Monday, June 30
Book 9
Compassion
I was wondering what we thought about section 5. Augustine speaks of the Stoics who claim emotions, like compassion, "invade" us. he also says that "the holy angels feel.... no fellow-feeling with misery while they relieve the miserable... though they have none of our weakness, their acts resemble the actions to which these emotions move us." So is compassion, and other emotions of feelings, a human weakness, something that invades us, we cannot control? Will we have compassion in heaven, or is there no need for compassion in heaven? We also were talking at CF last friday about "what is emotion?" or "what is feeling?"-- Sir Robert was wanting a definition but such a definition is hard to come to. We were discussing that thoughts can be sinful, but not feelings. The feeling of anger or lust or whatever is not sinful, but when we indulge that feeling, pursue it, think upon it, dwell in it, etc, then it is sinful. So Jesus, on the cross, can "complain" to God by asking "why have You forsaken me?"- these words arising in part of a feeling Jesus had on the cross, of being forsaken, but obviously such a feeling is not sinful especially if Jesus has this feeling... it seems kind of inhuman if one were to say Jesus did not feel forsaken. So what are feelings in relation to sin, weakness, strengths, etc...?
Section 16-Demons
I was wondering in this section if Augustine was saying that the demons become contaminated by men or at least have the capability of being contaminated? I don't understand how a demon can be contaminated if it is already in of itself wicked? You add a drop of oil to a glass of milk and it no longer is pure milk, and can never be pure milk again. Adding more drops to the milk changes a ratio, but it was already contaminated and thus that fact remains unaltered. Just because you sin 100 times a day doesn't make you more sinful than if you sin 10 times a day... you were sinful to begin with, it doesn't change. A murderer is no "more sinful" in the eyes of God than a blasphemer. etc. what do you think?
Book 8
any more thoughts?
I like your point, Dwight, about people not having the same understanding or perspective on certain things, like love or spirituality. A result is that truth gets watered down or abandoned.
Friday, June 27
Re: Pace of reading
I say that we aim for one a week, but give everyone time to respond to each book before moving on... and then move on and if more discussion on previous books continue even with the new book discussions, great!
I say that we aim for one a week, but give everyone time to respond to each book before moving on... and then move on and if more discussion on previous books continue even with the new book discussions, great!
Thursday, June 26
Re: Book 8 at last
Yeah, nice slow pace is cool with me :) wanna do one a week? or no schedule, just do it when it happens? Any opinions?
...since I started reading 40+ pages of War and Peace every day...
Thanks for reminding me, I bought Don Quixote yesterday (pretty good book so far)
"As a result, after Jesus' death (and resurrection) His followers only preached and healed and never used violence in the way that Augustine describes with Athens."
It is interesting what you about violence from the followers of Socrates and Jesus. I think that most people would think of Philosophers as more non-violent than Christians (think Crusades etc.)
..."But the true and highest good, according to Plato, is God, and therefore he would call him a philosopher who loves God; for philosophy is directed to the obtaining of the blessed life, and he who loves God is blessed in the enjoyment of God." so we really are philosophers! (haha)
Augustine is so ... not sarcastic, but facetious sometimes. He knows that Plato's highest good was his god, not God. But he puts it like "yeah, I agree with everything you say..." That's the problem with talking to many people these days, they agree with everything you say, but not the definitions of your words (think- love, good, spirituality etc. )
Prayers to Martyrs?
something else I noted at the end of Book 8, section 27.
Augustine states that sacrifices are offered at the tombs of martyrs not for the martyr but for God, as "honuors rendered to their memory." This is interesting because I remember Dwight bringing up prayers to saints and what Augustine would think of those. Well, this at least suggests to me that saints would not be prayed to unless it were to invoke God to aid us as He aided that saint, but the prayers not going to the saint him/herself... what do you think? Augustine seems to stress the memory, remembrance of the saints/martyrs, nothing more. Of course, Augustine only specifes "sacrifices"- "we do not ordain priests and offer sacrifices to our martyrs as they do to their dead men, for that would be incongruous, undue, and unlawful, such being due only to God..." I wonder if prayers would be in the same vein as sacrifices or acceptable if they are something completely different. Prayers however are more than honour and remembrance, these two things being what Augustine seems to 'approve' of here.
