Tuesday, May 19, 2020

I Don't Have a Point, and I'm Getting To It

I suppose the bottom line -- presented to you at the top -- is that faith, hope, and love aren't so much verbs as they are interdimensional links between immanent and transcendent objects (or subjects). Each of these functions to lift us out of our paltry and pneumatically sophicating existence into a dynamic and fruitful relationship with the source and ground of being.

I might add that these aren't in the realm of the "ought"; or, to the extent that we ought to cultivate them, it is because they always are. We could never invent them if they didn't already exist, but -- like truth or beauty -- we can certainly deny them. Pieper:

fundamental hope (singular) is not directed toward anything that one could "have" but rather has something to do with what one "is," with one's own being as man...

Homo viator: man is always on the way to himself. And Genesis 3 is a mythological account of how we are inevitably in the way of ourselves.

This is absolutely consistent with Voegelin. In fact, he says it in so many ways and in so many contexts, that it seems to have been his One Big Idea.

But by the very nature of this idea, it can never be simply presented in a cutandry manner, because it is necessarily participatory, such that one must explicate by demonstrating; or, as in, say, music, the demonstration is the explication: hearing is believing.

Now hear this: the links -- call them (F), (H), and (L) -- alluded to above disclose a real (as in reality) tension

which one may resist but which one does not dream up. It manifests not as a proposition to be proved but as an appeal to be responded to and a force to be trusted.

As an experience it has an immediacy that makes it palpable, even if this is an immediacy that can never be arrived at once and for all but will have to be endlessly pursued through a lifelong process... (Webb; I've also taken the liberty of making the past tense present for the sake of clarity).

We'll no doubt amplify it later, but I'm sure that the most abstract way to describe this endless process is O → (¶). Again, this isn't how the world "ought" to be structured, it is how it is structured. And the most vital component to re-member and re-cognize is the →.

Or better -- and you will understand this too as we proceed -- we have to see it as a spiraling process with two distinct movements that are ultimately resolved into one. Not only will this become clear to you, but you'll understand its necessity by the time we're done with all this endless nonsense.

Consider: "The reality that [discloses] itself [is] not an object to be looked at but a life to be entered." It is not primarily intellectual but existential -- or, intellectual because existential: the philosopher must "live in the truth and participate in the reality of which he [is] in search" (ibid.).

Not to re-belabor the point, but this isn't just "advice." Rather it simply is. Nor is it "paradoxical" except when viewed through the lens of a prior unexamined belief about reality. It is not difficult to believe. From my perspective, your belief -- scientism, atheism, leftism, et al -- is literally impossible to believe. These -- or any -- ideologies aren't just wrong but literally delusional. Literally.

Nevertheless, we are free to deny the O → (¶) process. We are "presented not with a simple fact but with an invitation, a call to decision."

I don't want to jump too far ahead, but this is undoubtedly the same decision one must make with regard to Christ. Or, for that matter, the same decision faced by Abraham, Moses, Mary (believe all women!), Paul, and other luminous sparchetypes who just said Yes.

In Voegelin's case, "If he did decide to trust it, he could live in its truth, but he would know it only in the dark glass of trust, hope, and love" (ibid.).

Which is why, I think, he can never get to the point, but never stops getting to it. Could it be that I too am in the same attractor, in that my point is the endless getting to it?

It's all about the Exodus, isn't it? Or rather, the Exodus from is always an Introdeus to. It is "the conscious realization and willing acceptance of the tension of existence with its transcendental dimension" (ibid.).

Okay then. I think I'll stop for now and pick up the endless thread in the next post.

5 comments:

julie said...

It's all about the Exodus, isn't it?

It really is, but only literally. Inasmuch as the people were suffering terribly in Egypt, but being rescued, and not finding themselves immediately Living the Dream of an easeful life with no hardship or difficulty, they complained endlessly and turned away from God at even the slightest hint that by merely sacrificing a child or two and dancing around a statue or a rock, they could Have It All. From the start of their rescue, they failed utterly to trust, much less to have hope or faith in what was really, concretely, unavoidably, scientifically even, right in front of their eyes.

We all, at one time or another, are a stiff-necked people, turning from Grace because it appears to be something less than everything; in short, because it doesn't plop us back down immediately into the Garden, before there was ever anything bad, when every need or desire was met; before we threw it all away; before, in short, we failed to trust that when He said, "don't eat that, it's bad for you," He meant it.

Anonymous said...

This is a great post, treating as it does with faith, hope, and love, not as oughts but as the ground conditions of reality.

Gratitude is another quality to appreciate. A whole post could be devoted to gratitude. We are grateful for God's existence.

Now the world is a strange thing. The Bible posits we had it good until we disobeyed. However, "having it good," as in the Garden of Eden, may very well not be enough.

Souls newly arrived from Heaven for Earth duty shoulder their duffels and pass under a huge iron sign which reads "Sh*t Must Happen."

That is the law of Earth and why Earth exists. Things happen here which do not, cannot happen in Heaven.

Original sin; can't live with it, can't live without it. Because this whole set-up is not here to facilitate lounging safely in a Garden. Nope, here we cover the genitals and get down to some rough-house. Because sh*t must happen. Why, what were you thinking?

Van Harvey said...

"... faced by Abraham, Moses, Mary (believe all women)..."

Actually laughed out loud at that. Unfortunately it looks like Mary doesn't even rate the Tara Reade treatment.

Anonymous said...

What then is your decision regarding Christ?

Van Harvey said...

Edit: "Unfortunately it looks like Mary doesn't even rate the Tara Reade level of treatment, by most people today."

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