentioned Martin Buber here yet...
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
I am going to HAVE to print this thread off.
And PRAY over it. Terribly sorry. A bit 'religious' I know!
I love you lot, I really do. I've been all of you so far I reckon. But it's getting better! It couldn't have got any worse!! Not with me managing to put one foot in front of another or ... breathe. I KNOW it will get bleak again, soon, it certainly has been a handful of days ago (uh OH! Loony alert.).
I've gotten VERY personal with God recently. Let the light expose every thing and acknowledge it. Every rotten, sick, squalid, evil thing. And now I'm perfect. HA! No, but now I DO have God the Psychoanalyst! A type of counsellor, no? I am AMAZED what temptation one can confront. Amazed.
And Karl, you are most poignant I gotta say it. Most. (And the Lady of the balcony - AWESOME, thank you, my dear unknown sister). INVOKE Him, Them Karl. It doesn't matter how you FEEL. Invoke Him. TELL Him. Them. The Persons of God. Jesus. Your BROTHER. TELL HIM.
You CAN'T do that in Church.
Yeah, yeah, I'm going thru a rebirth AGAIN, but I have NEVER been here before. This is a new, different, BETTER Heraclitean loop. The BEST yet. The best ever so far. I'm old and my marriage is in ruins and my mind is a plastic duck in a cess pit on the Somme during the Big Push so this is all probably a bi-polar episode BUT ... it's not Karl
Is this cringingly personal enough?
(It certainly feels better than my grim Mr. Hyde persona on the Islamic threads.)
Start again Karl - get thee to an Alpha course or Taiz'e. Get down to a Christian bookshop and get an ABC book like 'What Do I Do Now?' by Harris & Pollard. PM me.
I'll take my medication now.
[ 12. November 2005, 18:48: Message edited by: Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard ]
Posted by BanneR LadY (# 10505) on
:
Do I have a personal relationship with each member of the Trinity? Who do I pray to? It really helped me to discover that the Hebrew word of address "Ädonai" translates into "My Lords" plural, rather than "My Lord" singular. And no, I don't have a 'buddy' relationship with God. He is my teacher, my redeemer and my hope - I just enjoy spending every day in His university. But I DO know (totally without doubt) that He loves me. And I do my best, in a half-arsed human way, to reciprocate that love.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
BannerLady ... you don't KNOW how spooky that is.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
Bin a bit 'previous', me, Karl, my apologies. You're obviously NOT (after reading ALL the pages) as remote from God as I feared. Here comes the bi-polar downswing ... sigh. 'sorlright, I'm not bipolar ... much (I can be a tad enthusiastic and a tad grim) but I too have had AS recently ascribed to me. With some justification ...
[ 12. November 2005, 19:07: Message edited by: Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard ]
Posted by Fauja (# 2054) on
:
I've come in late on this discussion and I can't really be bothered to read all of this thread so far, though I'm sure some of it is kosher. Anyway, some thoughts entered my mind as I was scanning through. The first was a verse of scripture, "We know that we have come to know him (Jesus Christ) if we obey his commands." (1 John 2:3). The second was a memory of a preacher saying something along the lines of... "as with all relationships, communication is important to maintaining a healthy relationship. If you were married but didn't talk to your husband/wife for over a week and when you did, it was a pre-prepared script, it wouldn't take a marriage counsellor to figure out that you had a relationship problem".
I think there is some truth in both thoughts but I do think that the term 'Personal Relationship' can seem a bit strong or could imply something deeper and more intimate than is actually going on in the life of the person who claims to have one.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
Maybe God does talk to Karl, but if Karl doesn't hear it, then it's just the same as God not talking to Karl, isn't it? Are you blaming Karl for not hearing God? That's kinda harsh, isn't it?
First, please slow down! there is no blaming of Karl for not hearing God's voice - the question was even asked in the context of Aspergers (which I don't have, although a number of friends do), wondering if that may impact it. Second, while it may be functionally the same at the moment (Karl doesn't hear God's voice = God not talking to Karl), it isn't the same in reality. Of course, God being God, if He's speaking and Karl isn't hearing, God knows this. Perhaps what I'm pondering is the possibility that God is speaking to Karl in a way that Karl *will* hear but he hasn't yet associated with "the voice of God" - we are very much individuals and God works with us that way.
As Tom and Janine (and others?) have said, often in retrospect I look back and see that God was speaking to me in a certain situation and I didn't "get it", I just didn't hear it or recognize it. Biggest difference in my life and faith walk over these 30+ years is there's now a higher percentage of catching those things in the appropriate time frame (any of you remember the long-distance lag during phone calls in the pre-satellite connection days?) - it's like the delay has gone from days or weeks (even months, sometimes) down to minutes and hours - and often it's immediate.
The challenge here for me is that God *doesn't* always talk to me the same way (I suppose I'd try to put Him in a box, if He did - and He's way too big for that) - and I don't want to miss His voice, whether it's that subtle sense of pressure inside my head or an image or words or a sudden conviction - but, because I'm fallen and human and self-serving in my very nature, I have to test those things and make sure I'm not listening to "the wrong voice."
So maybe it's better to encourage Karl to consider his expectations (what would God talking back look like, or sound like) and then look outside those expectations - he may be getting feedback he has yet to recognize as feedback. God is very subtle (He has to be, for us to have any freewill in the matter); I think of 1 Kings 19:12.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by adamant azzy:
Well. No body has asked if the party of the second part wants to have this PRWHim.
He's the one who initiated the relationship, Azzy, and He doesn't start things He doesn't finish (unlike me... *sigh*).
Posted by 12uthy (# 9400) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Can I get this quite clear, 12uthy? Are you saying that because I don't have a warm, fuzzy, friendly, personal relationship with Jesus it is because I haven't sacrificed enough/prayed enough/done enough soul searching/am not willing???
Because if you are, then I am calling you to Hell.
I thought this thread had at least established that we are all different and experience God in different, equally valid, ways?
(Even though at one time it looked like deteriorating into another Prof Kirke v Evo1 show! }
Perhaps, 12uthy, you would care to revise what you wrote?
I'm sorry Nicodemia you seem to have misread what I was trying to say.
My point was that it has nothing to do with whether you have a "fuzzy feeling" at all. I apologise if that is what you thought I was saying.
All I wanted to say was that a relationship has two parties. We know that God loves us. That's a given fact.What we do with that fact is up to us.
IME there are many people who turn away from God because they see injustice in religion. These people did not have a relationship with God because other humans come between them.That is a great shame. Some go on to blame God for allowing those people to get in their way. That is an even greater shame.
The fact is that religion often gets between man and his creator. This is because religion sees itself as a kind of PR firm representing God, and the image that they put forward for God is not always a very accurate one. Often they try to lop off the bits that they see as unattractive, because it's not good for the image they want portray.
But God is still God.
The question is do we really want to see him for what he really is or do we want to buy into the image, because that's what we want God to be like.
If we really want a personal relationship with God, he is right there for us, but we all (including me) have to shed our own demands of what we want out of him in order to see through the PR image. That takes time and effort on our part. It requires incessant prayer in faith.
Some people don't have a relationship with God because they haven't yet seen behind their preconceived concepts of who he is, some prefer to have a relationship with the "religion" they can see and feel while others don't want to get to know him personally, because they only want a God when things are going wrong for them.
If all they want is for him to be there for them when they need to feel loved, then they'd better get a dog!
I hope this clarifies a little and I apologise if it offends, that is not my intention. Nor am I judging anyone for not having a "fuzzy feeling".
[ 13. November 2005, 08:02: Message edited by: 12uthy ]
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
Look. I've spoken to my mailman. She is a person. I am a person. I have a relationship with her because we relate in that she brings my mail, and I say hello sometimes if I happen to see her. Relationship that is personal. Here, personal means "involving a person or persons". I do NOT, however, have a "personal relationship" with her. If someone asked me "Do you have a personal relationship with your mail carrier?" they would not be asking if my mail carrier is a person, and if I relate to her occasionally. They would be asking if I have a close, well-known relationship with her or not. Personal means close and intimate on some level.
It so happens I have exactly this relationship with my postman, I would say I did have a peronal relationship with him. If someone asked me if I had a personal relationship with him, I'd give them the courtesy of not assuming they meant a close personal relationship, I'd probably suspect they were asking if I dealt directly with them or had one of my staff collect the mail.
You seem to be trying to tell me that I do not have a personal relationship with my postman here - something you had recently promised to defend me against?
I think what we have here is the "boyfriend" dilemma. I say to my daughter, "didn't one of your boy friends give you that birthday card?" to which she replies, "he's not my boyfriend". "But he's a boy and he's your friend?" "Yes".
By now, although I'd say not off the point, but going around in circles so I'll leave you to it.
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
12uthy posted
quote:
If we really want a personal relationship with God, he is right there for us, but we all (including me) have to shed our own demands of what we want out of him in order to see through the PR image. That takes time and effort on our part. It requires incessant prayer in faith.
I still think you are saying its MY fault I don't have this "personal relationship" thing; that I haven't taken enough time or effort or prayed enough. But I can't be bothered to call you to Hell about it.
I've had all this said to me time and again by my Charismatic/fundie friends, but nothing I do, or don't do helps. Maybe its an inherent fault in my psychological make-up. Maybe its something to do with the fact I just cannot believe God loves me, as an individual. As a member of humanity, yes, as me, no.
So I'll leave it at that. I'll worship him, pray to him, sing, dance and whatever in his honour, thank him constantly, and one day, perhaps, just maybe, I'll get what you are all on about!!
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
:
quote:
He's the one who initiated the relationship, Azzy, and He doesn't
If this so called PWRG was so real there would no thread arguing at length the reality or otherwise of its existance. No thread to be seen any where re: " ...if you touch a pan of boiling water it burns your fingers.. or it doesant.."
The human propensity when it comes to matters of faith, for the ..impossible... is remarkable.
We have kicked ourselves loose of the earth.
pax vobiscum.
Posted by cocktailgirl (# 8684) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by 12uthy:
The fact is that religion often gets between man and his creator. This is because religion sees itself as a kind of PR firm representing God, and the image that they put forward for God is not always a very accurate one. Often they try to lop off the bits that they see as unattractive, because it's not good for the image they want portray.
But God is still God.
The question is do we really want to see him for what he really is or do we want to buy into the image, because that's what we want God to be like.
If we really want a personal relationship with God, he is right there for us, but we all (including me) have to shed our own demands of what we want out of him in order to see through the PR image. That takes time and effort on our part. It requires incessant prayer in faith.
Some people don't have a relationship with God because they haven't yet seen behind their preconceived concepts of who he is, some prefer to have a relationship with the "religion" they can see and feel while others don't want to get to know him personally, because they only want a God when things are going wrong for them.
If all they want is for him to be there for them when they need to feel loved, then they'd better get a dog!
This highlights one of my problems with talk of a 'personal relationship with Christ'. Whatever form my relationship with God takes (I'm much happier speaking in those terms) it is inescapably bound up with other people too, Christians and non-Christians. I can't have a relationship with God all on my own. It's very easy and fashionable nowadays to dismiss religion and religious people as hide-bound traditionalists following empty ritual. But I'm afraid I need religion; I need the Church, because it is that company of the faithful whose Christ I share, who have wrestled with, rejoiced in and shared their knowledge and experience of God, so that when I add my prayer to theirs I know that I am caught up beyond myself and my preoccupations into the mystical Body of Christ. To be is to be in relationship, with God as Trinity and with his Church. I cannot separate myself from that corporate dimension, because it provides a richness and depth of experience that I will never be able to draw on from my own resources alone. It provides checks and balances that encourage me not to create God in my own image.
Posted by 12uthy (# 9400) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
12uthy posted
quote:
If we really want a personal relationship with God, he is right there for us, but we all (including me) have to shed our own demands of what we want out of him in order to see through the PR image. That takes time and effort on our part. It requires incessant prayer in faith.
I still think you are saying its MY fault I don't have this "personal relationship" thing; that I haven't taken enough time or effort or prayed enough. But I can't be bothered to call you to Hell about it.
I've had all this said to me time and again by my Charismatic/fundie friends, but nothing I do, or don't do helps. Maybe its an inherent fault in my psychological make-up. Maybe its something to do with the fact I just cannot believe God loves me, as an individual. As a member of humanity, yes, as me, no.
So I'll leave it at that. I'll worship him, pray to him, sing, dance and whatever in his honour, thank him constantly, and one day, perhaps, just maybe, I'll get what you are all on about!!
I'm sorry if I've made you feel that I thought that you haven't done enough, the old guilt trip is a pet hate of mine when it comes to religion, so I apologise, that is not what I meant.
I think the problem here is one of expectation. I suspect that you already have a personal relationship with God but because you are expecting it to feel like something, and it doesn't feel like that, you say that you don't have a personal relationship. No-one can tell you what it feels like because it is just that "personal"- according to the person you are.
That is what I meant when I said that religion gets between us. Your charismatic/fundie friends, and I have unintentionally misrepresented what a personal relationship with God feels like, and when it doesn't feel that way for you, you conclude that you don't have one.
Why do you believe that he doesn't love YOU personally?
Is it because the God that your religion portrays is a distant, pragmatic strategist? (Matthew 10:29) quote:
29 Do not two sparrows sell for a coin of small value? Yet not one of them will fall to the ground without YOUR Father’s [knowledge].
Is it because he has not answered a prayer the way you think he should?(2 Corinthians 12:7-9) quote:
. . .Therefore, that I might not feel overly exalted, there was given me a thorn in the flesh, an angel of Satan, to keep slapping me, that I might not be overly exalted. 8 In this behalf I three times entreated the Lord that it might depart from me; 9 and yet he really said to me: “My undeserved kindness is sufficient for you; for [my] power is being made perfect in weakness. . .
Is it because you are aware of some sort of defect in yourself that you don't believe he can overlook?(Psalm 130:3-4) quote:
3 If errors were what you watch, O Jah, O Jehovah, who could stand? 4 For there is the [true] forgiveness with you, In order that you may be feared.
All these things are a symptom of religion getting in the way; our expectations do not fit the reality.
I've found that although the Scriptures may not be infallible, they are a good way to get to know the real God, independent of religion, since we can read them in our own languages in our own way, especially if you cross reference them with several different translations.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
It so happens I have exactly this relationship with my postman, I would say I did have a peronal relationship with him. If someone asked me if I had a personal relationship with him, I'd give them the courtesy of not assuming they meant a close personal relationship, I'd probably suspect they were asking if I dealt directly with them or had one of my staff collect the mail.
The point being, if you say you do, then I will not dispute that you do, but I do not want you to explain to me why the relationship that I do not consider to be so, is in fact personal.
The fact that most people would consider "personal relationship" to mean "close" already, especially when referring to God, is a side argument.
-Digory
Posted by Dobbo (# 5850) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Ian Climacus:
Just coming back to this:
quote:
Originally posted by Demas:
Is there a difference between a 'personal relationship with God' and a 'personal relationship with Christ'?
This is one thing that always worried me slightly, looking back, at my life B.P. [before the Plot ™ ]. Perhaps it's projection, perhaps it was just me, but God equalled Jesus alone in my mind, and perhaps this is what gets my back up when I hear the term 'personal relationship with Christ'. Whenever I thought of God, Jesus was it -- the Father and the Holy Spirit were very much in the background.
For those who have and rejoice in a personal relationship with Christ as is being described by Evo, LutheranChik and others..., is this relationship different to your relationship with the other members of the Trinity? Can one have a personal relationship with the Father? with the Holy Spirit? Or does the incarnation of the the Son of God allow a different form of relationship?
[I hope you can understand what I'm asking!]
Thanks,
Ian.
You have made a very interesting point.
But as with the Athanasian Creed talking of
quote:
Quote by Teufelchen
{Jesus} although he be God and man: yet he is not two, but is one Christ: One, however, not by conversion of Godhead into flesh: but by taking manhood into God
Perhaps we see Christ as taking us with Him into the presence of the Trintiy - just as Christ took humanity into God
I suppose in part it is similar to people who use ikons to be brought into the presence of the Trinity.
Just as the High Priest took the sacrafice into the Holy of Holies once year we have one in the Godhead as truly man and as such He is touched by our infirmities.(Hebrews 4 v 15)
I believe it is biblical that Jesus called us His friends - what friend do you know that does not have a personal relationship with you? (John 15 v 15)and if you find one are they truly a friend? Also consider Proverbs 18 v 24
Posted by (gracia) (# 1812) on
:
from magdalencollege:
quote:
These are people who sound a little surprised that their good works to the least of Jesus' brethren were accounted as done unto Jesus; that sense of surprise gives me a hint of people who have been faithfully doing the right thing, whether they "felt" it or not. Nothing wrong with feeling it - but that can't be the basis on which we do it. These people were definitely SAVED.
(Bold mine).
Which is why I believe some who do have a PRWJ, see themselves as doubting Thomases, not taking much on faith, needing to touch, see, experience before they believe. And Jesus said to Thomas, "Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet have believed". (A bit of chastisement to the doubters and experience-learners, to be sure).
from 12uthy:
quote:
...religion often gets between man and his creator. This is because religion sees itself as a kind of PR firm representing God, and the image that they put forward for God is not always a very accurate one. Often they try to lop off the bits that they see as unattractive, because it's not good for the image they want portray.
This is home truth, IME.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by (gracia):
...I believe some who do have a PRWJ, see themselves as doubting Thomases, not taking much on faith, needing to touch, see, experience before they believe. And Jesus said to Thomas, "Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet have believed". (A bit of chastisement to the doubters and experience-learners, to be sure).
I think the point of this thread, or at least where the point has been driven, is that PRWJ in this sense is somewhat meaningless. I do believe that many who are living in God's will may not have any generally associated feelings to go along with it.
Someone asked how many friends you have that you don't consider to be "personal relationships." I think we would all answer, "none." But how many friends do you have that never talk to you or respond to you? What if I told you that some guy named Jim Bubkins has been talking to you for years, and trying to respond to all of your questions, but you've just never noticed him--would you consider him to be a personal friend then, after I told you and assured you that he was? I'd think probably not.
That, in my estimation, is the problem with the concept of personal relationship. It's, well, personal.
-Digory
Posted by Dobbo (# 5850) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
I think the point of this thread, or at least where the point has been driven, is that PRWJ in this sense is somewhat meaningless. I do believe that many who are living in God's will may not have any generally associated feelings to go along with it.
I think it is spurious as well because anyone that is living in God's will has a relationship, whether they recognise it or not - in one sense if you were not affected by God, then you would not need to live your life according to certain standards - so in a sense at least there has to be a causal relationship -ie I desire to do my best for Him because He loved me and gave His Son up for me.ie cause leads to effect
quote:
Someone asked how many friends you have that you don't consider to be "personal relationships." I think we would all answer, "none." But how many friends do you have that never talk to you or respond to you? What if I told you that some guy named Jim Bubkins has been talking to you for years, and trying to respond to all of your questions, but you've just never noticed him--would you consider him to be a personal friend then, after I told you and assured you that he was? I'd think probably not.
That, in my estimation, is the problem with the concept of personal relationship. It's, well, personal.
-Digory [/QB]
Sometimes true friends tell us things we do not want to hear and because of that they are ignored.
I think the Bible talks about people having personal relationships (as opposed to corporate) with God - Enoch walked with God, the Psalms of David - whether or not they knew that God was right there beside them, I do not know. Did Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego know that there was a fourth person in the fire?
But in my understanding the whole idea of the Holy Spirit being the "Comforter" was someone that was called to one's side. Someone who comforts is right beside you not a million miles away from you (at least that is my experience of people that give true comfort - please note it is not a location thing some people who are right beside you giving "comfort" are doing nothing of the kind) As I also highlighted Proverbs 18 v 24 which says there is a friend that sticks close.
I think the problem lies when the experience is everything - and if you do not have an equivalent experience then check out your salvation man - as people are individuals God deals with us as individuals - some are more emotional than others and I think God is gracious to deal with us at our level - some will not need or want to base our Christian walk on an emotional rollercoaster.
Posted by whitelaughter (# 10611) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by adamant azzy:
If this so called PWRG was so real there would no thread arguing at length the reality or otherwise of its existance. No thread to be seen any where re: " ...if you touch a pan of boiling water it burns your fingers.. or it doesn't.."
[chuckle]
Excellent. Thank you for bringing the thread down to earth.
That said - the difference is that boiling water will burn everybody. And nearly everybody notices; even with nerve damage you will normally see the burn. I assume that no one is arguing that everybody has a PRWG?
Assume that the majority of people were colour blind, but enough people could see colours for us to have the words for the different colours. Now, the colour blind people could argue with good reason that colours weren't 'real' - for starters, they can't see them; more tellingly, specific words are used for each colour despite there being no boundaries in the light waves. Would you argue in those circumstances that colours weren't 'real'? If so, you're being consistent in your use of language, so fair enough in saying PRWG isn't real. If you would say that colours were real, what do you see as being the difference?
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
Excuse me, but who said that all PRWGs are not real?
-Digory
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
I think what we have here is the "boyfriend" dilemma. I say to my daughter, "didn't one of your boy friends give you that birthday card?" to which she replies, "he's not my boyfriend". "But he's a boy and he's your friend?" "Yes".
Are you teasing your daughter when you say this? Or do you not see a difference between a boyfriend and a boy who is a friend?
Posted by PerkyEars (# 9577) on
:
quote:
Assume that the majority of people were colour blind, but enough people could see colours for us to have the words for the different colours. Now, the colour blind people could argue with good reason that colours weren't 'real' - for starters, they can't see them; more tellingly, specific words are used for each colour despite there being no boundaries in the light waves. Would you argue in those circumstances that colours weren't 'real'? If so, you're being consistent in your use of language, so fair enough in saying PRWG isn't real. If you would say that colours were real, what do you see as being the difference?
It's a good analogy. What is 'real' is that although there are no boundaries in light waves, there are wavelength differences! To see a difference in color between two things is to have a subjective experience that does correspond to some objective feature of the external world.
I think to use 'unreal' to discribe any subjective experience regardless of what external reality has caused it is not a practical use of 'real'. If I trip over something I think the pain in my toe is very real, thank you very much.
If by 'unreal' you mean generated by ones own nervous system rather than an external reality then of course there are many who 'rationally' think all religious experience falls into this category as a matter of course, and I dissagree with them.
CS Lewis said that Christianity was a bit like sex - and I think that's a much better analogy than colours. People do have quite a wide individual experience of sensations, and the sensations have no bearing on the fertility. As CSL said:
quote:
And of course the presence of God is not the same as the sense of the presence of God. The latter may be due to imagination... ...It is the actual presence, not the sensation of the presence of the Holy Ghost which begets Christ in us. The sense of the presence is a super-added gift for which we give thanks when it comes and that's about it.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
Nope, surprisingly she has no problems when I talk about her girl friends. - She's at that age.
[ETA - that was to Josephine]
[ 14. November 2005, 07:42: Message edited by: Evo1 ]
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Evo1 - if you really insist on parsing "boyfriend" as "a friend who is a boy", and ignoring the connotations and assumptions that users of the English language in the UK (at least) attach to the word, I'm not surprised you struggle with me saying that a PR is not just a relationship that has a personal aspect.
What's really odd is it's meant to be us Aspies who miss subtle shades of meaning.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
It looks obvious to me that you are trying to heavy handedly tell me what I should and should not understand of something which to me seems like plain English.
Sorry, I'm bored of this.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on
:
Unless I've missed something, nobody has yet made the point that to speak of a "personal relationship with God/Jesus" is a uniquely modern thing to say. Modern, that is, in the sense (roughly speaking) of the period after Descartes and before Wittgenstein. Now, I'm not saying that the phrase would have been greeted with utter incomprehension before Descartes, but it would certainly have meant something very different from what I think is being put forward here.
I think to the Western medieval mind, the relationship with God was analogous to the relationship between a serf and his lord: God was to the world what the lord of the manor was to the village. The individual owed God loyalty and obedience (the Middle English meanings of "belief") and God, in return, gave protection. And I think it's important to note that this was not a one-to-one or "personal" relationship - it was the village community that owed allegiance to its lord, so it was the Church that had a relationship with God. This should be clear from the "rights" that lords had to punish whole communities for the transgressions of individuals.
Similarly, after Wittgenstein, the first question that has to arise is, what language game (in the technical sense) are you playing when you claim friendship (or some other personal relationship) with a "person" who has no physical existence? How is it, for instance, that I can use the same language to describe my "relationships" with someone who is my tennis partner; Mr Spanners, my imaginary friend; and God?
The point is that talk of personal relationships is far from unproblematic either theologically, philosophically, or semantically. And simply to dismiss these problems with the answer that Jesus makes me feel all warm inside, just won't do.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
It looks obvious to me that you are trying to heavy handedly tell me what I should and should not understand of something which to me seems like plain English.
Sorry, I'm bored of this.
Love,
Evo1
I'm suggesting that you should perhaps allow your understanding of English words to be guided by the way everybody else in the speech community uses them. For example "boyfriend" does not mean a boy who is a friend; it means a male person (not necessarily a boy, but often a grown man) with whom someone is having a romantic relationship with a greater or lesser level of emotional commitment.
As well you know. You are beginning to sound like Humpty Dumpty.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
Love,
Evo1
[Digory, you did promise to help me out here?]
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
quote:
Unless I've missed something, nobody has yet made the point that to speak of a "personal relationship with God/Jesus" is a uniquely modern thing to say. Modern, that is, in the sense (roughly speaking) of the period after Descartes and before Wittgenstein. Now, I'm not saying that the phrase would have been greeted with utter incomprehension before Descartes, but it would certainly have meant something very different from what I think is being put forward here.
I think to the Western medieval mind, the relationship with God was analogous to the relationship between a serf and his lord: God was to the world what the lord of the manor was to the village. The individual owed God loyalty and obedience (the Middle English meanings of "belief") and God, in return, gave protection. And I think it's important to note that this was not a one-to-one or "personal" relationship - it was the village community that owed allegiance to its lord, so it was the Church that had a relationship with God. This should be clear from the "rights" that lords had to punish whole communities for the transgressions of individuals.