Tuesday, June 24
Book 8 at last
Hey all, sorry I'm a bit late, of course, someone else could've posted a question on Book 8. (any volunteers for Book 9??) As of now, I am realiziing it is taking me a whole heck of a lot longer to do the readings since I started reading 40+ pages of War and Peace every day... hmm. I am quite fine however at a nice slow pace...
So, Book 8!
It is so exciting, don't ya'll think?? Well, I was loving sections 2 and 3... and all the Plato stuff. In section 3, Augustine recaps the history of the life of Socrates. He remarks, "that very city of the Athenians, which had publicly condemned him, did publicly bewail him- the popular indignation having turned with such vehemence on his accusers, that one of them perished by the violence of the multitude...." I found this event quite interesting, as a parallel to Jesus. Jesus too was condemned by the city to die, though the disciples in "bewailing" Jesus never resorted to violence. While Jesus was still living, that had been their initial reaction (ex: Peter chopping off a guard's ear when Judas hands Jesus over, etc.), but were rebuked for violence. As a result, after Jesus' death (and resurrection) His followers only preached and healed and never used violence in the way that Augustine describes with Athens. I thought this was very interesting, as Jesus also had many followers, that only increased in number after His death, and we can say the same about Socrates and the Socratic philosophy.
the reason I am so interested in this section, incase anyone was wondering, was beacsue i am thinking about writing my senior essay on this, namely, contrasting the philosophies of Socrates and Jesus. Any thoughts to this end would be most appreciated. :)
So I don't really have a question, but, wanted to point some things out that I enjoyed and found interesting.
also, at the end of section 8, it says "But the true and highest good, according to Plato, is God, and therefore he would call him a philosopher who loves God; for philosophy is directed to the obtaining of the blessed life, and he who loves God is blessed in the enjoyment of God."
so we really are philosophers! (haha)
Re:Dwight on Will
I have the same tendency to think of God as Big Guy in the Sky... you put our conundrum nicely ;)
Friday, June 20
Re: MJ Book 5 on Will
(June 7th)
"But it seems like evil could come out of God giving us a will..."
Without evil can good exist? Imagine light without darkness, we wouldn't know what light was if we weren't ever without it. So I think more good comes from God allowing us to choose than would ever exist if we were all good all the time.
Why did God create the world... he doesn't need us, he was ALL... Is there more love now that we are here?
Re: Kristi on MJ on Will
(June 8th)
The nature of God's foreknowledge came up a lot last year in my OT and NT seminars. Does God plan each and every part of the entire actual history of man, so that our lives are simply like a movie? Or does he set down the big things, and force people not to interfere with those things? Or does he simply know what is going to happen (and therefore prophesy is true, not because he is making it true, but because the people in the world are going to make all the decisions that will bring about that prophesy) because he knows the creator's (his) nature and the creator made all people? This last option allows will. Just because God knows what IS going too happen, doesn't mean that he is forcing it to happen.
Also some of our problems with Will are created by the way we tend to think of God... as a Big Guy Somewhere Up in The Clouds looking down on us. But he is different... He doesn't exist in time (except when Jesus was incarnate) He is the Beginning and the End... he is both places in time and all others from eternity to eternity. (I know Kristi already said this, but I have to keep saying it to myself, and even when I do, I keep slipping back to the Big Guy in the Sky idea of God)
Re: MJ 3 Divisions of Theology continued
June 14
What you put in natural and civil theology sounds like what I have been thinking along these lines: Ok... now I am redeemed, since I can't just kill myself and go to be with God now... what do I do? Nothing we do is FOR redemption... but because of the redemption we do good. We can have rules and stuff to guide us through life, as long as we are always talking to God. Sometimes God talks to us through the law. But sometimes we say "OK God... I got it from here" and we start paying attention to the law instead of God. So all of Paul's passages that sound like laws are just good ideas that we should do. But we shouldn't get caught up in doing them. Always pay attention to Natural theology. And constantly strive to improve civil theology w/o thinking that perfect civil theology is even obtainable or can bring salvation.
