Theology

zelezo vlk

Well-known member
Messages
18,009
Reaction score
5,047
I'm sorry zelezo, I have to ask, all of your friends were Protestant DUE to YOUR upbringing??
Grew up in a liberal protestant church, went to a Lutheran high school. I just didn't interact with many Catholics who weren't family members until I left my hometown.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G900A using Tapatalk
 

IrishLion

I am Beyonce, always.
Staff member
Messages
19,127
Reaction score
11,077

Thanks for posting Admiral.

I guess my biggest gripe with this reasoning would be the general selectiveness that occurs when the Church (and its people) interpret the words of the Bible.

The first argument that references the restriction of females from the Clergy comes from an interpretation of which version (or individual known as) Paul authored the applicable verses. If one particular Paul was the author, we know that women are excluded from the opportunity. But if ANOTHER Paul was the author (or someone writing with a pseudonym), we can infer that it would be totally cool for women to be members of the clergy, because THAT guy relaying the word of God had a different belief in terms of the Male-Female-Christ relation.

But because Adam was created before Eve, and because Eve was tempted by the Serpent (even though we ALL suffer from Original Sin), we go with the version of Paul that excludes women.

I don't think it's a fair balance in terms of interpreting scripture, nor do I think it would be harmful to revisit that stance. Allowing women to be Deacons would aid the Church greatly in terms of finding individuals and personalities that could lead others to great works of faith. They don't need to be made priests in order to aid the Church in its mission, but allowing them one step in the hierarchy WOULD be a benefit in terms of widening the net, and thus helping strengthen the Church.
 

zelezo vlk

Well-known member
Messages
18,009
Reaction score
5,047
Alrighty! To begin, I will state the actual issue at hand:

Women are not ordained in the Catholic Church.

I thank Admiral for his contribution, and the reasoning for why some Protestant churches do not ordain women, but since the discussion arose over the Catholic Church's commission, I will approach from this side of the Tiber.

Women have never been ordained as priests within the Catholic Church, even from the beginning. In the early Church, some women were deaconesses, but this was due to the form of baptism at the time. Whenever possible, Christians were baptized fully immersed into water, though this was not the only method of baptism in the early Church, it was certainly the preferred. This is clear within the Didache and in other writings by the Church Fathers. Because of the scandal that may be caused by male priests and deacons dunking women into water and the effects that this action had on the white robes of baptism, deaconesses performed this sacrament.

Now this is not controversial, because the Church has taught that anybody can baptize, but the ordinary method is by the ordained. The difference between these deaconesses and deacons etc were that they were not ordained.

From Canon 19 of the First Council of Nicaea

Likewise in the case of their deaconesses, and generally in the case of those who have been enrolled among their clergy, let the same form be observed. And we mean by deaconesses such as have assumed the habit, but who, since they have no imposition of hands, are to be numbered only among the laity.

Some do not agree with the translation of "deaconess" and prefer servant, but this isn't a large concern in the current discussion.

The theology behind only men being ordained is a bit simple, but extremely Traditional (very key for the Catholic logic). Christ instituted 12 Apostles as His first priests at the Last Supper. In the role of their priesthood, the Apostles acted in persona Christi, and then ordained men to succeed them, who became bishops, and this chain continued to the bishops ordaining priests within their dicoese. The evidence for women ordination in the early Church is very weak, and the overwhelming amount of evidence points to only men being chosen.

This is not to say that women are held in low regard by the Church, because from the very beginning, priests were seen as "married" to the Church and to serve it as Christ served His Church, by sacrificing for the sake of the Body of Christ. Women have been upheld as models of holiness and piety since the founding, hence Notre Dame, Our Lady.

I'm not quite sure how to end, but I'll say this: yes, some invariably do want to deny the priesthood to women due to sexism, which is wrong. However, the idea that equality can only be gained by allowing women to be ordained is just as wrong and disrespectful. This idea of equality is only promulgated due to the denial of a fundamental difference between the sexes, and the Church has always opposed this. Christ had many opportunities to ordain women in His ministry, but not Martha and Mary (the sisters of Lazarus), Mary Magdalene, or our dear Holy Mother were made Apostles. God became Man; He did not become a Person who just happened to be a man for the sake of the cultural context.

ETA: If anybody likes stuffy language and would like to read the report wherein St. John Paul II declared that the priesthood had always been definitively male, here's a link: From the Diakonia of Christ to the Diakonia of the Apostles (2002)

I'm game to answer some questions, but be warned! I'm gonna be gone for part of the night and am not always great at elaborating enough. I'll do my best for y'all though.
 

woolybug25

#1 Vineyard Vines Fan
Messages
17,677
Reaction score
3,018
Alrighty! To begin, I will state the actual issue at hand:

Women are not ordained in the Catholic Church.

I thank Admiral for his contribution, and the reasoning for why some Protestant churches do not ordain women, but since the discussion arose over the Catholic Church's commission, I will approach from this side of the Tiber.

Women have never been ordained as priests within the Catholic Church, even from the beginning. In the early Church, some women were deaconesses, but this was due to the form of baptism at the time. Whenever possible, Christians were baptized fully immersed into water, though this was not the only method of baptism in the early Church, it was certainly the preferred. This is clear within the Didache and in other writings by the Church Fathers. Because of the scandal that may be caused by male priests and deacons dunking women into water and the effects that this action had on the white robes of baptism, deaconesses performed this sacrament.

Now this is not controversial, because the Church has taught that anybody can baptize, but the ordinary method is by the ordained. The difference between these deaconesses and deacons etc were that they were not ordained.

From Canon 19 of the First Council of Nicaea



Some do not agree with the translation of "deaconess" and prefer servant, but this isn't a large concern in the current discussion.

The theology behind only men being ordained is a bit simple, but extremely Traditional (very key for the Catholic logic). Christ instituted 12 Apostles as His first priests at the Last Supper. In the role of their priesthood, the Apostles acted in persona Christi, and then ordained men to succeed them, who became bishops, and this chain continued to the bishops ordaining priests within their dicoese. The evidence for women ordination in the early Church is very weak, and the overwhelming amount of evidence points to only men being chosen.

This is not to say that women are held in low regard by the Church, because from the very beginning, priests were seen as "married" to the Church and to serve it as Christ served His Church, by sacrificing for the sake of the Body of Christ. Women have been upheld as models of holiness and piety since the founding, hence Notre Dame, Our Lady.

I'm not quite sure how to end, but I'll say this: yes, some invariably do want to deny the priesthood to women due to sexism, which is wrong. However, the idea that equality can only be gained by allowing women to be ordained is just as wrong and disrespectful. This idea of equality is only promulgated due to the denial of a fundamental difference between the sexes, and the Church has always opposed this. Christ had many opportunities to ordain women in His ministry, but not Martha and Mary (the sisters of Lazarus), Mary Magdalene, or our dear Holy Mother were made Apostles. God became Man; He did not become a Person who just happened to be a man for the sake of the cultural context.