Similarly, after Wittgenstein, the first question that has to arise is, what language game (in the technical sense) are you playing when you claim friendship (or some other personal relationship) with a "person" who has no physical existence? How is it, for instance, that I can use the same language to describe my "relationships" with someone who is my tennis partner; Mr Spanners, my imaginary friend; and God?
The point is that talk of personal relationships is far from unproblematic either theologically, philosophically, or semantically. And simply to dismiss these problems with the answer that Jesus makes me feel all warm inside, just won't do.
Adeodatus, you speak a lot of sense here, and its understandable too!!
I must have a medieval mindset, because the idea of an analogy between the Lord of the manor and God explains what I feel - I am a member of a church, God loves me as a member of the church and humanity, and my relationship with him is one of awe, worship, gratitude, loyalty, and fear. No 'personal' relationship - I am a mere serf; no warm 'buddy' feelings, I wouldn't dare to presume; no warm love fuzzies - who do I think I am??
I'll get a clean wimple out.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
Karl, Karl, Karl ... may be, just MAY BE, you an' me ain't the ONLY ASsers here?!
Posted by adamant azzy (# 10636) on
:
quote:
OP'd by White laughter........ Assume that the majority of people were colour blind, but enough people could see colours for us to have the words for the different colours. Now, the colour blind people could argue with good reason that colours weren't 'real' - for starters, they can't see them; more tellingly, specific words are used for each colour despite there being no boundaries in the light waves. Would you argue in those circumstances that colours weren't 'real'? If so, you're being consistent in your use of language, so fair enough in saying PRWG isn't real. If you would say that colours were real, what do you see as being the difference
If only a few people could see (a/any) color they could very easily demonstrate by simple, understandable and repeatable experiments that they had this facility. Your example is indefensible. There is no way that the PRWG/J cames within the ambit of definable/domonstarble laws of nature.
It always surprises me that religious people have this naive desire to show that they can "prove" the existance of .... any number of things whatever... If one day I revert from atheism to some religion, I would simply say "thanks but no thanks" to any attempt at getting me to argue the veracity of my beleif.
I can hardly argue about atheism, even the arguments of the best atheists can be demolished pronto yet the even harder job of undertaking to "prove" the veritability of religious dogma is undertaken so lightly.
We were arguing about a flat earth and and a geocentric universe not so long ago and today we are arguing about evolution and a PRWJ. If the theory of evolution were to be proved to be true (which is already the case) beyond a shadow of doubt, would that destroy faith. By no means! But it will inflict serious damage if we continue to the position we take today. For the purpose of explaining the real world around us, science is much better positioned. The sooner we kick the old habits the better for us. The world is no less an awesome place "royal design" or otherwise. That I have an instant and inside feeling of connection to something beyond me and beyond the physical, is not something to be proved/disproved. It is just there. I know and Im sure. Consider such rumours as the sighting of the Holy Mother in Philipines and such other "visions" for example. They are an insult to the lord. Such belief is wrong and only brings redicule to religion, nothing more. Lets us stop this.
Pax vobiscum.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
I believe this:
quote:
Originally posted by me:
The fact that most people would consider "personal relationship" to mean "close" already, especially when referring to God, is a side argument.
-Digory
is the side argument people are now referring to.
Semantics--a very powerful and often misused tool.
-Digory
Posted by Timothy the Obscure (# 292) on
:
quote:
Adeodatus wrote:
I think to the Western medieval mind, the relationship with God was analogous to the relationship between a serf and his lord: God was to the world what the lord of the manor was to the village.
The image of God as feudal lord is one popular medieval metaphor (and the basis of Anselm's soteriology), but not the only one. Ramon Llull's
Book of the Lover and the Beloved gives a much more personal conception--admittedly, it was probably seen as applying only to the dedicated mystic, not the "ordinary" Christian.
"Personal relationship with God" is not a phrase you'll hear me (or Quakers in general) use much if at all, though I do construe the Light as personal in that it is given to me as an individual (as well as to the church as a community). It's perhaps less like a friendship than like the relationship with a beloved teacher or mentor--and even that is a stretch. I can't quite go for the feudal metaphor, probably because I'm American and for us, with our revolutionary history, it's hard to separate the image of "king" from George III (i.e., "tyrant").
This seems so much an argument about language--I do believe that the Light is given to everyone (not just confessing Christians), and that it is personal, but it really doesn't matter what you call it or what subjective emotional states accompany the experience--it can feel different for everyone, and that uniqueness is one of the things that makes it "personal." Certainly to tell someone else that because they don't experience it as a "personal relationship" as they use those words in everyday life, that their relationship to God is somehow defective strikes me as pointlessly harsh. It seems more helpful to share our various experiences rather than arguing about which one is right. I find the intensity on both sides rather perplexing, to tell the truth.
Timothy
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
Thank you to somebody upstream for the great CS Lewis quote - he had such a gift for brilliant plain speech!
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
Unless I've missed something, nobody has yet made the point that to speak of a "personal relationship with God/Jesus" is a uniquely modern thing to say.
St. Therese of Lisieux comes to mind, as well as Brother Lawrence. I think you're right, the phrase is very modern - but I don't think the concept is, even in its "warm & fuzzy" form. Yes, there are cultural components to our expectations (seasons and ages within the church) and there are theological and semantic questions, but I haven't read any "Jesus makes me feel all warm inside" arguments.
Sometimes Jesus *does* make me feel all warm inside - but that's icing, not the cake, nor the bread.
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by adamant azzy:
It always surprises me that religious people have this naive desire to show that they can "prove" the existance of .... any number of things whatever... If one day I revert from atheism to some religion, I would simply say "thanks but no thanks" to any attempt at getting me to argue the veracity of my beleif.
Reason isn't just about 'proof', though. Reason can help us ask whether our beliefs are coherent, and can tease out what we mean by using words in a particular way. It is fairly clear to me that people who talk about having a personal relationship with Jesus (I avoid using the phrase) cannot be talking about the same sort of personal relationship that I have say, with my wife, or even with my Uncle in America. One of the key things about human interpersonal relationships is that they involve bodies. I use my body to communicate with other embodied persons - either immediately (talking to or hugging my wife) or remotely (telephoning or emailing my uncle). There are obvious problems, then, with talking about an interpersonal relationship when one of the bodies in question is absent (which is surely what the doctrine of the Ascension claims).
I guess the Catholic answer to this problem would be to talk about the different ways in which Christ's body is present in these 'in between times' - eucharistic, ecclesial etc. To be honest, though, I think the terminology is better off junked, not least because the model of 'personal relationships' which seems to be operative most of the time in its use strikes me as pretty unhealthy.
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
To be honest, though, I think the terminology is better off junked, not least because the model of 'personal relationships' which seems to be operative most of the time in its use strikes me as pretty unhealthy.
Yes, but you make this remark without having the experience all the lovey-dovey feelings of those believe that they a "personal relationship" with God.
So, unless you know what they are feeling and how they are communing with God - your observations remain incomplete from a lack of personal experience.
I'm just posing as the devil's <hem> I mean God's advocate.
I personally cannot call what is between me and God a "personal relationship" - it would feel too (to be honest) daft and a bit stiffling. God is God. I kind of like Him/Her. I don't know what to call that yet.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Joyfulsoul:
I personally cannot call what is between me and God a "personal relationship" - it would feel too (to be honest) daft and a bit stiffling. God is God. I kind of like Him/Her. I don't know what to call that yet.
"Unknowingness" is of great value; don't be too quick to shed it.
It's this kind of honesty and personal identity that should be uplifted in this thread, in my opinion. What you say about your relationship with God is the most true thing that can be said about it, and no one else can tell you otherwise.
-Digory
Posted by Superslug (# 7024) on
:
Digory,
I like that.
Whilst I would use the term personal relationship, it is one which still thirsts for a deeper understanding, a deeper knowledge and a deeper '........'* of God.
As the deer pants etc.
SS
* I couldnt think of the word I needed there, it has something to do with dependancy or love or something. But I guess its that sort of unutterable mystery we are talking about eh?
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Joyfulsoul:
So, unless you know what they are feeling and how they are communing with God - your observations remain incomplete from a lack of personal experience.
I retain my right to disbelieve people who say they have had an experience they cannot in any way make intelligible to me. I'm with Wittgenstein on the impossibility of private langauges.
I'm also a little uncomfortable about the 'experience fundamentalism' in some parts of the Church. In the same way that a proof text trumps all argument for a 'real' fundamentalist, for these people an appeal to 'my experience' means my favoured assertions are immune from scrutiny. Almost as if Marx, Freud and a large number of 20th century philosophers had never put pen to paper, it is assumed that our experience cannot deceive us, that we don't come to 'our experience' with prejudices and that we are transparent to ourselves.
Also could we clarify what we're talking about on this thread. Are we talking about a personal relationship with 'God'? Or with Jesus qua human being? I have even more problems with the idea of having a personal relationship with God, as such, than I do with having one with Jesus. God is not a person, in the everyday sense of the word.
[ 15. November 2005, 20:37: Message edited by: Divine Outlaw Dwarf ]
Posted by Superslug (# 7024) on
:
DOD,
I take your point, but if you said you were in love with someone but couldnt put that experiance into words, or if i'd never had an orgasm and you were trying to describe the same to me, but I couldnt understand what on earth you were describing, I woundnt not beleive you just because you couldnt articulate your experiances sufficiantly coherently for me to understand.
especially if you were a friend or someone I respected.
SS
[ 15. November 2005, 21:23: Message edited by: Superslug ]
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on
:
No, but even in those situations you would be communicating something. Most of us have some experience of some sort of love, or at least of the effect it has on other people. We have a vocabulary of love, which is 'public'.
Posted by Superslug (# 7024) on
:
Agreed about love, but can you say the same about orgasm.
I'm saying if they cant communicate that experiance in any way, because they dont have the words or I dont have the understanding, I wouldnt necessarily not believe them.
Perhaps I'm just gullable.
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
One of the key things about human interpersonal relationships is that they involve bodies.
I'd also say that one of the most important factors in human interpersonal relationships is that they are two-way things.
I can sit and talk to a wall for a whole month, but that doesn't mean I have a Personal Relationship with it...
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
I can sit and talk to a wall for a whole month, but that doesn't mean I have a Personal Relationship with it...
Perhaps the wall is trying to talk to you, Marvin, and you just simply cannot hear it. After all, a person made that wall, and you're a person, and you are sitting in relation to the wall, so you have a relationship with it.
I think you have a personal relationship with the wall, and you just don't realize it.
-Digory
Posted by whitelaughter (# 10611) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by adamant azzy:
If only a few people could see (a/any) color they could very easily demonstrate by simple, understandable and repeatable experiments that they had this facility.
Demonstrate to each other, sure. How would you demonstrate this to the colour blind?
Your example is indefensible. There is no way that the PRWG/J cames within the ambit of definable/domonstarble laws of nature.
This is something we call 'a metaphor'. Using something you have - colour vision - to show what it is like on the other side of the fence.
It always surprises me that religious people have this naive desire to show that they can "prove" the existance of .... any number of things whatever...
The purpose of this thread was to describe and explain, not prove. *YOU* were the one who started asserting that our experiences aren't real. Why are you 'surprised' that people will argue an unsupported assertion?
We were arguing about a flat earth and and a geocentric universe not so long ago
Sorry, myth. The ancient Greeks not only knew that the world was round, but also it's size; this information was not lost. The reason Columbus was laughed at was that it was obvious to everyone that he'd done his sums wrong and that there was no way he could make it to Asia. If he hadn't stumbled over the Americas he would have died. And the geocentric universe was only disliked for political reasons.
Consider such rumours as the sighting of the Holy Mother in Philipines and such other "visions" for example. They are an insult to the lord. Such belief is wrong and only brings redicule to religion, nothing more. Lets us stop this.
Agreed about the insult to God. But - if someone has seen, experienced such a vision, what are they supposed to do? Assume that they are hallucinating? Does that make it any less 'real'? They've experienced it. Should they deny it because you say so? How do they know that *you* aren't a hallucination?
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
I retain my right to disbelieve people who say they have had an experience they cannot in any way make intelligible to me...
I'm also a little uncomfortable about the 'experience fundamentalism' in some parts of the Church. In the same way that a proof text trumps all argument for a 'real' fundamentalist, for these people an appeal to 'my experience' means my favoured assertions are immune from scrutiny. Almost as if Marx, Freud and a large number of 20th century philosophers had never put pen to paper, it is assumed that our experience cannot deceive us, that we don't come to 'our experience' with prejudices and that we are transparent to ourselves.
Of course our experience can deceive us - our hearts deceive us, the Bible makes that really clear - so we must approach this entire area with fear and trembling, as it were, and very open to correction by the Holy Spirit through the Word, through our conscience, and through fellow travelers on the road. I suspect this is why the discussion continues: it is subtle and hard to communicate and personal. Even when somebody says, "I have no personal relationship," the response tends to be "what do you mean by 'no personal relationship'?" That's pretty weird!
I know I'm not expecting everyone (or even anyone) who reads my words to believe them - I certainly don't have a problem with you retaining your right to disbelieve. But your belief or lack thereof has no impact on the reality of my experience, and that's okay, too. It IS private and individual and I've shared what I have only in the hope it might be useful to those who started the thread and echoed the query.
quote:
Also could we clarify what we're talking about on this thread. Are we talking about a personal relationship with 'God'? Or with Jesus qua human being? I have even more problems with the idea of having a personal relationship with God, as such, than I do with having one with Jesus. God is not a person, in the everyday sense of the word.
Well, not in the "everyday" sense of the word, like you or I - but He's definitely a Person, THE Person, imho. We underestimate Him mightily if we think of Him as an impersonal "force." God encompasses relationship within Himself and is self-sufficient - yet He chooses to grace us with His presence and love. Pretty awesome, in the pure non-surfer meaning of the word.
For myself, I don't think I can separate out Who I'm having a relationship with; Jesus said, "I and the Father are One," so if I'm having a relationship with Jesus, I'm also having a relationshp with the Father. And since Jesus is not currently walking around the planet in flesh, my relationship with Him happens because the Holy Spirit empowers it, revealing Jesus to me. So I don't see how one can separate Father, Son, and Holy Spirit - it is One God in three Persons and not three Gods, after all.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
Perhaps the wall is trying to talk to you, Marvin, and you just simply cannot hear it. After all, a person made that wall, and you're a person, and you are sitting in relation to the wall, so you have a relationship with it.
I think you have a personal relationship with the wall, and you just don't realize it.
ouch, it hurts to laugh so hard so after eating dinner...! I should go digest... this is great.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
I can sit and talk to a wall for a whole month, but that doesn't mean I have a Personal Relationship with it...
Perhaps the wall is trying to talk to you, Marvin, and you just simply cannot hear it. After all, a person made that wall, and you're a person, and you are sitting in relation to the wall, so you have a relationship with it.
I think you have a personal relationship with the wall, and you just don't realize it.
-Digory
I find this line of thought fairly disrespetful actually.
Are you really likening prayer to talking to a wall - thats to PK and Martin?
If so, I assume neither of you do engage in prayer.
If not, what on earth is this about?
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
quote:
Are you really likening prayer to talking to a wall - thats to PK and Martin?
If so, I assume neither of you do engage in prayer.
Lots of time prayer is like talking to a wall. Doesn't mean that's a good reason to stop, of course, but I don't always get much back.
Of course that's only my personal experience, which I wouldn't dream of assuming is true for anyone else - I'm sure we all know how dangerous and insulting that is. However I seem to remember a whole stream of Psalms which complain that God isn't listening, so maybe it's not just me.
[ 16. November 2005, 06:39: Message edited by: The Wanderer ]
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by The Wanderer:
However I seem to remember a whole stream of Psalms which complain that God isn't listening, so maybe it's not just me.
Yes, my wife often goes on at me about not listening - of course, she doesn't do this because she thinks I'm not listening (if so she wouldn't waste her breath) she does it cos she knows that really I am but doesn't like my response to it.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
I find this line of thought fairly disrespetful actually.
Are you really likening prayer to talking to a wall - thats to PK and Martin?
If so, I assume neither of you do engage in prayer.
If not, what on earth is this about?
I suspect Martin is not talking about *prayer* so much as the lack of feedback which makes him reluctant to call it a PRWG (and he may be arguing a point, as opposed to expressing his personal experience) - but ProfKirke is doing a fabulous immitation (an homage, as it were) to the early part of the thread where there was some insistence that a person was having a PRWG even when said person argued he was *not* having one - lots of semantics and parsing had been going on and Digory nailed it. Personally, I think Jesus is chuckling about it, too (He has a great sense of humor and the Bible is full of puns and wordplay, most of which we miss because we don't read Hebrew or Greek).
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
oops, sorry, that's Marvin, not Martin (and he should speak for himself - don't mean to be putting words in his mouth...).
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
I suspect Martin is not talking about *prayer* so much as the lack of feedback which makes him reluctant to call it a PRWG
I'd rather hear it from them all the same.
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
Evo posted:
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by professorkirke:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
I can sit and talk to a wall for a whole month, but that doesn't mean I have a Personal Relationship with it...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Perhaps the wall is trying to talk to you, Marvin, and you just simply cannot hear it. After all, a person made that wall, and you're a person, and you are sitting in relation to the wall, so you have a relationship with it.
I think you have a personal relationship with the wall, and you just don't realize it.
-Digory
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I find this line of thought fairly disrespetful actually.
Are you really likening prayer to talking to a wall - thats to PK and Martin?
If so, I assume neither of you do engage in prayer.
If not, what on earth is this about?
Professor Kirke -
Evo1 - talking to a wall is exactly what prayer feels like for me most of the time. Doesn't mean to say I don't do it, though. I'm hoping one day the wall will fall down and All Will Be Revealed.
Could you just try to understand that we are not all the same, and those of us that are different are not necessarily deficient?
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
You can hear it from me. Prayer is exactly like talking to a wall, except that I [i]know[/]i the wall doesn't hear me. I can hope that God can. But there's no more feedback than there is from a wall, not really.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
You can hear it from me. Prayer is exactly like talking to a wall, except that I [i]know[/]i the wall doesn't hear me. I can hope that God can. But there's no more feedback than there is from a wall, not really.
I know we seem to struggle with common English definitions but jst to point out that in my world, if something is exactly like something else, there are no exceptions. Though I do accept we are all different.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Could you just try to understand that we are not all the same, and those of us that are different are not necessarily deficient?
I get tired of saying this, I have only ever said the opposite of what you are accusing me of. My posts are all here, perhaps you'd like top point me out saying what you are unfairly acusing me of.
Thanks,
Evo1
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
You can hear it from me. Prayer is exactly like talking to a wall, except that I know the wall doesn't hear me. I can hope that God can. But there's no more feedback than there is from a wall, not really.
I know we seem to struggle with common English definitions but jst to point out that in my world, if something is exactly like something else, there are no exceptions. Though I do accept we are all different.
Let me say it then. Prayer is exactly like talking to a wall in every way except one. The one way that it is not like talking to a wall is that I can hope that perhaps somebody is listening when I pray.
Then again, I suppose I can hope that someone is listening when talking to the wall...
Maybe I do have a PRWW...hmm...
-Digory
[ 16. November 2005, 12:48: Message edited by: professorkirke ]
Posted by Superslug (# 7024) on
:
Digory,
Here you go, some liturgy for you all the other wall worshippers out there.
Our Wall which art out back
Hallowed be thy brick
Thy back yard come
Thy repointing done
In cement as it is next door
Give us today our daily shade
Forgive us our climbing over
As we forgive those who trespass in our yard
Lead us not to kick footballs against you
But deliver us from fences
Yours be the flower box and the boundary line
For ever and ever Amen
SS
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
Very droll
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Superslug:
Digory,
Here you go, some liturgy for you all the other wall worshippers out there.
Our Wall which art out back
Hallowed be thy brick
Thy back yard come
Thy repointing done
In cement as it is next door
Give us today our daily shade
Forgive us our climbing over
As we forgive those who trespass in our yard
Lead us not to kick footballs against you
But deliver us from fences
Yours be the flower box and the boundary line
For ever and ever Amen
SS
That's going straight into my personal catechism.
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Could you just try to understand that we are not all the same, and those of us that are different are not necessarily deficient?
I get tired of saying this, I have only ever said the opposite of what you are accusing me of. My posts are all here, perhaps you'd like top point me out saying what you are unfairly acusing me of.
Thanks,
Evo1
Well, when you post stuff like: quote:
Are you really likening prayer to talking to a wall - thats to PK and Martin?
If so, I assume neither of you do engage in prayer.
it does suggest to me that Nicodemia is right. The leap from: "Prayer for me is like talking to a wall" to: "Aha! It's clear you don't pray" is not an obvious one to me. The fact that you can say stuff like that does suggest to me that you don't really appreciate that people have different experiences, let alone value those whose experiences are different from your own. But that's only my perception of what you have written; I may well be wrong.
Posted by cocktailgirl (# 8684) on
:
The hardest times to keep praying are those when it feels like there's no one there. That, to me, is the true test of faith. I take my biretta off to those whose experience is always that. Telling people that isn't prayer shows a parlously shallow understanding of what prayer is. All IMHO, of course.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Evo1 - talking to a wall is exactly what prayer feels like for me most of the time. Doesn't mean to say I don't do it, though. I'm hoping one day the wall will fall down and All Will Be Revealed.
Could you just try to understand that we are not all the same, and those of us that are different are not necessarily deficient?
A good friend at church feels this way and is greatly discouraged by the lack of *a sense* of PRWG - and yet, at the same time, this man has prayed for me and I have seen the Holy Spirit working through him, giving him insights that are not simply his, as a fellow human, but clearly (to me, at least) Divine - but he FEELS nothing. I encourage him, to the degree that saying, "I hear God speaking to me through you when you pray for me," may encourage him - but I fear this is a place where the general sense of our parish ("everybody can hear God, everybody can have a PRWG") ends up discouraging him.
I wish I could make it be different but clearly I cannot; I assume if God wanted it to be different, it WOULD be different - therefore God is working through this man in such a way that this man cannot feel it. I believe it takes huge faith to continue to serve, to pray, to love with so little feedback, and I have great admiration for those of you who do just that - I trust that great will be your riches in heaven, because you're operating in that "blessed are they who believe without seeing" arena - "blessed are they who pray and serve without warm fuzzies."
And, SS, I love the prayer to the wall!
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by The Wanderer:
The leap from: "Prayer for me is like talking to a wall" to: "Aha! It's clear you don't pray" is not an obvious one to me.
Same here. Like you, I found this to be not a little condescending and in the "you must have experiences like mine to be a genuine Christian" vein.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
Same here. Like you, I found this to be not a little condescending and in the "you must have experiences like mine to be a genuine Christian" vein.
Then you must be fairly proficient at the words in mouths thingy that goes on so often here.
Saying that prayer can be like talking to a wall - yes, I've experienced this too - is a far cry from saying that it is actually talking to a wall. That's what I found insulting. (Since most have actually agreed that it is not exactly like talking to a wall, I think I can validly assume that this is not what people posting believe).
Whether it be due to a PWRG or just a belief that someone/thing may be listening.
I was insulted by the tone of the post (Digory's especially which was just poking fun at the idea that anyone might actually be listening.
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
So why then leap to the assumption that PK and Martin don't pray? That leap is the bit I think many of us found insulting; saying to someone, "I don't like the image you used," isn't.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
Saying that prayer can be like talking to a wall - yes, I've experienced this too - is a far cry from saying that it is actually talking to a wall. That's what I found insulting. (Since most have actually agreed that it is not exactly like talking to a wall, I think I can validly assume that this is not what people posting believe).
Except nobody said that, and you indeed were getting nasty about people saying it was LIKE talking to the wall, as your own words prove:
quote:
Are you really likening prayer to talking to a wall - thats to PK and Martin?
If so, I assume neither of you do engage in prayer.
They were, on your own witness, LIKENING prayer to talking to a wall, i.e. saying it was LIKE that. That was indeed what got your dander up and made you insult them. Don't go changing your story now; anybody capable of scrolling up can see what actually took place.
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
(Digory's especially which was just poking fun at the idea that anyone might actually be listening.
I thought Digory was poking fun at the semantic discussion about "personal," "relationship," and "personal relationship." And not making any comment about whether in prayer to God anyone is listening or not.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
(Digory's especially which was just poking fun at the idea that anyone might actually be listening.
I thought Digory was poking fun at the semantic discussion about "personal," "relationship," and "personal relationship." And not making any comment about whether in prayer to God anyone is listening or not.
That is how I read that post, also. As Digory says in another post that he hopes there is someone hearing his prayers, I assume he doesn't find it jibeworthy when others have the same hope (let alone some kind of assurance).
Badly misread, Evo1.
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
I suspect Martin is not talking about *prayer* so much as the lack of feedback which makes him reluctant to call it a PRWG
I'd rather hear it from them all the same.
That's exactly what I meant. Without any response, there is no Personal Relationship. However many times someone assures me that there's someone on the other side of the wall who's listening and who cares, for all I can tell there is only me and the wall.
I kept speaking to the wall for a long time, hoping to hear a sign of life on the other side. I'm still hoping that someone's there. Maybe they've walked away to do something else. Maybe they're just listening without answer. But I came to the realisation that all I was achieving by staying with the wall was to get more and more frustrated, and more and more angry with whoever was (hopefully!) on the other side.
So for the sake of my sanity - and any potential relationship with the unknown person who might be on the other side - I walked away. I made sure to tell the wall that I was walking away (and why), just in case someone else was there. I didn't want them to wonder what had happened to me.
I still pop back to the wall occasionally, just to shout a greeting over it. My visits are getting more and more sporadic every year, because I've stopped expecting to hear a reply, but the hope remains. The hope that one day I'll stroll up, say "Hi, anyone there?", and hear "Hi there Marv, how are you?" come floating back.