Progress
This internet thing might start working soon... sorry about the delay I will try to catch up soon...
catch you latter
Thursday, June 19
It seems to me that sometimes I can assert I "know" something since I trust God's word... but perhaps that just means it boils down to faith anyway. hmm.
anyway, I will not be on tomorrow since the internet here will be down, but, maybe I'll get on saturday or sunday and post a book 8 question, unless someone else wants to beat me to it....
anyway, I will not be on tomorrow since the internet here will be down, but, maybe I'll get on saturday or sunday and post a book 8 question, unless someone else wants to beat me to it....
Wednesday, June 18
Re:Disaray of gods
I find this very interesting too. I am definitely learning a lot about the Roman cultuer and religious lives. It's pretty disturbing. This disaray also relates to a previous topic we discussed, about chaos adn order. To quote Augustine who was quoting that guy Varro in 7.17, "I can be more easily led to doubt the things which I have writen in the first book, than to attempt to reduce all the things I shall write in this one to any orderly system." Clearly, the religion of teh Romans and their "gods" was a complete disaray... no order was possible. This also relates to some of my thoughts on Book 7 about the mind...
The Mind in Book 7
Augustine begins Book 7 by saying that he will "eradicate depraved and ancient opinions hostile to the truth of piety," (preface). I find the claim interesting that the Romans reliled on opinions and not truth, preferring to be deceived than to know the actual nature of these gods, truth, etc. Some interesting passages I was reflecting on and relating:
".. they do not explain them, but rather involve them. They rush hither and thither, to this side or to that, according as they are driven by the impulse of erratic opinion; so that even Varro himself has chosen rather to doubt concverning all things, than to affirm anything." (17)
"...[Varro] was not only without the guidance of the truth of things, but was also pressed by the authority of tradition." (17)
this one is especially interesting: "as Xenophon of Colophon writes, I will state what I think, not what I am prepared to maintain; it is for man to think those things, for God to know them." (17)
and some more:
"Interpretation failed, reason blushed, speech was silent..."(26)
"We, however, seek for a mind which, trusting to true religion, does not adore the world as its god, but for the sake of God praises the world as a work of God, and, purified from mundance defilements, comes pure to God Himself who founded the world." (26)
"...we have mind and reason by which to seek after Him who made all these things..." (31)
I find the role of the mind in the Christian life particularly interesting. We are commanded to love God with our minds, yet for the Romans, they denied their minds, deined the ability to grasp truth, and were swayed by passions and pleasures instead, vile and wicked things, etc. In a time that I always think of being as particularly logical and philosophical, this was a bit shocking that they seem to abandon reason in religion. Any thoughts? Also, what do you guys think about the last quote I wrote from 17- can we know things as God knows, are our ideas only thoughts and not things we can maintain... my gut screams no, we can know things, God can tell us things, but, what is this balance for the Christian between "thought" and "knowledge"?
Re:MJ on Divisions
ok, I gotcha now. I had a feeling after posting my comments that we didn't actually disagree that much, but, that I just wasn't clear on your thoughts.
p.s- Book 8 is so great! Socrates! Plato! Greek Philosophy! hurrah! ;) I can't wait to discuss...!
Tuesday, June 17
hey... I am in Minnesota... I just downloaded the posts y'all have done in the last couple days. I am having trouble connecting, but I think I got it worked out, look for some responses tomorrow... sorry for the delay
yeah... whatever pace we set is fine with me... see y'all tomorrow
yeah... whatever pace we set is fine with me... see y'all tomorrow
Monday, June 16
Re: MJ on the Three Divisions
I agree with you that religions are related. my guess is that other religions exist because they were trying to understand the one true God but just missed the mark. and since they are based in this world created by God, it makes sense that some of the same "themes" run through differing religions. However, it is necessary to identify that when these ideas are shared, they can only be right in the correct, true and only context- the context of Christ Himself.