ETA: If anybody likes stuffy language and would like to read the report wherein St. John Paul II declared that the priesthood had always been definitively male, here's a link: From the Diakonia of Christ to the Diakonia of the Apostles (2002)

I'm game to answer some questions, but be warned! I'm gonna be gone for part of the night and am not always great at elaborating enough. I'll do my best for y'all though.

That is one heck of a response. Reps for the detail.
 

zelezo vlk

Well-known member
Messages
18,009
Reaction score
5,047
That is one heck of a response. Reps for the detail.
I spend a lot of time on r/Catholicism and listening to Catholic podcasts. Plus, I needed to research a lot of this stuff before converting. If you have any questions, I'll do my best.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G900A using Tapatalk
 

wizards8507

Well-known member
Messages
20,660
Reaction score
2,661
If atheism is true, then determinism is true and free will is false.

Discuss.
 

ACamp1900

Counting my ‘bet against ND’ winnings
Messages
48,946
Reaction score
11,225
If atheism is true, then determinism is true and free will is false.

Discuss.

You just want to dispel free will so you can feel better about that whale you porked in college....
 

wizards8507

Well-known member
Messages
20,660
Reaction score
2,661
Free (wizards') Willy?

200.gif
 

MrIrishCanadian1

Douche Lord
Messages
247
Reaction score
20
If atheism is true, then determinism is true and free will is false.

Discuss.

Can challenge the letter of your claim at both points:

(1) if atheism is true, the world can still be non-deterministic. (there might be metaphysical indeterminacy at the quantum level whether or not there's a god.)

(2) even if determinism is true, free will might still hold (this is called compatibilism). The basic idea is that an action is free just in case the act resulted from my internal states (like my beliefs and/or desires) as opposed to some external constraint (someone holding a gun to my head, I'm restrained in jail.)
 

wizards8507

Well-known member
Messages
20,660
Reaction score
2,661
Can challenge the letter of your claim at both points:

(1) if atheism is true, the world can still be non-deterministic. (there might be metaphysical indeterminacy at the quantum level whether or not there's a god.)

(2) even if determinism is true, free will might still hold (this is called compatibilism). The basic idea is that an action is free just in case the act resulted from my internal states (like my beliefs and/or desires) as opposed to some external constraint (someone holding a gun to my head, I'm restrained in jail.)
(1) The uncertainty principle would seem to indicate that you're correct. My main goal is to discuss whether theism is a necessary component of free will. I'll concede that quantum uncertainty (metaphysical or otherwise) might introduce randomness into an otherwise deterministic model and create uncertain outcomes.

(2) Compatibilism is bullshit. Determinism holds that every action is caused by predetermined conditions. Free will, as properly defined, means the freedom to choose otherwise. I picked A but I could have chosen to pick B.

I'm not sure they mean by free will what has traditionally been meant by free will.
This.
 

MrIrishCanadian1

Douche Lord
Messages
247
Reaction score
20
(1) The uncertainty principle would seem to indicate that you're correct. My main goal is to discuss whether theism is a necessary component of free will. I'll concede that quantum uncertainty (metaphysical or otherwise) might introduce randomness into an otherwise deterministic model and create uncertain outcomes.

(2) Compatibilism is bullshit. Determinism holds that every action is caused by predetermined conditions. Free will, as properly defined, means the freedom to choose otherwise. I picked A but I could have chosen to pick B.

It seems that the SPIRIT of your claim is that (i) free will requires that we have some sort of soul thing (the soul is what decides what you're going to do when the laws of nature leave it open). (ii) And since we need to have a soul, Theism must be true. I think you'd get a lot of people agreeing with (i). (ii) seems like the bigger leap. What's the reason for it? Is it that the most plausible models on which there are souls are theistic ones?

(Compatibilists usually say your definition "I picked A but I could have chosen to pick B" is in line with their view. For example I'm sitting in jail and you ask "could you have chosen to leave your cell?" I say "no, I'm restrained by these bars!". But suppose the door is open. I could say "yes, I could have chosen to leave! I (stupidly) chose to sit in this cell, but I could have chosen to leave (since the door's wide open!). So Compatibilists typically say that the way we determine whether you're free depends on the presence of external restraints.)
 

wizards8507

Well-known member
Messages
20,660
Reaction score
2,661
It seems that the SPIRIT of your claim is that (i) free will requires that we have some sort of soul thing (the soul is what decides what you're going to do when the laws of nature leave it open). (ii) And since we need to have a soul, Theism must be true. I think you'd get a lot of people agreeing with (i). (ii) seems like the bigger leap. What's the reason for it? Is it that the most plausible models on which there are souls are theistic ones?
Most atheists are materialists and materialism holds that there's no such thing as a metaphysical soul that exists outside of the laws of nature. To the extent that they could believe in a soul, it would be nothing more than a product of the matter that makes up one's brain. That matter would be subject to the laws of physics and, by extension, determinism (or determinism plus randomness... either way, not free).

The reason I brought this up is because a lot of my libertarian friends are atheist, and I haven't been able to reconcile libertarianism (which requires agency and ownership of self) with atheism (which requires materialism and determinism or something that looks sufficiently like determinism to render agency meaningless).

(Compatibilists usually say your definition "I picked A but I could have chosen to pick B" is in line with their view. For example I'm sitting in jail and you ask "could you have chosen to leave your cell?" I say "no, I'm restrained by these bars!". But suppose the door is open. I could say "yes, I could have chosen to leave! I (stupidly) chose to sit in this cell, but I could have chosen to leave (since the door's wide open!). So Compatibilists typically say that the way we determine whether you're free depends on the presence of external restraints.)
I understand, but the analogy only works when the restraints are obvious. Instead of the jail cell, let's say I can raise my right arm, raise my left arm, raise both arms, or raise neither arm. I raised my left arm. The compatibilist would say that I raised my left arm because of constraints in my brain that determined it to be the case that I would choose that alternative over the others even though I was "free" to choose any of them. You have to desperately pervert the definition of "free will" to identify that scenario as such.
 

MrIrishCanadian1

Douche Lord
Messages
247
Reaction score
20
The reason I brought this up is because a lot of my libertarian friends are atheist, and I haven't been able to reconcile libertarianism (which requires agency and ownership of self) with atheism (which requires materialism and determinism or something that looks sufficiently like determinism to render agency meaningless).

You should ask your friends if they are non-materialist atheists!