I have no idea what I'll do if and when that day comes. Die of shock in all likelihood. But it'll probably be one of the happiest days of my goddamn life.
And until it happens I don't have a Personal Relationship. All I have is myself, the wall, and a tiny bit of hope that just won't go away.
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on
:
Oh, and would it kill ya to stop calling me Martin?
[ 17. November 2005, 12:05: Message edited by: Marvin the Martian ]
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
Same here. Like you, I found this to be not a little condescending and in the "you must have experiences like mine to be a genuine Christian" vein.
Then you must be fairly proficient at the words in mouths thingy that goes on so often here.
Saying that prayer can be like talking to a wall - yes, I've experienced this too - is a far cry from saying that it is actually talking to a wall. That's what I found insulting. (Since most have actually agreed that it is not exactly like talking to a wall, I think I can validly assume that this is not what people posting believe).
Whether it be due to a PWRG or just a belief that someone/thing may be listening.
I was insulted by the tone of the post (Digory's especially which was just poking fun at the idea that anyone might actually be listening.
I think enough has been said about this post in general. I'm not even exactly sure which post the last line is referring to, but rest assured that I do not poke fun at people for any type of spiritual discipline. Humor, it's my hope, is a way for us to release some of our mutual frustrations with these disciplines. I think enough people appreciated that aspect of my line of posts to show that the offense you took, Evo, may have been misplaced.
Still, apologies if I've insulted you unintentionally.
-Digory
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
So Evi-l, having got all of that cleared up, maybe you could tell us why you assumed that "PK and Martin" don't pray? Enquiring minds, and all that.
Posted by Duo Seraphim (# 256) on
:
Can we get back to the discussion? This page simply reads like sniping and border line personal attack.
And everyone - the guidelines here in Purgatory talk about courtesy in debate. Part of that involves getting screen names right and not mangling them to make a point. The latter borders on personal attack.
Duo Seraphim, Purgatory Host
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
Aplogies DS - I had got confused, and thought this thread was in Hell.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
An apology to me would not go amiss either Wanderer.
Though at least it does clear up one thing, I think someone claimed I had misread the tone of these posts by taking offence, I don't think I did.
Marvin - I'm sorry for getting your name wrong, I was actually getting you confused with Martin who had posted earlier.
To those who have suggested that I accused Marvin and Digory of not praying and such like, I'm sure it's obvious that I never did that. I was reacting to the direct (no exceptions) comparison of prayer to talking to a wall. I think just about everyone here has qualified this with exceptions, I think it's pretty obvious that any such accusation is invalid.
To clarify, I would not suggest that by definition you cannot have a personal relationship with a wall - hence why I took exception to the suggestion.
[Nevertheless, I still liked the wall prayer]
Now, I think I've said enough on this thread - it all seems to have got pretty cold. If my forceful debating style has upset anyone, I'm sorry about that but I would hope I should never resort to name calling.
Love,
Evo1
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Me:
To clarify, I would not suggest that by definition you cannot have a personal relationship with a wall - hence why I took exception to the suggestion.
D'oh,
What I meant was "I would not suggest that by definition you can have a personal relationship with a wall"
Love,
Evo1
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
Evo1, I should not have made fun of your name in Purgatory. I had got confused as to the location of this thread, and therefore I have apologised to the Hosts. I'm not sure what I need to apologise to you for; your recent statement: quote:
To those who have suggested that I accused Marvin and Digory of not praying and such like, I'm sure it's obvious that I never did that.
seems to me to be in clear contradiction to: quote:
Are you really likening prayer to talking to a wall - thats to PK and Martin?
If so, I assume neither of you do engage in prayer.
I am finding it hard to follow your chain of thought when you refuse to stand by your own words. However, I do not want to descend to petty sniping in Purgatory, and I fear I have said too much already.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
Well it was my name you made fun of, but suit yourself.
I don't have anything further to add here, just to say there is a difference between:
"If so, I assume neither of you do engage in prayer."
And
"I assume neither of you do engage in prayer."
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
I apologize for my contributions to the derailing of this thread.
I have started one in Hell to (hopefully) avoid future issues of this kind.
-Digory
Posted by Back-to-Front (# 5638) on
:
I have read all 6 pages of this thread and have lost and then regained the will to live numerous times throughout the experience.
At the end of it all, I have gained a bit of insight into what people are actually talking about when they speak of a "personal relationship with God".
To my knowledge, I have neither Asperger Syndrome nor autism. However, like many here, the language and concept of a personal relationship with God has always been a foreign one, not just in the sense that the concept doesn't fit into my experience of God but that I just could never imagine what people could possibly mean by it. For me, God is eternal, magnificent, omnipotent and transcendent. However, he condescedns and comes to us in worship, in the Sacraments and in our sacramental life in the Church. I wouldn't describe that as a personal relationship, but that doesn't diminish its value.
During my Anglican days, I visited other parishes that used songs much like the one that Nicodemia quoted earlier, and which to me, sounded as though they were describing a sort of "Jesus is My Little Pony" approach to the Faith, which I could never surmount.
Much of what has been said here has made me realise that this is not what everyone means when they talk about a PRWG, and I'm grateful for their patient explanations and for the insight.
However, there are things that others have said which, if I'm honest, have merely served to convince me that this approach is alive and kicking, and that what some people describe as a PRWG is very much along the lines of my perceptions in visiting those other parishes mentioned above. That isn't intended to cause offence but merely as an honest expression of what I perceive is being said and done. I am open to the idea that not everybody experiences God in the same way and I have seen evidence of this. Most of the time, even if I don't share the experience, I can understand it. It is this last step that I find myself unable to make with respect to this particular understanding of a PRWG.
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
Back-to-front, whatever misunderstandings there have been along the way I think we can agree that no two people are identical, we all experience God in different ways, and it is dangerous to insist on any type of experience as being essential for all. At its best this thread has been a useful reminder of diversity.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
I am open to the idea that not everybody experiences God in the same way and I have seen evidence of this. Most of the time, even if I don't share the experience, I can understand it. It is this last step that I find myself unable to make with respect to this particular understanding of a PRWG.
Yup - God is very big and He really seems to like variety. Flowers, insects, birds, humans, how to interact with humans...
Posted by Fauja (# 2054) on
:
I wonder, do we pursue an understanding of Christ in order to become more Christ-like or do we become Christ-like in order to understand Christ more? What is the main purpose of a relationship with God anyway?
Much of this thread so far as been a discussion about what is often meant by the term PRWC/G but I'm sure that most posters are agreed that prayer and an understanding of the person(s) of God are essential whatever terminolgy we prefer to use with regard to how we have some connection with God.
Posted by Back-to-Front (# 5638) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by The Wanderer:
Back-to-front, whatever misunderstandings there have been along the way I think we can agree that no two people are identical, we all experience God in different ways, and it is dangerous to insist on any type of experience as being essential for all. At its best this thread has been a useful reminder of diversity.
Precisely, which is why it's really irritating when people do what soemone did in response to me some time ago. I posted that I don't consider myself to have a "personal relationship with God", and someone quoted me and posted, simply using the smiley.
The arrogance of this was unbelievable.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Back-to-Front:
I posted that I don't consider myself to have a "personal relationship with God", and someone quoted me and posted, simply using the smiley.
The arrogance of this was unbelievable.
Excellent, I shall store that up in my arsenal!
[Oh, I'm only kidding ]
[ 19. November 2005, 15:03: Message edited by: Evo1 ]
Posted by Weed (# 4402) on
:
I am fascinated by the current work on neuroscience and religion. Through the work of people such as Andrew Newberg we now know something of what is happening during the brain during religious experiences and it appears that several different parts of the brain are implicated.
There's a quick introduction to his work on the Questions and Answers page on his website. Even more useful if you have time to listen is a lecture he gave on this area. To see/hear it, go to the Meta-Library, click on Psychology and Neuroscience and then on A Neuropsychological Analysis of Relgious Experience where the audio-visual lecture will load and begin to play.
The significance of such work is that we are talking about people having different experiences not because of wilfulness or personal preference but because their brains work differently. Asperger's Syndrome has already mentioned but it's tempting for those of us who don't have it to think that that's very much an exception. What we see from Dr Newberg's work is that whilst some people may have subjective personal experiences of God, to others liturgy is the way that they make the connection and that that is determined by the way their brain is wired.
This, it seems to me, has enormous implications for the way different groups of Christians regard each other that they haven't even begun to grasp yet, as this thread has shown. It's all very well making statements as to the superiority of one form of experience, whether it is corporate ritual or a PRWG, but if being born with an inclination to one or the other is what determines our experience then the objective superiority that some claim for their own subjective experience may need to be questioned.
I would raise a further issue. Perhaps the reason that church attendance is so low in western Europe at the moment stems from the same neurological roots. Maybe there is only ever going to be a small percentage of the population whose brains are capable of experiencing a PRWG, or who will meet him through ritual, or through meditation or prayer. I have a sneaking suspicion that St Paul's illustrations of the different parts of the body making up a whole, or many gifts but one spirit, need looking at in a new light. Maybe there are some people who will never have a direct experience of the divine because their brains don't work that way and who will only ever connect with God through doing things for other people, and maybe, sheep and goats, that is just as pleasing to God.
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
Is this the idea that religious experience is caused by frontal lobe epilepsy? I don't know much about it, but it's very popular in these parts.
Posted by Weed (# 4402) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by The Wanderer:
Is this the idea that religious experience is caused by frontal lobe epilepsy? I don't know much about it, but it's very popular in these parts.
Could I refer you the Q&A page where he addresses this? I'm only a layperson and if I try to put it into my own words I may well distort what he is saying. If you are concerned that he may be dismissive of religion as some neuroscientists are, he isn't.
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on
:
A thought: is there maybe an underlying assumption in all of this about an essential symmetry on both sides of a "personal relationship"? I get the impression that one of the things that seems to be assumed by both those who accept such a thing and those who reject it is that a "PRWG" is something with a person on both ends - albeit that one of them is the person who happens to be God.
Does a "personal relationship with God" necessarily presuppose a personal relationship with a person who happens to be God? Is it possible to understand a PRWG as being a complete personal engagement on my side of it with the reality (or otherwise) of God as this confronts me - even if it confronts me as a brick wall? Is it possible to have a personal relationship with a brick wall?
I remember going to Center Parks at Sherwood Forest with my family some years ago. We'd expected a quiet country break - which was daft because we lived in the deep countryside, and what we got was hundreds of people enjoying an urban-friendly version of the countryside. But it was good. On the Sunday I went to the small chapel on the site for the service, and went back to sketch it - because something had struck me about it.
It was very plain, with a breeze-block wall behind the communion table and the lectionary. On the wall, there were two sets of symbols - a big crucifix, and lettering: "Trust in my mercy and my love". But as I sat in the almost-silence, and listened to people passing by outside, lots of them presumably there to get away from real worries or difficulties, it occurred to me that actually there were three sets of symbols facing me. There was also the brick wall. And I would guess that that was maybe the most potent symbol of what many people there that weekend, whether they came to worship or not, were actually facing in their lives.
And the point was that that brck wall was interpreted by the lettering - which people in extremis might or might not be able to believe and trust - but there was also the crucifix. And possibly that symbol-set contained enough to engage somebody with the conviction that "Somehow, there's (a) God in all this..."
It seems to me that for someone to encounter this set of symbols and engage with it as potential truth is certainly what I'd call a "personal relationship." And it doesn't involve the potentially stultifying sense of a "person" on the other side. God is much more than that. But it does, perhaps need to evoke a personal response in us, addressed out even into the void, which addresses this different reality at the heart of our reality, as - in Martin Buber's way of putting it - "Thou".
For me, the touchstone of a personal relationship is when it switches from "I-it" to "I-Thou". It doesn't seem to me to necessitate "a person" on the other side of the relationship for this to be able to happen. What is necessary is a sense of being confronted, and of my personal response, couched in the second person.
There are good grounds - Ian Ramsey, sometime Bishop of Durham and but-kickingly fine philosopher arged it in a paper in H H Farmer's Festschrift - for holding that talk of a "perosnal God" grew up in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as part of an attack on Trinitarian thought. Something got us thinking about God as a super-bloke, a super-person; and I never cease to wonder at how starting to talk Trinitarian-ly with a confirmation class shifts them instantly light-years from God-the-bearded-bloke-in-the-sky. Maybe we coud drop the "personal", and concentrate on relationships that don't depend on me on one side talking to somebody like me, but whose job is being God, on the other.
[fixed link code]
[ 19. November 2005, 20:56: Message edited by: John Holding ]
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on
:
God knows why, but I said quote:
breeze-block wall behind the communion table and the lectionary
I meant lectern...
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Fauja:
I wonder, do we pursue an understanding of Christ in order to become more Christ-like or do we become Christ-like in order to understand Christ more? What is the main purpose of a relationship with God anyway?
I think, since we're spending the rest of existence with Him, in His presence, it's good to start the process of knowing Him now. There are some chicken-or-the-egg qualities to much of this discussion, that's for sure!
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
Weed, thank you for posting the Newberg Q&A page - fascinating stuff! There is also work by Daniel Amen (who happens to be a Christian) and specializes in brain research and applications - he's written a lot of books (one I really enjoy has a dreadful name: "Change Your Brain, Change Your Life" - !!! - fascinating book, however).
quote:
Newberg said:
Our research indicates that our only way of comprehending God, asking questions about God, and experiencing God is through the brain. But whether or not God exists "out there" is something that neuroscience cannot answer. For example, if we take a brain image of a person when she is looking at a picture, we will see various parts of the brain being activated, such as the visual cortex. But the brain image cannot tell us whether or not there actually is a picture “out there” or whether the person is creating the picture in her own mind. To a certain degree, we all create our own sense of reality. Getting at what is really real is the tricky part.
Dr. Paul Brand (who co-wrote "Fearfully and Wonderfully Made") is another profound Christian and research physician - much of what we now know about leprosy comes from his many years of work and observation as a medical missionary in India - and in his fabulous book, "Pain - the Gift Nobody Wants" he talks about this curious phenomenon that we "live" in a dark little box at the top of spinal columns... interesting stuff. I think perhaps we need an "Is It All In Your Head?" thread to explore the brain/spirit interface... if I can figure out how to do that, I will!
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Fauja:
I wonder, do we pursue an understanding of Christ in order to become more Christ-like or do we become Christ-like in order to understand Christ more? What is the main purpose of a relationship with God anyway?
Well. I don't claim to have a PRWG. But as a follower of Christ, because I've been mesmerized by the beauty and love of Jesus/God - I both seek to be like Him/Her and to get to discover more of what and who God is. I'm totally curious, when I look at the stars at night, when I think about the processes and phenomenal forces of the universe or even the beauty of entropy and variation in creation - man, I'm like freaking out. It so amazing. From dinosaurs to fluffy bunnies. So, yeah I'm kind of curious as to what kind of Being thought of it and made weird laws like gravity and spun the universe into existence. Also, i find Jesus's teachings to be really profound. Sure I love Zen teachings, too. I also love a lot Chinese philosophy thought. But truly, there's something unique about Christ. I would love to more forgiving like him. I don't think I'll ever "get" God. He's just way too big. I'm not worried by this though. I have my whole life to discover God and learn more about Him and apply his wisdom and love to my life. So, yeah, to answer your question - its both.
[ 20. November 2005, 03:03: Message edited by: Joyfulsoul ]
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on
:
Psyduck, nice rference to that Ian Ramsey essay. I remember reading that years back and saying "yes yes yes - that's why the PRWG language will always fail to resonate for me." I must dig it out again.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Joyfulsoul:
I don't claim to have a PRWG. But as a follower of Christ, because I've been mesmerized by the beauty and love of Jesus/God - I both seek to be like Him/Her and to get to discover more of what and who God is. I'm totally curious, when I look at the stars at night, when I think about the processes and phenomenal forces of the universe or even the beauty of entropy and variation in creation - man, I'm like freaking out. It so amazing. From dinosaurs to fluffy bunnies. So, yeah I'm kind of curious as to what kind of Being thought of it and made weird laws like gravity and spun the universe into existence.
I known a Christian brother who is truly brilliant (I think he holds three doctorates in assorted hard sciences) and, for him, research is worship - you're resonating with some of what I hear from him when he talks about learning more about God by observing the universe - very cool! And my Dad (went home to heaven this past January) was a physicist and a deeply committed Christian and he used to theorize that gravity is love... (science can describe the laws of gravity, but nobody really understands what it IS, or so I'm told). He also used to see evidence of creation in the fact that ice floats... technically, water shouldn't do that and ice ought to be down there at the bottom of the pond, not up on top making a nice skating surface - but this what water does! And if it didn't, life as we know it wouldn't exist on this planet. Hmmm. Lots of personal relationship with God for him in science.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
oh, and I did open a "Is it all in your head?" thread, for those of you interested in the brain stuff...
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
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[tangent]
quote:
He also used to see evidence of creation in the fact that ice floats... technically, water shouldn't do that and ice ought to be down there at the bottom of the pond
Technically, ice should float, and it does. It's intrinsic in the shape and polarity of the water molecule that ice will be less dense than cold water.
[/tangent]
Posted by Teufelchen (# 10158) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
[tangent]
quote:
He also used to see evidence of creation in the fact that ice floats... technically, water shouldn't do that and ice ought to be down there at the bottom of the pond
Technically, ice should float, and it does. It's intrinsic in the shape and polarity of the water molecule that ice will be less dense than cold water.
[/tangent]
Water is densest at 4 degrees C. (As I'm sure you know, Karl.) This 'ice shouldn't float' thing sounds a bit like 'science says bumblebees can't fly'. Science teaches us to make observations. So we observe ice floating, and bumblebees flying, and we say 'Hm. Bit of a problem with any theory that contradicts this, really.'
I observe Christians (including myself) saying they don't experience a personal relationship with Jesus in the usual sense, and other saying they do. So I'd have a problem with any theory that says such a thing is necessary to Christianity, or that belief in it is somehow wrong for Christians.
T.
Posted by corvette (# 9436) on
:
Of course ice floats! it's a concession to polar bears, who can swim, but need a rest now and then. It also ensures your lemonade goes to the bottom of the glass where the straw can reach it.
Apparently if ice sank, the sea would go on freezing as more and more water met the cold polar air. Keeping the warm stuff deeper down and putting the insulation layer (ice) at the top, helps the fish to stay alive in winter. And that's good for the polar bears too.
Ain't creation wonderful?? God obviously has a heart for polar bears
{..after a sermon we had recently about creation, where Tim explained the difference between science which answers why /through what cause/ [the world was created], as against religion which answers why /for what purpose/. }
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Teufelchen:
I observe Christians (including myself) saying they don't experience a personal relationship with Jesus in the usual sense, and other saying they do. So I'd have a problem with any theory that says such a thing is necessary to Christianity, or that belief in it is somehow wrong for Christians.
Excellently put, T. That about sums it up for me, too.
-Digory
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on
:
There are Anglicans who describe a personal relationship not only with Jesus but with some of the saints. I wouldn't doubt it for them, but it's apparently not the way my mind works, any more than I can make myself speak in tongues.
A few days ago for amusement, I took another personality test. Sure enough, it reported that I was an INT (on the Myers-Briggs scale). They usually identify me as INTP, sometimes INTJ. Some tests have their own categories, but whatever is closest to INTP, that's where they put me. We're a fairly skeptical lot with respect for ideas, language, and reasoning. We're also inner-directed and regard suggestibility as a weakness. So if someone starts "sharing" what Jesus told her, I'm tempted to ask, "Did He speak to you in English?" People who describe hearing voices that others around them can't hear are probably mentally ill. But if Jesus doesn't speak in English, how can the person be so certain of the message?
How many adult INTPs remain in ecclesial groups for whom "a personal relationship with Jesus" etc. is a sine qua non? Aren't these groups, in effect, consigning certain personality types to hell?
[ 21. November 2005, 21:20: Message edited by: Alogon ]
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on
:
I'm an INTP - and very I and very P. I find this interesting: quote:
How many adult INTPs remain in ecclesial groups for whom "a personal relationship with Jesus" etc. is a sine qua non? Aren't these groups, in effect, consigning certain personality types to hell?
I'm also very much one of John A T Robinson's "once-born" Christians. I can't remember a time when I wasn't consciously a Christian - not even those six searing weeks in my fourteenth year when I desperately wanted faith, and didn't have it. In the course of my life, I've never come to a relationship with God I didn't have before - other than in a gentle, evolutionary sense. I've never not had a relationship with God that's not engaged a big part of what I am. But I can't describe it as personal in the sense that people on this thread seem to mean, because it isn't a person on the other side of it. It's God.
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on
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Sorry to double-post; I notice that "priests" and "religious leaders" are supposed to be very poorly represented among INTPs. Hmmm.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
[tangent]
Technically, ice should float, and it does. It's intrinsic in the shape and polarity of the water molecule that ice will be less dense than cold water.
[/tangent]
YES, but why? Why does *water* behave that way, have an adiabatic reaction and expand its molecules at a certain temperature? I think the "why does it do that?" question (and lack of an adequate *purely scientific* answer) was what delighted him, in that situation.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Alogon:
...We're also inner-directed and regard suggestibility as a weakness. So if someone starts "sharing" what Jesus told her, I'm tempted to ask, "Did He speak to you in English?" People who describe hearing voices that others around them can't hear are probably mentally ill. But if Jesus doesn't speak in English, how can the person be so certain of the message?
I think this is a really good question - I have known people who have heard an external voice, outside their head. I have known people who hear a specific voice *inside* their head. For myself, it's often a "sense" of something, where I can apply my own words to describe that sense - and then sometimes there will be "corrections" if I'm using the "wrong" word. I don't know if this will make any sense or not(especially to the wall folks-- *sorry!*), but in those situations when I've been "pressed" to use a different word (given a specific word *in Englsh*), that word has proved to be really important in the prayer context.
I'll give an example: praying with a friend in a small prayer group. Family members were recently out to visit and she felt "slimed" and as she explained her prayer request to us, I got the sense that it related to her mother, old mother wounding stuff got stirred up, etc. Now, I've met her mother on a number of occasions and to me she's always been "Mutti" - she's German and that's what my friend calls her mom & that's how she was introduced to me. So time comes to pray and I'm getting this picture in my mind and trying to pray out the picture (see, this is why your "Did He speak to you in English?" question is really good) - the picture is a very thin, spike-like shard of stone material, like a splinter of stone, so I'm describing, "I see a shard, I see a splinter and it's old, there's festering around it..." and the picture keeps coming back new, almost like refreshing a computer page (this is not typical for me), so I keep trying to describe it because I can tell I'm not communicating something important. Finally the picture changes and I see a classic crystal formation with one "finger" longer than the others - so, in describing this new picture, I say, "It's crystal--" and my friend's eyes fly open and she sort of gasps and I look at her, "what?" and she asks, "Do you know my mother's name?" Noooo - "My mother's name is Crystal." So we continued to pray through this area of old pain and wounding - but this just confirmed for all of us that we were on the right track and God was in the prayer. But that's what I mean when I say sometimes I get very specific words - and sometimes the word comes in word-form, and not image-form - but God talks to me a lot in pictures... kinda cool. I like it, once I got used to it and started to "trust" it).
There is definitely a growth and experience component to all this, which perhaps is why some people argue that "anybody can have <this kind> of PRWG" - they remember how it was for them when they started. But I'm not sure that's the case - I think God is too big and enjoys variety (and variations on themes) too much to interact with all of us the same way. Some of it may be a physical brain thing, some of it may be personality (Myers-Briggs has some interesting applications) - and how much of personality is genetic? The whole nature vs. nurture debate enters in. So I figure God is very big and I am very small and it would be pure folly for me to expect Him to interact with all of us the same way. And I really would not want to discourage someone or cause pain to someone by putting an expectation upon them (the implied "what's wrong with you?" question).
I don't mind if people ask questions about what I experience and how I know what I know - but if they start making "she's loony" kinds of responses, I'd be saddened. I have a schizo-affective daughter-in-law and she DOES hear voices that nobody else hears (and it's controlled with medication... *sigh*) - my experience is nothing like hers, even the one or two times I've 'heard' Jesus' voice in my head.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
[tangent]
Technically, ice should float, and it does. It's intrinsic in the shape and polarity of the water molecule that ice will be less dense than cold water.
[/tangent]
YES, but why? Why does *water* behave that way, have an adiabatic reaction and expand its molecules at a certain temperature? I think the "why does it do that?" question (and lack of an adequate *purely scientific* answer) was what delighted him, in that situation.
Because it's a polar molecule, and as the temperature decreases the stability of the hydrogen bonds increases to the point where they form a regular expanded lattice.
I just don't see anything in that that says "Hey, look, there's a God!". There's a perfectly good answer to "why" within physics.
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
I'm a very strong INTJ - which I am sure goes a long way to explain why I don't have a PRWG/J.
Now, if we could just get those touchy-feely types to realise that they may hog most of the spectrum, but there is a little corner that is us, and that's OK by God, then we could all be happy!!!
Sorry, you will have to go back a page to see what I am on about - floating ice pushed in!!!
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
INTP registering in here. What a surprise, eh?
I've changed since last I did it, though. I'm only moderately expressed I, strongly N, and moderate P. I used to be strongly I, and only weakly expressed on the others, which would sometimes vary.
Posted by Teufelchen (# 10158) on
:
Can I stick my head above the parapet and say I don't believe in Myers-Briggs categories? Y'all can put me in a box when I'm dead, but not before.
T.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Feel free. When they're a box, becoming prescriptive rather than descriptive, they're not helpful.
Posted by Astro (# 84) on
:
Having just come back from a communion service I am aware that one of the times when I am most aware of my personal relationship with Christ is when I meet, eat and drink (with) him at his table.
I accept that for some people there is nothing personal about Communion but for me it is very personal.
