03/28/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1EN

Summary of text [comment] page 69

[Before going to the second movement, allow me to ask this question about assume3cC:

Why don’t ‘the two relations that compose the dyad in actuality’ interscope?

Why does one relation not become situation and the other content?

The answer comes from the fact that dyadic actuality belongs to one relation.

Once you remove the pair from that one particular relation, then the actualities (if they are relations) may interscope.

Compare 2.1 EL to 2.1 EI.]

03/24/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1EM

[So, with the preceding blogs and images in mind, I attempt to summarize.

I do so in two movements.

First, God the One must also be God the Three in order to encompass all three categories of existence.

If the One Triune God is actual, then another actual relation occurs in the dyad of actuality. That other actuality is creation.

These actualities are not hierarchical, they are contiguous. They obey the laws of non-contradiction.

Furthermore, this dyad has a normal context: Assume.

‘Assume3cC’ brings ‘One True Triune God and Creation2cC’ into relation with the ‘potential of all coming into relation1cC’. This relation characterizes a suprasovereign religion.

Details can be found in the e-book: How To Define the Word ‘Religion’.]

03/15/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1EF

Summary of text [comment] page 69

[The intersection of participation and recognition contains a polarity between divine normal contexts (the sources of grace, as well as self destruction) and human potentials (the subject of grace, as well as self destruction).

This polarity encounters the polarity of exclusive normal contexts that bring either grace or self destruction into relation with the monadic sea of possibility.

Thus, I present an image of the word ‘counter’ in the (translator’s chosen term from the original Dutch) ‘counterpoles’ describing the difference between the source and the subject of grace.

Finally, I compare this intersection to the ground of the dyadic actuality of ‘the human in the image of ‘the One Who Recognizes’ and ‘the One Who Is Recognized’‘. This comparison appears in the next blog.]

03/14/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.1EE

Summary of text [comment] page 69

[At this point, I have a deeper appreciation of the qualifier ‘counter’ in Schoonenberg’s term ‘counterpole’.]

Schoonenberg uses the term to describe the difference between the source and the subject of grace.

[What have I seen with these models?

A fundamental polarity lies within the intersection containing the single actualities of the states of grace or self-destruction. Additional polarities are found in the content-level nested form incorporating this single actuality.

This is shown in blog 2.1 DY.]