But if I were to defend libertarians who are also materialists, this is what I'd say:
"Sure there's a mystery about how I could have libertarian free will in this materialistic world. And you are very puzzled! But what makes you think adding a SOUL in there solves the mystery in any way? If free actions are just the result of some INDETERMINATE process, then the action was just some random, chance event! Like flipping a coin! But in what sense is that a free action? That's just random behaviour! You might try to stick a soul in there. But does the soul act in a deterministic manner? Then you're just a compatibilist! Does it act in a non-determined way? Then it's acting just as randomly! It's not free! So your position is no less mysterious than my own!"


I understand, but the analogy only works when the restraints are obvious. Instead of the jail cell, let's say I can raise my right arm, raise my left arm, raise both arms, or raise neither arm. I raised my left arm. The compatibilist would say that I raised my left arm because of constraints in my brain that determined it to be the case that I would choose that alternative over the others even though I was "free" to choose any of them. You have to desperately pervert the definition of "free will" to identify that scenario as such.

What you call "constraints in the brain" are just one's desires. So, yes, the compatibilist is saying that your raising of the left arm was constrained by your desire to lift it. But that's just what we want. Your action should be constrained/determined by your desires/beliefs--that's what makes you in control of the action. (Otherwise the act is just some random event, not even controlled by you--going back to the previous point.)
 
B

Buster Bluth

Guest
If atheism is true, then determinism is true and free will is false.

Discuss.

I think I agree with this.

There probably isn't a god and every thought you have or ever will have is a chemical reaction influenced entirely by your environment (including past experiences) and genetic makeup. Even when you're choosing and think you're using free will it's all based on partial knowledge determined only by your experiences (including knowledge) and genetics.

If you had the exact same DNA and life experiences as Hitler, you'd make the same decisions.
 

irish1958

Príomh comhairleoir
Messages
1,039
Reaction score
112
I think I agree with this.

There probably isn't a god and every thought you have or ever will have is a chemical reaction influenced entirely by your environment (including past experiences) and genetic makeup. Even when you're choosing and think you're using free will it's all based on partial knowledge determined only by your experiences (including knowledge) and genetics.

If you had the exact same DNA and life experiences as Hitler, you'd make the same decisions.

https://www.samharris.org/free-will
 

Whiskeyjack

Mittens Margaritas Ante Porcos
Staff member
Messages
20,894
Reaction score
8,126
Brett McKay, the guy behind The Art of Manliness, just published an article with his wife titled "Is Christianity an Inherently Feminine Religion?"

Last week we began a series which which is exploring the relationship between masculinity and Christianity — mainly, why it is that the more a man embraces the former, the seemingly less likely he is to adopt the latter.

In our first article, we laid out statistics which show that all around the world, and in almost every Christian church and denomination, women outnumber men. Women are far more likely to be involved in the Christian faith, to participate in church, and to feel that their religion is important to them. In addition, we demonstrated that this disparity is not rooted in the fact that females are simply more religious than males overall, as Christianity is the only major world religion where men are significantly less committed than women.

One of theories as to why this is, is that the gender gap naturally arises from a theology and ethos that was inherently feminine from the start — that the issue is “baked-in,” so to speak. Today we’ll examine the basis of this assumption, as well as how Christianity could be thought of as primarily masculine.

The Code of Manhood & the Femininity of Christianity

As we have documented in numerous articles on AoM, the traits and qualities that are considered “manly” have been consistent for thousands of years, and universal to cultures around the world. While a boy was born a male, he had to earn the title of man, and he did so by proving himself in tests of skill and self-control, developing his autonomy, self-reliance, and toughness, embracing risk, struggle, and conflict, and competing with his peers to earn status. Physical strength was valued, along with other martial virtues like courage; battlefield prowess has always been central to the code of masculinity. Overall, a male had to excel in the “3 P’s of Manhood” — Protection, Provision, and Procreation — in order to be considered a “real man.”

Manhood was never a private affair — a boy was initiated into it by his community and it had to be repeatedly re-proven in the public arena thereafter. A man was thus primarily concerned with his honor — with having a reputation worthy of the respect of his fellow men. To maintain that reputation, if he got pushed, he pushed back.

Finally, a man’s primary identity came from his membership in a tribe, and his primary social unit was the gang — a small, close-knit honor group. Honor groups were exclusive in nature — not every man could belong — and were suffused with an “us vs. them” dynamic. A man’s loyalty was intense — the willingness to sacrifice, to bleed, and even die for one’s people has always been central to the ancient code of masculinity — but such loyalty only extended to a man’s comrades and kin.

It is little wonder then that some have seen the Christian religion as positively antithetical to the central components of traditional masculinity.

From this perspective, Jesus is the paragon of the “soft,” gentle virtues traditionally associated more with women than men, like kindness, compassion, forgiveness, caring, chastity, and humility. This is the Jesus who walks beside you on the beach, and carries you through trials.

Rather than committing violence and seeking to triumph over one’s foes, he asks followers to turn the other cheek and to love their enemies. Rather than glorying in competition and status, Christians are to beware of pride, to avoid comparing themselves to others, and to seek complete humility.

The body is seen as less important than the soul and earthly status is meaningless in the kingdom of God; worldly success doesn’t make you “better” than other people, as all are alike unto God. Not only will the strong be saved alongside the weak, power and wealth are, if anything, a hindering block to salvation, rather than an advantage. Jesus promised that the meek and poor would be exalted, while the rich and mighty would be brought low.

The Christian way is open to all — it is universal, rather than exclusive. It asks believers to overcome their inherent propensity towards tribalism in order to embrace the brotherhood of man. Strangers are to be loved as much as kin, as much as oneself.

The opinions of others matter little in comparison to the judgment of God. A man’s honor is thus primarily private rather than public in nature; it doesn’t come from the approval of peers, but arises from the possession of inner integrity and a clean conscience.

Finally, Christianity is based on submission — dependence on a martyr king; followers of Jesus must kneel before their savior and rely entirely on his merits to be saved.

An argument can be made for many of the above imperatives constituting the components of human excellence, but it would be difficult to say they’re distinctly related to manly excellence. In fact, one would be hard pressed not to view such tenets as direct contradictions of the ancient code of manhood.

Christianity, seen this way, might make you a good man, but it won’t make you good at being a man.

Christianity as Slave Morality

“The Christian faith is from the beginning a sacrifice: a sacrifice of all freedom, all pride, all self-confidence of the spirit, at the same time enslavement and self-mockery, self-mutilation.” –Friedrich Nietzsche

It’s for this reason that some philosophers, most notably Friedrich Nietzsche, have dismissed Christianity as a weak, repressive religion, unbecoming of any man who wishes to truly “say yes to life.” While Nietzsche had some respect for Jesus as a unique individual who created his own values, the philosopher derided the fact that he denied reality in favor of looking to a kingdom to come, and went to his death without a fight. And Nietzsche had full contempt for the religion Jesus’ teachings developed into, arguing that Christianity was a faith developed by slaves who begrudged the power of masters.