Posted by Dobbo (# 5850) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
quote:
Originally posted by The Wanderer:
The leap from: "Prayer for me is like talking to a wall" to: "Aha! It's clear you don't pray" is not an obvious one to me.
Same here. Like you, I found this to be not a little condescending and in the "you must have experiences like mine to be a genuine Christian" vein.
Do Orthodox not advocate experiences as well
I am thinking of the idea of experiencing "theoria" (vision of God)
Are these experiences of theoria on a personal level per chance?
I think (as I hear many people pray - as our faces so do our needs) so I do not think God gives everyone the same experience but He meets with us as individuals.
I accept the problem is that it is not Orthodox people that shove their experiences down peoples throats as a requirement to be a "genuine" Christian
Perhaps if we used the term do you have a Personal Experience With/Of God - everyone would be in agreement?
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
Depends on what you mean, I think.
Experience with/of God as a finite event which has happened a certain number of times in the past or present,
or
Experience with/of God that is ongoing as a continual event.
I think the second one is somewhat implied with how people would use it, but it would provide the same problem as PRWG. The first one may be somewhat more acceptable to all, since a belief in God is typically derived from some sort of experience of him (contrary to the belief that it is an intellectual assent made from the collection of convincing facts...).
-Digory
Posted by PerkyEars (# 9577) on
:
I think a lot of people that claim a PRWG are really thinking about discrete events, or periods that have given them a sense of being interacted with over and above talking to a wall. I know other people who have what appears to be a much more consistent awareness of God but wouldn't use the PRWG phrase.
I think I've changed my mind about it during the course of this thread. I started out ready to defend the idea of a PRWG because to me saying the idea was a myth sounded like saying any two-way interaction with God was a myth. Now I'm starting to think it's a cringeworthy phrase that doesn't do justice to the range and subtlety of Christian experience and which alientates more people than it enlightens.
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Teufelchen:
Can I stick my head above the parapet and say I don't believe in Myers-Briggs categories? Y'all can put me in a box when I'm dead, but not before.
T.
That's o.k. You have good company. We INTPs are such a skeptical lot that we're not even sure that there are INTPs.
But my point doesn't really depend on a particular scheme for analysis and classification of personality types, merely in different personality types. The subject has fascinated too many thinkers for too long to be dismisses as a figment of the imagination.
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on
:
Just for the record ...
Another INTP (borderline P/J, which adds no end of confusion) who doesn't get the whole "personal relationship with <enter deity of choice>" thing.
You're right, Myers-Briggs is nonsense. So all these INTx folk saying they don't know what's going on is just a coincidence. Or a conspiracy.
Posted by ken (# 2460) on
:
Its crap. Its crap because there are no distinct personality types. And because their categories are a rather bad taxonomy of the actual variation in personalities. And because its all based on odd tech Jungian ideas of mental development. But its persuasive crap because the potted descriptions look true because they are your own self-descriptions reformatted and sent back to you.
And because everyone likes talking about themselves.
At least us ENFPs do.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Because it's a polar molecule, and as the temperature decreases the stability of the hydrogen bonds increases to the point where they form a regular expanded lattice.
I just don't see anything in that that says "Hey, look, there's a God!". There's a perfectly good answer to "why" within physics.
works for you - but for him, he did see God in it - clearly, "ymmv"
quote:
posted by ken:
Its crap. Its crap because there are no distinct personality types. And because their categories are a rather bad taxonomy of the actual variation in personalities. And because its all based on odd tech Jungian ideas of mental development. But its persuasive crap because the potted descriptions look true because they are your own self-descriptions reformatted and sent back to you.
And because everyone likes talking about themselves.
At least us ENFPs do.
GUFFAWING! *bwahahahahaha* indeed. I've known people who found astrology very helpful (I'm not talking simple sunsigns here, but full on charts) and others who argued against it for the same reasons as above (well, not the Jungian thing) - but I find *astrology* gets lumped into that whole divination thing in the OT, so after being seriously burned I learned to avoid it (I am sometimes slow but I am teachable...). Myers-Briggs, however, isn't divination. Unless you use it to decide who to marry. Or what job to take. or... hmmmm...
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
I dislike Myers Briggs because it end up saying there are 16 types of humans - which isn't nearly subtle enough for the range of people who exist. On that basis astrology is preferable. When done properly it goes beyond the 12 signs of the zodiac and factors in where the sun, moon and planets were at the time and place of your birth. As a system it is far more flexible and less deterministic than dear old MB.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Misuse of MB says there are 16 types of humans. When you factor in the degree to which each preference is expressed, there is a massive spectrum of personality types where one bleeds into another.
Using it as "I am an INTP therefore I can't be a company director" is misuse.
"I am an INTP and therefore I am more likely to work best on my own contributions rather than pushing everything forward as a group" gives a valid basis for discovering how one can be most effective and work in the way that gives least stress - as long as you test that the MB prediction really does work for you - it might not.
I have to disagree with Ken. I've found that the MB type indicator does accurately describe aspects of my personality and way of working which are not directly asked in the questions.
Posted by kempis3 (# 9792) on
:
If this thread was about personal relationship with Christ, it might have got lost a little on the way.
I also do not understand what we mean by having a personal relationship with Christ. It all sounds a bit like an Us-and-Them exercise in non-communication. Dogma I find is not a useful thing in a religious life -- much better is to see who in your church is a loving and accepting person to anyone, especially those the rest of us think as unlovable. Then to say, "I wish I was like that. I will try to be more like that."
Maybe this is similar to having a "personal relationship with Christ" which may be only a piece of jargon.
Posted by whitelaughter (# 10611) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I'm a very strong INTJ - which I am sure goes a long way to explain why I don't have a PRWG/J.
Is my being an INTP supposed to explain why I do?
Good to see fellow NTs bagging the many weaknesses of Myer-Briggs. That said, if you haven't looked at the stuff it's based on (your Primary/Secondary/tertiary/Inferior)I'd recommend doing so - you may still think it's rubbish, but it's more interesting (and more useful) rubbish.
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I'm a very strong INTJ - which I am sure goes a long way to explain why I don't have a PRWG/J.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Is my being an INTP supposed to explain why I do?
Good to see fellow NTs bagging the many weaknesses of Myer-Briggs. That said, if you haven't looked at the stuff it's based on (your Primary/Secondary/tertiary/Inferior)I'd recommend doing so - you may still think it's rubbish, but it's more interesting (and more useful) rubbish.
Whitelaughter - I think its the TJ combination which is supposed to be so "non-feely" and therefore likely NOT to have a PRWJ!
And yes, I have gone into all the nuamces and strengths of the various aspects of MB - fascinating, and I must say, enormously helpful to me at the time I did it.
It may be rubbish (though I don't think so!) but if it is, its very entertaining rubbish!
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on
:
Ken: quote:
But its persuasive crap because the potted descriptions look true because they are your own self-descriptions reformatted and sent back to you.
Hmm. Well, as a diehard Freudian, I don't hold any brief for Jung. But it is an interesting experience to get your own self-description reformatted and sent back to you, not least because it can be very deconstructive of the barriers we usually put between ourselves and - well, our selves...
This: quote:
Its crap because there are no distinct personality types
is intriguing. Care to expand?
Posted by kempis3 (# 9792) on
:
Thank you, St. Sebastian for asking a very important question. What I'm trying to say is that how you behave (kindly) is much better than what you say. What you believe is only valuable if it motivates you to be kindly to all, especially the marginalised.
"Having a relationship with Christ" is meaningless jargon if it comes from a tyrant. On a personal level, I wish I was kindly to all and I will work towards this end.
I've read this thread and it's a pity that we have moved away from St.Sebastian's important question.
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on
:
A noble effort, kempis, but in my experience once the Myers-Briggs lot take over a thread there's no going back.
Shame, really. I was enjoying reading it as well...
Posted by Teufelchen (# 10158) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Because it's a polar molecule, and as the temperature decreases the stability of the hydrogen bonds increases to the point where they form a regular expanded lattice.
I just don't see anything in that that says "Hey, look, there's a God!". There's a perfectly good answer to "why" within physics.
works for you - but for him, he did see God in it - clearly, "ymmv"
To argue a middle ground here, I think Karl is right - there's nothing in the remarkable properties of water to demonstrate that God exists - but as I believe that the whole universe is God's creation, this and many other fascinating and useful aspects of physics and chemistry are expressions of the glory of God. So I can see God at work there. I just don't think the behaviour of water is some kind of neat exception which shows God is giving us a hand up. After all, the Titanic sank because water doesn't have a normal temperature/density profile.
T.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by kempis3:
Thank you, St. Sebastian for asking a very important question. What I'm trying to say is that how you behave (kindly) is much better than what you say. What you believe is only valuable if it motivates you to be kindly to all, especially the marginalised.
"Having a relationship with Christ" is meaningless jargon if it comes from a tyrant. On a personal level, I wish I was kindly to all and I will work towards this end.
I've read this thread and it's a pity that we have moved away from St.Sebastian's important question.
I think the vast majority of the seven pages of this thread stay pretty close to the question. Relatively few people have been as blatant as I am
and come right out and said, "this is what MY personal relationship with Christ looks like" and lots of people have echoed the "huh?" back and then discussed *why* there's a "huh?" and tried to clarify that it isn't deficient Christianity if one doesn't have a sense of a "PRWG." I'll qualify that: it *can be* deficient Christianity because the person isn't putting time into the relationship - just as their work and their marriage would suffer from insufficient time & energy invested - but there ARE people who earnestly seek after God's face and only sense "the wall."
We devolved to ice and Myers Briggs in the last page, and may yet recover~~
I suspect a tyrant who had a "PRWG" would not long remain a tyrant - but I think that would be true of any tyrant who became a committed, practicing Christian - I don't see how the tyrant could remain tyrannical under the influence of Christ.
Posted by Ophelia's Opera Therapist (# 4081) on
:
This was a big issue for me a while back, and I am interested in Myers Briggs (ENFP). However, over the years I have stayed an ENFP (roughly) while my belief in the necessity and accessibility of a personal relationship with God or Christ has changed.
Lutheranchik wrote: (back on p3)
quote:
I think God meets us where we are, and God relates to us in the way that God can best reach us. And that relationship is going to look different for each person.
I'm not convinced by this view. I am sure God could reach me better by other ways. But for some reason he chooses not to do so. It's a mystery, but since it's not just a mystery to me I'm finding some comfort in the way I can be a comfort to others by being real about my struggles.
To sidetrack the thread in another direction, maybe one's idea about the need for a PRWG is related to one's stage of faith, as defined by Fowler and others. Though I still have some trouble with this model as it seems that once I get past my total-confusedness and am at peace with the mystery I may have reached nirvana and/or be clearly superior to other beings.
Hmm.
Very puzzled but still hanging on to some faith,
OOT
Posted by PerkyEars (# 9577) on
:
Fowler's stages of faith
I think Fowler is on to something in regards to people's psychological development. But I don't see what that has to do with people's belief in a PRWG. What stages do you think this might correspond to?
I think it's a mistake to get too hung up on personality types and faith stages and such like in this - as they are all characteristics of us - i.e. only one side of the relationship. The real determining factor in whether we perceive God or not is what God wants to do. He seems to to make himself present to people (in assorted ways, and usually in one encounter or for a brief period) for reasons of His own, and then dissapear just out of sight. Or not appear at all.
I think part of God being 'a person' is that He choses whether He's interacted with or not. As soon as we locate the reasons for people's different experiences 'entirely' in their own makeup, we are downgrading God to a sort of force, that some people are better at picking up on than others.
[ 23. November 2005, 22:36: Message edited by: PerkyEars ]
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Ophelia's Opera Therapist:
Lutheranchik wrote: (back on p3)
quote:
I think God meets us where we are, and God relates to us in the way that God can best reach us. And that relationship is going to look different for each person.
I'm not convinced by this view. I am sure God could reach me better by other ways. But for some reason he chooses not to do so. It's a mystery, but since it's not just a mystery to me I'm finding some comfort in the way I can be a comfort to others by being real about my struggles.
Yes - and then Perky Ears wrote:
quote:
The real determining factor in whether we perceive God or not is what God wants to do. <snip>
I think part of God being 'a person' is that He choses whether He's interacted with or not. As soon as we locate the reasons for people's different experiences 'entirely' in their own makeup, we are downgrading God to a sort of force, that some people are better at picking up on than others.
So yes, there is God's side of the equation (which, by definition, must be bigger than ours, because He's God and we're not) - but then it's easy for people to feel like "second class Christians" because God isn't "choosing" to interact with them, or not the same way as He is with XYZ. I think perhaps it's more of a dance than that. Scripture indicatess "Draw near to Me and I will draw near to you" and I think it speaks of God's unwillingness to overwhelm our sense of self, our very being, and it would be so easy for Him to do that.
It may be that *this* is the only way God can interact with you (OOT) without overwhelming you. We cannot know His reasons, but He must have them.
I wonder if this is one of the errors of our age, this emphasis on "relationship" with God ("it's not religion, it's relationship") and we have mistaken what would have been called "mysticism" in the past as normative today?
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by kempis3:
Thank you, St. Sebastian for asking a very important question. What I'm trying to say is that how you behave (kindly) is much better than what you say. What you believe is only valuable if it motivates you to be kindly to all, especially the marginalised.
"Having a relationship with Christ" is meaningless jargon if it comes from a tyrant. On a personal level, I wish I was kindly to all and I will work towards this end.
I've read this thread and it's a pity that we have moved away from St.Sebastian's important question.
I am having trouble understanding exactly where you've drawn the connection with explaining yourself as having a PRWG/C and then wanting to act kindly to all.
In fact, wouldn't the very idea of a PRWG/C somewhat dictate that I could very well hear him say almost anything to me, even perhaps a command to treat others with contempt, etc? You could say that Jesus wouldn't command that, but who are you to interpret MY personal relationship with him?
And on the other hand, couldn't I desire strongly to act kindly to all because I believe strongly that it is what Jesus taught and what God wants, even if I do not feel any personal connection to them? I want to very much to not jump off of a building because I believe what Newton taught about gravity, but I have no PRWIN.
-Digory
PS Or do I not want to jump because I am thoroughly terrified of being hurt, and really I care nothing for what Newton taught? Interesting side-thought...
Posted by kempis3 (# 9792) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
I am having trouble understanding exactly where you've drawn the connection with explaining yourself as having a PRWG/C and then wanting to act kindly to all.
In fact, wouldn't the very idea of a PRWG/C somewhat dictate that I could very well hear him say almost anything to me, even perhaps a command to treat others with contempt, etc? You could say that Jesus wouldn't command that, but who are you to interpret MY personal relationship with him?
And on the other hand, couldn't I desire strongly to act kindly to all because I believe strongly that it is what Jesus taught and what God wants, even if I do not feel any personal connection to them? I want to very much to not jump off of a building because I believe what Newton taught about gravity, but I have no PRWIN.
There may be no connection. I myself probably have no relationship with Christ and yet I'm trying to work out a better way to lead my life. I'm sure there are many people who have a PRWC and this motivates them to be kind to all -- they are probably lucky to have this encouragement and consolation. I do not have this and yet I wish to lead a more empathetic life -- obviously failing by the look of things.
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on
:
<tangent>
Gosh, there is some veritable nonsense in here about Myers Briggs. Type doesn't define you at all. It simply indicates that you may have some preferences. I prefer E but need reflective time on my own. I have a major preference for N but that doesn't mean I dont appreciate sensing and sensory input. I tend to give preference to values rather than logic, but I use the discipline of logic all the time, as best I can. And I tend, slightly, to be P, preferring flexible lifestyles, but appreciate the need for order. All of us can operate at any point on the scale of the 4 polarities and do.
The MB course I did years ago emphasised that Type isn't a label or a prison, its simply an indicator of certain general tendencies. And if you don't think the Type you came out as reflects your tendencies, either choose another one or bin the whole thing. Some folks (not all) find it helpful as a means of understanding themselves and others and their inter-relationships. My wife and I did. We spent most of the weekend on the course laughing at the way that Type (properly understood) illuminated our rubbing edges. We had a good relationship before, but MB actually helped us to make it better, and be mutually more understanding of our funny little ways.
<end tangent>
Posted by Maher-Shalal-Hash-Baz (# 9228) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
Just for the record ...
Another INTP (borderline P/J, which adds no end of confusion) who doesn't get the whole "personal relationship with <enter deity of choice>" thing.
You're right, Myers-Briggs is nonsense. So all these INTx folk saying they don't know what's going on is just a coincidence. Or a conspiracy.
Well, I'm another strong INT (with borderline J/P). I work as a systems analyst/programmer (and occasional consultant statistician), and majored in philosophy (Kant, Hegel, Marx, Buber - love that German NT culture, much more than the British and American ST culture).
And I confess to sometimes speaking in tongues (although I wouldn't describe it as central to my faith or a big part of my life). And contemplative prayer (as in "infused contemplation" or the "Prayer of Quiet") - which is a more significant feature of my life. I went through stridently fundamentalist Protestant and charismatic phases in my youth and early twenties, and also Anglo-Catholicism, Catholicism (e.g. Jean Vanier came to my fellowship once and mentioned us in one of his books). As a result I developed more ecumenical leanings, and recanted all the fundamentalism (stuff like "Isaiah the book must have been written entirely by the prophet Isaiah", "Job was a real person, not a character in a book of fiction", "The first chapters of Genesis are talking about science", etc - I am sure I once believed all that, but I don't now).
I tend to think of God as more than personal (C S Lewis spelt out this idea once: as a cube is more than a square, so the divine person is more than than the finite person). But God stoops down and becomes personal for our sakes. That gives him a lot of leeway for deciding exactly how to do it, how much, etc.
There are times when I do feel like there has been a very personal ("this is for you") moment between God and me, and other times when it is a long dry haul. Sometimes it may be related to how much (or little) I am putting into the relationship, and other times I suspect God is weaning me off needing so much "consolation" (warm fuzzy times). The point is, INTs aren't all the same.
I don't identify with "revival tent", "deep sighs of repentance" spirituality - nor does much of the emotional displays in charismatic churches attract me (give me solid classic liturgical worship!). I didn't become a Christian because I felt particularly sinful, I became a Christian because I (then an agnostic) felt God's presence (a definite sense of being addressed, and by a voice - not audibly, but felt - which was definitely not me: the Other). So I definitely identify with the mystical and "super-sensory" aspect of Christianity ... while still allowing for some considerable skepticism about "God told me....". I don't find God giving me personal messages everyday, but have found it happening at some major events in my life (e.g. marriage, big career changes).
So, I wouldn't be surpised to hear that many INTs veer to a more philosophical, rational and objective kind of spirituality, but I wouldn't rule out other varieties of spirituality either. Preference, upbringing, opportunity, experiences, luck will all play a role.
Posted by kempis3 (# 9792) on
:
I've been looking up this Myers-Briggs stuff (I was totally ignorant about it) and found that I'm INTJ. I don't think it means much, but most people here seem to be INT if they have difficult with the PRWC -- or perhaps I'm talking nonsense.
An earlier post -- by Alogon, I think -- suggested that some churches were sending some types of personality to Hell. That seemed to make some sense.
Or perhaps my earlier thoughts that trying to lead a more kindly life was a better idea than PRWC/G whatever that means.
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on
:
The M-B test says I'm an INTJ, and I have a personal relationship with God. Go figure. The M-B test might be a reasonable predictor for what kind of church (if any) you might prefer, since it asks all those questions about how you like to deal with people, things and ideas, but God is something else altogether, and I don't see how it can predict how you might like to approach God. From my memory of the questions, I'd say it doesn't seem to try to learn about how people approach the numinous.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
I am an INTP who used to be an INTJ*. I don't recognize myself as having a PRWG. But IMHO, YMMV as to whether a PRWG is possible for an INTP. OTOH, AFAIK, no INTP is really firmly sold on anything. But in the EOC I can both be grounded in something larger than myself, and yet not have to sacrifice my mind on the altar of conformity. Which WFM. YMMV. Not sold separately.
*more doubts and less cocksurety than in my younger days (believe it or not)
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
Posted by kempis3 (# 9792) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
I am an INTP who used to be an INTJ*. I don't recognize myself as having a PRWG. But IMHO, YMMV as to whether a PRWG is possible for an INTP. OTOH, AFAIK, no INTP is really firmly sold on anything. But in the EOC I can both be grounded in something larger than myself, and yet not have to sacrifice my mind on the altar of conformity. Which WFM. YMMV. Not sold separately.
*more doubts and less cocksurety than in my younger days (believe it or not)
I like it!
Biggest laugh of the day!
Laugh 'til I cried!
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on
:
MT, that's priceless!
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
And THAT is why the Ship wouldn't be the Ship without Mousethief. (For me, anyway.) Hahahahaha.
Posted by Caz... (# 3026) on
:
v good MT
Posted by universalist (# 10318) on
:
How can we ever have a loving, feeling, connected relationship with Jesus until we grieve through all our anger for Him? I think that's what all that "weeping and gnashing of teeth" business is: people finally getting in touch with their God-anger, experiencing it and finally coming to "acceptance" that they may experience God in deeper ways.
What anger at God, you ask? That would be our "denial" stage. We also like to "bargain" with God and we feel "depression" over Him as well. After all, we live in a world full of evil and all its awful effects. God is fully sovereign over all, allowed evil to be here in the first place and is therefore ultimately somewhat responsible for it.
Jack Miles (A Crisis in the Life of God) sees the Cross as the answer to our God anger.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
For me, as I've discovered since falling in to the abyss two months ago, I'm afraid there is NO substitute, no alternative, but to grabbing hold of Jesus all too personally. There again, only the sick need Yahweh Rapheka - that doctor.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
This is a copy of a comment I've just made on the Ranking Perversion thread.
Just an hour or so ago I realised for the first time that when we invoke the blood of Christ for our sins, no matter how depraved, how abnormal, paraphilic, sick, how vile and hurtful of others and self to this moment with seared, ashamed, obsessional, looping guilt, the flames still feeding on our still cooking, decomposing mental tissue, fanned by the oxygen of legally CORRECT Satanic accusation, though they be 'repented' of decades ago, He takes FULL responsibility for our sins.
Jesus TAKES our sins upon himself. He bought and paid for our SIN. Our lives without Him are nothing but SIN.
It's as if - and my head reels with this - He did them. Does them. The punishment for ALL sin and ALL of its consequences were meted out FULLY on Jesus, on God, within God by Himself to fulfill His absolute, pure, righteousness.
So how can we possibly NOT have a Personal Relationship With God? The God in Jesus who takes FULL responsibility for OUR sins?
Some sins are more objectively dysfunctional than others, more personally and socially destructive, marring.
Again, He was MARRED more than any other human for those sins and all others. For paedophilia, bestiality and everything 'less'. Some of us have done a LOT less.
I'm going to take the liberty of adding this to the PRWG thread.
So here it is.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
It's as if - and my head reels with this - He did them.
Right on Evo0. I couldn't agree more, and conversely, as if we didn't. - So we appear (and are) washed as white as snow.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
Posted by Gordon Cheng (# 8895) on
:
Hey Martin PC
What a wonderful insight into the nature of the gospel and into God himself.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
Thank you Gordon, I thank God for it, it has been stunning me ever since. It came back anew as I walked back from town just now in the bracing evening air, having just bought Meltdown (Making Sense of a Culture in Crisis) by Marcus Honeysett and been distracted by all sorts. I'd mentioned it to my friend who runs the Christian bookshop. He layered it with a reinforcement of the concept I'd read recently of being found rightfully guilty in court and then the judge pays the fine. In fact He serves the sentence. For all my crimes past, present and future. Hence mercy is a matter of justice.
It came back just now as, 'Come to me all you who are heavy laden and I will give you rest.'.
I have NEVER before felt the sense, the impact of those word of Jesus that way before, that my scarlet sins and their ongoing consequences for others that I can do NOTHING about are His responsibility now.
I have never been so free.
Posted by Gordon Cheng (# 8895) on
:
Well that is wonderful. I have read many of your posts with interest and concern, and prayed for you as well. That is a glorious discovery and release to have experienced.
[Hosts—normally I would PM stuff like this but I don't seem to be able to in Martin's case]
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
Fine by me Gordon - thank you very much. If we can't share each others burdens, testify and praise here in public it would be a sad thing.
Posted by Gordon Cheng (# 8895) on
:
Fair enough Martin. It seems to me that past the Bible's teaching that it is possible to be related to God as sons are related to their Father, the personal testimony of those so convicted is very powerful.
I know that for the most part, I don't reflect a lot one way or another on my personal experience of God because "now we see in a glass darkly, then we shall see face to face" (1 Cor 13:12). But I am always helped when people are kind enough to share their experience with me, and it makes me thankful to God for what he has done for us in Christ.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
So how can we possibly NOT have a Personal Relationship With God? The God in Jesus who takes FULL responsibility for OUR sins?
Well, think of it this way, Martin. What if someone found out that you were in big trouble, and so they paid your bail, paid for your lawyer, and then arranged for the charges against you to be dropped. Perhaps he even took full responsibility for the crimes you had committed. But every time you tried to get in touch with the person, you never could--you never heard back from him, you never could actually see him face to face. You might have one rather lengthy letter sitting at home from him, but you've never really heard his voice.
That's not much of a personal relationship, is it? You'd be incredibly grateful, and you may even give him the benefit of the doubt that he has a good reason for not making himself more visible/audible, etc.
But I doubt you'd consider yourself to have a personal relationship with this person. At least I wouldn't.
I don't see the connection between "taking full responsibility for sins" and a necessary "personal relationship".
-Digory
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
I don't see the connection between "taking full responsibility for sins" and a necessary "personal relationship".
I've not read all of this thread, but as someone who does think of his relationship with God in personal terms I think the "necessary" bit is being blown out of all proportion.
A relationship is as personal as we perceive it to be. In a functional sense it's entirely what our imagination makes it. Our concept of God also is only given form by our imagination, based on the necessarily incomplete information we have about God. If we find that concept expands as Martin seems to have done into freedom from some of the consequences of guilt, that's also part of our personal connection with reality.
