05/20/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BP

Summary of text [comment] page 56

The book of Job struggles to reconcile the existence of evil with God’s goodness. God’s answer, coming at the end, confronts Job with a question: How can a part comprehend the whole? Were you present at the founding of your world?

[We can ask the same types of questions with respect to spontaneous orders.

How can any particular anti-entropic entity contemplate the entire anti-entopic spontaneous process?

How can an organ comprehend a body?

How can a person comprehend a society?

How can a society comprehend its Mythos and Logos?]

05/19/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BN

Summary of text [comment] pages 55 and 56

[The devil lives in the details.

“The metaphor of the devil” as “an order that is parasitic to spontaneous orders” may be useful in understanding our own experiences, as well as biblical witness.

Evil is parasitic on the energy sustaining any spontaneous order, eventually diminishing that order and eroding its abundance.

Ted Peters’ book on radical evil details the process of possession in seven steps. These seven steps may be depicted as an interscoping form:

Blasphemy3c( cruelty2c(1c))

Self-justification3b( concupiscence2b(1b))

Pride3a( anxiety2a( unfaith1a))

All these nested forms are parasitic of the good within their host.]

05/18/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BM

Summary of text [comment] pages 55 and 56

[Once we view ourselves as living and working within a spontaneous order, then the devil cannot be an independent divine substance. The devil exists only within a spontaneous order.

The devil plays within the dynamics of any spontaneous order in the same way that a parasite plays within the dynamics of its host. Devils divert energy from the entire system in order to preserve themselves in being, thereby weakening the entire order.

Devils, then, may possess a person, an organization, an institution, or a society in the same fashion that a parasite possesses its host. Like a parasite, the devil looks for vulnerability and power.

The devil exploits the spontaneous order in order to harvest power (and souls) for itself.]

05/15/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BL

Summary of text [comment] pages 55 and 56

[Prior blogs discussing Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, offer another perspective on natural evil.

We humans participate in spontaneous orders on multiple levels. There are many opportunities to fail (that is, to slip back into the realm of possibility).

Evil for living entities (due to limitations and challenges) is intrinsic to biological spontaneous orders. However, the good of living (being in actuality) is necessarily greater.

Otherwise, failure and physical evil would not be considered deficiencies of good.]

05/14/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BK

Summary of text [comment] pages 55 and 56

[Rene Girard offers another perspective.

Evil (specifically Satan and scandal) is a consequence of mimesis (people imitating other’s desires).

The benefits of mimesis should outweigh the evils, although, at times, the opposite seems to be the case.]

05/13/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BJ

Summary of text [comment] pages 55 and 56

The Catholic Church has always resisted the temptation to divinize evil. The fourth Lateran Council in 1215 declared that God created all. The devil was created naturally good by God (in terms of dispositions) but became evil by himself (by way of thinkgroup and consciencelacking). Evil does not have God as its principle.

Similarly, St. Augustine rejected evil as a positive divine substance. “The cause of evil” is “deficiency of some good”.

How could this be?

How could “deficiencies of some good” arise?

St. Thomas thought that deficiencies could be due to the finiteness of the creature. Our limitations make deficiencies evil.

Along the same lines, Tielhard de Chardin thought that our genesis was fraught with evil in terms of both limitations and challenges.

05/12/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BI

Summary of text [comment] pages 54 and 55

[Manichaen simplicity eases the exercise of sovereign power.

How?

Thinkpro-object and thinkanti-object organize society.

They incite two attitudes.

One is passivity (the pursuit of balance).

The other is mob action (the pursuit of imbalance).

The first is useful for controlling people.

The second releases social pressures through scapegoating.]

05/11/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BH

Summary of text [comment] pages 54 and 55

[In Manichaeism, evil is regarded as a timeless divinity, co-existent with good.

Contrast this image with the eternal co-existence of the Father and the Son.

The former embodies conflict. The latter embodies family.

The former embodies imbalance. The latter embodies harmony.

The former is fruitless. The latter is generative.]

05/8/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BG

[To me, this “good versus evil” simplicity eerily matches the moment when an alliance of infrasovereign religions grasp sovereign power. Thinkdivine is eclipsed. Thinkgroup splits into thinkpro-object (substituting for thinkdivine) and a projected thinkanti-object (taking the role of thinkgroup compared to thinkdivine).

Pro-object is designated good. Anti-object is designated evil.

From all appearances, two co-eternal gods have been designated.

However, there is a trick.

“Evil” becomes “a projection by the alliance in power” onto other persons. The accusation of thinkanti-object and conscienceanti-object destroys the accused, whether innocent or guilty.]

05/7/15

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7BF

Summary of text [comment] pages 54 and 55

Schoonenberg noted: “Divine causality with respect to evil” must considered in light of God’s transcendent causality.

The notion, that “evil may be a positive entity in and of itself” has been around a long time. It was a key tenet of several non-Biblical religions.

For example, the heresy of the Albigensians displayed a Manichaen dualistic point of view, claiming that good and evil exist in and of themselves.

This notion greatly simplified the world. There were two divinities, one good and the other evil.