11/18/13

Thoughts on Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.1C

Comments on text are in square brackets.

[How would these words fit into the intersecting nested forms that were developed while reviewing Menninger’s book?

I have started using subscripts to denote thirdness, secondness and firstness.  This should help clarify

The Hebrew word “anon” (twisted situation, something amiss, a burden that should be taken away) sounds, to me, like “lawessential3(missing the mark2(_1))”.  That is, “twistedness” contextualizing “missing the mark”.

The Hebrew word “pesa” (hostility, rebelliousness, resistance, among men and with God, rebellion and offense against God) seems, to me, like “(missing the mark2(disposition1))”.  That is, “sin” situating a “disposition”.

Thus, “anon3(2())” and “pesa2(1)” capture the transition from one category to another on the natural philosophical axis.

The Hebrew word “ka’as” (challenging, provoking, embittering, hurting the feelings of Yahweh) call to mind, to me, “thinkdivine3(missing the mark2(_1))”.

The Hebrew word “na’as” (scorn, revile, disdain, spurn, revile) sounds, to me, like “missing the mark2(consciencelacking1)”.

Thus, “ka’as3(2())” and “na’as2(1)” capture the transition from one category to another on the moral religious axis.]

11/15/13

Thoughts on Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.1B

Chapter 1 is titled “The Essence of Sin”.  This chapter is divided into seven sections.  The first section is “The Vocabulary of Scripture”.

I summarize the text (pages 1-3).

The Hebrew word for “sinning” literally means “to miss” as in “to miss the mark”.  Who sets the mark?  Answer:  Not you, nor your friends, family, tribe, nation … only God does.

“Missing the mark” implies rebellion or offense against Yahweh (on the outside) and inner injustice or guilt (on the inside).

The words, “anon” and “pesa”, flesh out these implications.  “Anon” points to “something amiss or twisted”, like guilt or iniquity, that ought to be carried away and expiated.  “Pesa” indicates an attitude of rebellion against God.

These words were used in Exodus to describe the obstinacy, infidelity, and apostasy of the tribes of Israel.  The prophets also used the word “pesa” to describe unfaithfulness and rebellion.

Later writers mixed in the Hebrew words “ka’as” and “na’as”. “Ka’as” describes Yahweh’s jealous and provoked wrath.  “Na’as” is translated as “scorn”, “revile”, “disdain”, “spurn” and “embitter”.  “Na’as” was translated into Latin as “offendere”.

11/15/13

Thoughts on Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.1A2

From previous blogs, I have several Peircean categorical tools for imaging commentaries on “sin”, including the intersecting nested forms.  This tool may be integral to a postmodern definition of “religion”.

In 1962, Schoonenberg had none of these tools.  As a Dutch Jesuit theologian, he had the tools of scholasticism and modernism, the same tools that had failed the Liberation Theologians of Latin America.  He was like a chemist trying to synthesize a novel molecule. Chemistry and Theology have something in common.  Both can be flammable.

Liberation Theologians distilled their life experiences, their society, and the Bible into concepts, such as “a preferential option for the poor” and “social sin”, that unwittingly fueled the ambitions of leftist tyrants throughout Central and South America as well as leftist Progressives in North America.

South of the border, “the preferential option for the poor” became “a preference for the tyrants who claim that the poor are victims of the rich”.  You have heard the slogans: It is not your fault that you are poor.  Even the wealthy imagined that they were victims of the (even more) rich.

North of the border, the concept of “the sins of the world” transformed into “the political incorrectness of the world”.  You have heard the slogans: Who is more politically incorrect than the racist, woman-suppressing, homosexual-damning, money-grubbing, Catholics?  OK.  The Baptists.  They must be re-educated.  Let them be baptized by immersion in the fiery solvents of Progressivism.

By 2012, the crass, defiant, entrepreneur-hating, crony capitalist tyrants of South America and the hygienic, high-minded, sharp-tongued, self-anointed Progressives of North America had rebranded the elixir of Liberation Theology and made it their own.

11/14/13

Thoughts on Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.1A1

Piet Schoonenberg’s book, De Macht der Zonde (1962), was translated into English in 1965 (University of Notre Dame Press: Notre Dame, Indiana).  Man and Sin: A Theological View is divided into 4 chapters plus an epilogue.

This is a book on theology.  Its pages are free of banter.  Its lines of thought are evocative and sometimes tangled.  In some spots, one paragraph will occupy many blogs.

This type of theological text reminds me of what someone said about a biochemistry text: Every sentence sums up a doctoral thesis.  Perhaps, theology is even worse, since each sentence sums a centuries long controversy.

Nevertheless, I have several tools at my disposal for commenting on this text.

From An Archaeology of the Fall, I have a foundational perspective: Our world is a world of symbolic orders and social constructions.  Social constructions situate symbolic orders.  Our judgments about our social constructions are constrained by the very words we use.

11/13/13

Thoughts on Whatever Became of Sin? By Karl Menninger MD (1973) 9K

Chapters 9 and 10 of Menninger’s book should be read with the last few blogs in mind.  Menninger could “hear” that “something was wrong”, yet he could not correctly identify “what that ‘something’ was”.  He could not because he could not see into the future.

40 years later, the reader cannot help seeing that Menninger was swimming in the waters of Progressivism and looking towards the ark of Christendom.  Now, we are deeper in the waters.  We are further from the boat.