So I'm not sure how objecting to the PRWG idea is any different to placing limitations on how someone else should perceive reality.
[ 27. November 2005, 11:21: Message edited by: Dave Marshall ]
Posted by Fauja (# 2054) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
But every time you tried to get in touch with the person, you never could--you never heard back from him, you never could actually see him face to face. You might have one rather lengthy letter sitting at home from him, but you've never really heard his voice.
That's not much of a personal relationship, is it?
I think this statement encapsulates the problems we have when trying to reconcile theory with what is actually happening. Theory tells me that I can have a dramatic experience of God because it's in the Bible. My experience tells me, personally, that I have had an encounter with God that some other people may have doubts about. But the crux of the matter is whether or not I actually am still experiencing that personal relationship with God. It is natural to desire such a relationship if we think it is at all possible but the Scriptures tend to emphasise worship and faith above the actual knowing-God-personally side of religion.
Abraham was considered a friend of God because he believed in spite of improbable odds of anything God said being true. His personal acquantance with God was not measured in terms of how often God spoke to him personally or felt his presence but by the fact that he believed. I think that to truly know God requires that we remain faithful and faith-filled through all those dark days when there seem to be no signs of God other than what the Scriptures say. Hebrews 11 has much to say on the subject of faith.
I can identify with the feeling of being lost and without connection with God all the more because I have experienced what I would call encounters with God. The challenge for me is to rise above subjective feelings and still worship God anyway. Sometimes I pray more to make that connection but I am also learning that the process of engagement requires more than words, it is a discipline of keeping an attitude of prayer and the Church has played a big part in that development.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
Digory - the more I invoke the PRWG - which looks like a design for Tony's belated born-again nuclear energy policy - the more personal it becomes. Yours is a superb analogy and therfore inadequate, just as the analogy that is the concept of a PRWG is. I am a person in relationship with the Persons of God. One of the luckiest people alive. I would love to hear a voice say "You're welcome." the next time I say "Thank you Jesus.", but it will have to wait till after I'm dead. In the mean time I have the undivided attention of my Father, Brother, Advocate, Comforter along with every other Christian. As well as the Family Christmas Letter that keeps being added to by my simply opening it. Now there's a thought ...
Walking and talking (driving and working) with my invisible Friends is the natural intended state of man. Worship. Or I'm a crazed solipsist talking to his imaginary, external, idealized, delusional, repressed, obsessive self.
Bit of both really. It keeps me alive. Hopeful. Saner.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
So once again it comes down to a question of definition. Martin PC Not defines "personal relationship" as "a relationship between persons" and so he thinks he has one with God. Some of us have a stricter definition and therefore don't see that we have one with God.
Is there anything else that can be said on this topic that isn't some variation on one of the two above positions?
Posted by (gracia) (# 1812) on
:
from professorkirke
quote:
Well, think of it this way, Martin. What if someone found out that you were in big trouble, and so they paid your bail, etc,etc...
professor, there is a very clear difference between this scenario, and how God responds,IME.
God waits for us to call on him; he's knocking, but He doesn't open the door all by Himself. We are an active party in the relationship.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
Actually it's worse than that. What we have is a 2000-year old book that SAYS we were in debt and God paid our account. No letters from creditors, nobody knocking the door down looking for payment. It's even less like a personal relationship than the scenario Digory painted.
Posted by Gordon Cheng (# 8895) on
:
All I can say is that I am astonished in the change in tone of Martin PC's posts. Something has happened, and he tells us that what it is for him is a rediscovery (discovery?) of personal relationship with God, through the awareness that his sins have been paid for by the death of Jesus on the cross.
I know this is non-purgatorial, but praise God! Others can theorise, but this morning (Sydney time) I am thanking God for his kindness, yet again.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
It's the biggest Heraclitean loop of re-discovery ever Gordon. Hopefully I've been broken out of stepping in to the same stream twice and more, which is what Heraclitus said one can't do. And he was right. I have re-discovered Jesus, as Malcolm Muggeridge did a generation and more ago, I have discovered that my appalling, truly appalling sins and their appalling ongoing consequences are Jesus' FULL responsibility. Hopefully I'm not looping or in a rogue comet orbit, I've broken free of the surly bonds of earth and I'm reaching out to touch the face of God although my reach exceeds my grasp as yet. You've seen me loop here before, trying to save my life and respond to God's hand upon me at the same time. Well, I couldn't. No one can. And when I crashed and burned, He picked me up. Again. And has lifted my higher than ever. Not very Purgatorial, no, but I'll fail you now Gordon by going to do battle with Ruth over my intemperate remark about Gene Robinson.
And Mousethief, my dear, I think I had moved on from claiming a mere PRWG. It's better than that. My personal relationships are a LOT more problematic.
Posted by Gordon Cheng (# 8895) on
:
Mate, pure poetry. The angels are rejoicing.
Posted by Gordon Cheng (# 8895) on
:
The poem to which Martin alluded...
Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of earth
<snip -copyright? use google >
And, while with silent lifting mind I've trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
Put out my hand and touched the face of God.
John Gillespie Magee, Jr.
[Hosts, once again, apologies for personal discussion, but the PM function for Martin is locked]
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by (gracia):
from professorkirke
quote:
Well, think of it this way, Martin. What if someone found out that you were in big trouble, and so they paid your bail, etc,etc...
professor, there is a very clear difference between this scenario, and how God responds,IME.
God waits for us to call on him; he's knocking, but He doesn't open the door all by Himself. We are an active party in the relationship.
As Mousethief has already somewhat pointed out, the situation is less personal than even the one I'd originally described. God may be waiting for us to call on him, but most of us never hear him knock. We don't know much about our debt except what other various people tell us. We have to trust a lot of things about this person whom we've never communicated directly with.
We are certainly an active party. Some of us feel like we are the only active party.
-Digory
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
I don't see the connection between "taking full responsibility for sins" and a necessary "personal relationship".
I've not read all of this thread, but as someone who does think of his relationship with God in personal terms I think the "necessary" bit is being blown out of all proportion.
No disrespect meant, Dave, but perhaps your confusion comes from not reading all of the thread.
My use of the word "necessary" was meant to allude to a necessary following from the previous proposition. It could have been reworded like this:
I don't see why a "personal relationship" necessarily follows from the fact that someone has "taken full responsibility for my sins".
Hope that makes more sense.
-Digory
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
Who's "We" Digory? I know my debt. Just the gut slicing edge of it I must admit. But I know it.
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
I don't see why a "personal relationship" necessarily follows from the fact that someone has "taken full responsibility for my sins".
Thanks for restating this, but I think my point is still valid.
You seem to be thinking that a PRWG must involve something like hearing voices. I'm suggesting that "personal" is broader than that, that the psychological processes we use to manage our relationships are (for some of us anyway) more flexible. In particular, inputs and outputs for those processes don't have to be limited to the ones we normally use for our inter-human-person relationships.
I am not a psychologist or anything like, but how we imagine our relationship with God has to be an individual thing. So if you think of it as a creator/created thing and separate out how you receive information from God (Bible, human love, beauty in nature, for example) from the relationship itself, that's one way of seeing it. If I include the same information as simply another relationship input, the end result is the same. It seems to me this is only a different way of thinking about what's going on in our heads.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
Who's "We" Digory? I know my debt. Just the gut slicing edge of it I must admit. But I know it.
I said, "God may be waiting for us to call on him, but most of us never hear him knock. We don't know much about our debt except what other various people tell us."
Now that I think about it, "most of us" was probably an inappropriate choice of phrases. But I did mean to refer to only those people who have expressed any rejection of the idea of a personal relationship with God here on this thread and in "real life" as I have met them.
"Some of us" would have worked better.
-Digory
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
But Dave, if we wouldn't consider the "input" as a personal relationship with another human being, why should we consider it a personal relationship when it's from God? Aren't we then just twisting the meaning of that phrase beyond what it is able to bear?
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
I don't see why a "personal relationship" necessarily follows from the fact that someone has "taken full responsibility for my sins".
Thanks for restating this, but I think my point is still valid.
You seem to be thinking that a PRWG must involve something like hearing voices. I'm suggesting that "personal" is broader than that, that the psychological processes we use to manage our relationships are (for some of us anyway) more flexible. In particular, inputs and outputs for those processes don't have to be limited to the ones we normally use for our inter-human-person relationships.
I am not a psychologist or anything like, but how we imagine our relationship with God has to be an individual thing. So if you think of it as a creator/created thing and separate out how you receive information from God (Bible, human love, beauty in nature, for example) from the relationship itself, that's one way of seeing it. If I include the same information as simply another relationship input, the end result is the same. It seems to me this is only a different way of thinking about what's going on in our heads.
I agree completely (I think). The overwhelming point first made by Karl LBS and later picked up by myself was that you may in fact call your relationship with God quite personal, while I may refer to mine as not so personal. Because I may believe that Jesus has taken full responsibility for my sins would not necessarily mean that I must believe that I have a relationship with Jesus, or that this relationship is personal by my own understanding of what a personal relationship is.
-Digory
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
But Dave, if we wouldn't consider the "input" as a personal relationship with another human being, why should we consider it a personal relationship when it's from God?
Because I think, in with all the rest of his attributes, God has something of the personal that is some sense the same as the personal we connect to in other people. So I'd say, why not call a relationship with God personal, if that's how we think of it.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
Because God never seems to connect back, whereas the other people I interact with do? If I have a relationship with another human being that is entirely in my imagination, that's not a personal relationship. At best it is delusion; at worst it is stalking.
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
It would be interesting to hear your take on the Narnia thread here in purg...
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
I thought I'd already given my take on that thread, but I'll go look.
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on
:
MT's observation about stalking is stimulating. It's dangerous to overestimate our perception of our own thought processes. I remember a vicar friend of mine, having to deliver a sermon without preparation in the post Easter-period (the curate was taken ill on the Sunday morning). It was in the David Jenkins "conjuring trick with bones" era.
He came up with this little gem. "There is a lot of chatter amongst Christians today about the exact manner and nature of the resurrection of Jesus. That is all very interesting I suppose. But a more profound question occurs to me. We proclaim in this season that Jesus is alive today. In what ways do we find that to be true for us?"
My personal answer is that there are external stimuli and internal resonances. In the natural world, in relationships with other people, in the sacred texts, in times of worship. Things which help us "relate" to the Numinous. And everyone has a different story to tell - when we share them we find similarities and differences.
The reason why I liked the stalking comment is that there is a sense in which I believe the Holy Spirit is the "stalker" and the journey of faith is as much a matter of God seeking a people as it is people seeking for God.
Perhaps the language of personal relationship gets in the way of the fact that there is actually a good deal of personal relating going on? There is a tension between the Eternal Almighty and the Abba Father. I guess we relate personally to God somewhere on the line between the two. God dwells in light inaccessible, hid from our eyes (distant) and is also present (closely) in the Body of Christ. He is also an indwelling Spirit. It is hard for me to see how God can be Immanent without in some way being personal. But that's just my take. When I pray I am sure Someone is both "listening" and "speaking". But I'm often hard of "hearing".
<spelling>
[ 28. November 2005, 09:04: Message edited by: Barnabas62 ]
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
Walking and talking (driving and working) with my invisible Friends is the natural intended state of man. Worship.
I once realized that part of why we, in our brokenness, so consistently fall into co-dependent relationships with other people is because God built us to be dependent upon HIM, but it's easier to substitute in someone we can see and touch and hear more easily...
quote:
Professor Kirke wrote:
As Mousethief has already somewhat pointed out, the situation is less personal than even the one I'd originally described. God may be waiting for us to call on him, but most of us never hear him knock. We don't know much about our debt except what other various people tell us. We have to trust a lot of things about this person whom we've never communicated directly with.
We are certainly an active party. Some of us feel like we are the only active party.
The image I get is a bunch of little kids at a party and some have stuffed cake in their ears and some are crying and a few have been boxed about the head and shoulders or suffered so many ear infections that their hearing is damaged through no fault of their own, and there are some running around playing cops & robbers and shrieking, and a few little girls having a tea-party with their dolls and a little kid sitting near the door who realizes his mum is knocking and finally calling his name, so he gets up opens the door.
How come he gets a face-to-face relationship with his mother? A whole series of factors: 1. he wanted it, 2. his mother told him she'd be back to get him and he was expecting her, 3. he didn't stuff cake in his ears, 4. he doesn't have a congenital hearing problem, 5. he hasn't had injuries or illnesses which caused hearing problems, 6. he hasn't been running around and playing so hard that he forget to listen, 7. he wasn't satisfied with having a tea party, playing cops & robbers, etc.
Some of those are entirely out of the control of the child; some of those are personal choices; some of them are inclinations of individual nature. There are any number of reasons and combinations of reaons why this one kid wound up opening the door to his mother and not the others but, in this illustration at least, his listening coincided with her presence at the door. "Seek the Lord while He may be found" implies that He is not always equally or consistently findable.
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
Because God never seems to connect back...
And there's me thinking that my whole experience of life is God talking back.
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
Because God never seems to connect back...
And there's me thinking that my whole experience of life is God talking back.
For you it may well be. That experience is nowhere near universal, though, and I doubt that MT meant to imply that it is...
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martin:
For you it may well be. That experience is nowhere near universal, though, and I doubt that MT meant to imply that it is...
No, I didn't think he was. I only meant to clarify why a personal relationship with God makes sense to me.
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on
:
Damn your goggly eyes, Digory, but there's nowt wrong wi' yer 'most of us', it's yer 'we'. But there again, yer 'we' = 'most of us' logically and isn't a universal 'we' including me, I just dimmly realize.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
Damn your goggly eyes, Digory, but there's nowt wrong wi' yer 'most of us', it's yer 'we'. But there again, yer 'we' = 'most of us' logically and isn't a universal 'we' including me, I just dimmly realize.
Antecedent, Martin. We referred to the "most of us" that I'd already described, and have since modified to "some of us." It was never meant to refer to "all of us." Don't get all "evo1ish" on me, now.
-Digory
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
How come he gets a face-to-face relationship with his mother? A whole series of factors: 1. he wanted it, 2. his mother told him she'd be back to get him and he was expecting her, 3. he didn't stuff cake in his ears, 4. he doesn't have a congenital hearing problem, 5. he hasn't had injuries or illnesses which caused hearing problems, 6. he hasn't been running around and playing so hard that he forget to listen, 7. he wasn't satisfied with having a tea party, playing cops & robbers, etc.
This is a great illustration, Lynn, and I've been thinking about it a lot. Large scope. Good stuff.
I think that all of your reasons can't really be looked at as the fault of the child. Any mother who drops his kid off at a party yet doesn't expect him/her to play, shove some cake in his ears, get lost in a game or two, etc. is fooling herself. Those kids all make it home from their parties, too.
I mean, can you see the newspaper article?
____________________________________________________
LOCAL BOY'S 4th BIRTHDAY PARTY ENDS IN TRAGEDY
Newly 4-year old Jimmy Jenkins' birthday party ended in the late afternoon on Saturday, but with a twist few could have expected.
Several of the children had managed to jam a fair amount of cake in their ears, others were sick with ear infections, and still others were "playing much too hard to hear properly," said one mother who remained anonymous.
The mothers arrived to pick up their children at precisely 2:30 pm, and waited on the porch while knocking lightly on the door. After two hours of knocking with no response, the mothers left confused and returned to their homes.
After the mothers had left, the children left at the party were dragged to the basement, where they are being kept for all of eternity. There, they will be tortured with no chance of ever seeing their mothers again.
One child, Lisa Loland, happened to be sitting near the door at the time of her mother's arrival, and managed to make her way home after the party.
"The other mothers were knocking clearly," said Mrs. Loland. "It's a shame the children didn't hear them knock, but they really have no excuse. The mothers gave them a chance to come home."
"I'm not sure why my child didn't come to the door," asks one of the unlucky mothers. "I know he has a hearing impairment and can't hear, but I wrote him a note when he was 1 year old and stuck it in his dresser drawer, telling him that whenever he's at a party he should listen because I will come for him. I don't know why he didn't remember."
_________________________________________________
If this is the case, then, wouldn't we expect a personal, caring God to burst through the doors of the house and make himself known in some other way if we do not hear him knocking at the door? Perhaps this is not how your view of God works, but then I have trouble thinking of him as being "personal" or indeed "caring."
-Digory
PS Sorry for the lonnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnng post.
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
Basically this thread is like this:
1: Wahoo, me n' Jesus are buddies! Everyone should be buddies with Jesus and have sleepovers!
2: I'm not buddies with Jesus. You must be making that up.
1: No, really. I'm not making that up. There must be something wrong with you. Why don't you luuurve Jesus the way I do?
2: Huh? Are you on crack or are you deaf? I don't relate to Jesus like he's my buddy. What don't you understand about that?
1: Ah. I get it now. You've clearly been traumatised in your past relationships and so have a defunct image of God that doesn't allow you to have warm feelings and closeness like me <sigh> (I know I'm special 'cause Jesus loooves me so).
2: Why are you psycho-analysing me? Don't you know I have XXXX personality type that flies in the face of your analysis? See, I don't feel close to God.
1: Aha, now I really get it this time. It is because you don't hear him knocking on the door of heart. Quiet now...shhh...wait for it...wait for it...see? Can't you hear him knocking just waiting to be close to you?
2: So, now its my fault I can't hear him. Who made me deaf in the first place, huh? What type of God is this? Clearly you are wrong.
1: .....
2: .....
[And the conversation goes on ad naseum ... will Harry and Janice ever be re-united? Will this conversation ever reach some sort of reconciliation? Stay tune...]
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
You forgot about the part where Person 2 tells a hilarious story about children at a party.
I mean, ridiculously hilarious.
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
Well, I'm not perfect you know. It's hard to edit 8 long pages into a few sentences. I gave it my best effort. Not that your news article wasn't absolutely hilarious andclever, though.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
Don't beat yourself up about it. We all make mistakes.
-Digory
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on
:
Not all of us are absolute freaking geniuses, though, and on that note, Joyfulsoul, you just made my list of Important People To Watch.
[ 29. November 2005, 03:48: Message edited by: Kelly Alves ]
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
"I'm not sure why my child didn't come to the door," asks one of the unlucky mothers. "I know he has a hearing impairment and can't hear, but I wrote him a note when he was 1 year old and stuck it in his dresser drawer, telling him that whenever he's at a party he should listen because I will come for him. I don't know why he didn't remember."
I haven't laughed this hard for a week - very good! I'm not actually trying to come up with an equivalence - I don't think there IS an equivalence. But various angles from which to view the conundrum. At the end of the day, I do not have *any* answer as to why God deigns to allow me to have a "personal relationship" with Him - I just know He does. I don't think it makes me any "better" than anybody else and I don't attribute it to anything that other people don't also report doing (i.e., being accessible, spending time in the Bible, in prayer, in worship, listening) - the only thing that *might* apply, which marks the "kicking into high gear" point in this relationship, was my state of profound brokenness - but it's not something you can work yourself into (and you wouldn't want to, if you could--). I dunno, maybe God literally took pity on me, in my pain.
To follow the analogy (as flawed and ridiculous as it is), when the child doesn't respond to the knock at the door, the mom walks up the garden path and knocks on the window and the hostess says, "ah, Sue! you're here to pick up little Billy!" and the outcome is very different than the being tormented for eternity in the basement. Likewise, none of the people in this discussion are going to hell for not having what they would call a "personal" relationship with Christ; they're following Jesus the best they are able, even though it sometimes feels like a wall, and exercising tremendous faith, imho (the little boy whose mother is last to arrive and collect him may get nervous but rarely does he stop believing his mother will, in fact, come). Like the beggar Lazarus, at their death the angels will come and escort them to meet this Jesus, finally making the relationshp truly personal in heaven.
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
Kelly Aves, you make me blush. And you were always on my Important People to Watch list.
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
Joyfulsoul and ProfK - thank you!!!
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
...they're following Jesus the best they are able, even though it sometimes feels like a wall, and exercising tremendous faith, imho (the little boy whose mother is last to arrive and collect him may get nervous but rarely does he stop believing his mother will, in fact, come). Like the beggar Lazarus, at their death the angels will come and escort them to meet this Jesus, finally making the relationshp truly personal in heaven.
AMEN! Excellently said.
-Digory
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
I wondered, Digory, when you wrote your newspaper article, did you maybe have compartment rupture between this topic and "God allowing hell" topic? I don't think anybody had raised the possibility of hell as the result of lacking a PRWG until the basement... ?? Just wondering...
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
I wondered, Digory, when you wrote your newspaper article, did you maybe have compartment rupture between this topic and "God allowing hell" topic? I don't think anybody had raised the possibility of hell as the result of lacking a PRWG until the basement... ?? Just wondering...
Yes, I think sometimes the threads run together in my mind...
But I do think there are many here that believe that if you NEVER achieve a PRWG, that you've never fully been saved. Otherwise, they wouldn't nag so hard about how important it is. (Not you, of course, Lynn... )
-Digory
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
Yes, I think sometimes the threads run together in my mind...
But I do think there are many here that believe that if you NEVER achieve a PRWG, that you've never fully been saved. Otherwise, they wouldn't nag so hard about how important it is. (Not you, of course, Lynn... )
I hope I'm not nagging! I'm sharing my own experience and trying to understand something which is *hard* for me to understand (it would be much easier if I could say, "ah, THOSE people are deficient in some way!" - but I have learned through the years that is not the case)... on the other hand, I do know that my "tone" is often misunderstood. I'm intense, but playful. Kind of like an enormous puppy...
Posted by Gill H (# 68) on
:
I've stayed off this thread because I don't have a problem with the PRWG as a concept - it's one I can relate to. But I do get very annoyed with the evangellymould idea of salvation that often goes along with it.
At a church meeting last night, we were told to give each other our testimonies. Now, there was a lot of talk about how each one is individual, and how your story is unique, etc etc. But we were told the heart of the message is the difference that Jesus has made to your life.
Well, I don't have a standard before/after testimony. I've always known God was there. I've always known He loved me (in the same way as I know my parents love me - not just intellectual consent but heart knowledge). My life has been a long, gradual process of learning more of God. So the 'difference' concept is irrelevant to me. You might as well ask me what difference being female/Welsh/left-handed has made to my life. I could talk about what being any of those things means to me. I could talk about the impact those things have on my life. But 'difference' just doesn't compute.
The well-meaning person next to me said I needed more about the 'difference' aspect in my testimony - that it didn't stress how I felt forgiven, cleansed, etc. Well, that's why it's my testimony and not yours, sorry. If those things had felt major aspects of my story, I'd have put them in.
We finished up with a 'bridge to life' four-step 'come to Jesus' thingy. It was stressed that it isn't a formula, and it's just one way of looking at things. So far, so good. But I realised that, though they may be helpful for many, such things are deeply painful for me. Since the age of 11, friends have been using them to beat me over the head (in love, of course) and say that 'if you haven't done this, you're probably not a Christian'.
So, though I'm still happy to count myself a hand-raising, Jesus-cuddling charismatic with a PRWG, I hope you don't mind if I sit with you guys for a while.
It's no wonder us Elder Brothers get a bit snarky sometimes, when those who are recovering from the Pigswill Diet think theirs is the only way.
(Yes, I confess, I was thinking of the SoF Quotes File thread when I wrote that last sentence. Well, either that, or I was channelling Martin ...)
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
There are one or two here who have come very close to saying "If you haven't had a PRWJ then you are not saved, or not a 'proper' Christian".
But I have had that said to me IRL. Several times. And it hurts, offends and everything else you can think of.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
Yes, I think sometimes the threads run together in my mind...
But I do think there are many here that believe that if you NEVER achieve a PRWG, that you've never fully been saved. Otherwise, they wouldn't nag so hard about how important it is. (Not you, of course, Lynn... )
I hope I'm not nagging!
No no no I honestly meant "not you"! I realize now that it probably sounded sarcastic, but it wasn't. You go to great lengths to make sure you're not misunderstood as being nasty. You're all good.
-Digory
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Gill H:
So, though I'm still happy to count myself a hand-raising, Jesus-cuddling charismatic with a PRWG, I hope you don't mind if I sit with you guys for a while.
Hey, we're all in this together. That's what can be so great about it. (And it's why I don't think is Rook is all right when he rants about the completely negative effects of religion, either...)
Thanks for sharing, Gill.
-Digory
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
There are one or two here who have come very close to saying "If you haven't had a PRWJ then you are not saved, or not a 'proper' Christian".
But I have had that said to me IRL. Several times. And it hurts, offends and everything else you can think of.
Nicodemia, you are totally right that such statements hurt and offend - like watching a violent movie where they shoot someone and then *press* on the wound to get the person to talk - ugh. Not okay. I don't know if I'm oblivious (sometimes I am) to the comments made that implied as much, but I'd like to assure you I do not believe it for a moment, and if I have in any way erroneously expressed such a p.o.v., that was wrong and I apologize. As for the IRL stuff, it's kind of scary how much we can hurt other and still "mean well"...
Gill, yup. One-size-fits-all Christianity. In my early twenties as I got serious about my faith, I also got VERY offended by the "Let's put God in THIS box!" lopping off all the bits that don't fit approach to Christianity... grrrrrr. I am more tolerant now because I recognize the limitations under which such people operate - but yeah, it still bugs me (and I'll nag them, given the chance!).
And thanks for reassuring me, Digory (!!) - I'm not "all good" by any means but, like the puppy, the big messes I make are unintentional...
Posted by Janine (# 3337) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
There are one or two here who have come very close to saying "If you haven't had a PRWJ then you are not saved, or not a 'proper' Christian".
But I have had that said to me IRL. Several times. And it hurts, offends and everything else you can think of.
If you are "saved" -- redeemed, reconciled with God, however you want to put it -- you do have a very personal relationship indeed with the Christ.