As to the second part of what you were saying, MJ, I am not sure I agree. The church is a vital part to Christianity, as is the Bible and perhaps other "religious" things you mention like traditions etc. I recognize this "civil theology" you apply to the religion side of Christianity as important because of sin. yet this statement is what i am not sure i agree with: If we did not live in sin, that would be all we needed, but because we do live in sin, we need religion. If we did not have sin, we wouldn't have Jesus. But clearly after we die adn no longer live in sin but live eternally in Christ, we still have Christ, we still have a community of believers even in heaven. The church is not just there in my eyes becasue of sin. The church and religious things are important beyond the purpose of helping us survive through sin. It's also important because of doctrine, adn this is why we have denominations, differences over doctrine. (in general). I do recognize that after life, "doctrine" won't necessarily be the same because I suppose everyone will be on the same page on everything, and the divisions won't exist. So I can see at least a few ways how your divisions of theology are appropriate, I jsut don't fully agree. I also don't think the natural theology would be the only thing we needed, at least not how you define it. I don't think all we need is our own personal relationship with Christ... I mean, yes, that is all we need, technically, but God designed us to live in communion with one another and with Him. I think we devalue the importance of the church, community,etc., thinking we can get along just fine without it when it is exactly what we need. maybe thsi is what you meant by sharing it with others, but, i was just trying to be more specific by referring to "the church." anyway... i'm rambling a bit.
Book 7?
I'm still reading book 7, will be finished tuesday, so if someone else has a question or opening thoughts, please ask and post away ;)
Saturday, June 14
another thing occurred to me about Book 6. This guy Varro Augustine talks about divides theology into the fabulous (mythical), natural (physical), and civil. why the heck i wonder was theology divided at all in the first place? i mean, do we experience that- different theologies for the "theater, world, city"? Seems a bit absurd to me. Theology, being about the one true God, seems to me that it should be like God and be unchanging. Book 6 , and now 7 I'm still reading, both are not quite as interesting to me. But perhaps these sections were especially important if this guy Varro was deceiving people by his philosophy...
anyone in this great void have some thoughts? :)
anyone in this great void have some thoughts? :)
Friday, June 13
Re:Interem Post
readings are long and slow but manageable for me. However, since it's Friday and no posts have been made on Book 6 yet (after my thoughts at least) I'd vote to do 7 on Monday and just fall back a bit. We can always carry this study into the fall/school year, that is fine by me. I'd rather take our time and really understand it as much as possible then rush just to fit it in during the summer, etc. I'll check back later today to see if anything new has been posted on 6... so hope everyone's doing well out there! ;)
readings are long and slow but manageable for me. However, since it's Friday and no posts have been made on Book 6 yet (after my thoughts at least) I'd vote to do 7 on Monday and just fall back a bit. We can always carry this study into the fall/school year, that is fine by me. I'd rather take our time and really understand it as much as possible then rush just to fit it in during the summer, etc. I'll check back later today to see if anything new has been posted on 6... so hope everyone's doing well out there! ;)
Wednesday, June 11
Interem Post
Hey... I am kinda confused and behind... I am finished with book 6, and will try to catch up on what y'all have posted later tonight.
For me at least, the reading hasn't been to much for me, I just have been lazy. So my vote is to do 7 tomorrow and keep up 2 a week.
