Explaining the Fall to Atheists

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  • Опубліковано 22 сер 2024
  • In this short meditation, I explore the meaning of the Fall in secular terms, and the mistake atheists make in understanding their own placement.
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    My intro was arranged and recorded by Matthew Wilkinson.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 564

  • @leondbleondb
    @leondbleondb Місяць тому +213

    You should make this a "Explaining (X) to Atheists" series

    • @buglepong
      @buglepong Місяць тому +9

      haha try materlialist rationalist christians

    • @AlexanderSchröder777
      @AlexanderSchröder777 Місяць тому +2

      Yes!

    • @leanneglascott6836
      @leanneglascott6836 Місяць тому +2

      I feel that statement needs softening a bit. Us vs them.......Perhaps more - How To See The Humanity and wisdom of US as brought down through the Ages. A bit long I know but Unity is key - not division.

    • @leondbleondb
      @leondbleondb Місяць тому +2

      @@leanneglascott6836 😫

    • @Kc40k
      @Kc40k Місяць тому +2

      @@leanneglascott6836 No. We need directness and acknowledgement of difference.

  • @JackVogel2024
    @JackVogel2024 23 дні тому +12

    "God, god, give me more suffering"... some story told of a praying munk I've heard.
    I often think of it, because somehow, as I've gotten older, the meaning of suffering has transformed.
    I now, genuinely, associate suffering with beauty.
    Suffering at its worst is overwhelming and real and personally I don't have the words to fully describe it, but the same is true for what comes after, or along with it... usually deep insights into other people or ones self, unconditional feelings of love and compassion, a deep deep rooted appreciation for something so simple as a flickering shadow, the sound of a dog barking half a mile away, or even of that "dead", grey, dusty and dark corner over there that used to be an embodiment of depression.
    It's that crazy.
    Being thankful for the single breath and getting goosebumps from feeling the wind, even in those most ironically gritty situations coming from another insane day at work let's say...I know it wouldn't be possible without that suffering that happened earlier on.
    And knowing this, it constantly transforms stuff happening as it comes as well.
    Life became something else, because of suffering, and whatever it is it's beautiful now, despite not all being "well".
    It's weird and confusing.
    If I'd sum it up, death and suffering has the ability to make us appreciate every single little thing in this life, regardless of any ingrained concept we may have had about it.
    I'm not religious in any traditional sense either I might add

    • @deadweaselsteve3262
      @deadweaselsteve3262 14 годин тому

      "Suffering doesn't make you a better person. It just makes you suffer." _Art Spiegelman

    • @JackVogel2024
      @JackVogel2024 14 годин тому

      @@deadweaselsteve3262 I mean, perhaps not a "better" person, but life takes a new shape, that I would dare call better.
      Suffering is not just suffering when experienced though. That is a false statement.
      That's like saying a river Is just a river, disregarding all the life within it, and all the life it provides in its way, and how it connects to the ocean.

  • @milesmungo
    @milesmungo Місяць тому +81

    Sacrifice is fundamental to spacetime reality. Something dies, I eat. I workout, get stronger. Invest in relationships, reap joy. Sow a seed reap a harvest.

    • @nobody8717
      @nobody8717 Місяць тому +6

      Seeds of harmony, or Seeds of discord.
      they're both in the bag, we just have to sort through them.