As for being a "proper" Christian, ya ought to get folks who say the stuff that hurts you to define their terms and state exactly how the good terms apply to them.
The discussion might help them figure out what they really mean, and either stop sounding self-righteous or stop being self-righteous, whichever applies.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Janine:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
There are one or two here who have come very close to saying "If you haven't had a PRWJ then you are not saved, or not a 'proper' Christian".
But I have had that said to me IRL. Several times. And it hurts, offends and everything else you can think of.
If you are "saved" -- redeemed, reconciled with God, however you want to put it -- you do have a very personal relationship indeed with the Christ.
No I do not. But we're back where we started, aren't we?
I have a PRWJ when He:
Meets me down the pub
Talks to me
Plays RPGs with me
Jams with me on His bass guitar
Makes me dinner
Sleeps with me (scratch that one; I'm straight)
Get the picture. These are the sort of things that make a personal relationship.
Posted by Janine (# 3337) on
:
Geez, He bled blood for you. I'm so sorry that ain't personal enough.
Posted by PerkyEars (# 9577) on
:
quote:
Plays RPGs with me
He'd be an interesting GM.
Posted by Teufelchen (# 10158) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by PerkyEars:
quote:
Plays RPGs with me
He'd be an interesting GM.
It'd have to be Amber or something. He doesn't play dice.
T.
Posted by PerkyEars (# 9577) on
:
quote:
It'd have to be Amber or something. He doesn't play dice.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
It's the biggest Heraclitean loop of re-discovery ever Gordon. Hopefully I've been broken out of stepping in to the same stream twice and more, which is what Heraclitus said one can't do. And he was right. I have re-discovered Jesus, as Malcolm Muggeridge did a generation and more ago, I have discovered that my appalling, truly appalling sins and their appalling ongoing consequences are Jesus' FULL responsibility.
I'll join Gordon in unpurgatorial praises too.
Freedom makes you feel so free eh Martin,
Sounds like this thread may have achieved something after all
Warmest Regards,
Evo1
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Janine:
Geez, He bled blood for you. I'm so sorry that ain't personal enough.
It's the relationship bit that doesn't seem personal. But we're working on different definitions again, aren't we?
Let's put it this way. One of the most noticeable features of people I have personal relationships with is that I have interactions with them that put their objective existence beyond any reasonable doubt. I do not have such interactions with God.
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Let's put it this way. One of the most noticeable features of people I have personal relationships with is that I have interactions with them that put their objective existence beyond any reasonable doubt. I do not have such interactions with God.
The thing is, you seem to be saying that you are offended by people saying you need a PRWJ because of the way you define PR.
I think if you listen carefully to what Janine, for example says about what she thinks a PRWJ looks like you'd be less offended.
I think you need a PRWG to be a Christian. Unashamedly. Entrusting your eternity to someone constitutes both personal and a relationship. However, I am not for one minute saying that a PR with the divine Trinity works exactly like those with non infinite physical beings. People who do that, frankly scare me.
(I never had personal relationships with the people I played RPGs with. that really would have been a frightening thought)
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
No, I know exactly what Janine's getting at. What bugs me is her effectively insisting that I go by her definition and say I've got a PRWJ. My life, my definitions.
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
What bugs me is her effectively insisting that I go by her definition and say I've got a PRWJ.
And her apparent inability to see that other people have different definitions from her.
[order word]
[ 01. December 2005, 14:35: Message edited by: Mousethief ]
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on
:
Lep, with regard to this: quote:
I think you need a PRWG to be a Christian. Unashamedly. Entrusting your eternity to someone constitutes both personal and a relationship. However, I am not for one minute saying that a PR with the divine Trinity works exactly like those with non infinite physical beings. People who do that, frankly scare me.
I have concerns about the way we are phrasing things here. Let me put it this way, I have a PRWG which is recognisable as such, and would be recognisable as such by you, since you also have such a PRWG. We can chat to each other on such terms, and there is little room fo confusion. What we mean by that, when we are chatting to each other, is neither a relationship which is indistinguishable from the type of relationship which I could have with a finite creature, nor is it a relationship which can be encompassed by quote:
Entrusting your eternity to someone constitutes both personal and a relationship
. This phrasing seems to me to take no account of interaction, which I think we would both consider to be an important part of our PRWG. The point that Karl et al are making (not wanting to put words in their mouth) is that this type of relationship is not within their experience, to the extent that the language is not useful to them at all. Yet clearly they are Christians, probably much better ones than me. Would it not be better, then, to jettison the language, which isn't particularly biblical anyway, much as evangelicalism has, on the whole, jettisoned the much more scriptural "born-again"; because it has become so tainted in popular useage that it now confuses rather than clarifies. Because if you don't, it is highly likely that a considerable number of your brothers and sisters will follow the line of argument that goes
1) Lep says that I must have a PRWG to be a Christian.
2) I don't have anything that I could meaningfully call a PRWJ (ie my faith isn't that experiential)
3) Therefore, Lep thinks I'm not a Christian.
Now clearly they would be wrong in making that third deduction, but it would hardly be an accusation conjoured out of thin air.
That isn't to say that I haven't used such language in the past, as it's an easy shorthand to stress the difference between someone who is a Christian through committment to the person of Christ, and someone who may have been born in a "Christian" country, but who cares nothing for the things of God. However, this thread has convinced me that it's not a term I should really be using.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
Thanks, Jolly. You, as usual, voiced almost everything I wanted to say but in a much better and more gracious manner.
-Digory
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
I think you need a PRWG to be a Christian.
<snip>
(I never had personal relationships with the people I played RPGs with. that really would have been a frightening thought)
Hey Lep, I think you need a personal relationship with a person to play an RPG with them. I think you did have personal relationships with them, in fact. Otherwise, you've never really played an RPG.
See the twist?
-Digory
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Janine:
Geez, He bled blood for you. I'm so sorry that ain't personal enough.
Soldiers bleed blood for others, but that doesn't create any personal relationships. Nice try, though.
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
That isn't to say that I haven't used such language in the past, as it's an easy shorthand to stress the difference between someone who is a Christian through committment to the person of Christ, and someone who may have been born in a "Christian" country, but who cares nothing for the things of God. However, this thread has convinced me that it's not a term I should really be using.
I really don't understand this.
As it happens, PRWG, is not a phrase I use much. "Know God for yourself" is one I am much more likely to use.
Furthermore, I am perfectly happy for people not to use it. I think I said that a couple of pages ago.
What I am against is those who don't wish to use it saying that it shouldn't be used at all because what they experience with God doesn't feel like their other personal relationships. Fine. Don't desribe the Christian faith in that way if you wish not to. Like I said, it is no biggy to me.
But objectively speaking, Christianity is both personal and relational. So I am perfectly happy to bear with those who like the phrase. I don't see any earthly reason why anyone should have a problem with someone saying "as I understand it, you have a personal relationship with God."
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
quote:
I don't see any earthly reason why anyone should have a problem with someone saying "as I understand it, you have a personal relationship with God."
Oh, *I* can, Lep! Because you are judging me from your point of view. And we are not communicating. You may *think* what you like about my relationship with God, but if you are going to talk about it with me, then we must be using the same meaning for the same terms. Otherwise we are in an Alice in Wonderland situation, each person having an individual meaning for their words.
Come to think about it, maybe that is what all the trouble in the Christian world is about!!
Relationship - yes. Personal, no, no, a thousand times no!
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
But objectively speaking, Christianity is both personal and relational. So I am perfectly happy to bear with those who like the phrase. I don't see any earthly reason why anyone should have a problem with someone saying "as I understand it, you have a personal relationship with God."
I have a problem with it. It's like telling someone who believes her husband doesn't love her, "Of course your husband loves you. He comes home every night. He doesn't drink too much. He pays his share of the bills. He even sends you flowers on Valentine's day. That's what it means for a husband to love his wife. How could you possibly think your husband doesn't love you?"
And maybe her husband does still love her, and she just can't see it. Or maybe she's right and he doesn't. Neither one is the point. The point is that it is rude beyond words for someone else to tell her that she has a loving relationship with her husband when she doesn't feel that way about it. It is a mind-boggling level of presumption. The simple fact is, it's her relationship, not yours. She's the only one who can say whether it is a loving relationship or not.
Likewise, it is mind-bogglingly presumptuous to tell someone "you have a personal relationship with Christ" when that person doesn't see it that way. And it is hurtful and harmful to say that one must have a PRWJ to be a Christian -- there is nothing in Scripture or Tradition that would support that assertion, and much in the life of Christians that I know to show it to be false.
To say "one must have a PRWG to be a Christian" and then to assert that you are not saying that those who feel that their relationship with God is not personal are not Christians, because, of course, you know that they really do have a PRWG, even if they don't see it, honestly doesn't make things any better. How could it?
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
That isn't to say that I haven't used such language in the past, as it's an easy shorthand to stress the difference between someone who is a Christian through committment to the person of Christ, and someone who may have been born in a "Christian" country, but who cares nothing for the things of God. However, this thread has convinced me that it's not a term I should really be using.
I really don't understand this.
As it happens, PRWG, is not a phrase I use much. "Know God for yourself" is one I am much more likely to use.
I'm still out. I don't know God. I know a series of propositions about Him, and have particular feelings about Him, but I do not know Him any more than I know the Archbishop of Canterbury.
I remember CU missions years ago handing out these daft "Knowing God Personally" tracts thinking "What am I doing? I don't know God personally myself!". The sense of inadequacy and sub-Christianity took years to no longer give a shit about.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
But objectively speaking, Christianity is both personal and relational. So I am perfectly happy to bear with those who like the phrase. I don't see any earthly reason why anyone should have a problem with someone saying "as I understand it, you have a personal relationship with God."
I have a problem with it. It's like telling someone who believes her husband doesn't love her, "Of course your husband loves you. He comes home every night. He doesn't drink too much. He pays his share of the bills. He even sends you flowers on Valentine's day. That's what it means for a husband to love his wife. How could you possibly think your husband doesn't love you?"
And maybe her husband does still love her, and she just can't see it. Or maybe she's right and he doesn't. Neither one is the point. The point is that it is rude beyond words for someone else to tell her that she has a loving relationship with her husband when she doesn't feel that way about it. It is a mind-boggling level of presumption. The simple fact is, it's her relationship, not yours. She's the only one who can say whether it is a loving relationship or not.
Likewise, it is mind-bogglingly presumptuous to tell someone "you have a personal relationship with Christ" when that person doesn't see it that way. And it is hurtful and harmful to say that one must have a PRWJ to be a Christian -- there is nothing in Scripture or Tradition that would support that assertion, and much in the life of Christians that I know to show it to be false.
To say "one must have a PRWG to be a Christian" and then to assert that you are not saying that those who feel that their relationship with God is not personal are not Christians, because, of course, you know that they really do have a PRWG, even if they don't see it, honestly doesn't make things any better. How could it?
Sometimes you amaze me, Josephine. Glad you posted on this issue before me, so as not to give me a chance to say something like what you just said but in a much less effective way.
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
Jossephine
You put things so much better than I can!!
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
I have a problem with it. It's like telling someone who believes her husband doesn't love her, "Of course your husband loves you. He comes home every night. He doesn't drink too much. He pays his share of the bills. He even sends you flowers on Valentine's day. That's what it means for a husband to love his wife. How could you possibly think your husband doesn't love you?"
Josephine, it is nothing like this. Those in the PWRG camp and those without are broadly agreed on the character of God. The issue is, surely, how we relate to that character, and whether that way of relating is "personal" or not. Bringing in similes that make it sound like I am trying to get you to imagine that God is loving and kind when he isn't at all, just muddies the issue.
quote:
The point is that it is rude beyond words for someone else to tell her that she has a loving relationship with her husband when she doesn't feel that way about it. It is a mind-boggling level of presumption. The simple fact is, it's her relationship, not yours. She's the only one who can say whether it is a loving relationship or not.
Indeed. Whether someone loves God or not is not something I would presume to tell them. You will not in my last post that what I was saying was that I can't see the problem with saying to someone " as I understand it ie, by the definition I am using, you do have a PRWG." I still can't. As I have said, I am happy for people not to use that language if they don't want to. I just don't think they should try and stop others using it.
quote:
To say "one must have a PRWG to be a Christian" and then to assert that you are not saying that those who feel that their relationship with God is not personal are not Christians, because, of course, you know that they really do have a PRWG, even if they don't see it, honestly doesn't make things any better. How could it?
How could it? Because most of the anti-PWRG people here seem to be saying that the reason they don't know they have such a thing is because they don't feel a certain way, or enjoy a certain type of worship, or get on with Christians who use the PWRG language. I haven't yet seen a single advocate of the PWRG position who is trying to say that is the essence of a personal relationship with God. If you accept Jesus as Lord of your life, the most basic confession of Christianity, it is my understanding that you are personally relating to Him. I'm sorry if that offends you but I stand by it.
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
How could it? Because most of the anti-PWRG people here seem to be saying that the reason they don't know they have such a thing is because they don't feel a certain way, or enjoy a certain type of worship, or get on with Christians who use the PWRG language. I haven't yet seen a single advocate of the PWRG position who is trying to say that is the essence of a personal relationship with God. If you accept Jesus as Lord of your life, the most basic confession of Christianity, it is my understanding that you are personally relating to Him. I'm sorry if that offends you but I stand by it.
I think part of the problem is that "personal" and "relationship" are deeply loaded words -- loaded that is with connotations that are deeply important to people.
The purely mathematical mode of saying "this is the definition I'm using" collides with the deep implications of the words in a way that makes it really hard to work in terms of a specific definition only without letting the other deep meanings people associate with the words (and/or with the phrase "personal relationship") keep impinging.
Another thing that collides is a feeling of "if that's all you meant, then why attach the deeply meaningful words 'personal relationship' to it?" so that there may be a feeling that there's more behind the definition than is being said.
I think where there's such freight attached to words or phrases that it's easier to further discussion by finding a neutral alternate term to use rather than continue to hit the wall engendered by the phrase.
In your particular usage:
quote:
If you accept Jesus as Lord of your life, the most basic confession of Christianity, it is my understanding that you are personally relating to Him.
Suppose for conversation's sake we treat those as semantically interchangeable, as a purely formal definition for "personally relating" in this context. Does that help to draw any other conclusions?
It suggests to me that if I am unsure about accepting Jesus as the Lord of my life, that I should work on talking to Jesus as I would talk to any other person with whom I wanted to build a "personal relationship" (using the phrase in an everyday sense now).
It suggests to me that if I am unsure about what "accept Jesus as the Lord of my life" means, that perhaps what it means is "do I talk to Jesus in my mind the way I talk to other people in my mind, and imagine him answering and being there just the way I think of other real-life people who are close to me."
It suggests that the way to work on "accepting Jesus as the Lord of my life" is to talk to Jesus in the way described above.
It suggests to me that if I think I'm a Christian, but don't understand that in terms having to do with "personally relating to Jesus," that perhaps I have the wrong understanding of what it means to be a Christian. (I personally won't be offended if someone thinks that's correct -- just laying out the conclusions this use of words gives me because of the connotations I have around them.)
Are those the suggestions and connotations you wished me to also draw?
If so, "personally relating" is a useful phrase for me to understand what you want to convey. If not, then "personally relating" seems about as formal and empty a usage in this context as if you said I were "personally relating" right now to the computer on which I am typing this.
(These same issues don't arise for me when someone talks about their personal relationship with Jesus, only when this extends into the type of dialogue about definitions that we seem to be having in most of this thread. Well, I guess they do, because if someone said "I have a personal relationship with Jesus" I would expect that to mean more like what Lynn Magdalen College has described than what Karl:Liberal Backslider has describe. So it's useful to me that Lynn and Karl have described their experience. And I guess in general anytime someone uses the phrase I should ask what they mean, since it seems to be quite a nebulous phrase!)
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
Josephine, it is nothing like this. Those in the PWRG camp and those without are broadly agreed on the character of God. The issue is, surely, how we relate to that character, and whether that way of relating is "personal" or not. Bringing in similes that make it sound like I am trying to get you to imagine that God is loving and kind when he isn't at all, just muddies the issue.
But you're trying to get other people to believe that their relationship with God is personal, when they think it is nothing of the kind. It's not an exact analogy, because no analogy is, but I think it's very much of the same kind.
Let's try another one, though, since you don't like that one. Let's say for the sake of argument that you were baptized as an infant, but had never since darkened the door of the Church, and you considered themselves an atheist. Furthermore, let's say that you've been hurt and offended in the past by people who called themselves born-again Christians. Now let's say that I tell you that you are, in fact, a born-again Christian, because you were baptized. By definition, when you are baptized you are born again, and you become a Christian. Whether you believe it or not, whether you understand it that way or not is no more relevant than whether an infant being born believes it and understands it or not. Call yourself an atheist if you like. I know that you're a born-again Christian.
If you were that hypothetical atheist, would you find that offensive?
Or suppose I told my friendly neighborhood Southern Baptist that, as I understand it, when they take Communion, they are eating God's flesh and drinking His blood, and if they are not doing that, then what they are doing isn't really Communion. Do you think they'd be mollified by my saying "as I understand it"? I don't. They would quite rightly respond by telling me that they are not bound by my understanding of Communion.
Nor are others bound by your understanding of what it means to have a personal relationship with God. In fact, while you say
quote:
If you accept Jesus as Lord of your life, the most basic confession of Christianity, it is my understanding that you are personally relating to Him. I'm sorry if that offends you but I stand by it.
I don't see it that way at all. None of the creeds, none of the councils, ever talked about accepting Jesus as Lord of your life. Nor do they talk aobut personally relating to God. It's not historic Christianity. It's not orthodox (note the small o) Christianity. It isn't the faith of the desert fathers, of the martyrs, of the confessors. It's a modern innovation, designed for people who want their own individual, private, personal God, something that makes them feel like they have an important place in the Kingdom of God.
Me? I know I'll be lucky if I get a chance to mop the dust from the streets of gold. If I do, it won't be because of my personal relationship with God. Instead, it will be because of the intercessions of the saints, the prayers of my godfather, the goodness and holiness of those who love me far more than I love God. The fathers tell us that no one is ever saved alone. I don't need my relationship with God to be personal. In fact, I'm quite sure that if I depend on my personal relationship with God for my salvation, I ain't gonna make it. I need my relationship with God to be communal. I need to relate to him in the company of the saints, guarded and guided and upheld by them and by the angels. That's the only way I'm going to be saved.
Or you either, for that matter. I'm sorry if that offends you, but I stand by it.
[ 02. December 2005, 00:54: Message edited by: josephine ]
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Teufelchen:
quote:
Originally posted by PerkyEars:
quote:
Plays RPGs with me
He'd be an interesting GM.
It'd have to be Amber or something. He doesn't play dice.
wellll - Proverbs 16:33 says "The lot is cast into the lap, But its every decision is from the Lord" - so maybe He DOES play dice!!! (I can see it now, Einstein up there and the Lord elbowing him and saying, "hey, watch THIS one!")
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
It's like telling someone who believes her husband doesn't love her, "Of course your husband loves you. He comes home every night. He doesn't drink too much. He pays his share of the bills. He even sends you flowers on Valentine's day. That's what it means for a husband to love his wife. How could you possibly think your husband doesn't love you?"
oh Josephine, this makes me think of CSLewis' "Til We Have Faces" - !!! wow! The book has some interesting applications to this thraad, methinks.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
<<Looking up>> THREAD. sigh. I can spell, too!
quote:
posted by Autenried Road:
So it's useful to me that Lynn and Karl have described their experience. And I guess in general anytime someone uses the phrase I should ask what they mean, since it seems to be quite a nebulous phrase!)
This thread has been useful for me in the same way - to point out that terminology which I've found unproblematic is, in fact, quite problematic because of its nebulous nature.
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Me? I know I'll be lucky if I get a chance to mop the dust from the streets of gold. If I do, it won't be because of my personal relationship with God. Instead, it will be because of the intercessions of the saints, the prayers of my godfather, the goodness and holiness of those who love me far more than I love God. The fathers tell us that no one is ever saved alone. I don't need my relationship with God to be personal. In fact, I'm quite sure that if I depend on my personal relationship with God for my salvation, I ain't gonna make it. I need my relationship with God to be communal. I need to relate to him in the company of the saints, guarded and guided and upheld by them and by the angels. That's the only way I'm going to be saved.
I think your unstated "first cause" is, in fact, the atonement made for us on the cross, yes? I mean, there is no "communion of the saints" without Jesus making saints in the first place. I'm just clarifying because it seems the confusion on this thread is often based on our unspoken assumptions...? Thanks - pax!
Posted by Janine (# 3337) on
:
Just wondering some stuff...
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
... I know I'll be lucky if I get a chance to mop the dust from the streets of gold.
Yes indeed. "Better a doorkeeper in the house of my God" and all that.
quote:
If I do, it won't be because of my personal relationship with God. Instead, it will be because of the intercessions of the saints...
The live saints or the dead ones?
quote:
... the prayers of my godfather...
That's the intercession of the saints I understand.
quote:
the goodness and holiness of those who love me far more than I love God...
Those, who? The goodness of other people is credited to you?
quote:
... The fathers tell us that no one is ever saved alone...
They do? Is there a cutoff point or a timeline to use, to figure out who speaks/spoke the very oracles of God?
quote:
... I don't need my relationship with God to be personal. In fact, I'm quite sure that if I depend on my personal relationship with God for my salvation, I ain't gonna make it.
Yep, you're right, you're gonna fry in Hell if you're depending on the power and might of the way you, the magnificent Josephine, deign to relate to God. You're not thinking any of us PRWC people are saying that, are you?
quote:
I need my relationship with God to be communal. I need to relate to him in the company of the saints, guarded and guided and upheld by them and by the angels.
Those saints would be the dead ones, then?
quote:
That's the only way I'm going to be saved.
Is it an Orthodox thing, the deal where you devote yourself to God and the Church and strive to be ever more holy until you die, then perhaps you'll make the cut if you're holy enough?
quote:
Or you either, for that matter.
Very true. I contend, though, that because of the personal relationship with the Messiah -- say "individual" if "personal" is too... personal ... and try "connection" for "relationship"...
Because of that interconnectedness with the Redeemer, if you are His you are saved. Now. And it's a matter of rejecting Him to escape so great a salvation.
quote:
I'm sorry if that offends you, but I stand by it.
I doubt anyone was offended -- I hope you're not offended by my interest in using your well-put-together explanation of your POV to try to contrast my own. As I accidentally read Nicodemia's post -- "Josephine, you put things so much better than I can't!"
Oh, and Mousethief -- I know people need to define terms-in-common if they're gonna have a meaningful discussion. I know lots of folks don't operate with the same definitions.
I simply think mine are better.
Posted by (gracia) (# 1812) on
:
from josephine:
quote:
It isn't the faith of the desert fathers, of the martyrs...)
Josephine, are you quite sure about that? If so, what do you base that belief on?
It's a modern innovation, designed for people who want their own individual, private, personal God, something that makes them feel like they have an important place in the Kingdom of God.
How nice that you believe you have so much insight into those who experience their faith differently from you. I find it rather presumptuous of you.
Posted by (gracia) (# 1812) on
:
from josephine:
quote:
It isn't the faith of the desert fathers, of the martyrs...)
Josephine, are you quite sure about that? If so, what do you base that belief on?
more from Josephine: quote:
It's a modern innovation, designed for people who want their own individual, private, personal God, something that makes them feel like they have an important place in the Kingdom of God.
How nice that you believe you have so much insight into those who experience their faith differently from you. I find it rather presumptuous.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LynnMagdalenCollege:
I think your unstated "first cause" is, in fact, the atonement made for us on the cross, yes? I mean, there is no "communion of the saints" without Jesus making saints in the first place. I'm just clarifying because it seems the confusion on this thread is often based on our unspoken assumptions...? Thanks - pax!
You mean the first cause of my salvation? That would be the grace of God. Everything else flows from that.
quote:
Originally posted by Janine:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
If I do, it won't be because of my personal relationship with God. Instead, it will be because of the intercessions of the saints...
The live saints or the dead ones?
Live saints, of course. There aren't any dead saints. Christ destroyed death; the saints are alive in Christ, even if their bodies are dead. (We don't ask for the prayers of people who are dead in Christ. You've just got to figure out which death is the important one.)
quote:
quote:
the goodness and holiness of those who love me far more than I love God...
Those, who? The goodness of other people is credited to you?
Credited? No, not credited. But haven't you read what James said? He who turns a sinner from the error of his way will save a soul from death and cover a multitude of sins. And Jude, the brother of James, told us to have compassion on some, but to save others with fear. And Paul said that he would save his brethren by provoking them to jealousy. And he talked of husbands saving their wives, and wives their husbands.
So I trust that those who love me will cover my sins with their love, that they will turn me from error, that they will, through their prayers, their kindness, their strength, their love, do whatever it takes to help me on my path to salvation.
quote:
quote:
I need my relationship with God to be communal. I need to relate to him in the company of the saints, guarded and guided and upheld by them and by the angels.
Those saints would be the dead ones, then?
Like I said, there ain't no dead saints.
Oh, and (gracia)?
quote:
How nice that you believe you have so much insight into those who experience their faith differently from you. I find it rather presumptuous.
You're exactly right. I was rather hoping folks might notice that the shoe pinched when it was on the other foot.
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
The fathers tell us that no one is ever saved alone.
<snip>
I need my relationship with God to be communal.
<snip>
I need to relate to him in the company of the saints, guarded and guided and upheld by them and by the angels. That's the only way I'm going to be saved.
Thank you, Josephine for sharing with us this understanding. While I am not (O)thordox nor hold strictly to what you posted here about salvation & God, I want to thank you very, very much for reminding us about relationship and the importance of relationship in God's word and in his kingdom.
An evangelical Korean-American shared that whenever he was introducing somone to Christianity & the bible, he didn't use the John 3:16 approach.