Other's opinions may vary
Re:Will and Time, Book 5 still
Well, not sure how much I can expand my thoughts on God out of time, us locked in time. I brought it up because I wanted to emphasize I don't think the paths of our lives must follow one single path. We do have choices, and if we follow God, the road is indeed straight and narrow. But let me give you an analogy that has come up about 3 times in the past week during discussions at Christian Fellowship and outside of it, etc. (Neat how God brings something up over and over again to teach me!) God's will is one line. A straight and narrow road, if you will. And you must walk this narrow road and not fall off to either side. Yet imagine that this narrow road is like a plane slicing through a medium. The plane's edge is a single line, it cuts the medium with one cut, one slice, this one narrow road of God's will. Yet being a plane, there are an infinite many ways to go from point A to point B- straight lines, wavy lines, jagged lines, etc. I use this analogy to illustrate our freedom of choice even when we are abiding in God's will. I hope this doesn't complicate the discussion.
But to be more specific to the issue, I guess I think God is not one who will "force" us to do anything simply because it is "fated" or what-have-you. We don't "interact" with God's foreknowledge in that way. Rather, He knows the future, we don't know the future, but we go and do and be in each moment as we choose and He knows it all because He is God. Not sure I can take it much further at the moment, maybe someone else can reflect on God and time.
Re:Ambition Book 5
Thanks for your thoughts MJ! I found the quotes good/helpful as well.
Book 6 Thoughts
Not sure if we want to keep going, since it seems we're a bit behind, seeing as how it is Wednesday and technically were supposed to go on to Book 6 on Monday, but I'll throw something out there. Please give feedback on whether we should slow down, wait for Ryan and ourselves (ha!) to catch up, keep on trucking, ... ?
Eternal Life
Augustine mentions toward the end of this section that "none of these gods is the giver of happiness, who are worshipped with such shame... Moreover, how can he give eternal life who cannot give happiness? For we mean by eternal life that life where there is endless happiness," (12). Is this a good definition or description of eternal life- endless happiness? For some reason it struck me as an interesting way of "summing up" eternal life. Also, is it not possible that the Romans felt happy even in their shameful worship? Sin as sin wants to seem good and fun and enjoyable. Turning from sin seems to be one of the hardest things for Christians because it is tempting and tempting to enjoy sin, etc. How would the Romans- or anyone- then know they were experiencing "true felicity" from God?
Madness
another interesting comment: Augustine says in section 10 after describing the shameful practice of worship of the gods, etc, that "no one would doubt that they are mad, had they been mad with the minority; but now the multitude of the insane is the defence of their sanity." What do we think about this? Don't Christians sometimes give the same impression- that we are mad- i.e. Pentecost, drunk on the Spirit, etc...? is the difference that our "madness" is "moral" since it is from God and recognizably different from the "immoral madness" of the Romans?
Sunday, June 8
Re: MJ on Will
I think Augustine says the power of the will is good- so perhaps, in the ultimate case (sorry, couldn't resist the Newton Principia reference... haha), the will is good. Yet the will involves freedom which is also good... good until the freedom is used for evil. Yet if we did not have the will to choose God and what is good, we would be robots, and any praise or love or devotion to the Lord would be like a computer or something... it wouldn't be as much of a delight becasue we had no choice whetehr to love God or not.. but we choose Him just as He chooses us... thereby, on both sides, the love is of more value. does that make any sense? not that i'm clearing up problems, but, perhaps moving in that direction at least.
