1. You shall have no other gods before me.
2. You shall not make for yourself an image in the form of anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the waters below. You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing love to a thousand generations of those who love me and keep my commandments — Exodus 20:3-6
If one who lives in a Christian culture goes up to God’s house, the house of the true God, with a true conception of God, with knowledge of God and prays—but prays in a false spirit; and one who lives in a idolatrous land prays with the total passion of the infinite, although his eyes rest on the image of an idol; where is there most truth? The one prays in truth to God, although he worships an idol. The other prays in untruth to the true God and therefore really worships an idol — Soren Kierkegaard
Consider that I give a ring to my wife-to-be. What does that mean?It is easy to mock a god with an image by defacing its statue, dressing it up in silly clothes, jeering at it, or even just smashing it. — andrewk
Why "ought" something to be worshipped? And what does it mean to worship something?would all be idol worship because it seeks something other than that which ought be worshiped — Hanover
What is holiness found in then? Why is it that we call an icon holy?it is doubtful that a thinking person would find holiness in the mundane. — Hanover
What does it mean to put something at the center of your life? How do you go about doing that? What is it really?Everyone must put something at the centre of their life as the most important; God, money, social status, pleasure, power, love, themselves, science, ... something. That thing is what one worships, whether one is in a church, a mosque, a temple, a laboratory, or the hypermarket. — unenlightened
Consider the situation I have asked andrewk to consider. If I give a ring to my wife-to-be, have I given her a worldly thing? What distinguishes the worldly thing from the non-worldly?An idol is a worldly thing, as distinct from an ideal. — unenlightened
What does it mean to put something at the center of your life? — Agustino
Consider the situation I have asked andrewk to consider. If I give a ring to my wife-to-be, have I given her a worldly thing? What distinguishes the worldly thing from the ideal? — Agustino
This is an abstraction. What is it concretely? How is my life, concretely, about something? What makes it about something instead of about something else?It means your life is about something. — unenlightened
Neither of the three, but the first comes closest.What is important here, your giving, the ring itself or your wife? — unenlightened
Why would that be so? What makes my wife an idol? Or better said, what would make her an idol?Is it, in the end, about your wife? If it is, you are worshipping an idol. — unenlightened
If I give a ring to my wife-to-be, have I given her a worldly thing? What distinguishes the worldly thing from the non-worldly? — Agustino
What is an image? And what is a non-image? — Agustino
Right! Right! We are created in the image of God. What does a painting of Mount Everest point to? And is the painting of Mount Everest one with Mount Everest?Theologically speaking, we are created in the image of the God of Love — Heister Eggcart
No, not at all. I'm trying to see where your thinking moves. Would you agree that if man is created in the image of God, then man's self always points beyond itself?Are you testing me or something? >:O I'm prolly the only one here who will agree with you in this thread. Respect your allies more, pls — Heister Eggcart
What is an image? And what is a non-image? — Agustino
Is an icon an idol?An image, or idol, is a material object taken to be a representation of the immaterial God — Metaphysician Undercover
What is an icon?No because an icon is not made to represent God. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can an idea not be an idol? The Communist society...An image, or idol, is a material object taken to be a representation of the immaterial God. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, not at all. I'm trying to see where your thinking moves. Would you agree that if man is created in the image of God, then man's self always points beyond itself? — Agustino
This is an abstraction. What is it concretely? How is my life, concretely, about something? What makes it about something instead of about something else? — Agustino
Is it, in the end, about your wife? If it is, you are worshipping an idol.
— unenlightened
Why would that be so? What makes my wife an idol? Or better said, what would make her an idol? — Agustino
Yes, obviously.If I give a ring to my wife-to-be, have I given her a worldly thing? — Agustino
Take justice as an unworldly example. It is not a natural condition, but is only brought into being by a just man. I don't think I can make the unworldly concrete, except in so far as I can show you a life lived.What distinguishes the worldly thing from the non-worldly? — Agustino
So Heister, in what sense are you gazing further within yourself - trying to see God more fully - rather than your own nature? Is there something within you that is not your nature? Is there something in you that is beyond your self?The tricky business here is that "pointing beyond the self" actually entails gazing further within oneself, but in an attempt to see God more fully, rather than our own nature, which is only represented just the same outside of our bodies in the world. — Heister Eggcart
So that is still an abstraction. I'm asking you practically, for you, what does it mean that your life is about love? What makes your life about love? If I look at your life, what in it makes me think "this is about love"?I don't know what your life is about. It is for you to say what is the most important thing to you. For me it is love - which is not to say that I am loving or lovely, but that is what it is about; that is where I stand, and where I am trying to go. And it is an abstraction, to the extent that I fail to make it real in my life. — unenlightened
Obvious enough it is, but has something slipped unnoticed? When I have given her the ring, was it just the ring that was given?Yes, obviously. — unenlightened
Would love also be an unworldly example?Take justice as an unworldly example. It is not a natural condition, but is only brought into being by a just man. I don't think I can make the unworldly concrete, except in so far as I can show you a life lived. — unenlightened
Clarify this - how does one find truth in themselves?Find truth in yourself and you've found truth in the rest of the world. — Heister Eggcart
Clarify this - how does one find truth in themselves? — Agustino
Consider by analogy - when one watches pornography, it seems that the images that one sees point beyond themselves. Someone watching porn isn't ultimately watching themselves. But, do they control the images? Can they stop the images? Can they choose the images that they want? And in choosing them, are they ultimately thrown back upon themselves? How does this compare with your wife? Do you control your wife? Do you control what sounds she makes, when she smiles, when she's happy? In having sex with your wife, are you pointing out of yourself - encountering someone that is other than you - and therefore reaching out of your own self? — Agustino
Is all of it in you? Or is your asceticism a way to reach out of yourself? Is Love greater than you or equal to you?Love is the truth and it is in me - but unless it can reflect itself in the world, it is dead — Heister Eggcart
No. — Heister Eggcart
Greater, of course. — Heister Eggcart
Ok. So if Love is greater than you, it is not completely contained by you - it always exceeds you. And in order to know it, and be closer to it - you have to reach out of the prison of your self. So man is created in the image of God - destined to reach out of their own self - to point towards God.For my love to be given, yes. — Heister Eggcart
Who is the Pharisee really praying to? And who is the tax collector praying to?To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everyone else, Jesus told this parable: “Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other people—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.’
But the tax collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, ‘God, have mercy on me, a sinner.’ — Luke 18:9-13
Why is the Christian, in the house of the true God, with a true conception and knowledge of God praying to an idol, while the one kneeling before the statue of the false God is praying in truth to the real God? What is the relationship between the object in front of which one prays and idolatry?If one who lives in a Christian culture goes up to God’s house, the house of the true God, with a true conception of God, with knowledge of God and prays—but prays in a false spirit; and one who lives in a idolatrous land prays with the total passion of the infinite, although his eyes rest on the image of an idol; where is there most truth? The one prays in truth to God, although he worships an idol. The other prays in untruth to the true God and therefore really worships an idol — Soren Kierkegaard
Why is this a problem? Why can't the lived well-being be reduced to some conception?The abstraction of "how" or "why" you love is just a dishonest reduction to particular concepts or images, where the lived well-being is reduced to some idea, standard or authority. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Ok. So if Love is greater than you, it is not completely contained by you - it always exceeds you. And in order to know it, and be closer to it - you have to reach out of the prison of your self. So man is created in the image of God - destined to reach out of their own self - to point towards God. — Agustino
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