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« Calvinism, a Syllogism and the Origin of Evil
Yet Another Reason Calvinism is Certain to Die »

The Ecumenical Language Barrier

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Linguistics
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Print article This entry was posted by existdissolve on June 17, 2007 at 12:06 pm, and is filed under Theology. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site.
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  • Comments (4)
  • #1 written by nmcrawford
    about -1916 years ago
    Reply Quote

    I just made a nice, articulate, long response….And you stupid website wouldn’t post it, and subsequently lost it because I had to fill in a stupid box. Very upset.

    Basically, went like this….

    Like stuff on language, mostly. You don’t deal with the semiotics of language and what you say may not be tenable when talking about the oral use of language.

    Like stuff on ecumenism, mostly. There are however deep seeded ideological differences – specifically in the way that faith is practiced, what sources are used for reflection, and something else i have already forgotten.

  • #2 written by existdissolve
    about -1916 years ago
    Reply Quote

    test

  • #3 written by existdissolve
    about -1916 years ago
    Reply Quote

    nate–

    Sorry about the loss of your post. If it makes you feel any better, your misfortune allowed me to fix the problem…

    Anyway, even though the post didn’t appear here, I was able to retrieve what you wrote from an automatic email that was generated. Below, in italics, is the content of your lost comment. I thank you for the criticisms, and I will respond later today.

    Ahhh…you have learned well from whatever reading you have done. i hope it has been much Derrida. That would strangely warm my heart. Anyway, I like what you say about language (I’ve got a few quibbles – you don’t seem to take into account the semiotic relationship of language/writing and what happens in speaking/talking/oral communication; I think the rules may change). And I’m also wondering if Larry and Chuck were representative of a couple old professors us graduates of Asbury Seminary used to have? On the ecumenism, I think you are very right. There are some deep seeded ideological differences between the three. And all align differently on different issues. Also, the way that each practices their faith is very different. But, all in all, I think that you are on a good track. I like it. peace, nate

  • #4 written by existdissolve
    about -1916 years ago
    Reply Quote

    Ahhh…you have learned well from whatever reading you have done. i hope it has been much Derrida. That would strangely warm my heart.

    LoL, I wish that I could say that I have read alot about this subject, but I haven’t. Most of thoughts above are in reflection of 1.) various conversations that you and I have had in the past and 2.) deductions from the frustrations I have described in attempting to linguistically bridge the gap between Catholic and Protestant views on history, hermeneutics, etc.

    Take heart, however; Derrida is on my list (as well as numerous volumes I currently possess from Heidegger). Also, I might give a shout out to Tim and delve into some Wittgenstein (I’m about halfway through a biography of his)…lol.

    Anyway, I like what you say about language (I’ve got a few quibbles – you don’t seem to take into account the semiotic relationship of language/writing and what happens in speaking/talking/oral communication; I think the rules may change).

    I completely agree that there are fundamental, as well as monumental differences between written and oral communication. On the phenomenological level, oral communication is deployed with concurrent aspects of “body language,” voice tone, even personal presence—all of which obviously determines meaning deployed and meaning received. Written communication, also, utilizes different “rules,” for one is able to more precisely determine word choice, grammatical structure, etc. However, at the same time, I wonder if they are that different. For example, could it be that the attendant peculiarities of oral communication (inflection, tone, etc.) is a form of “oral translation” of the nuance and thoughtfulness of written language, and visa versa?

    We all know people who are masters at oral communication; however, when they write, often that mastery is lost. At the same time, we’ve all read literature that is impossible to imagine translated to oral communication. So perhaps the question is this: Is voice inflection, body language, etc. somehow functionally equivalent to the accoutrements of written language? In other words, does the nuance and thoughtfulness of written communication parallel the accessories of oral communication? Just thinking out loud here.

    And I’m also wondering if Larry and Chuck were representative of a couple old professors us graduates of Asbury Seminary used to have?

    LoL! Actually, the names were completely random (or were they?), but that is pretty hilarious. Some things you just can’t plan!