Nietzsche wanted to resurrect the Homeric values of ancient Greece, and revive an aristocracy where might makes right. Humanity is inherently hierarchical, Nietzsche contended: some people are demonstrably better than others. At the top of the heap were the masters, the noble ones — unabashed egoists who asserted their will on the world and took what they wanted through strength, courage, and excellence. They had a will to power and the desire to rule. Masters loved struggle and risk-taking and approached life with vitality and energy. They heroically strove to be the very best and gloried in their individual successes and the accolades that came their way.

Those at the bottom of the totem pole were slaves — timid and spineless beings who weren’t able to exert their will, and resented those who could. From this resentment of “master morality” was birthed “slave morality” — the underlings’ attempt to turn the code of the powerful on its head. Slaves asserted that the values of the master class were not only offensive to God, but that it was actually more righteous and excellent to be weak, humble, and submissive.

Nietzsche believed that slaves eschewed risk and struggle, and played it small, safe, and mediocre — they didn’t embrace this mortal existence with true vitality and drive, because they were too busy dreaming of their mansions above.

Slave morality, he asserted, was a naked attempt by those who lacked the will to power and the ability to conquer to feel better about themselves and justify their weaknesses as strengths. Their whole identity and worldview was a mere delusion, and a truly pathetic one at that.

The Masculinity of Christianity

The inherent femininity and weakness of Christianity posited by Nietzsche and others has not gone unchallenged. Defenders of the masculinity of Christianity don’t deny that many of the tenets of the Christian gospel are “soft” in nature, but argue that they are joined by an equal, if not greater number, of “hard” virtues and strenuous requirements that align with the code of manhood in many respects. In fact, there are those, like Catholic scholar Leon J. Podles who argue that the way of Christ is primarily masculine in nature — that “Women can participate in this spiritual masculinity, but men could be expected to have a greater natural understanding of the pattern.”

Podles and others say that while the loving, merciful, nurturing, gentle side of Jesus represents one part of his character, he has another, often ignored side — a lion in contrast to the better-known lamb — marked by traits like justice, boldness, power, and self-mastery. This is Jesus the carpenter, the desert camper, the whip-cracker.

The man who said to “judge not” roundly condemned his critics.

The compassionate healer who championed children, cleansed the temple in a righteous rage.

The gentle sage who spoke of lilies and sparrows, rebuked his friend as Satan incarnate, and declared he had not “come to bring peace but a sword.”

The teacher who admonished his followers to “love thy neighbor as thyself” called Gentiles dogs, and at first reserved the teaching of his message for his own people. And while those “others” were eventually able to fully adopt his message, the Christian gospel hardly disavowed its “us vs. them” ethos; Jesus had no problem drawing lines between the sheep and the goats — those who were part of his tribe, and those who had no place in it. All would be welcome, as long as they lived a strenuous code of ethics.

Sharp of tongue, deft in debate, and unafraid of conflict, challenging the status quo, or causing offense, Jesus was anything but safe and predictable. Far from hiding in private solitude, and playing it small, Jesus was a public figure, a revolutionary who rigorously confronted the establishment, and who preached such a confrontational and audacious message that he was ultimately killed for it.

In fact, during his life critics called him a lestes— a word that meant an insurrectionist, rebel, pirate, bandit. Though the label was often associated with violent thievery, Jesus practiced what anthropologists call “social banditry” — groups of men operating on the margins of society who refuse to submit to the control and value system of the ruling elite, and who fight for the justice, independence, and emancipation of the common people. While the existing power structure considers them criminals, the exploited see these outlaws as their champions.

Like all bandits of the time, Jesus hung out with a gang — twelve comrades — and he invited others to share the same risky, subversive, challenging life with him — to become brothers in suffering and the fight against oppression and sin. Taking up one’s cross wasn’t for the faint of heart; physical courage was at times needed, and moral courage was required in spades.

While Jesus went to his death as a martyr, the ethos of laying down one’s life for one’s friends fits with the code of manhood, as does the way he bore that death (and its prior torture) with an ironclad stoicism.

While Jesus does not directly charge his followers with fighting human foes (though there have been those who have found an implicit justification for such in the name of a righteous cause), many of the faith’s adherents have seen the gospel as a call to continue Christ’s cause by engaging in another kind of warfare — one waged on the spiritual plane. The Bible is full of references both to contest — what the ancient Greeks called agon — and to war. Individuals wrestle with God (both metaphorically and literally), and the apostle Paul refers to believers as “athletes” who must “train” their souls and run the race set before them. Believers are to gird themselves about with spiritual “armor,” and wield the “sword of the spirit” in battling unseen forces and directly confronting the conflict between good and evil.

C.S. Lewis thought that Christians should conceive of the world as “enemy-occupied territory,” and of themselves as sort of secret agents. “Christianity is the story of how the rightful king has landed, you might say landed in disguise, and is calling us to take part in a great campaign of sabotage.”

St. Ignatius de Loyola, a Spanish knight who converted after being wounded in a physical battle, founded the Society of Jesus for “whoever desires to serve as a soldier of God” and organized the Jesuits around a martial ethos. Ignatius saw, in the call to the discipleship, something very similar to the summons of an earthly king who is assembling an army for battle, and is looking for those who will be willing to live hard and die hard in service to the mission ahead:

“Whoever wishes to join me in this enterprise must be content with the same food, drink, clothing etc. as mine. So, too, he must work with me by day, and watch with me by night, etc., that as he had a share in the toil with me, afterwards, he may share in the victory with me.”

This kind of battle summons, Ignatius felt, was just like the call of his heavenly king, who extended this herald:

“It is my will to conquer the whole world and all my enemies, and thus to enter into the glory of my Father. Therefore, whoever wishes to join me in this enterprise must be willing to labor with me, that by following me in suffering, he may follow me in glory.”

By, as Podles puts it, embracing “the inner life as a spiritual combat” and submitting to the discipline of the gospel as a soldier submits to the discipline of the military, a follower of Jesus gains greater power, can experience and do more, and attains a greater reward than he could have alone, or by giving free rein to his desires. By following the way of the ascetic warrior, he can become not just a soldier for Christ, but a hero like his king.