  • @synaxarium
    @synaxarium Місяць тому +57

    Here are my thoughts, mostly centered on approach, hope they're valuable:
    In my opinion the talk is a bit all over the place, and it would mostly make sense to the people who are already familiar with your work. Jumping from one symbolic explanation to another really wrecks the listener's attention (which has it's uses, but not here imo). Most people still don't even have a sense of what "tree" is, let alone the rest of it, so we've got to be generous and patient.
    Besides that, "the fall is the distance from the purpose" argument is the most powerful one. Focusing the conversation, and maintaining the attention on "purposes" is always a good idea. You really helped me most when you described what purposes are, but avoided the discussion about which ones are ideal. The argument where you explained how the enlightenment thinkers are basically talking about a fall whenever they talk about the "gaps" they see, is fantastic. But the argument about the gnostics falls short, because "Why is Jonathan talking about Christian heresies now?" (atheists are seldom generous); it's probably best to put this one at the end, as a final support for the full image.
    I, personally, would double down on the "judging good from a distance" argument and would give a few secular examples. It's a bit confronting maybe, but the entire discussion needs a few concrete point throughout, so that the person listening can tie the points together themselves, and the one I mentioned is an easy and concrete one.
    Usually people engaging solely in the hermeneutics of suspicion are already blind to what they're doing, so tip-toeing around it makes it more difficult. It makes it more difficult because their own behavior is already veiled to them anyway, veiling it further is pointless. I want to be careful with this, but in my experience, people that are solely using the hermeneutics of suspicion (most atheists) are feasting on carcasses, which means they're very hungry for meaning, and secretly a sense of identity (which is the key moment).
    So this is from my experience with talking to atheists:
    You begin by laying the groundwork first, by defining some of the terms ("the way ancient people saw it" is a good garment), but in a simple manner. The martyrdom of Christ is not simple, unless you have a seriously high view of reality. But the fall in connection to purposes, the gaps argument, and maybe a few common examples of "judging good from the perspective of bad" should be good enough.
    After all this, you want to trick the atheist into eating their own arguments with their deconstruction, BUT at the same time you want to support them in building a constructivist argument (one without the other is just malicious).
    I'm trying to be concise, but I'm still working this out myself. Hopefully this next part will be useful:
    At this stage, this pattern of speech that works most universally: you talk about the death of the world (only about external things) like presenting the "fall" and "gap" aspect of the enlightenment as a hypocrisy. Then, you make a mock deconstructivist argument (in fact, exactly where the gnostic argument was). "And so, we can say something like [with a mocking voice]: 'what does the gap thing have to do with Adam and Eve being driven out of the garden? Weren't they taken out of the garden because God didn't want them to have more knowledge, or whatever? God created the whole thing anyways, He decided to throw them out.'
    I mean, yeah sure, I guess, but then who cares about the story anymore? You know, it's like that one aunt at Thanksgiving dinner whose sole purpose in life is just whining about everyone's problems. The one that always points out that you're fatter than last time she saw you. Oh, but you say something back about her, and it's like the end of the world. If you get where I'm coming from. Alright, so here's how I see the gap thing in connection to the fall....".
    At this point you can start constructing the argument and usually the atheist will start considering it. Typically, you construct like so: there's this [problem], AND here's how it's rectified (which I see you doing a lot anyway);
    If you're in a live conversation, they'll typically start daydreaming while you talk to them, and will tell you what your explanations remind them of. In other words, the best part in the discussion.
    Finally, here you can add the stuff about the gnostics and all the rest of it, since now you're constructing the argument, instead of defending it. All the beautiful and ornamental stuff belong here.
    And I'd add this extra stuff for everyone else reading:
    None of these explanations depend solely on logical, rationalistic arguments. It's a game centered on food, fundamentally. We're in a deconstructed world and people are starving for meaning, so much so that they forgot what meaning looks like. Atheists are not deconstructing because they're willfully blind (as much as we really want that to be true), they simply have never been properly presented with a higher source of food. Not in a way that would connect with them, never.
    And we can say "Well, it's not my job to play tricks and do the thinking for them, and make all these little changes because they're refusing to see.", and to that I would say: If we truly have been blessed by God to grasp some of this wisdom, then it's our job to put it to good use, and bear the fruits necessary, to properly and patiently show people a higher, more beautiful, more refreshing perspective. Some people, expect the atheist to self-sacrifice their approach, but they can't even demonstrate themselves. Right, the atheist is blind, and some Christians feel like they've got this grand understanding, and they're going to show the atheist how blind they are. Sounds like those two persons are the same.
    Of course you have to change your approach to fit the perspective of the person. Some people really don't want your help. But when it comes to most of them, you either patiently help them see, or you failed.
    And there's all these people that really do their best to absolutely miss your point, but as long as they're having the conversation with you, they are participating, which means soon enough they will tell you where're they're coming from. Like, you might think that you and some atheist are having a discussion about Christianity, but in reality the atheist is arguing with their ultra-devout, tyrannical, strict mother (subconsciously).
    And maybe it really sucks when you engage in this conversation, and these topic mean the world to you, but you end up getting all your arguments deconstructed and it makes you feel cold and alone, remember that everybody, Christian and atheist alike, are going through the same experience, because everyone else is also deconstructing their meaningful things. But you can be an enduring example of the opposite.
    Alright, I'll stop with my sermon, or whatever this was supposed to be. If you found the last paragraph meaningful and hopeful, notice that I am using the same tactics on you that I explained above. "Tactics", more like a breath of fresh air (at least for me).
    I really hope this is useful,

    • @denniszaychik8625
      @denniszaychik8625 Місяць тому +15

      As an atheist I have to say that this by far has been one of the most respectful and understandable positions regarding the topic of those as myself in the comment section of this channel. Some things I don't agree with, but the overall message and sentiment really hit it home for me. Well done brother.