What you brought up about having an uncertain outcome has certainly been stewing in my mind longer than I've been reading Augustine. yet this is what I've come to in my own thoughts. If God only "predicted" as you said, this is a limit on His being. I also don't think God predicts things because then He would be "surprised" by things and I don't think that is possible. He knows every hair on our heads, and no one falls without His knowledge. I also think this means, He sees things beforehand, and this foreknowledge is what enablees Him to intervene in our lives as well. He knows what needs to be done to watch out for us. I think if we try to understand the freedom of choice from two perspectives- one that is ours, locked in time, and the one that is God's, outside of time, it might help. We have the freedom in time because the future for us is uncertain. the future is not uncertain for God but that doesn't necessitate Him dictating our own thoughts and actions. He knows them, but doesn't force us to do/make them in one particular way or the other. Not that He's a distant observer or "watchmaker" that doesn't do anything, but, He allows us to sin and allows us to choose Him or reject Him. And this is good and perfect because it is from God, how we are made, etc. How am I doing on my logic adn theology? ;)
Friday, June 6
Book 5
Will
Well. I really enjoyed book 5. I especially found sections 9 and 10 extremely interesting. Did anything stike you guys particularly in those sections? I almost wish however that Augustine would have gone another step further and talked more about 'predestination' and what it means to be 'chosen'- still, the discussion of will and foreknowledge was complex and good. I think I agree with the way he seems to reconcile them. Augustine does say that "as He is the creator of all natures, so also is He the bestower of all powers, not of all wills; for wicked wills are not from Him, being contrary to nature, which is from Him." So what do we think about this? Obviously in creation God gave us this power of choice- the power of will. Yet what does it mean for Him to give us actual wills? It makes sense not to give us wicked wills being contrary to nature, but I guess I'm not sure what it means to give us wills if it is supposed to be something different than the power of will...?
Awareness
Then, in section 23, Augustine says something that I just had a little question over. He says God did "cause that the king of the Goths should be conquered in a wonderful manner, lest glory should accrue to demons, whom he was known to be supplicating, and thus the minds of the weak should be overthrown..." I was wondering whether we think God still "protects" His glory by not letting glory "accrue to demons" today? Was this sort of action normal, specific to the time, specific to the situation? Perhaps we are simply not aware of the fullness of God's role in this world. In many ways, Augustine takes it for granted that his audience knows God's constant intervention. God's intervention in our daily lives- in my life- is certainly something I know I must have no full comprehension of.
Re: "good" not pertaining to God
I still don't understand Augustine when he says that a certain attitude, while not aligned with God, is better than another attitude.
Dwight, I wasn't sure what you were referring to, so if you get a chance, could you expound and quote Augustine if possible to a section he talks about this?
Schedule
Yes, I have not tackled book 6. I also know Ryan is trying to catch up, so, doing catch up either later on or just not at all sounds better to me. So, just doing 5 today sounds good with me. I'll post some of my thoughts on book 5 later today.
Re: Dwight's Ambition in Religion
I' not sure it is the same thing to think about God in the facets of your life as it would be to create separate gods for those facets. However, I suppose what you mention does make it conceivable how the Romans would do such a thing, i.e. creating a multitude of gods. Creating gods for those facets implies a discontinuity in life- that other gods can' "help out" with more than one thing, and the human experience is only connected in our eyes but then the gods don't know us as the Lord does. They would only know us in one specific manner. Thus, a multitude of gods allows the Romans to think that different gods act differently, i.e. they change. There is no one divine nature- more than one nature could be divine. Thus, divinity is relative. And that is not how the Lord is. In addition, the Romans must assume gods have limited power, which is also not how God is. So I think creating gods for every facet of life starts with a deception/blindness/misunderstanding of who God is, what He is, how He is, etc. Whereas, for your experience, you know His nature, and thus every facet of your life is governed by this same nature when you think on Him, etc. (man, I'm long-winded. I'll work on that...)
I like your comment about the saints, too. I'm not sure what Augustine would say about them...
Re:Dwight's Felicity
I wondered what you thought about the evil that exists in the world- when we as Christians suffer, and evil/sin are the causes, is this still "good" for the Christian? Or is it more that God works through the evil in this world to give His children good? (an ultimate good if not a temporal good?) What do you think? Again, as to what felicity is, I think it's another one of those things like justice and love that only has true meaning when based upon Christianity. (referring back to a previous blog post)
Re:MJ's Felicity
I like the distinction you make about happiness and joy. However, I've always thought the non-Christian tries to attain true felicity apart from God, ends up empty, then can begin to understand God as the true giver of felicity... however, you suggested (based on my quote from 33) that a non-Christian would only be able to understand true felicity at all from being accustomed to felicity from good fortune. In my quote from 33, Augustine says a person would be "spiritual" yet not "openly declaring"- so perhaps they have a glimmer of true felicity that is in/from God, and experience of that, but still holding back? anyway, it's interesting to think about the two different perspectives.