He said it was too individualistic and alien to his culture. His culture did not focus on the individual as the basic unit - but rather the family and the family within a village. Whenever this Korean-American shared the gospel, he said that he used the books of Acts. This may sound strange.
He used verses like:
quote:
He told us how he had seen an angel appear in his house and say, 'Send to Joppa for Simon who is called Peter. He will bring you a message through which you and all your household will be saved.'
Acts 11:13-14
Which emphasized the family and household and community...
and also,
quote:
They replied, "Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved—you and your household." Then they spoke the word of the Lord to him and to all the others in his house.
Acts 16:31-32
It is possible to see that in the early church, it wasn't just "me n' Jesus got a thing going on" etc...but it was about families and households and communities.
I think maybe in the West, we have erred so much on the side of individualism that we have missed out on the beauty of community. We forget that is not just a "me 'n Jesus" - but a gathering and company of saints - we who make up his body...
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
Here's a question I've been thinking about, and it probably boils down to definitions but I'm going to go out on a limb anyway. In Mark 12, Jesus is questioned:
"One of the teachers of the law came and heard them debating. Noticing that Jesus had given them a good answer, he asked him, "Of all the commandments, which is the most important?"
This seems to be just as valid for Christians as Jews but you may disagree but Jesus answers:
"The most important one," answered Jesus, "is this: `Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.'
Now my question is simply this, do you love God (as best you can) in this way (again, something I would regard as synonymous with Christianity (at least to try) and if you do, how can this be achieved without being personal?
Just interested to know how you guys square this circle is all I'm after, not making any judgements.
Though I fear I will be misinterpreted once more.
Evo1
Posted by Gill H (# 68) on
:
I suspect this is going to come down to how you define 'love'.
Even us fluffy bunnies would say it doesn't necessarily mean 'having warm fuzzies'.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
Now my question is simply this, do you love God (as best you can) in this way (again, something I would regard as synonymous with Christianity (at least to try) and if you do, how can this be achieved without being personal?
Just interested to know how you guys square this circle is all I'm after, not making any judgements.
Though I fear I will be misinterpreted once more.
Evo1
It's a fair question, Evo. I think it's just a matter of how some of us experience (or don't) the return contact. If my grandfather was dead, I would not stop loving him very much. My relationship with him, however, would cease being personal, because though I may call out to him, he won't answer in a way I can hear. (Unless, of course, we are in a Disney movie.)
Also, Lep: I don't want anyone to think that I am in any way proposing that people not refer to their own relationships with God as personal. The root of my argument is that you should be able to describe it in any way you want. My contention is that I don't need you to describe to me why I misunderstand my own relationship with God. It's patronizing, as if to say, "Someday you'll become enlightened, like me, and you'll understand." Mean it like that or not, it's why people are responding so strongly against this type of suggestion.
-Digory
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
It's a fair question, Evo. I think it's just a matter of how some of us experience (or don't) the return contact. If my grandfather was dead, I would not stop loving him very much. My relationship with him, however, would cease being personal, because though I may call out to him, he won't answer in a way I can hear. (Unless, of course, we are in a Disney movie.)
But I imagine that you are not here saying that God is dead? How about if your grandfather had gone to the moon and you couldn't communicate with him, what then? You love him very much, he loves you very much. It reminds me of the painting of Adam's finger reaching up to God's finger but they just fall short of touching (don't ask me which it is, I'm an artistic Phillistine (see Hell thread on Art for proof)??
Seeing as both sides are deeply entrenched here, I'll not go on.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
It's a fair question, Evo. I think it's just a matter of how some of us experience (or don't) the return contact. If my grandfather was dead, I would not stop loving him very much. My relationship with him, however, would cease being personal, because though I may call out to him, he won't answer in a way I can hear. (Unless, of course, we are in a Disney movie.)
But I imagine that you are not here saying that God is dead? How about if your grandfather had gone to the moon and you couldn't communicate with him, what then? You love him very much, he loves you very much.
Yeah, you're moon analogy is better, as long as we assume there is no telephone/radio/satellite contact at all between us. In that case, I would still feel like I had lost the personal aspect of my relationship with my grandfather since I couldn't see him in person or hear his voice out loud. So that would be my own take on that situation.
-Digory
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
Michaelangelo - Sistine Chapel, in Rome. Gorgeous.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
Cheers Lynn
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
From Josephine:
quote:
Oh, and (gracia)?
quote:
How nice that you believe you have so much insight into those who experience their faith differently from you. I find it rather presumptuous.
You're exactly right. I was rather hoping folks might notice that the shoe pinched when it was on the other foot.
Exactly!
Josephine - I am bowled over again this morning how well you express all that I feel!
And : quote:
Me? I know I'll be lucky if I get a chance to mop the dust from the streets of gold.
I always imagined I'd be in the back kitchen making the coffee!!
Joyfulsoul: quote:
I think maybe in the West, we have erred so much on the side of individualism that we have missed out on the beauty of community. We forget that is not just a "me 'n Jesus" - but a gathering and company of saints - we who make up his body...
I think you are right there.
[ 02. December 2005, 10:44: Message edited by: Callan ]
Posted by Superslug (# 7024) on
:
Digory,
Just to say that I still have a personal relationship with my father who died 7 years ago.
He still has a massive influence on my life, I still act in a way he would have wanted me to act, he still speaks to me through memories of conversations and actions. To me my father has not stopped being, if you get my drift.
I beleive if I ask something of him now, his answer would be given through this contact which does not seem to be bound by our human concept of time.
Yes, I understand that this could be seen as different to God, in that I did have a living physical, tangable relationship with Dad, but as a supporter of the PRWG view I see this as a good analogy.
Perhaps it is just the way we are all made, fantasticly different?
SS
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Or suppose I told my friendly neighborhood Southern Baptist that, as I understand it, when they take Communion, they are eating God's flesh and drinking His blood, and if they are not doing that, then what they are doing isn't really Communion. Do you think they'd be mollified by my saying "as I understand it"? I don't. They would quite rightly respond by telling me that they are not bound by my understanding of Communion.
Would they? I have had many a Roman catholic person tell me this. You are right I am not bound by their definition - but I'm not trying to "bind you to my definition" (whatever that means!) I am trying to explain how I use a particular set of words. To be honest I'm not sure that the average Southern Baptist would be half as bothered about your understanding of their communion service as you seem to be about these four words. I am merely trying to get to the bottom of that.
quote:
It's not historic Christianity. It's not orthodox (note the small o) Christianity.
Nonsense. "If you believe with your heart and confess with your mouth...." - what is that if it isn't personal?
quote:
It's a modern innovation, designed for people who want their own individual, private, personal God, something that makes them feel like they have an important place in the Kingdom of God.
Erm no. The Lordship of Christ doesn't make me feel that way at all actually.
quote:
Me? I know I'll be lucky if I get a chance to mop the dust from the streets of gold. If I do, it won't be because of my personal relationship with God. Instead, it will be because of the intercessions of the saints, the prayers of my godfather, the goodness and holiness of those who love me far more than I love God. The fathers tell us that no one is ever saved alone. I don't need my relationship with God to be personal. In fact, I'm quite sure that if I depend on my personal relationship with God for my salvation, I ain't gonna make it. I need my relationship with God to be communal. I need to relate to him in the company of the saints, guarded and guided and upheld by them and by the angels. That's the only way I'm going to be saved.
Or you either, for that matter. I'm sorry if that offends you, but I stand by it.
The thing is, I'm not offended at all by that. Even though I disagree with most of it. I can live with the fact that we disagree on what it means to be a Christian.
I actually agree with Joyfulsoul that evangelicalism has largely lost it's hold on the corporate aspect of relating to God. The evangelical staples of personal Bible reading and prayer have made it sound like the Bible is just a book written for me, and this I think has led to unlikely and ridiculous expectations of personal revelation from the Holy Spirit, as well as a skewed view of the Gospel.
I'm even happy to admit that I don't really like the phrase PRWG, and don't use it much, and that it's no big deal to me if people don't want to use it. My issue is that the repentance and faith that Jesus calls us to is something that we do, a response that we make, and an experience that we have (though many of us feel that experience differently).
Yes becoming a Christian is joining the church, but I actually think it is more than that too - it is an individual and corporate ecnounter, although, and here I am agreeing with you josephine, much of how we experience that as individuals is through our corporate acts together.
Posted by quantpole (# 8401) on
:
I think I agree with you there Lep.
In addition I must say that this is the first time on the ship I've read a discussion about having a PWRG. The OP has asked a question and people have said what they mean by it. It's then a bit harsh to castigate people for answering truthfully what they think. In the same way (I think this thread needs a few more similies yet!) if a thread was started asking RCs what their position on Protestant communion was, it wouldn't be fair to then have a go if they said that it wasn't Communion in their eyes.*
Josephine's and Lep's point about the corporate nature of evangelicalism is an interesting one - worthy of another thread?
[* just an example of another issue where there's not likely to be much agreement between the different camps]
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Lep, let me make it totally clear why I have a problem with the language, and think that people who relate to it should be bloody careful how they use it.
It damages people. It screws up their faith.
Why? Because when Cuddly Charismatic(TM) A N Other tells me he has a PRWG, and that if I'm a Christian I have one as well, he does not go through a nine page thread (that's over 400 posts!) explaining what he means. He lets me parse it for myself.
And I find that by my understanding of the words, and I thought I knew what "personal relationship" meant, so I don't ask him to clarify, I do not have this PRWG.
Therefore, there is something badly defective with my Christianity.
Perhaps I'm not really a Christian. So I spend months constantly rededicating my life to Christ, awaiting this PRWG to materialise.
Perhaps it's a load of bollocks. So I conclude for a while that the Cuddly Charismatics are fooling themselves, inventing experiences out of their own psyche and basically wasting their time. I grow antagonistic towards them and want nothing to do with them, because every time I associate with them I go back to worrying that they're right and my Christianity is bogus.
Fortunately I've managed to keep just inside faith by concluding that PRWG as I understand the "PR" bit is impossible, meangingless and a complete distraction. But it would have been so easy to fall by the wayside, so very easy, so many times. And this whole PRWG stuff would have been the main reason.
So feel free to encourage people to use the language, and watch those for whom it doesn't work leave the church, their faith defeated.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Lep, let me make it totally clear why I have a problem with the language, and think that people who relate to it should be bloody careful how they use it.
..snip..
So feel free to encourage people to use the language, and watch those for whom it doesn't work leave the church, their faith defeated.
Or in other words, "you better see things from my point of view or else you are responsible for the damnation of others".
There are two sides to this story aren't there? What about people whose lives have been entirely changed around through this very aspect, mine included?
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
How about it being presented as "This may be something useful for you, although a lot of Christians don't relate to it, and be careful because some people assume it means things it doesn't"
Rather than "Every Christian has a personal relationship with Christ. You do, if you're a Christian"
Spot the difference?
And can I add that your last post sounded like "sod you, I'm all right Jack?"?
[ 02. December 2005, 13:03: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
but then it would, wouldn't it.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Presumably because that's what it was.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
There are two sides to this story aren't there? What about people whose lives have been entirely changed around through this very aspect, mine included?
There are probably more than two sides to the story. Some people relate to God in a very intimate way, one that is in some way quite erotic. I don't. I can't imagine it. But I've read enough of certain mystics that I know that that is a very real. very legitimate way of relating to God.
Nevertheless, if someone said, "Christians have an erotic relationship with God," and "in my understanding, if you're a Christian, your relationship is erotic, and if you haven't noticed an orgasm during prayer yet, you're just not paying attention," and "I think you need an erotic relationship with God in order to be a Christian," we'd all agree (I think) that the person was extrapolating their relationship with God to others in a way that just doesn't make sense for the rest of us. Some of us have never experienced God that way, don't expect to, and probably don't want to. For myself, if I started experiencing God that way, I'm not sure whether I'd first consult with a mental health practitioner or a holy nun who cold help me figure out whether I needed a mental health practitioner or maybe confession and penance or something else.
So, just substitute "personal" for "erotic," and maybe you'll understand the problem. It's okay for you to have a relationship with God that you consider personal. No one is saying it isn't. The problem occurs when you tell other people, explicitly or implicitly, that their relationship is or must be personal. It's telling other people how they relate to God, and how they feel about that relationship, that's the problem.
You can say all you want that believing, confessing, loving, worshiping, are all personal activities. I'm sure they are. But for some Christians, they don't add up to a PRWG. I think it's necessary to respect that.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
And although you started from acknowledging two sides of the story, you have managed not to see things from the other side, continuing to insist that we should not be allowed to tell people anything we believe but caveat beyond all meaning.
(I promise you, some of the people that I talk to would not respond at all well to "some people find this useful, you may, you may not, I do, though sometimes I might not but then I do again, but you must understand that others mean something completely different by this etc etc etc" They prefer to listen and decide for themselves whether it makes sense.)
So you see, your telling me that I cannot just tell people what I think, straight up, no nonsense, does somewhat tie my hands, just in exactly the same way that you are accusing us on the other side of the fence of oppressing you.
This "six of one and half a dozen of another" is what I'm trying to highlight.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Presumably because that's what it was.
No, I was commenting on your general inability to understand what I say.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
No, we're just telling you why you talking about your PRWG the way you do could be damaging to other Christians who don't relate to it, and therefore to be careful with the language.
Why is it so awful for us to want you to do that?
Incidently, I seem to be able to understand what everyone else says; I only have this apparent problem with you, which points to the problem being at your end, not mine.
[ 02. December 2005, 13:57: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
No, we're just telling you why you talking about your PRWG the way you do could be damaging to other Christians who don't relate to it, and therefore to be careful with the language.
But then I'm telling you that using the language you suggest can be damaging to other people. You don't seem to respect that.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Come, now, Evol, you expect me to believe that mentioning that the language of a Personal Relationship with God isn't helpful to everyone is damaging to some people?
Don't take me for a bloody fool.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
Your doing it again.
This is pointless.
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on
:
quote:
So you see, your telling me that I cannot just tell people what I think, straight up, no nonsense, does somewhat tie my hands, just in exactly the same way that you are accusing us on the other side of the fence of oppressing you.
I'm sorry, Evo1, this is complete bollocks! What is the purpose behind telling people what you think. Is it to get it off your chest, or is it to communicate? In short, is it for your benefit or for theirs? If the former, then rather than drawing people to Christ, are you not in danger of repelling them. If the latter, what is the problem with testing out whether or not they might find a concept useful, before pursuing it. As, for example, Karl suggests in his post of 13.02. What's so constraining in making sure that your message is understood, rather than misunderstood? (I won't even mention the issue of respect for the person to whom you are talking).
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
Your doing it again.
This is pointless.
It is. We've got to the point where you're defending your position by telling me that the people you talk to like to decide for themselves what's meaningful for them and this somehow means that telling them that this may or may not be meaningful for them would somehow be harmful.
Further discussion of this could only take place in Hell, and it's not a Thursday, and I'm busy this afternoon, so we'll just have to leave it here.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
So you see, your telling me that I cannot just tell people what I think, straight up, no nonsense, does somewhat tie my hands, just in exactly the same way that you are accusing us on the other side of the fence of oppressing you.
I'm sorry, Evo1, this is complete bollocks! What is the purpose behind telling people what you think. Is it to get it off your chest, or is it to communicate? In short, is it for your benefit or for theirs? If the former, then rather than drawing people to Christ, are you not in danger of repelling them. If the latter, what is the problem with testing out whether or not they might find a concept useful, before pursuing it. As, for example, Karl suggests in his post of 13.02. What's so constraining in making sure that your message is understood, rather than misunderstood? (I won't even mention the issue of respect for the person to whom you are talking).
I have no problem with saying things along the lines of, "I wonder if this might be helpful to you.."
But that's not what Karl said, he prefers the more caveated: "How about it being presented as "This may be something useful for you, although a lot of Christians don't relate to it, and be careful because some people assume it means things it doesn't (in the opinion of KLBS)"
(with my clarification there of course)
The point is, I only tell people this kind of thing if they ask, so it is for their benefit - they wanted to know, I tell them. They are normally not Christian, and normally do not have a PRWG anyway, on quite a few occasions, afterwards, they have had one. I'm glad about that, bollocks or not!
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
This may be something useful for you, although a lot of Christians don't relate to it, and be careful because some people assume it means things it doesn't (in the opinion of KLBS)"
No, in the opinion of many posters on this thread. Lots of us have said that "PR" means things you think it doesn't. Trying to make it look like I'm the only one, and it's only opinion (it's clearly fact that some people have a different understanding of the term, as they've said so) is dishonest of you.
And please explain exactly how being that caveated could actually be harmful, because frankly I think that's bullshit.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
quote:
This may be something useful for you, although a lot of Christians don't relate to it, and be careful because some people assume it means things it doesn't (in the opinion of KLBS)"
No, in the opinion of many posters on this thread. Lots of us have said that "PR" means things you think it doesn't. Trying to make it look like I'm the only one, and it's only opinion (it's clearly fact that some people have a different understanding of the term, as they've said so) is dishonest of you.
And please explain exactly how being that caveated could actually be harmful, because frankly I think that's bullshit.
Frankly, this is laughable, you really would insist on my saying (on the basis that people on here have said so) (now read this carefully and spot the bit that may seem out of place to a listener):
"This may be something useful for you, although a lot of Christians don't relate to it, and be careful because some people assume it means things it doesn't - including me actually, I am assuming it means something it doesn't (in the opinion of some people on SoF)"
When are you going to understand that we are all different?
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
:
Come on, Evo, you know perfectly well that others have said how difficult we find it to conceive of ourselves having a PR with God/Jesus. Josephine, Prof K., myself as well as Karl have all said so, at length. There are probably others, only I'm not trawling back through 10 pages to discover who they are.
I thought I had made it quite clear that I for one, have left the evangelical church because of the Cuddly Charismatic, PRWJ, erotic-style love affair with Jesus (Yes, Josephine wasn't so far off the mark!) that I was expected to have if I was to consider myself a REAL Christian.
Fortunately I discovered that all this fuzzy stuff was not obligatory, before I lost my faith altogether. Christianity could come in many forms.
So why not stop spouting all this nauseating stuff, agree to differ, respect what others say, and believe, and keep quiet about what sort of relationship you consider necessary for a Christian?
And stop telling us what OUR relationships are *really* like, although we just don't realise it!
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
When are you going to understand that we are all different?
O! O! The irony! It hurts, ma, it hurts!
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on
:
Evo, why not just preface your comments with: "This may be something useful for you" and then go on to talk about a PR? That way you've left people space to say, "I'm sorry, I don't find that a helpful image," if they don't, or to use it and rejoice if they do.
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on
:
Evo1, your response to Karl's question would be?
Posted by Superslug (# 7024) on
:
Karl,
One of my major problems is that I tend to sit on the fence about stuff like this, I can see all peoples point of view and am quite happy to hold a number of ideas in tension. It is great, therefore, that other people like you and EVO1 have solid firm opinions, well thought, out and backed up, to give other people a clear view about what you are on about.
If you insist on those who identify with a PRWG loading their arguments with caveats, you risk them not giving a clear statement of what they believe to be true.
In other words, turning them into a fence sitting, bungling, tongue tied evangelist like me.
Would you give a balanced argument to someone who asked or would you give a response which just referred to your take on things ?
SS
[ 02. December 2005, 14:47: Message edited by: Superslug ]
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on
:
I've got to say, out of all the discussions I've read in Purgatory over the years, this has to be one of the least edifying.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by The Wanderer:
Evo, why not just preface your comments with: "This may be something useful for you" and then go on to talk about a PR? That way you've left people space to say, "I'm sorry, I don't find that a helpful image," if they don't, or to use it and rejoice if they do.
and this is exactly how I do frame things, as my comment around the top of the page alluded to. "You may find this useful" I think is an excellent way to discuss with all kinds of people."
And as to Karl's question, I can confirm that not being clear about this very point can (and in my case did) keep me in atheism. And for me at least, that was certainly damaging for me. But that might not be a good enough answer - I'm sorry about that.
Thanks for that Slug, you are a very wise man.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Superslug:
Would you give a balanced argument to someone who asked or would you give a response which just referred to your take on things ?
Depends, of course, on the question. If someone asked, "What is your relationship with God like?" I'd just say what mine is like. My take is all they were asking about, so that's what I'd tell them. If they asked, "What is it like to have a relationship with God?" I'd say, "It's different for different people. For me, it's like this. But other people have said X, Y, and Z about their relationships with God."
That doesn't seem to be so weighted with caveats that it's beyond understanding. But maybe that's because I don't expect one-size-fits-all answers to major life questions.
Posted by Superslug (# 7024) on
:
Josephine,
I'm sorry, its probably due to my large ego, but even with your 2nd question i would still assume someone was asking about my relationship.
I would hope the conversation would progress to talk more widely about the subject and it is then that i would fall into toungue tied, fence sitting idiot mode.
but hey we are all different!
[ 02. December 2005, 15:10: Message edited by: Superslug ]
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on
:
Evo1,
Why not simply say "in my experience,..."? It's simple, and acknowledges that other people might have other experiences.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
One reason I don't do what you would like me to is, believe it or not, I am different to some/all of you.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
Evo1, when you're not in a direct argument with somebody, I really can appreciate your insight. A little earlier in these posts we were having a wonderfully polite and civil conversation which I enjoyed.
It's when the argument begins to flare up that you begin making absolutely no sense.
For instance, let me get this straight. People who don't feel like they have a PRWG don't want others telling them that they do, so they request that people would stop telling them that they DO have one, and that it is NECESSARY to have one.
Now some of you are insisting that it's just as harmful to you if we ask you to be sensitive to that?
Nobody is asking you to stop referring to your own relationship with God in any way that you would like. I'm not, anyway. Refer to your relationships however you wish, and let us refer to ours as we wish. What is harmful about that request?
The stubbornness here is astounding. Yes, people are all different--deal with it and be sensitive to the differences. You can't then say "Yeah everyone is different so don't get on my case just because I think everyone should be just like me, after all everyone is different so it's hurtful if you tell me I can't act like that!"
It just doesn't make a bit of sense.
-Digory
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mousethief:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
When are you going to understand that we are all different?
O! O! The irony! It hurts, ma, it hurts!
Speechless.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
I'm not even going to start to make a reply to the prior poster, I could, it would be a long post and no-one would end up in any different place so I won't. Let's just say I am quickly learning why this place is called "Ship of Fools"
But that said, I do apologise for my argumentativeness earlier. I have had a very tough couple or three months, so tough in fact that if "I am not Job" knew just how tough it was he would probably change his name to "I am not Job, but I think Evo1 might be".
The upshot may well have been that I have allowed myself to be drawn into argument rather than debate - and I am sorry for that.
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on
:
I told myself I wasn't coming back to this topic thread again, but...
Is there perhaps a confusion between the terms <i>personal</i> and <i>private</i>?
I'm thinking of Dr. Mark Allen Powell, NT prof at Trinity Lutheran Seminary (Columbus, OH) and author of, among other books, <i>Loving Jesus</i> -- I'm going to be hearing him lecture in February; that'll be kewl -- saying that, in Christianity, our relationship with Christ) can certainly be <i>personal</i>, but it's never <i>private.</i> (Or as my own pastor would put it, "It ain't me and Jesus under a blanket with a flashlight." Is that helpful at all to anyone?
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
Evo1, when you're not in a direct argument with somebody, I really can appreciate your insight. A little earlier in these posts we were having a wonderfully polite and civil conversation which I enjoyed.
It's when the argument begins to flare up that you begin making absolutely no sense.
For instance, let me get this straight. People who don't feel like they have a PRWG don't want others telling them that they do, so they request that people would stop telling them that they DO have one, and that it is NECESSARY to have one.
Now some of you are insisting that it's just as harmful to you if we ask you to be sensitive to that?
Nobody is asking you to stop referring to your own relationship with God in any way that you would like. I'm not, anyway. Refer to your relationships however you wish, and let us refer to ours as we wish. What is harmful about that request?
The stubbornness here is astounding. Yes, people are all different--deal with it and be sensitive to the differences. You can't then say "Yeah everyone is different so don't get on my case just because I think everyone should be just like me, after all everyone is different so it's hurtful if you tell me I can't act like that!"
It just doesn't make a bit of sense.
-Digory
Very classy reply, Professorkirke. I could not think of a single response myself that would not either lower myself or drag things straight to Hell.
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
But that said, I do apologise for my argumentativeness earlier. I have had a very tough couple or three months, so tough in fact that if "I am not Job" knew just how tough it was he would probably change his name to "I am not Job, but I think Evo1 might be".
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
I'm not even going to start to make a reply to the prior poster, I could, it would be a long post and no-one would end up in any different place so I won't. Let's just say I am quickly learning why this place is called "Ship of Fools"
The little winky face doesn't make you any less of an ass. I would have PMed you, but you've added me to your "ignore" list because I am such a terrible, rude, irrational, offensive person.
-Digory
PS Sorry hosts, I didn't think it was worth a whole new thread in hell. At least not yet.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
I told myself I wasn't coming back to this topic thread again, but...
Is there perhaps a confusion between the terms <i>personal</i> and <i>private</i>?
I'm thinking of Dr. Mark Allen Powell, NT prof at Trinity Lutheran Seminary (Columbus, OH) and author of, among other books, <i>Loving Jesus</i> -- I'm going to be hearing him lecture in February; that'll be kewl -- saying that, in Christianity, our relationship with Christ) can certainly be <i>personal</i>, but it's never <i>private.</i> (Or as my own pastor would put it, "It ain't me and Jesus under a blanket with a flashlight." Is that helpful at all to anyone?
Your posts are always helpful, LC. (Just don't forget to use square brackets [] and not the carats <>.)
However, I think the main argument that has circulated and stagnated here for the last 500 posts is not furthered by your distinction. Let me point to one of your phrasings though--
quote:
...our relationship with Christ can certainly be personal
--you didn't say "is always personal." That's all that matters to me. Certainly and without doubt many people right here on this thread have very personal relationships with God. But when they tell me and others that we
a) must have a PRWG to be Christians, and
b) actually DO have a PRWG without even knowing it,
well, it's just uncalled for. It's unnecessary and it's offensive, and if people would just take this advice from those of us who have been hurt by this type of philosophy, they would perhaps save others from experiencing a similar misfortune.
