01/11/17

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.2 EK

Summary of text [comment] pages 78 and 79

[At the end of section 2.2 ( The Inability to Love), Schoonenberg described a failure to integrate, to achieve harmony, to order ourselves, and to find goodness.

Schoonenberg did not describe a positive feedback loop where sinful acts are contextualized through perverse justifications (thinkgroup) and the denial of consequences (lawdenial). Nor did he describe sinful acts situating a narrowing band of attitudes (consciencelacking) and fixations (dispositions).

In sin, the individual’s potential, the range of possibilities inherent in conscience and dispositions, shrinks. Human recognition, the openness of one’s morality and the honest assessment of outcomes, constricts.

The sinner exhibits narrow-mindedness and arrogance, the foundations of bigotry and hubris. The sinner acts like an elitist.]

01/10/17

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.2 EJ

[In the pursuit of partial goods, denying the consequences becomes part of the game of establishing harmonyapparent.

Lawessential falls under the spell of lawdenial, a network of excuses that brings sinful actions into relation with a narrowing range of attitudes and emotional needs.

Lawdenial characterizes sovereign religions.

So ironically, some sort of harmony is achieved by sin.

However, harmonyapparent includes deception as an essential part of its functioning.

Harmonyapparent integrates lawdenial.

Harmonyapparent comes at the expense of harmonyfull.]

01/6/17

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.2 EI-1

Summary of text [comment] page 79

[Does integration also happen when think is qualified by group and conscience is qualified by lacking (freedom)?

The inability to love associated with thinkgroup and consciencelacking may achieve an apparent harmony (in contrast to the fullness of true harmony).

The lack of freedom of conscience is compensated by a gain of pleasure or lack of pain. Pleasure and comfort plus consciencelacking are situated by sinful acts. The sinful acts are then contextualized by thinkgroup. They are labeled as “good”.]

01/5/17

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.2 EH

[This raises a question: What happens to an intersection when the contradictions that sustain it are resolved?

As long as contradictions between the two actualities are not resolved, the intersection exists. The single actuality of ‘what is virtue and what is sin’ exists as long as human thought and human action contains contradictions that undermine an interscope.

As these contradictions are resolved ‘what is good and what is bad’ no longer stands as a single actuality composed of a pair of contradictory actualities.

The intersection resolves, turning back into an interscope.

But now, the person is either totally good or totally evil.]

01/2/17

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.2 EE

Summary of text [comment] page 79

The inability to love brings about the inability for complete goodness.

Our bodies and our materiality produce diverse tendencies, each striving for a partial good. These diverse tendencies contradict one another. If there is to be harmony, then the contradictions eventually resolve. This, in itself, is not evil.

We personally mold ourselves by ordering, integrating and unifying our drives and powers. Love facilitates this. Any other attitude facilitates the promotion of some partial goods at the expense of others.

12/30/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.2 ED

Summary of text [comment] page 79

Without love, we (humans) cannot integrate our many disparate dispositions.

Sinful acts lead to the inability to love. They deprive us of grace.

Without grace, the sinner cannot integrate his dispositions. The sinner cannot pull himself together.

The sinner is always missing the mark. Plus, he is cruelly depriving himself of participation in a drama that is ultimately far more interesting than the inevitable narcissism of fixating on one’s own dispositions.

[This drama plays out in the person’s movement in the field of ‘the object that brings us all into relation’].

12/29/16

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.2 EC

Summary of text [comment] pages 78 and 79

The limited goods of ‘loving your family’ and ‘loving your tribe’ are closed moralities. They do not extend beyond their limits. Jesus pointed that out in Matthew 5:43. The inability to love brings about an inability for complete goodness.