The Christian Way as a Hero’s Journey

“I quite agree that the Christian religion is, in the long run, a thing of unspeakable comfort, but it does not begin in comfort…In religion as in war and everything else, comfort is the one thing you cannot get by looking for it. If you look for truth, you may find comfort in the end: if you look for comfort you will not get either comfort or truth — only soft soap and wishful thinking to begin with and, in the end, despair.” –C.S. Lewis

Part of the case against the effeminate or enslaving nature of Christianity can be made by showing how the religion and the life of its founder overlay with the components of the “hero’s journey.” The hero’s journey refers to a narrative pattern that has underlaid many of the world’s stories, rituals, and myths from ancient times to the present.

Different scholars have lent a different order, and more or fewer steps to the journey, but its three big stages are separation, initiation, and return, and these are some of the basics contained within those stages:

  • Hero receives a call to adventure
  • Leaves his ordinary life
  • Receives supernatural aid
  • Crosses a threshold that separates him from the world he has known
  • Gathers allies for his quest
  • Faces test, trials, and challenges
  • Undergoes an ordeal
  • Dies a physical or spiritual death
  • Undergoes transformation and apotheosis (becoming godlike)
  • Gains a reward or magic elixir
  • Journeys back home
  • Shares the reward and wisdom he’s gained with others
  • Becomes master of the two worlds he’s passed through
  • Gains greater freedom

The pattern of the hero’s journey manifests itself in the rites of passage that tribes around the world used to initiate a young man into manhood: a boy would separate himself from the comfortable world of his mother, gather with male mentors, undergo a painful test of skill and/or toughness, die to his immaturity, rise to his manhood, and return to the tribe both with greater responsibilities — committed to serve and to sacrifice — and with new freedoms.

The story of Jesus also fits the pattern of the hero’s journey. A son descends from heaven, and with the supernatural aid of his heavenly father, becomes a mortal on earth. He gathers allies for his mission, faces tests and trials, undergoes a sacrificial ordeal, dies and resurrects, returns to the earth to announce that the power of sin and death has been conquered, and then ascends back into the heavens.

The journey of Jesus’ followers can be seen to fit this pattern as well. A man receives a call to adventure in becoming a “soldier of Christ,” leaves behind his ordinary life for the path of discipleship, and ventures into an unknown world — discovering another reality and plane of existence he previously did not know existed. He is empowered in his quest both by the brothers he meets along the way, and by the Holy Ghost, a fiery force Podles compares to thumos, and which theologian Rudolf Otto describes as “vitality, passion, emotional temper, will, force, movement, excitement, activity, impetus.” He faces tests and challenges, suffers for and with his Savior, dies to self to live in the spirit, and is progressively transformed. He begins a journey back home, offering the “magic elixir” he now possesses to those he meets along the way, and becoming a savior with a small S onto others. In learning to balance the spiritual and material, and to conquer himself, he becomes master of two worlds, and gains greater freedoms — the freedom from death, and the freedom from slavery to his passions and physical desires. Ultimately, he will make his way to his heavenly home, and receive his final reward — eternal life as a joint-heir of Christ, and in some traditions, like the Eastern Orthodox, even theosis — full union with God. As the second century bishop St. Irenaeus explained: “God became man so that man might become god.”

Podles argues that “For all human beings, life is a struggle, but men know that it is their duty in a special way to be in the thick of that struggle, to confront the hard places in life and strive to know, in the fullest sense, what the mysteries of life and death are all about.” Christianity then, in his view, offers precisely the kind of epic, heroic struggle that appeals to the masculine soul.

Conclusion: Is Christianity a Masculine or Feminine Religion?

So is the Christian religion more feminine or masculine in nature? Is it inherently better suited for men or women? Is it the faith of slaves or masters? Milquetoast or heroic?

Well, that depends on how you look at it, and who you ask.

Clearly, there are two sides to the coin. Indeed, Christianity is like that optical illusion where if you look at it one way, you see a woman, and if you look at it another, you see a lamp.

Its emphasis on kindness, acceptance, forgiveness, and humility represent those traits traditionally associated with femininity.

Its requirements of suffering, sacrifice, self-mastery, conflict, and contest represent those traits traditionally associated with masculinity.

Most Christians would say that setting up a masculine/feminine contrast creates a false dichotomy, and believe that Christ represents the perfect synergy of soft and hard qualities — that in fact this harmonious blend of all that constitutes human excellence is part of what makes him a god worth worshipping.

(As a side note, that the standard of that excellence is too lofty, or goody-goody to be appealing to men can’t be the cause of Christianity’s gender gap, as a religion like Islam shares the same high standards of virtue ethics — including the elephant in the room, the requirement of premarital chastity — but does not evidence the same disparity between men’s and women’s commitment.)

The real question then, is not whether the Christian gospel is inherently more feminine or masculine, but why the former characterization has been privileged over the latter. It’s unarguably true that in congregations, in artwork, in media, in political debates, and in popular culture as a whole, the image of the “softer,” more accepting, more huggable Jesus prevails. There is not much talk either inside or outside the church, of his judgments, or his anger, or the hard, bracing nature of his way. Certainly, it’s rare to hear Christianity referred to as “heroic.”

Hypothetically, this might have been different — the lion thread of Christianity might have been ascendant, or equally yoked with its lamb side. And for a time, it was. To the forces that shifted the narrative of Christianity, creating an ethos which appealed more to women, than to men, is where we will turn next.
 

zelezo vlk

Well-known member
Messages
18,009
Reaction score
5,047
Same for me. Catholicism was derided as idle worship, at best.
Right. Well I already addressed it, but my friends from high school on until my conversion were all Evangelicals or Missouri Synod Lutherans. Neither group is particularly friendly towards us Papists. I've lost a few friends from this, but I still wouldn't trade it for anything.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G900A using Tapatalk
 

wizards8507

Well-known member
Messages
20,660
Reaction score
2,661
Right. Well I already addressed it, but my friends from high school on until my conversion were all Evangelicals or Missouri Synod Lutherans. Neither group is particularly friendly towards us Papists. I've lost a few friends from this, but I still wouldn't trade it for anything.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G900A using Tapatalk
Too funny. In my hometown you were either Irish Catholic, French Catholic, Portuguese Catholic, or Italian Catholic.

From Gallup: More than half of Rhode Island's population (54%) is Catholic, making it the most Catholic state in the union, and the only state in which the Catholic population is at least twice the national average (24%).
 

zelezo vlk

Well-known member
Messages
18,009
Reaction score
5,047
Too funny. In my hometown you were either Irish Catholic, French Catholic, Portuguese Catholic, or Italian Catholic.