Re:Dwight's Deception
Based on what you say, it doesn't sound like you are deceived if you know that your thinking is off. So I would say, because your thinking is off, then that is sinful, because it is not how God would have you think. So I don't know if there is another form of deception besides sin (or something derived/resulted from sin) or demons.
Here it is, thursday night, and I just finished book 5 this morning... I don't know how y'all are doing, but I am behind. I won't be able to reply the next couple of days... see y'all Sunday!
From the last chapter of book 5 and the Preface to 6, I think we can rule out the idea that this book could be adressed to Pagans. After saying they are too stupid to understand what is going on, the idea that the whole time Augustine was adressing these arguments to a sympathetic audience was cemented in my mind.
In books 1-5 he has sufficiently delt with Pagan "gods" Whats next?
I still don't understand Augustine when he says that a certain attitude, while not aligned with God, is better than another attitude. I guess it is kinda like the attitude I have had sometimes. "At least Americans aren't ___" or "It sure is nice that we have freedom of religion." Wouldn't it be better if we were persecuted for our faith? Isn't civil government an intrument to make softies out of us?
Observations on Augustine following the 5th book
From the last chapter of book 5 and the Preface to 6, I think we can rule out the idea that this book could be adressed to Pagans. After saying they are too stupid to understand what is going on, the idea that the whole time Augustine was adressing these arguments to a sympathetic audience was cemented in my mind.
In books 1-5 he has sufficiently delt with Pagan "gods" Whats next?
"good" not pertaining to God
I still don't understand Augustine when he says that a certain attitude, while not aligned with God, is better than another attitude. I guess it is kinda like the attitude I have had sometimes. "At least Americans aren't ___" or "It sure is nice that we have freedom of religion." Wouldn't it be better if we were persecuted for our faith? Isn't civil government an intrument to make softies out of us?
Monday, June 2
Stuff
My brother would like to join the group... I told him to use the comments for a while just to see if y'all wanted to let him join. So read the comments, and if you think he does a good job, we can let him join
:-)
Sorry I was out of pocket the last couple days, my cousins are graduating, and my grandmother had a micro-stroke (TIA or something like that) in church on Sunday. If you would pray for her that would be great... She is fine, there was no damage, but it was scarry.
I think we should try to do 5 and 6 this week if possible (I am almost done reading 5) but we can skip one if we are falling behind...
Re: Deception
Is there any other source of deception than sin or demons? Even within my life, I am deceieved into some of the ideas you present. Sometimes I find myself weighing the "good" things I have done versus the bad things i have done... and I know that nothing I do is good except for God.
Re: Felicity
(More)What exactly is felicity? It is Good Fortune, right? It cannot be bad, as fortune can. Is there more to it? Also, what we view as good and what IS good are two things. Since "all things work out for good for those who believe in Jesus," every event is good for Christians. (Not necessarily for non-Christians.) So no-matter-what Christians experience "good-fortune." Even when friends and relatives pass away. Even when we are being held hostage. Even when _fill in the blank with anything that would be considered bad from a secular viewpoint_ happens.
Re: Ambition in Religion
(More)While I was reading about all of the Gods in books 3 and 4 I couldn't help thinking about saints. I don't know that much about them, but I do know that Luther swore by St. Anne (Patron saint of Miners) that he would become a monk when he was scared by lightning. Aren't there saints of most of the stuff that Augustine was talking about? I wonder what Augustine would say about saints today.
Re: Book 3 Opening Thoughts
(Kristi)Thus, what are the differences between us suffering and the Romans suffering (described in this section)?
I think Augustine is saying that the gods were worshiped so that the worshipers would not suffer, and to disprove these gods Augustine shows how they don't "do their jobs."
