03/20/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7X

[In 2015, Progressive televisionaries favor tyranny.

They broadcast postreligionist (enlightenment) religious points of view.

They claim they are “not religious”, but look again.

Thinkgroups multiply and seek sovereign power.

They divide the world into a diversity of thinkpro-objects and thinkanti-objects.

See and believe.]

03/19/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7W

[Plus, you cannot talk back to the television.

Do the televisionaries know what they are doing?

Do the televisionaries know that you cannot talk back to the TV?

Consider how they portray “victims”. “The victims on TV” stand in “for you, the viewers, the voiceless ones”.

The producers of elite propaganda claim that “they are on your side”. They and you (the voiceless viewer) are united against “some disturbing malignant class of agents that are responsible for your voicelessness”.

However, your voicelessness is a character of the medium itself.]

03/18/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7V

[Thinkgroup expresses itself in talk.

The more talk is one-sided, the more the thinkgroup sounds like a leviathan. In this regard, the potential of all forms of broadcast media cannot be underestimated.

America’s current nascent (2015) totalitarian state exploits the advantages of a new way of talking: television.

The totalitarian states of the 1930’s also benefitted from a new way of talking: radio.

With radio and television, a handful of individuals (or thinkgroup) can produce the impression of a mass movement. One news announcer can be very compelling. Televisionaries broadcast their points of view directly into your living space. They talk as if they are reporting to you. They selectively present images to you.

The greater the percentage of the population that watches broadcast media, the more convincing the Progressive elites sound.]

03/17/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7U

Summary of text [comment] pages 49 and 50

[Thinkgroup = think x think x think x think … x think.

It can achieve a power that is categorically different than any individual conscience.

Thinkgroup can rationalize mob action.

Thinkgroup can identify scapegoats.

Thinkgroup can achieve a societal closure that marks the totalitarian state.]

03/16/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7T

Summary of text [comment] pages 49 and 50

[Solvable? Let me tell you about solvable problems.

Both thinkgroup and thinkdivine occupy the normal context slot of the vertical axis of the intersection modeling “the message underlying the word ‘religion'”.

How did I come up with these terms? At first, I thought of using “group think” and “God think”. But the qualifier was not part of the word.

So I ran them together like groupthink and Godthink.

No, that was not adequate.

Then, I happened to hear a lecture on Aristotle, where the word “powers” was used a lot. I already knew that “powers in math” described “the number of times a number was multiplied by itself”. So I associated the two concepts. Think became exponential.

The mathematical notation of exponentials inspired the words thinkgroup and thinkdivine.

How is that for a solution?]

03/11/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7R

Summary of text [comment] pages 49 and 50

[“The transcendent Holy Spirit3” brings “the immanence of the Father and the Son2” into relation with “the Possibility of One Truth-filled God1“.

Where is “the Mystery of God” in this?

The normal context is the Holy Spirit, which is perceived as a person. After all, people are also mediators. So that makes sense. The Holy Spirit is relational. Every relation expresses three elements. God is triune.

Actuality is dyadic. It has two elements. One element “causes” the other, in the broadest sense of the term “cause”. Both Yahweh and Jesus are actual. They do not contradict. Therefore, God is truth-filled.

So there we have three people, but there is one element missing in the nested form.

Missing is “the mystery that God is possible”.]

03/10/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7Q

Summary of text [comment] pages 49 and 50

[The so-called European Enlightenment elevated Greek thought over so-called Judeo-Christian superstition. These thinkers claimed to be “not religious”. I call them “postreligionist”.

The self-labeled enlightened ones made two columns labeled “transcendence” and “immanence”. They then put Yahweh into the “transcendence” column, thereby unconsciously projecting onto Him all the attributes of Zeus. Zeus is a majestic, transcendent and capricious god. So also, by association, is Yahweh.

Postreligionist (enlightenment) thinkers then put Jesus into the “immanence” column, thereby unconsciously projecting onto Him all the attributes of someone like Socrates. Socrates undermined the Athenian social system with his persistent questions. By association, so did Jesus. Jesus was a political animal.

Postreligionist (enlightenment) thinkers never imagined that there was a third element. The list itself constituted a third.

They also never imagined what made their list possible. Paper, pen and ink turned their list into something that they could see.

Neither the paper nor the pen nor the ink have the character of a Zeus or Socrates.

They reflect a mystery that the postreligionists could not imagine.]

03/9/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7P

Summary of text [comment] pages 49 and 50

[So we have two columns with the headers of transcendence and immanence.

Both Yahweh and Jesus go into the column of immanence.

So does everything in the Bible.

The Bible is a record, even if that witness is buried in forgetfulness and oral tradition. The Bible witnesses the Real.

So, what goes into the header of transcendence?

Go outside and look at the sky.

It is not in the sky.

Go outside and feel the earth.

It is not in the earth.

Feel the breeze touch your face.

It is in the wind.

The Holy Spirit goes into the column of transcendence.

How different is the Holy Spirit from Zeus?

The idea of the Holy Spirit allows us to divorce Greek philosophy from Greek mythology.

The schoolmen of the Latin Age began this divorce.]

03/6/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7N

Summary of text [comment] pages 49 and 50

How can sin both hurt God’s feelings and not injure God Himself? Schoonenberg claims this is not a problem to be solved.

[Once again, we meet the mystery. We already know why “transcendence” is on the list. That is the Greek logical view. These characteristics go with a Supreme God.

Why is “immanence” also on the list? Greek logic does not require this. Instead, the Bible witnesses God’s immanence. The Old and New Testaments declare that God created the heavens and the earth; fashioned the first human out of earth; made a covenant with Israel; was born as the Son of Mary; and presently moves us through the Holy Spirit.]