From Gallup: More than half of Rhode Island's population (54%) is Catholic, making it the most Catholic state in the union, and the only state in which the Catholic population is at least twice the national average (24%).
Right. Well. Central Illinois is just a smidge different than Rhode Island I guess. We definitely have better corn. ;)

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G900A using Tapatalk
 

Legacy

New member
Messages
7,871
Reaction score
321
Many Americans Hear Politics From the Pulpit:
More say their clergy have spoken out about issues than about specific presidential candidates


PF_2016_08_08-00.png


As the calendar turned from spring to summer and the political season transitioned from the primaries to the general election campaign, many American churchgoers were hearing at least some discussion of social and political issues from the pulpits at their houses of worship, a new Pew Research Center survey finds. Religious liberty and homosexuality were chief among the issues they were hearing about, with four-in-ten saying they heard from clergy on each of these topics during the spring and early summer. Roughly three-in-ten say their clergy talked about abortion, similar to the share who heard about immigration. And one-in-five churchgoers reported hearing about the environment and economic inequality.

In the new survey, conducted online and by mail June 5-July 7 among a nationally representative sample of 4,602 adults, 40% of Americans reported attending religious services at least once or twice in the few months before the poll was conducted. Within this group, about two-thirds (64%) say they heard clergy at their church or other place of worship speak about at least one of the six social and political issues mentioned in the survey, with nearly half (46%) indicating that religious leaders had spoken out on multiple issues.

Fewer recent churchgoers (14%) say they heard their clergy speak directly in support of or against a specific presidential candidate in the months leading up to the survey. Black Protestants were particularly likely to hear this type of message: Among black Protestants who have been in church recently, roughly three-in-ten (29%) have heard clergy speak out in support of a candidate – mostly Hillary Clinton – and an equal share have heard religious leaders speak out against a candidate (primarily Donald Trump). Smaller shares of Catholic, white evangelical Protestant and white mainline Protestant churchgoers – roughly one-in-ten or fewer – say their clergy have publicly supported or opposed particular candidates.
 

zelezo vlk

Well-known member
Messages
18,009
Reaction score
5,047
The bearded squirrel

The priest on one of my favorite podcasts just wrote this on Natural Law. One of the reasons I converted was that I could not find many Protestants who were willing to go any further than Scripture to argue for Christianity. I've been meaning to study the Natural Law more, and this article certainly does a good job of explaining its importance.

After two and a half years of college buried in biochemistry textbooks, it was time to explore a broader portion of what my university’s “College of Liberal Arts and Sciences” had to offer. So I decided to take a course in ancient philosophy. One hundred level. Nothing fancy.

I was attending a gigantic state school, so I had no illusions of my Catholic faith being endorsed from the lectern, but I thought at least the classics had a chance of getting a fair shake. Like any college course, one could get out of it what one was willing to put into it. We read Plato’s Republic, Aristotle’s Categories, and surveyed most of the notable pre-Socratics. Aside from occasional and random digs at Christianity (once, when discussing some ancient form of torture, the professor said “it made crucifixion look like a day at the beach”, or something to that effect), the lectures were pretty fair surveys of the material.

But there is one lecture that, even to this day, still sticks in my craw.

One afternoon the topic of “natural law” came up, and as if to dismiss the notion as absurd from the outset, the professor paused to point out all the bearded men in the room. A scruffy man himself, he then said, “We are the only men in the room who are following the so-called ‘natural law’.” And, in order to answer the question we were no doubt dying to ask, he quickly pointed to the now famous bonobo chimps, who have been observed in the wild engaging in homosexual sex. You see, even if the natural law weren’t such a ridiculous way of adjudicating moral questions, it would still endorse the liberal academic weltanschauung. Chimps are liberal progressives. Heads I win, tails you lose.

Looking back now, I think the reason I bristled so much at what most of my classmates doubtless thought was another harmless condescension to the quaint ancients – what with their togas (and hearty, natural-law-abiding beards!) – was that it was at best a misunderstanding of the topic, and at worst a ham-handed attack on the idea of human nature. You see, it doesn’t much matter to me how monkeys copulate. I’m not a monkey. I’m a human being, and I have a human nature. Maybe one day scientists will discover lizards that bed down with their first cousins, and I have it on good authority that some spiders eat their husbands, but all I say to that is, “Thank God I’m human!”

And the beard grooming rebuttal is a straw man so lazily assembled that it’s hardly worth taking apart. But humor me.

The notion of “natural law”, at least in the classical tradition, is best understood not by saying that there is a law in nature qua nature, but that there are laws in natures. It is predicated on the idea that particular things have particular natures, not just that there are certain fundamental laws at work in the more ephemeral and abstracted idea of “nature” as a whole (we suburbanites who occasionally like to “go out in nature” are more accustomed to this latter definition of the word).

But Aristotle, for example, said that a tree has a nature, and so does a rock, and so do frogs and people and giraffes. With certain honorable exceptions, it is not in a squirrel’s nature to fly, for example. And I’d wager that if you went out into the woods (on a “nature walk”, perhaps) and saw a squirrel shaving his face in a wash basin at the end of a limb, even if it were a flying squirrel, you might have to throw up your hands and say, “That’s positively unnatural!”

Strictly speaking, that wouldn’t be entirely accurate. At least in the Christian appropriation of this notion of nature and natural law, the shaving squirrel would not be acting unnaturally, but supernaturally. Shaving cannot be unnatural; it happens in nature all the time (in bathrooms all across the land). It’s just that it happens in a nature higher than squirrel nature, namely human nature. Even if my esteemed professor doesn’t think so, and acknowledging variations in cultural and religious conventions in the matter, it is well within the purview of human nature to bathe and groom oneself with soap and water.

This distinction between the natural, the unnatural, and the supernatural can help us see why the beard bugaboo is so off the mark. Proponents of natural law do not pretend that we should imitate the lower natures (by letting our hair grow out or by cultivating a harem of mates like deer or elk, for example), but rather that we should act in accord with our higher, human nature.

But now we can see what’s really at stake in the argument. There is a not-so-hidden agenda behind the dividing of the universe into two distinct realms – the forest versus the city, the prairie versus the living room. The agenda is this: there is what’s objective and unchanging (so-called “nature” and its laws), and there is what’s not (the strange and mostly arbitrary things we human animals choose to do in nature, like shaving). Nature is biology, but morality is convention. What bonobos do is natural, but marriage is something else.

Our instinct to separate ourselves from mere abstract “nature” is somewhat understandable, though. We are the only thing in nature that has any idea what nature is. It is precisely because of our human nature that we seem to somehow hover above nature. As long as we talk of nature in the general sense, we must include ourselves as part of it. But when we take stock of our unique position in nature, we must say our nature among other natures is quite exalted and unique. There is no mistaking the fact that we are in this world, but experience and common sense insists that we are most certainly not of this world.

Part of what separates us from the lower natures, according to the natural law tradition, is that we human beings feel ourselves obliged by nature to act in certain ways, not by force of instinct like the animals, but by freely choosing good and avoiding evil (what the medievals called synderesis). But it is also our unique human nature, with its faculties of intellect and free will, that allows us to defy nature. Hence the need for a natural law. Everything in nature is governed by natural laws, but only human beings can decide whether or not they will obey it.