Re: Ambition in Religion
I do see that as I learn more about God, a greater percentage of my life (thoughts, actions, etc.) is lived with God in mind. I wonder if this is in any way similar to "creating gods" for every facet of life... I'm not saying it is an acceptable way of living, but is it kinda the same?
hmm. so it's monday and i thought everyone would have been talking about book 4 by now... or perhaps everyone like me is behind, haha. how's everyone doing out there?? sorry, guys, that i disappeared for 3 days. we can push book 5 back to thursday if we want. but i'll try to start us off with some thoughts on book 4 at the moment....
We see this role of 'ambition' - or whatever we want to call it- again throughout this book in relation to their gods. The Roman people seem to think (the) one God is not enough, and that they must have multiple gods for every detail of life. Augustine goes on to talk at great length about the gods/goddesses the Romans appoint for Fortune, Felicity, Virtue. He argues these should not be gods seeing as how they are gifts from God (4.21). He also concludes in 33 that first, God is the only giver of felicity and second, "Felicity He gives only to the good."- what do we think about this statement? Frankly, what do we think about the entire section 33? (He also ties felicity to piety which is interesting.) I thought this is true if it was referring simply to an eternal felicity, but then Augustine says that "and this is the mystery of the OT, in which the New was hidden, that there even earthly gifts are promised: those who were spiritual understanding even then, although not yet openly declaring, both the eternity which was symbolized by these earthly things, and in what gifts of God true felicity can be found." Do all physical things really symbolize eternity? etc.
Augustine also writes that "[the pontiff] thinks it expedient, therefore, that states should be deceived in matters of religion" (4.27). is this motivation for deception a by-product of sin or demons? I find a similar train of thought running today- not that people should be deceived abotu religion, but that people should submit themselves to a religion if it will help them be a better person... thus there is deception that someone can be a good person by going to church but not having to believe. People push aside the idea of an absolute truth and simply want the temporal benefits of religion- good morals, character, etc. These are comfortable thoughts because they push aside the awareness of sin and the need for holy, obedient, servants of Jesus Christ. Morality is not enough. Why was there this push towards religious deception??
if anyone else has some better questions or thoughts, go ahead. i'll head on to book 5, but you guys let me know where you are in reading, etc.
Two Thoughts from Book 4
Felicity
We see this role of 'ambition' - or whatever we want to call it- again throughout this book in relation to their gods. The Roman people seem to think (the) one God is not enough, and that they must have multiple gods for every detail of life. Augustine goes on to talk at great length about the gods/goddesses the Romans appoint for Fortune, Felicity, Virtue. He argues these should not be gods seeing as how they are gifts from God (4.21). He also concludes in 33 that first, God is the only giver of felicity and second, "Felicity He gives only to the good."- what do we think about this statement? Frankly, what do we think about the entire section 33? (He also ties felicity to piety which is interesting.) I thought this is true if it was referring simply to an eternal felicity, but then Augustine says that "and this is the mystery of the OT, in which the New was hidden, that there even earthly gifts are promised: those who were spiritual understanding even then, although not yet openly declaring, both the eternity which was symbolized by these earthly things, and in what gifts of God true felicity can be found." Do all physical things really symbolize eternity? etc.
Deception
Augustine also writes that "[the pontiff] thinks it expedient, therefore, that states should be deceived in matters of religion" (4.27). is this motivation for deception a by-product of sin or demons? I find a similar train of thought running today- not that people should be deceived abotu religion, but that people should submit themselves to a religion if it will help them be a better person... thus there is deception that someone can be a good person by going to church but not having to believe. People push aside the idea of an absolute truth and simply want the temporal benefits of religion- good morals, character, etc. These are comfortable thoughts because they push aside the awareness of sin and the need for holy, obedient, servants of Jesus Christ. Morality is not enough. Why was there this push towards religious deception??
if anyone else has some better questions or thoughts, go ahead. i'll head on to book 5, but you guys let me know where you are in reading, etc.