William wrote: ↑Wed Feb 23, 2022 1:28 pm
I understand. Perhaps our debate would be better focused around the question: is living according to love the same as living under grace?
It is in terms of the law, if indeed the law was originally designed to teach humans how to love.
At the very least, the law was designed for a sinful humanity. We are under the law because we are slaves to sin. It was a corrective. Just like love is. To bring us back to God and to grace.
Given that the 10 became the 613 - and historical Jesus entering the scene where {I assume] the 613 were in operation as religious inserts biblical Jesus fosters a type of hostility for religious practices based upon those inserts...as if humans have interpreted the 10 with their own faulty reasoning.
Biblical Jesus sets the record straight - by saying not only are the 613 off the mark regarding an individuals relationship with The Father, but the 10 which triggered the invention of the 613 need to be reduced to the 3,2,1.
Which is strongly suggestive of we having to see things the other way - and it is by grace that this is accomplished...because grace lifts the otherwise impossible burden which religiosity has imposed upon the individual seeking sustained connection/communion with The Creator.
I'm aligned with this general trajectory. Love remains a tricky concept for me -- a spiraling logic around the mantra 'love life' and what word(s) to emphasize there and if it even matters. Put otherwise, while love may be the means, I don't think it is the end, which would be a state of grace.
And we can debate the 613 and Jesus' hostility towards them. He does say that he did not come to abolish the law but to fulfill it. That's why I like suggesting a deconstructive (versus hostile) attitude. He renders the law inactive - not by destroying it but by loosening / opening it up to its true intention - be it love or grace - so that it can be fulfilled. (Which I know you agreed with already, so I don't think we're far off here.)
William wrote: ↑Wed Feb 23, 2022 1:28 pm
Also, you could have stopped me in my tracks with Paul's ode to love in 1 Corinthians 13: "If I give all I possess to the poor...but have not love, I gain nothing."
Does Paul's saying 'stop you in your tracks?'
Not really. More food for thought and something that gets me thinking (back to that spiral logic I mentioned). To your other questions:
Can Paul's saying be seen in the practice of modern day Philanthropy? Or would he have a problem with the rich NOT giving away every cent and becoming poor.
If there is any attachment whatsoever to what is withheld, then yes, I think there is a problem. It means we haven't entered into the more radical economy of the kingdom where everything is freely given (and grace abounds).
Is it possible that genuine giving while keeping oneself rich enough in money to be able to continue the practice throughout ones lifetime, is in keeping with grace and love?
I don't know if money has a place in the kingdom. It's a system of exchange, which is the exact opposite of what it means to be under grace. And while I'm not an economist, I believe even our money/exchange-based economy requires flow. The only reason (IMO) we store up cash is to safeguard the future (mostly
our own future). In the radical economy of the kingdom I think the idea would be to let it all flow to where it's needed now. No holding it in a bank account for the future, including future investments we want to make.
I see your suggestion giving us an excuse to hold back and amass. It's an easy road back to sin (and being under the law) versus the path to grace.
Is such a person practicing this kind of giving because they are not under the law which would command every last cent must be handed over?
The law doesn't command every cent be handed over, does it? I would think of it more as grace needing every cent to flow freely, so that there can be grace for all who need it.
William wrote: ↑Wed Feb 23, 2022 1:28 pmA genuine relationship with The Creator, is worth so much more than a relationship with a religious artifact, wouldn't you agree?
Sure. But that doesn't mean an artifact can't be our best access to God (while idolatry is always possible, so too is the iconic).
William wrote: ↑Wed Feb 23, 2022 1:28 pm
I tend to think that there is a far more subversive and radical 'economy' at play in the Kingdom than you lay out here (which I take to be some sort of beneficent capitalism). One that requires a radical trust in the world (/God) to provide.
I see no trust in this view.
My tendency is to see the potential for human beings to build the Kingdom of God on the planet, using what devices we have in order to do so.
My preference is to see this potential become a reality rather than have to witness Jesus' return 'in all his glory' and get about commanding humans to build said Kingdom [or however he would go about it] because - even given it may be better than letting human beings become extinct at their own hand - it would clearly show that humanity failed to realize its own potential and didn't mature enough to be able to do it for themselves.
Meantime, since Jesus hasn't returned yet, there is work to do for those who want to do it. Not trusting that view, means the work won't get done by those not trusting that view.
100%. Hence we need to invest it all today and save nothing for tomorrow.