But at the risk of beating a dead horse, it is not things like shaving, or flying in airplanes, or performing heart transplants that defy our nature as human beings. Disobedience to the natural law is not an upward movement, but a downward one. It is in imitating the lower natures, governed completely as they are by base desires for food, sex, and self-preservation, that we humans defy the natural law. What is unnatural is acting less than human, not more than the animals. We don’t discern the natural law by examining the behavior of primates, in other words, but by listening to the dictates of our conscience.

In fairness, the materialists of the modern era would deny any such essential difference between human and animal natures. Most would hold with Hobbes, for example, that man, in his “state of nature”, was little more than a clever ape. He had a unique way of making his way in the world, but all of his cleverness – making tools, forming commonwealths, or even doing philosophy – was just man’s complex way of ensuring self-preservation. This radical “naturalism”, devoid of any trace of the metaphysical, sees man as nothing more than a monkey who happens to write poetry.

This reductive view of the human person is not without its fringe benefits. If the only natural law is biological, and we just so happen to be the beneficiaries of a biology that allows us to manipulate nature to our advantage, we are unquestionably nature’s highest authority. We are free to make of ourselves whatever we like. “Right” and “wrong” are words we have invented to limit the strong in their dominance over the weak, a particular evolutionary trait of humanity, but there is no reason why our sense of what’s right and what’s wrong shouldn’t evolve right along with us.

This view of the human person as the pinnacle of Darwinian evolution is simultaneously an act of intellectual humility, placing us squarely in the animal kingdom, and an act of self-aggrandizement. We are the animal kingdom’s übermensch. We share all the primal instincts of nature – sex, aggression, predation, self-preservation – but we have big enough brains to know how to harness these instincts more productively. What’s primal always abides – we cannot change our biological instincts – but higher-level notions of “morality”, “knowledge”, or “truth” are largely arbitrary and subject to cultural differences and the ever-changing zeitgeist.

There are two obvious difficulties, though, with this account of human nature. The first is the startling claim that the only really essential law at work in our nature is Darwinian. It is difficult to see how, apart from any coherent and universal foundation of right and wrong, one member of the human species may demand that a fellow member respect his inherent “human rights” if the only law of nature is “survival of the fittest”. Say what you will about Nietzsche and others of his ilk, at least the atheists of the so-called “post-modern” turn were honest about this. But when confronted with this difficulty, contemporary atheists (who still, after the horrors of the 20th century, somehow trust in the power of scientific materialism to save us all) will often claim that injunctions against murder, rape, genocide, and the rest are simply “common sense” and need no divine legislator to demand they be understood or obeyed. What is ignored is that, from an historical perspective, the common praxis is to ignore these injunctions whenever convenient. We may admire the libertinism of the chimpanzees from the comfort of the classroom, but I doubt we’d really like to live in a society of them. Werner Herzog says it concisely in his film Grizzly Man, while staring into the eyes of the brute bear: “I discover no kinship, no understanding, no mercy. I can see only the overwhelming indifference of nature.”

But the second difficulty is subtler. When claims to universal moral truth are made, references to variations in cultural norms or taboos abound, making it seem like a lack of consensus on what constitutes right and wrong means the words have no objective meaning. All morality is relative. But what is lost in this argument is the higher order assumption that is staring us in the face. While it is true that moral norms do vary across cultures, what does not vary is that wherever there are human beings, there is always culture, and culture is always intensely interested in questions of right and wrong. Whether the cause is biological or metaphysical, from the time we are toddlers we have a keen sense of justice and an understanding that people are obliged to obey a moral law extrinsic to them whether it suits them or not.

But neither of these reactions to modern materialism and moral relativism give a satisfactory answer to the main difficulty at hand: if we are subject to a higher natural law than the rest of nature, and if that law is universal, why is there so much disagreement across cultures and epochs on what constitutes right and wrong, and why is this so-called “law” so routinely ignored? The law of gravity is the same no matter where you are, and you will be forced to obey it whether you like it or not. But why, if there is a similarly universal moral law, is there not a similar equality across the ages on questions of polygamy, slavery, the treatment of poor, and the rest?

This is where the lens of Christianity can help put the matter into focus. The Scriptures tell us of a primordial fall. Our first parents chose to disobey God, the author of human nature and of the natural law. Instead of acknowledging the authority of God by obeying the laws presented to them in their consciences, our first parents decided to rewrite the moral law according to their own independent definitions of right and wrong. This was an abuse of our status as something like angels among brutes – a failure to recognize that, although we were higher than the animals by nature, we were not higher than the author of all nature. The tragic irony of this overreach is that it did not actually elevate us to the level of the gods like we thought it might, but rather corrupted what was higher in us and put it at the service of what was lower.

But to say that we have a “fallen nature” is a bit of a misnomer. What “original sin” really means is that we have an inevitable (though not irresistible) tendency not to live up to our nature. Although sin may feel natural to us, it is exactly the opposite. It should not surprise us, then, that cultures and communities made of these fallen creatures, habitually conditioned to choose wrongly, should miss the mark so consistently and disagree so stridently in their apprehension and application of the natural law.

It is also worth noting that it is the very reasoning of the modern materialist (“right and wrong are whatever we fancy animals decide that suits us!”) that lies at the root of our alienation from our unique human nature. In an ironic turn of events, the Copernican revolution that took mankind out of the center of the universe did not chasten man, but emboldened him. Now that we are mere flukes of dumb evolution and not images of a divine Creator, we are the only intelligence that exists, and what we say goes. From a Christian natural law perspective, this is all just a recapitulation of the fall.

The only way out of this predicament is down. If we are ever going to lift ourselves out of the mud, we are going to have to come down off of our paper throne. Unless we who have this uniquely exalted nature recognize the existence and primacy of a still more exalted – let’s call it a supernature –we are doomed to the inhuman, Darwinian life of predator and prey – in the schoolyard, in the boardroom, in the streets of our inner cities, etc.

But this is exactly the problem: the reason we need to be humbled is because we have over-exalted ourselves, and the reason we over-exalt ourselves is that we, by overreaching, lack the humility to be humbled. We are like the fly trapped between the screen and the window pane – we are bouncing around hopelessly in our glass coffin because we cannot (or will not) see that the way out is to sink to the level we were at when we flew in there. Or to use a biblical image, all of humanity is the cripple waiting at the pool of Siloam – in need of healing because he is crippled, but by being crippled unable to put himself in the healing waters.