    On the ecumenism, I think you are very right. There are some deep seeded ideological differences between the three. And all align differently on different issues. Also, the way that each practices their faith is very different. But, all in all, I think that you are on a good track. I like it. peace,

    I think the point you have made about the difference in practice is extremely important. After all, the praxis of worship cannot be separated out from the deeper understandings that drive such. Both must be taken into serious consideration when approaching an understanding of the necessary things that must happen for ecumenism to be realized.

    However, as I’m sure you’ll agree, it also cannot be reduced to practice. That is, simply getting Catholics, Orthodox and Protestants to occupy the same space and engage in the same motions will not change anything (this is reflected in the nauseating, “can’t we all just get along” mantra). Rather, the underlying theological allegiances must be uncovered, examined and reconciled so that the ensuing praxis might reflect an inward change, rather than simply an outward compulsion.

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A Study Bible to End All Study Bibles

about 17 years ago - 42 comments

This may have been out for a while, but I recently ran across it: "The New Defender's Study Bible: Understanding the Critical Issues of Faith from a Literal Creationist Viewpoint". My initial reaction was laughter at such absurdity. After all, here is someone going to the trouble of writing an entire study Bible for the…

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Brief Discourse on the Philosophical Tenability of Miracles Commonly Conceived

about 17 years ago - 2 comments

My church just concluded a sermon series on the subject of miracles. On the whole, it was an interesting series and some good points were made. However, there was one particular part of the series that especially intrigued me, that being the definition of "miracle." To explain the concept, the speaker appealed to a Grahamian…

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Miracles Considered, Conclusion

about 17 years ago - 4 comments

In my previous post, I briefly discussed some problems which I believe to be inherent to popular conceptions of the miraculous. As outlined, this understanding is based upon the correlation of the miraculous to human ignorance, e.g., that which is miraculous is that which is beyond the [current] knowledge of human persons. The crux of…

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Sin as Privation – Brief Conclusion

about 17 years ago - 1 comment

In my previous post, I briefly discussed reasons why Christian theology must necessarily affirm the ontological non-existence of sin. I concluded that if sin is assigned a substantival nature; and if God is to be spoken of as source and sustainer of all that has existence; then one must unavoidably conclude that God has not…

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A 1600 Year-Old Justification of an Assertion?

about 17 years ago - 5 comments

In several of my posts, I have argued that human language is incapable of propositionally communicating truth about the divine nature of the Godhead. The qualification of propositionally is important, I think, because on the one hand it acknowledges the severe break that exists between the human and divine in terms of ontology (and the…

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The Closing of the Evangelical Mind

about 17 years ago - 21 comments

Let's just be completely perspicuous: evangelicalism is doomed. It's leaders sense it. It's adherents feel it, uneasily. Everyone looking at it from the outside fully acknowledges it. The most pitiable fact, however, is that evangelical's fatal wound is entirely self-inflicted. It's arsenic? Sola Scripura. Why, the inquisitive reader may ask, is sola Scripture so deadly?…

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Calvinism, a Syllogism and the Origin of Evil

about 17 years ago - 1 comment

Those who affirm the canons of Calvinistic philosophy often laud the logical coherence of its systematic formulation. In this post, I would like to turn the tables on this methodological assumption, showing how Calvinistic philosophy, while perhaps logical, leads to a horribly perverse image of the divine nature and will of God. I shall do…

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A Brief Introduction to The Absolute Necessity of Speaking of Sin as "Privation"

about 18 years ago - No comments

Think about the word "sin." What do you think of? A stain? Some black, ethereal substance? A "negative" field of energy? Throughout history, humans have struggled with defining this difficult concept to align with and elucidate religious and social notions of right and wrong, good and evil, morality and ethics. In Christian theology, sin occupies…

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Human Language and the Divine

about 18 years ago - No comments

Over the last several monthsand especially within the last few daysI have been involved in numerous conversations about the nature and function of human language in describing God. What follows is not meant to be a fully-developed essay, but is rather intended to be somewhat of a summary of the lines of thinking I have…

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More Correlations Between the Hebrew Scriptures and Ancient Near-Eastern Literature

about 18 years ago - 1 comment

Continuing in my research concerning the parallels between Hebrew and other ancient Near Eastern writing, I would like to share some additional interesting correlations in some of the texts. In the following, I have quoted, at length, the various texts under considerations. At the end of each section is a concluding discussion about similarities. I…

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