anon 0x24a said in #1667 13mo ago:
A few months ago, a close family member became very interested in Christianity. It made me dig much deeper than I had done previously into these questions. It even made me come up with a personal definition of sorts for what Religion should be.
Good Religion in theory should be something like: "An integrated sovereign life force which incorporates all aspects of higher meaning". By failing to account for all relevant forces at play, a religious system automatically opens itself up to subversion and therefore invalidates the intrinsically binding nature required of it.
Normative Protestantism therein ends up coming across almost by definition as bad religion. I'm very surprised Catholic apologists haven't latched more onto the absurdity of having such an inconsistent jumble of denominations and doctrines. Protestants are forced to claim the "Universal Church" as a mere abstraction. The Catholic Church comes across to me as superior almost by default.
When I think of "sovereign life force" the practical derivative through natural law would be something along the lines of the ability to act as a prime-mover that shapes society. But what if that ability steadily diminishes over time? That kind of frame certainly makes us ask some very grave questions on the part of the Catholic Church as well.
The default among apologists appears to view Church decadence primarily through the prism of a test to be endured. Fair enough, but this is certainly insufficient. Without reincorporating a clear active principle, we arrive at a succinctly telluric and passive worldview (a la Dr Evola). The temptation is clearly to retreat towards the comforts of moralism and the hereafter; a caricature of slave morality.
One personal conclusion is that I am unable to accept the "Christian impulse" as intrinsically valid in all cases. To reject Christianity altogether also appears to me as equally absurd. At the the very least it is one of the most consequential forms of magic to ever be released on Earth. The rightful place of the "Christian impulse" might be as an alchemical ingredient of sorts that must be (deliberately?) counter-balanced by other forces. This previously occurred by default through natural law (Malthusian limits, the physical inferiority of women etc). One esoteric reading of fascism is surely to view it as an attempt at a rectification along these lines.
If sovereignty at the group and personal level is our primary concern, then I end up with a sort of horseshoe. Both extreme fundamentalism and active nihilism are praiseworthy. I'm curious about what anyone else thinks. Any criticisms?
IMO, the #1 insight