04/8/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1EW

Summary of text [comment] page 69

[‘Our states of existence’ (of either grace or self-destruction) are tumultuous because they contain contradictions.

On top of that, ‘our states of existence’ face apparently incompatible normal contexts. A divine object (such as an idol) may be incompatible with our human nature (to participate in divine nature; such as, triadic relations). Normal contexts obey the laws of exclusivity. The incompatibilities, manifested as contradictions in ‘our states of existence’, may drive conversion from one exclusive normal context to another.

The tension between the normal contexts and the realms of possibility constitutes a God-source and human-subject polarity within the intersection.

Finally, ‘our states of existence’ belong (as an actuality) in a content-level nested form. This content-level form describes the person. However, this nested form is not articulated. It models the person’s unconscious.

Thus, Schoonenberg’s word ‘counterpole’ is rendered as both ‘God-source and human-subject’ and ‘God-source and human-subject within the person’.]

04/6/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1EU

[When participation no longer situates recognition. ‘what we recognize as ourselves’ and ‘what we do’ clash in a single actuality.

God (the source pole corresponding to both normal contexts) brings the human subject (the subject pole corresponding to both possibilities), into relation with an actuality that may be described as ‘a state of existence’ (corresponding to the single actuality of participation and recognition).

‘Our states of existence’ (of either grace or self-destruction) are filled with contradictions. Yet, they operate under the laws of non-contradiction. They are contextualized by two exclusive normal contexts. They are grounded in two upwellings in the monadic sea of possibility (conscience and dispositions).]

04/5/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1ET

Summary of text [comment] page 69

[When these nested forms do not interscope, they intersect.

‘God Recognizing Himself’ creates and sustains three categories of existence.

Our human disposition prepares us to participate in ‘the triadic structure of existence’. We assume that the triadic structure of existence is actual. We attend to relationships, artifacts and potentials.

But sometimes, participation does not situate recognition. We are always surprised and disarmed when we perform some act with apparently no normal context. We participate without recognition. We are also miserable when we are forced to do activities that do not fit our self-recognition.

Often, in our current Lebenswelt, sovereign religions force their objectorganizations upon us. They lie to us in the hope that we will recognize ourselves within the mirror of their objectorganization.

Forced participation. False recognition.]

04/4/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1ES-2

[Humans belong to God’s Creation.

Humans recapitulate the Godhead (or objectrelation).

We (humans) recapitulate the theological relation (the actuality of the One True Triune God) in our self-recognition:

‘I recognize myself’ may be depicted as a nested form:

A design or object3a(‘I, the one who recognizes’ and ‘myself, the one who is recognized’2a(the possibility of I recognizing myself1a)).

We recapitulate the anthropological relation (the attraction of God and humans) in our participation in creation in the light of the theological relation.

Our human nature is to participate in the divine nature may be depicted as a nested form:

God’s immanent nature3b( my participation2b( the potential of my own human nature1b)

Unlike the actuality of ‘assume3cC’, these nested forms are not contiguous. They belong to different categories. They interscope without tension under a particular perspective.

Participation situates recognition.]

03/31/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1EQ

[The triadic assume3cC contextualizes an objectrelation2cC that is a dyadic actuality.

Each of the actualities in the dyad is a triadic relation.

In turn, each triadic relation (in the dyad contextualized by assume3cC) contains an object that is a dyadic actuality.

In the theological relation, the One Who Recognizes accounts for the One Who Is Recognized.

In the anthropological relation, the One Who Is Recognized accounts for the individual living within the Body of ‘the One Who Is Recognized’.]

03/29/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1EO

[For example, consider the relation that defines religionsuprasovereign:

Assume3cC( objectrelation2cC( possibility that all will enter relation1cC))

The actuality, objectrelation2cC is a dyad of relations.

As a dyad, ‘the two relations in actuality’ are contiguous. Somehow, one accounts for the other. The theological relation of the One Triune God accounts for the anthropological relation of Creation. The theological relation of ‘Recognize!’ accounts for the anthropological relation of ‘the individual in mystical union with God’.]