But there is good news. Someone has come along who can put us in the water. We would not kneel to accept the crown of human nature, so God has knelt down to accept it for us. The remedy for human pride is divine humility. The upending of Babel is Pentecost.

And this is why a proper understanding of what we mean by “nature” is so critical to understanding the Christian worldview. It is no linguistic accident that the fathers of the Council of Chalcedon used the formulation “one person in two natures” to describe the mystery of Christ’s incarnation as man.

But how God becoming man helps us out of our predicament is not immediately obvious. In fact, it almost seems like cheating. Of course a man gifted with an all-knowing intellect and an all-powerful will can perceive clearly the natural law (which He wrote, by the way) and muster the will-power to obey it. Is it any wonder, then, that Christ’s commands in the Sermon on the Mount seem so beyond us? As a sinner I find it hard enough to fulfill my natural duty to love my family, so what hope can I possibly have of fulfilling the supernatural command to love my enemies? (Never mind that we fallen humans can even make enemies of our family).

Christ comes to make supernatural demands of us who cannot even comply with natural ones. It would be hard enough for a just person to become a saint, but he insists on making saints out of us poor sinners. But how can I, who covet my neighbor’s wife, renounce even a wife of my own? Or how can I, who am reluctant to give away my extra coat to the neighbor who has none, be persuaded to give away my most prized possession, my life? The post-enlightenment naturalist sees things like celibacy and martyrdom as the result of neurosis or religious extremism, but that would be to make the same mistake our nature-lover made when he saw the shaving squirrel. They are not unnatural aberrations. They are supernatural gifts.

I say “gifts”, because that is what they must be. For the reasons just described, they can be nothing else. According to Christians, God wants us to be like Him. But not in the way that Adam and Eve tried to be like Him – grasping at his power to define right and wrong. He wants us to be perfectly ourselves, made as we are in His image and likeness. But even beyond that, He wants us to share in a fullness that to us is wholly supernatural and otherworldly. As high as we are above the plants and animals, so much higher does God want us to be above ourselves. But how can we answer this call to supernatural love unless it is given to us from above?

And so we see what all the fuss was about at Chalcedon in 451 A.D., when the Church said definitively that Christ, although divine in nature, took on an additional human nature. If God wanted us to live His life, he had first to live ours. If we were going to love the way He loves, He was going to have to love us first. We were groping in the darkness of our fallen state, and if we were ever going to find our way again it would be by a light coming down to us from above.

In Christ, God did what was not natural to Him. He slept. He ate. He even died. These things are below God’s nature. But mysteriously, he did not cease to be God while He did them. In fact, being supernatural to us, He was able to live the most perfectly natural human life, precisely because he could overcome the unnatural corruption of sin and death. But He did much more than that. Like the water turned to wine in Galilee, once the divine nature had made contact, human nature would never be the same again.

The early Church fathers put it this way: Deus fit homo ut homo fieret Deus. God became man so that man could become God. In coming to us, He opened the way for us to come to Him. We who had fallen below our nature have now been lifted above it.

Now that all sounds nice, and it even makes good sense. But, at least for me, it still doesn’t prevent the Gospel from sounding really hard. The command to obey a supernatural law while still struggling to obey the natural one is a pretty hard sell.

This feeling came to me the other day while I was reading from the Gospel of Matthew. Jesus’s family is trying to get his attention, and Jesus blithely responds, “Who is my mother? Who are my brothers?” and pointing to the disciples he says, “Here are my mother and my brothers. For whoever does the will of my heavenly Father is my brother, and sister, and mother.” (Matthew 12:50)

I thought to myself, “I can’t do the will of your heavenly Father. I can’t even obey the dictates of my own conscience. Does that mean I can’t be your brother? You made me free to do what I want, but for some reason I’m not free to want what I’m supposed to want. How can you ask me to do the impossible?”

Then I remembered that I was actually reading it backwards. Not literally, of course. Jesus does in fact make it sound like perfection is the condition for having a relationship with him. But it’s actually the reverse. To be His brother one does not have first to be obedient. To be obedient one has first to be His brother. And, if we read the passage in context, we will see that just twelve chapters before, in taking on human nature, Jesus became the brother of us all.

This is why all this talk of nature really matters, whether it be in ancient Greece, at the Council of Chalcedon, or in the halls of the modern university. In being born of the Virgin Mary, Jesus did not just become one woman’s son. He did not just become one, isolated, and strangely-behaved primate among many. In taking on human nature, the Son of God became a son of Adam. Our uniquely exalted and tragically fallen human nature may give us a sense of isolation amidst the rest of nature, but it is also the thing that binds us as family to one another. In sin, we are all sons and daughters of Adam, but in Christ, we are all brothers and sisters of God.

Saint Paul said in his letter to the Romans, “I take delight in the law of God, in my inner self, but I see in my members another principle at war with the law of my mind, taking me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members.” (Romans 7:23-24)

I dare say any honest human being could echo these words. There is something wrong with us. We know we should eat right, stop smoking, go to church, hold our tongues from gossip and idle talk, but we simply can’t help ourselves. Our lower self takes charge of our higher self. The stomach rules over the counsels of the mind, and it even makes the mind a pathetic servant of its tyranny (“My grandpa smoked until he was 90!”).

The conclusion of Christianity and natural law is simple but startling: if we are ever going to be really human, I mean really human, we have no choice but to accept help from the divine. And as for making it to heaven, we will have to do much better than the knee-jerk “I’m a pretty good person” (read: “I’m better than a lot of other people.”). To become saints (the only people in heaven, by the way), we have to submit to be transformed from the inside out. We have to let the incarnation run its full course – to let Christ take flesh in me.

And so the first step, and every step after that one, is to surrender – not to wave the white flag to your lower nature, but to accept the help of a greater warrior. If you attempt to fight the war alone, you are doomed to fail. The enemy is too strong, and your equipment is profoundly undermined.

But it is not irreparably so. You do not have to be a natural outlaw forever. There is a rehabilitation plan, and it is called Christianity. The Sacraments, which unite us to the divine nature by way of God’s own solidarity with the flesh and blood of human nature, can make us into who we are and who we’re meant to be. That is if we let them.

But we can choose not to let them. Our nature will beg us to be good whether we like it or not, but we can always opt to ignore it. As human beings we are free by nature, and true freedom allows even for the freedom to choose slavery. But the idea that there is no essential difference between man and beast – that there is no unique thing we call “human nature” – is a self-fulfilling prophecy. If we are certain that we are merely animals, we will certainly act on that belief. If all morality is convention, then the only law of nature is “eat or be eaten”. If we refuse to recognize the dignity we are granted in our nature, we will certainly refuse to accept the glory for which we are destined.

But if we recognize what we really are, we will see start to see shadows of what one day we will be.
 
Top