The “morality gap” that Menninger announced on pages 192 and 226 only makes sense in regards to a changing of public symbolic orders from Christianity to Progressivism.  Menninger struggled to put it into perspective, but he could not.  He presented his interpretation, but – like all interpretations in psychoanalysis – his interpretation must be regarded as provisional.

In trying to understand how Menninger’s interpretation “missed the mark”, we have constructed a new – semiotic – tool.

The crossing of two nested forms, one horizontal and one vertical, is the hard-won gift bestowed by Whatever Happened to Sin?

The intersecting nested forms visualize what Menninger was trying to convey: On the vertical axis, there is a choice.

11/11/13

Thoughts on Whatever Became of Sin? By Karl Menninger MD (1973) 9J

How does the Progressive thinkcorrect (and projected thinkincorrect) fit into the Christian vertical nested form?

Progressive thinkcorrect (and the projected thinkincorrect) constitute a thinkgroup.

One of the characteristics of thinkgroup is a shift from personal to collective responsibility.  Progressives who accuse others of political incorrectness demonstrate their “moral superiority”.  At the same time, the are not held personally responsible for the consequences of their actions. This consciencelacking is dramatically portrayed (with well researched stories) by Ann Coulter in her many books.

The Public Cult of Progressivism has popularized the concept that the individual person is not responsible for her situation.  On one hand, they are correct when “responsibility” means “conditions of development”.  After all, no one is responsible for the situation of her birth.  On the other hand, they are wrong when “responsibility” means “I will take charge of my own situation”.

The “meaning” of the word “responsibility” has changed.

11/8/13

Thoughts on Whatever Became of Sin? By Karl Menninger MD (1973) 9I

Menninger’s “interpretation” confounded Christian and Progressive symbolic orders.

First, let us consider the nested form on the vertical axis.

In the Christian sphere: thinkdivine(virtue(consciencefree)) and thinkgroup(sin(consciencelacking)) are exclusive nested forms that always interpellate one one another.

In the Progressive sphere: thinkcorrect(political correctness(consciencecorrect) is exclusive and superior to thinkincorrect(political incorrectness(conscienceincorrect)). Thinkincorrect and conscienceincorrect exist as deductions (that is: they must exist in the accused) from the structure of the vertical nested form.

The cryptotheological superiority of thinkProgressive mandates the application of sovereign power.

Thinkcorrect corresponds to the “super-ego” of the Public Cult of Progressivism.  Words are true by way of tautology.

For example, the term “medicare” is, precisely, “medical care provided by the Public Cult”.  Political debate must conform to this tautology.

Anyone who disagrees with any feature of this central government program may be labeled as “a person who wants to take medical care away from those provided”.

That person is “politically incorrect” and therefore exhibits both thinkincorrect and conscienceincorrect.  She is a bad person.

The catch-all character of the word “political incorrectness” inadequately captures the dramatic unfolding of each perceived act.  I say “perceived act” because many accusations of political incorrectness are not necessarily founded in fact, but perception.

11/7/13

Thoughts on Whatever Became of Sin? By Karl Menninger MD (1973) 9H

Menninger’s “interpretation” confounded Christian and Progressive symbolic orders.

First, let us consider the nested form on the horizontal axis.

In the Christian sphere, we substitute “lawessential” for “crime”; “sin” for “political incorrectness”; plus a still unclear “disposition towards sin” for “symptom”.

In the Progressive sphere: “Crime” puts “political incorrectness” into normal context.  “Psychological symptoms” make “political incorrectness” possible.

To me, this implies that Progressivism removed elements from Christianity and claimed them for their own.

By analogy, this is what Enlil, the air-god of the city of Nippur, did to An, the sky-god (in An Archaeology of the Fall).  Enlil took the sun, moon and stars from An, leaving the masculine god as stony darkness.

11/6/13

Thoughts on Whatever Became of Sin? By Karl Menninger MD (1973) 9G

Menninger could not see into the future.

I write almost exactly 40 years after the publication of this book.

My critique of Menninger comes precisely from the place where he could not see.

That contributes to the beauty of what I am about to say, which is also what I have been saying.

The answer to the title question, Whatever became of sin?, is “political incorrectness replaced the term”.

This implies that the horizontal axis that Menninger attributed to “sin”, that is, “crime(sin(symptom))” is actually “crime(political incorrectness(symptom))”.

In short, Menninger confounded the Progressive symbolic order with the Christian symbolic order.

He could not see the future development of the Public Cult of Progressivism.  He was immersed in it.   In the late 1960’s, the Public Cult of Progressivism and the private cults of the New Age Movement (white magic) and Satanism (dark magic) were “in the water”.

As a trained psychoanalyst, Menninger could “hear” (that the word “sin” was no longer used) but he could not fully “interpret” (what the loss implied).  So he presented the “interpretation” that he had at the moment.  Like all psychoanalytic interpretations, what he wrote was provisional.

11/5/13

Thoughts on Whatever Became of Sin? By Karl Menninger MD (1973) 9F

OK.  The last blog was a hypothesis.  I have not demonstrated that this “way of projection” is sufficient to categorize Public – or Sovereign – Cults.

Certainly, when a Christian “names a sin”, she is not projecting an agenda into “a void of another person” according to the logic of Menninger’s mandala in the same fashion that the Progressive does.  The sinner knows this.  The Christian does not want to coerce the sinner into “becoming good”.  She wants the sinner to “convert”.  The sinner knows this.

The Christian aims to save “souls”.  The Progressive aims to “save” everything else.

This contrast is significant.

Menninger’s mandala may be valuable in discerning the nature of “religion”.