Either that, or they could stubbornly refuse to acknowledge it and instead pick apart wordings and concepts and go back on arguments. Ah, choices.
-Digory
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on
:
Hosting
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
The little winky face doesn't make you any less of an ass. I would have PMed you, but you've added me to your "ignore" list because I am such a terrible, rude, irrational, offensive person.
-Digory
PS Sorry hosts, I didn't think it was worth a whole new thread in hell. At least not yet.
The little apology doesn't make you any less in violation of the Ship's third commandment. This sort of thing is absolutely out of order in Purgatory, and you knew that when you posted it. If you don't wish to post abuse in Hell, don't post it at all.
RuthW
Purgatory host
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
My apologies, RuthW. You're right.
I re-read over the wording of the Commandments after I'd posted and saw just exactly how out of line I really was. Won't happen again.
-Digory
...goes off mumbling something about the stupid PM ignore feature...
Posted by o00o (# 3147) on
:
I would like to thank Nicodemia, Professor Kirke, Josephine, Karl and others for their contribution. I have been following this thread closely but have refrained from posting (bar once back on page one) because this is too close and difficult an issue for me at the moment. What has been said has helped me clarify my own thoughts, and has encouraged me greatly.
I would like to ask a question to Professor Kirke, Karl, Nicodemia et al - how, if at all, do you practise prayer, bible study, "quiet times" etc, and are there good resources/books that you find useful?
I have spent all of my Christian life so far in a envangelical environment that strongly emphasises the PRWG angle, and the necessity of daily "quiet times" talking with God etc. For me these have been a permenant struggle and driven by guilt rather than any more positive motive. I have not even been attempting private prayer or bible study regularly for several months now due to the negative feelings associated with everything. I know I need some form of bible study/prayer but I don't know where to look and am scared of picking up something that is going to damage my only recently returning desire for God, rather than help.
On a similar note, what sort of churches do you attend? Fortunately I am moving house in the new year so I can make the change to a different without too much more difficulty.
Thank you.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
Hello, oOOo.
Thanks for your honesty. It's always refreshing.
I'll give you my opinion, with a strong preface that they are only my opinions and should be treated as such. For the longest time I have struggled with the very things you're talking about in your post--the "necessity" of a certain kind of prayer, "quiet times," and other ritual practices. I have found many of them to be quite useless and to have negative effects on my outlook on God.
So, instead I have found that I need to let God define the relationship I am going to have with him by the desires he placed there at the point I was created. First, I love music. So I spend a considerable amount of time listening and reflecting on thought-provoking music. Many times it's Christian worship music that I enjoy, but other times it's secular music that I find to be inspirational in some way. It gives me a great time to reflect and meditate. Second, I need to write in order to think, so I spend some time just writing out some thoughts about things I don't understand, or whatever happens to pop in my mind about God, no matter the tone. The church I go to has 4 different preachers who rotate giving sermons on Sundays, and the church is rather large. I find that it helps me to somewhat disappear, sit somewhere and just soak it in and let myself interpret it in a way that is relevant to my own life. I sit with a journal and even if I think the pastor is spewing some sort of nonsense, it provokes all sorts of thoughts that I channel to (what I think are) good ends.
Lastly, I come here, which also gets my mind focused on all sorts of God-flavored things. Anything that points me there, like reading good inspirational books (check out Brian McLaren and Donald Miller if you're looking for some stuff that's a little different). That's kind of how I deal.
-Digory
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
I would have PMed you, but you've added me to your "ignore" list...
Evo1,
If you would kindly take me off of this ignore list, we could avoid cluttering up Hell with another useless thread.
-Digory
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
I don't respond too favourably to threats I'm afraid.
For the record, Digory is on my ignore list for sharing details publicly the last time I PM'd him. He also posted a message warning everyone that he did not see a Private message in any way Private unless the sender explicitly made it clear.
PK, I really don't see that we have anything further to say to each other, if you wish to continue to shower me with personal insults, go ahead and open a Hell thread but I do not wish to do the same to you anymore.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by o00o:
I would like to ask a question to Professor Kirke, Karl, Nicodemia et al - how, if at all, do you practise prayer, bible study, "quiet times" etc, and are there good resources/books that you find useful?
What works for me is what lots of the PRWG types would call "empty ritual." For me, of course, the rituals aren't empty at all. Following the patterns the Church has devised over the last 2000 years or so, rather than trying to come up with something on my own, makes a difference for me.
So I keep the prescribed fasts. I give alms. I attempt to follow a rule of prayer (a set of prayers to be said at a particular time each day), although I find that very difficult. Quiet times and improvised prayers just don't do it for me at all, though.
I also find reading the lives of the saints and writings by the saints to be extremely helpful.
Posted by St. Sebastian (# 312) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by o00o:
I would like to thank Nicodemia, Professor Kirke, Josephine, Karl and others for their contribution. . . . What has been said has helped me clarify my own thoughts, and has encouraged me greatly.
Ditto!
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
I don't respond too favourably to threats I'm afraid.
Oh man. I give up.
__________________________________________________
ooOOoo or St. Sebastian or anyone else, you can PM me if you have any other questions or whatever.
Otherwise, I think this thread has run its course. See you all in other, new and budding threads!
-Digory
Posted by corvette (# 9436) on
:
quote:
Original sig by Evo1:
Just think how horrid I'd be if I didn't have a Personal Relationship with Jesus
and just think how wonderful Jesus is, that even i can be forgiven.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
What works for me is what lots of the PRWG types would call "empty ritual." For me, of course, the rituals aren't empty at all. Following the patterns the Church has devised over the last 2000 years or so, rather than trying to come up with something on my own, makes a difference for me.
I too find great richness and depth in liturgy (I go to an anglo-catholic charismatic "smells & bells" episcopal church, if you can wrap your brain around THAT set of contrasts!) - the prescribed prayers are rich and full, if you bring your own "content" to them (does that make sense? I know what I mean, but no idea if anybody else will).
I also have the wonderful opportunity to spend Tuesday afternoons (usually 3-4 hours total) at church in a very small "listening prayer" or "prophetic intercession" prayer group, so the "quiet" stuff works well for me, personally.
I'm also one of the worship leaders Sunday morning, so I do a lot of worship in music (in our main service, we use 10 songs in two primary sets, so that's a fair chunk of music), listening to it, singing along, being part of a team or sometimes an individual leader, depending on what is needed, etc.
I've got a wonderful "Bible in a Year" which is Oswald Chambers! That's been delightful and I tend to read a day's worth before going to sleep at night (helps me to "set my mind" on the things of God before sleeping). I try to do some Bible reading in the morning to get myself rightly oriented at the start of the day (I need it!) and I also try to do some "study" several times a week, working through one specific book at a time - usually utilizing one of a number of different Bible teachers I respect.
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on
:
At risk of repeating what's been said or offending those who haven't/don't want a PRWG, can I clarify what I think evangelicals mean when they talk about PRWG?
It doesn't always mean an intense, emotional, ecstatic, charismatic experience.
It doesn't mean suddenly becoming enthusiastic about private prayer and daily quiet times or giving out leaflets and singing Graham Kendrick songs.
But the term 'personal relationship' is, I believe, a term that was coined to challenge people who feel they can inherit their faith from parents, or who feel that Christian culture is enough. In fact I think the phrase has less to do with 'relationship' than with 'personal'.
I think what it simply means is that Christian faith has to be your own decision, your own journey and pilgrimage, rather than assuming you can be included in the crowd if you stand near enough.
I guess therefore, that whatever type of believer you are, if you have a belief that is considered, deliberate, aand meaningful to you, and has a focus on God, then that is your PRWG.
Even if it's not expressed or 'felt' in an emotional way.
Does that help or make sense at all?
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Oh, that makes perfect sense, but the thing is that that was not explained by the purveyors of the PRWG when I was a charismatic evangelical.
To me, it still has a semantic problem - it's a personal relationship, but not analogous to any other personal relationship you might have.
I think the phrase "individual search for God" would be more useful, unless anyone's going to claim they've actually found Him.
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Oh, that makes perfect sense, but the thing is that that was not explained by the purveyors of the PRWG when I was a charismatic evangelical.
To me, it still has a semantic problem - it's a personal relationship, but not analogous to any other personal relationship you might have.
I think the phrase "individual search for God" would be more useful, unless anyone's going to claim they've actually found Him.
individual is a very good word.
i think your charismatic friends may have inadvertantly mislead you - which is a shame.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Oh, I don't know that they did. Most of them did seem to have an emotionally expressed relationship with God, where He spoke to them quite clearly. They naturally assumed that was for everyone. What is disconcerting is that there were no more mature people prividing a balance by pointing out that it isn't necessarily that way. Or perhaps there were; I've got a sneaking suspicion that I was so taken by the idea of this clearly felt, emotionally expressed PRWG that I wasn't listening to what caveats there may have been. It is a very seductive and attractive idea, which is why I think folk need to be so careful about how they express it.
The only time I thought God had clearly spoken to me I though He told me to go and be a primary school teacher. Evidently I was wrong, since I flunked the course in the final year and I am now an IT systems analyst. Still, I met Mrs Backslider there, so maybe God can even work through me mistaking my own imagination for Him. Or perhaps He doesn't map things out and it just all works out in the end; I don't know any more.
Back to answering o000o's question, one of the most interesting things I've found about myself is that the eucharist has risen in relative importance against other aspects of church services, probably because the elements are something real and concrete that I can hang my not particularly strongly believed faith on to. It's a pointer to an objective external reality (I'm not one for non-realism). Songs, hymns and prayers can require me too much to focus on something I cannot sense - the bread and wine at least are real physical objects, and possibly, just possibly, they can give me a glimpse of the real metaphysical Presence of God.
[ 06. December 2005, 07:55: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
To me, it still has a semantic problem - it's a personal relationship, snip...
So what have we been arguing about?
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Evol - what I meant was that the purveyors of the PRWG are saying "it's a personal relationship, but not analogous to any other personal relationship you might have"
Perhaps I should have used inverted commas.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
Ah, I see that now.
Thank Goodness, I was really confused then .
Just to be sure (be patient with me) you were saying that to you, what the evangelicals are saying is that it is a personal relationship, but not one like any other?
I get that.
Posted by PerkyEars (# 9577) on
:
quote:
The only time I thought God had clearly spoken to me I though He told me to go and be a primary school teacher. Evidently I was wrong, since I flunked the course in the final year and I am now an IT systems analyst. Still, I met Mrs Backslider there, so maybe
...maybe that was what you were there for.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
Ah, I see that now.
Thank Goodness, I was really confused then .
Just to be sure (be patient with me) you were saying that to you, what the evangelicals are saying is that it is a personal relationship, but not one like any other?
I get that.
Unfortunately, what they often said was "it's a personal relationship". My problem is that if it's not analogous to any other personal relationship, then I can't find locate the phrase in any semantic space.
Let me explain.
Suppose you tell me that you have a tree in your garden. I know what a tree is, so I will naturally think you mean that you have a large woody plant with roots, branches and leaves, because that's what trees have.
So when someone says they have a PRWG, I know what a personal relationship is, so I will naturally think that that person talks to God, gets responses, knows He's there, can interact with Him, has a degree of intimacy and so on and so forth. If it turns out that this PRWG has none of these features, I find it rather confusing that it's called a PRWG, just as I'd find it strange if you actually had a giant thistle with no wood, no branches, and no leaves, but called it "a tree, but not like any other tree".
What I seem to be getting on this thread from the PRWG side is "a tree, but not like any other tree". One that doesn't have branches, leaves or roots, because it isn't like any other tree. What I'm asking is why you call it a tree then.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by PerkyEars:
quote:
The only time I thought God had clearly spoken to me I though He told me to go and be a primary school teacher. Evidently I was wrong, since I flunked the course in the final year and I am now an IT systems analyst. Still, I met Mrs Backslider there, so maybe
...maybe that was what you were there for.
Maybe it was. The thing is, had "God" (because I don't think it was He) said "Go to Nottingham Trent University" that would have been one thing. But "God" actually said "I want you to go and become a primary school teacher". That, had it really been "God", would have been a lie.
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
:
Karl, we've got those giant thistle trees out here in California!!! - we call 'em "palm trees"...
Posted by Teufelchen (# 10158) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
What I seem to be getting on this thread from the PRWG side is "a tree, but not like any other tree". One that doesn't have branches, leaves or roots, because it isn't like any other tree. What I'm asking is why you call it a tree then.
Sorry to hijack your metaphor here, Karl, but as with the 'not pizza, but bread and wine' argument I advanced much earlier in this thread, the tree-unlike-any-tree is exactly the symbol of God's personal relationship to us:
Faithful cross, thou sign of triumph,
Now for us the noblest tree,
None in foliage, none in blossom,
None in fruit thy peer may be;
Symbol of the world’s redemption,
For the weight that hung on thee!
Venantius Fortunatus, tr J M Neale
As I said before - some Christians clearly do feel a personal relationship with God in what is sometimes called the Jesus-is-my-boyfriend sense; others such as Karl equally clearly find such a conception impossible. Unless there's some disagreement about that, I'm not sure where the problem lies.
Oh - and to seize someone's substitution of 'erotic' for 'personal' - isn't that experience more often found among Catholic mystics than evangelicals? I may be wrong, but this is my recollection.
T.
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on
:
Yeah, Teuf, but from the context those lines are clearly metaphorical. There was never any indication that the PRWG was a metaphor.
But this is a tangent of a tangent.
Posted by Teufelchen (# 10158) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Yeah, Teuf, but from the context those lines are clearly metaphorical. There was never any indication that the PRWG was a metaphor.
I know - my paragraph after the verse was intended to address the issue more generally, not to comment on the verse. I guess I'm saying that there are at least three ways of seeing this:
1. A personal emotional/erotic relationship with God, where a perception of God's human immediacy is an important dimension of one's faith.
2. A sacramental, sacrificial personal relationship, where God's transcendent nature is made personal and immediate by representation in religious activity.
3. A purely philosophical attitude, without any personal engagement to speak of.
Unless anyone is saying that one or more of these approaches to God is intrinsically invalid, surely our disagreements are not with each other, but with those beyond this thread who've presented that attitude to us at other times?
T.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
What I seem to be getting on this thread from the PRWG side is "a tree, but not like any other tree". One that doesn't have branches, leaves or roots, because it isn't like any other tree. What I'm asking is why you call it a tree then.
Then let me deal once, for all, with this point - and I shall be as sensitive as an Evo1 can be
What I would say, about my relationship with God, is that it is very much like other personal relationships of mine (no metaphors, real ones like father/son, mother/son, friend/friend, teacher/student and so on). Some times it is close, sometimes it is distant and some times, positively non existant.
He speaks to me and tells me things I could never otherwise have known and he comforts me in times when no-one else could.
But all that said, I do not project those experiences on anyone else. I know that's the case for me but I also know that it's only my personal stubborness which made it necessary for him to communicate with me in this way. I fully respect and admire other Christians who view and interact(or not) with God in wholly different ways than me.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
I think what it simply means is that Christian faith has to be your own decision, your own journey and pilgrimage, rather than assuming you can be included in the crowd if you stand near enough.
I know what you mean, Mudfrog. And for most of us, most of the time, it's incredibly important that we have our own relationship with God. That's why, in the Liturgy, when we say the Creed, we say, "I believe in one God ..." and later, before the Eucharist, we have another prayer that begins with "I believe" --
quote:
I believe, O Lord, and I confess, that thou art truly the Christ, the Son of the living God, who came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am first. And I believe also that this is thine own most pure Body, and that this is thine own precious Blood. Therefore, I pray thee, have mercy upon me, and forgive my transgressions, both voluntary and involuntary, of word and of in deed, in knowledge and in ignorance, and make me worthy without condemnation to partake of thy most pure Mysteries for the remission of sins and unto life everlasting. Amen.
Of thy mystical supper, O Son of God, accept me today as a communicant, for I will not speak of thy mystery to thine enemies, neither like Judas will I give thee a kiss, but like the thief will I confess thee, remember me, O Lord, in thy kingdom.
May the communion of thy holy Mysteries be neither to my judgment nor to my condemnation, O Lord, but to the healing of soul and body.
I have to believe; I have to partake; I have to receive. No one can do that for me.
Yet, there is that man, when Jesus asked him if he believed, responded, "Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief." And, for me, that's one of the greatest, most important, and most wonderful things about the Church. When I struggle to believe, I can go there, and stand in the crowd, and the faith and the prayers of those gathered there can carry me along with them. When the crowd starts moving, if I have just enough faith to put myself in it, I can be carried along. I only have to have enough discipline to go -- and knowing that there are people there who look for me to be part of the crowd helps me get there. And when I get there, when it's time to partake of the Eucharist, I only have to have enough faith to open my mouth. That's all. God, through the people he has gathered there, can take care of the rest.
I struggle to keep a rule of prayer. It's really hard for me to talk to someone who doesn't talk back. And even when I can, I struggle to find a quiet time and place to try to get myself focused and centered on God. It's just really hard for me. But a wise and kind deacon I know told me that monastics are given a daily rule that causes them to have to get up in the middle of the night for prayers, and they are given obediences at the monastery that might not be what they would choose, and a severe fast; the point of all of that is to teach them to deny themselves and follow Christ. I don't have a monastic rule, and I couldn't keep one if I did. I can hardly keep the miniscule rule my priest has given me. But I've been given kids with special needs, and they are given to me to teach me to deny myself and follow Christ.
The command to pray without ceasing is given to us, not as individuals, but as a Church. So when I can't pray, because I am reading special educaiton law, or researching pediatric gastric reflux, or whatever it is I'm doing, I can trust that someone else is praying. As the earth turns on its axis, somewhere, someone is praying Vespers, even when I can't. And then Complines, and Matins, and the prayers of the hours. The world is wrapped in prayers. And because I'm part of the crowd, I'm carried along with and supported by the prayers of all those who can and do pray when I can't find the time or the place or the peace in my heart to do it.
[fixed code]
[ 06. December 2005, 16:49: Message edited by: RuthW ]
Posted by quantpole (# 8401) on
:
Thanks for that Josephine - makes a lot of sense and has helped to break down some more barriers.
Just one question, as it is something I struggle with. quote:
The command to pray without ceasing is given to us, not as individuals, but as a Church.
How do we know the commandmant is for the church and not as individuals? I know it is physically impossible, but have previously taken it as a bit of hyperbole to emphasise the importance of prayer in our lives.
Posted by professorkirke (# 9037) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by Evo1:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
What I seem to be getting on this thread from the PRWG side is "a tree, but not like any other tree". One that doesn't have branches, leaves or roots, because it isn't like any other tree. What I'm asking is why you call it a tree then.
Then let me deal once, for all, with this point - and I shall be as sensitive as an Evo1 can be
What I would say, about my relationship with God, is that it is very much like other personal relationships of mine (no metaphors, real ones like father/son, mother/son, friend/friend, teacher/student and so on). Some times it is close, sometimes it is distant and some times, positively non existant.
He speaks to me and tells me things I could never otherwise have known and he comforts me in times when no-one else could.
But all that said, I do not project those experiences on anyone else. I know that's the case for me but I also know that it's only my personal stubborness which made it necessary for him to communicate with me in this way. I fully respect and admire other Christians who view and interact(or not) with God in wholly different ways than me.
Thank you, Evo1. That's (and I'm being quite honest here) one of the best things anyone's said on this thread.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
:
quote:
Originally posted by quantpole:
Thanks for that Josephine - makes a lot of sense and has helped to break down some more barriers.
Just one question, as it is something I struggle with. quote:
The command to pray without ceasing is given to us, not as individuals, but as a Church.
How do we know the commandmant is for the church and not as individuals? I know it is physically impossible, but have previously taken it as a bit of hyperbole to emphasise the importance of prayer in our lives.
Would you be happy with, "Because that's what I've been taught"? Hmm. Maybe not.
But because it is physically impossible, the Church had to decide whether to interpret it as hyperbole, or as a command to the community, because, as you say, it doesn't work as a literal command to individuals. And I've been taught, since becoming Orthodox, that it is a command to the Church, to the community. As a part of that community, I need to do my part to keep the prayer going. But it's something we all do together.
It seems to me, as I've said before, that Christianity in past times, and even now in other places, is much more communal than what is typical in the US and western Europe. We're in it together. It makes sense to me.
Posted by Evo1 (# 10249) on
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quote:
Originally posted by professorkirke:
Thank you, Evo1. That's (and I'm being quite honest here) one of the best things anyone's said on this thread.
Then I wished I'd said it a long time ago
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
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quote:
posted by Josephine:
The command to pray without ceasing is given to us, not as individuals, but as a Church. So when I can't pray, because I am reading special educaiton law, or researching pediatric gastric reflux, or whatever it is I'm doing, I can trust that someone else is praying. As the earth turns on its axis, somewhere, someone is praying Vespers, even when I can't. And then Complines, and Matins, and the prayers of the hours. The world is wrapped in prayers. And because I'm part of the crowd, I'm carried along with and supported by the prayers of all those who can and do pray when I can't find the time or the place or the peace in my heart to do it
You may believe it because it's what you've been taught; I've never been taught that but I really like it and see the truth of it. I'm not sure it's the ONLY way to apply the passage (so often things aren't "either/or" but "both/and") but yeah, this is a good understanding. I have had a few occasions when I could barely pray but I could feel the prayers of faithful friends (and only God knows how many other saints) upholding me... BTW, I love compline.
Posted by (gracia) (# 1812) on
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Well, if you consider "pray without ceasing" as hyperbole, then aren't all the other commandments hyperbole, too?
Thou shalt not covet...etc. etc. Impossible to live up to them, but these commands do set the standard for us, so we know what to strive for.
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
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I don't follow you, (gracia). One can't pray when one is, for example, unconscious. But I can't imagine anyone saying you sinned by failing to pray then. The commandment doesn't apply when you're out cold. So it doesn't literally mean "without ceasing," if it's a command given to each of us individually.
Which, as I said, I don't think it is. "Thou shalt not covet," on the other hand, is given to each of us individually. The command is in the singular, not the plural. So we're expected to refrain from coveting. And I don't see any reason to believe that it's impossible to refrain from coveting, any more than I would say it's impossible to refrain from murder.
Posted by (gracia) (# 1812) on
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I guess you're saying that since "pray without ceasing" was given to a body of believers instead of to each individual (historically), that makes it a qualitatively different "command" than the 10 commandments per se.
My point is that it is no more possible to obey all the commandments than it is to obey Paul's instruction, so I don't accept that "pray without ceasing" is too demanding to be considered as an individual requirement (because I do believe that the 10 commandments are, also, though they are a standard to measure our actions by).
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on
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quote:
Originally posted by (gracia):
I guess you're saying that since "pray without ceasing" was given to a body of believers instead of to each individual (historically), that makes it a qualitatively different "command" than the 10 commandments per se.
Yes.
quote:
My point is that it is no more possible to obey all the commandments than it is to obey Paul's instruction, so I don't accept that "pray without ceasing" is too demanding to be considered as an individual requirement (because I do believe that the 10 commandments are, also, though they are a standard to measure our actions by).
I'm still missing something, I'm afraid. Are you saying that you believe that God doesn't really expect or intend us to keep his commandments? Or that we're not capable of it anyway, so it doesn't matter what God expects or intends? Or something else?
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
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quote:
Originally posted by (gracia):
I guess you're saying that since "pray without ceasing" was given to a body of believers instead of to each individual (historically), that makes it a qualitatively different "command" than the 10 commandments per se.
gracia, I think it's direction and instruction, not law. So yes, that is qualitatively different. Paul (and others, but mostly Paul) gave a lot of instruction to the nascent church - "this is how you walk it out" - and since his emphasized that we are saved by grace through faith and that not of ourselves, that he wasn't establishing a new set of laws for the church to keep (obviously, ymmv).
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on
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This is going to come out wrong however I write it so Karl and Josephine please bear with me...
To return to the linkage or otherwise between those on the autistic continuum and PRWG, Mrs Black is a speech and language therapist and is frequently involved with under-5s who are on the continuum. One of the things which has deeply troubled her from time to time is the conflict between her evangelical faith and its insistence that we all have a PRWG on the one hand, and the fact that those individuals at the severely autistic end of the continuum frequently strike her as lacking the capacity to form a personal relationship (as most of us understand that) with anyone, including God/Christ on the other. The logical extension of the evangelical insistence on the PRWG is that such individuals are incapable of being saved, even that they lack a soul, a concept which, needless to say, both my wife and I find abhorrent in the extreme.
Both of us have found reading this thread a great relief and release from the above tyranny of logic, and my thanks to Josephine and Karl in particular for your candour and proof that "there's more than one way to skin a cat" on this issue.
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on
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Josephine said (a few posts back}
quote:
Yet, there is that man, when Jesus asked him if he believed, responded, "Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief." And, for me, that's one of the greatest, most important, and most wonderful things about the Church. When I struggle to believe, I can go there, and stand in the crowd, and the faith and the prayers of those gathered there can carry me along with them. When the crowd starts moving, if I have just enough faith to put myself in it, I can be carried along. I only have to have enough discipline to go -- and knowing that there are people there who look for me to be part of the crowd helps me get there. And when I get there, when it's time to partake of the Eucharist, I only have to have enough faith to open my mouth. That's all. God, through the people he has gathered there, can take care of the rest.
It was this belief, which Josephine puts so much better than I can and the thought of the "crowd of witnesses" - living on earth and in heaven - that got me through a long, and dreadful period of dryness, despair and almost non-belief.
And hooray that Matt and Mrs Black are no longer bound by one definition of what it means to know God. And for your work, Mrs. B
Posted by LynnMagdalenCollege (# 10651) on
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amen.
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