    • @chottstuff
      @chottstuff Місяць тому

      "I mean, yeah sure, I guess, but then who cares about the story anymore?"
      well, why are you assuming that we have to care about the story?

    • @lindaphillips4646
      @lindaphillips4646 Місяць тому +2

      ​@chottstuff well, many do, actually. Because it matters whether we are dust that only looks forward to decomposing in a grave after our death, or if we believe that we were created and made in the image of God, and that we all still carry that unfallen Image of God in us, no matter how we act.. and that Our Creator took on human form and rescued us from a forever grave in due time to live again with Him the life that we had in the beginning when He first formed Adam and Eve..
      Also, where we believe we came from is deeply important to where we believe others came from...and how we treat them.. even as we sin in this fallen world as we hope to be purified to live finer lives.

    • @llenb1303
      @llenb1303 Місяць тому +2

      I really want to believe in (a) God(s) and I don’t understand how can someone not be an atheist. I watched the debate with Alex O’Connor and I still struggle to grasp Jonathan Pageau’s perspective. Where does morality come from? Isn’t morality relative? Isn’t it linked to your environment and circumstances? The gap between what is real and how you would want reality to be: it comes from wanting to avoid pain. No living thing with a nervous system or a brain developed enough to understand psychological pain wants to experience pain in any form. Or hardships and difficulties. Why does that have to be tied to the notion of a deity? And about order: isn’t it all chance? Like out of the infinite possibilities it was bound to happen at some point in space and time? And where do space and time come from? I don’t know, they just are, we (as humans) will know only later when we will have the technology to discover that. Or didn’t Einstein already answer that? Maybe I’m just lacking the cognitive abilities to reason on the same level as Jonathan Pageau. I want to be a Christian so bad because having all the answers to the meaning of life and to make sense of the experiences I go through would be so much easier than just to think that sh*t just happens. And knowing that a loving deity was loving and always here to help you is absolutely a dream and I’m trying to force myself to believe in it but a part of me still think it’s all a story to make us humans feel better about having to live and die.

    • @lindaphillips4646
      @lindaphillips4646 Місяць тому +3

      ​@llenb1303 hi. I read this several days ago, but i haven't been able to think of anything to say. I think it is because i haven't wrestled with these problems in the highly-intellectual way that you are trying to do it.
      My mind works differently. I have always believed in God, and there is a way in which i must renew my faith every morning. .
      Perhaps, even as valuable as Jonathan might be here, maybe it would be better to just start going to an Orthodox Church and just BE there Sunday after Sunday, or Vespers after Vespers for a while..
      You DO NOT have to be a believer to be there. Your presence won't pollute anything. And i doubt that anyone will condemn you in any way..
      Because, eventually, your faith in God will come as some kind of encounter with HIM , which will happen on HIS terms and HIS time schedule.
      I am not saying this to trouble or scare you. I don't mean that you will have something happen that slams into you. The Lord is much more gentle and patient than that.
      In many cases it is just a quiet awareness that something must be true. All of us who convert to the Orthodox Church seem to have had a moment like that when it all begins to come together
      You are just a bit farther away than some of us were, but your heart is seeking and your ego does not seem to be in the way.. and that is a great blessing already.
      I hope you will buy a copy of the Orthodox Study Bible , even if just the New Testament and begin to look at it and read the notes.. .
      The Church you go to might have them for sale. Or go online..
      There is a story in the Gospels of a man who came to Jesus asking that He heal someone.
      Jesus asked him if he believed?
      He said, Lord, i believe. Help my unbelief.
      (I have known that story all my life. But it took on a deeper importance to me about 20 years ago.,)
      Why not go to an Orthodox Church and tell the Lord as you go in that you don't believe in Him yet but that you have come to see and learn?
      He already knows that.
      He gave you a wonderful, active mind. But go to Church and let all its questions rest for a while and just experience some services.
      Tell someone at the candle stand that you are new there. And ask them to help you as they see your needs.
      No one will bother you.
      You will be gjven your space, unless someone talkative like me comes over to greet you..
      And then go to coffee hour or lunch and let some people meet you.
      Don't assume that everyone there is a member..
      Prayers for you..
      ☦️💝📿💝☦️

  • @nomadinsox8757
    @nomadinsox8757 Місяць тому +10

    You just keep getting clearer and clearer each time you talk about these topics. Really great to get to watch unfold.
    One thing I would have liked to hear you expand on is how all limitstion is death and all suffering is just a gorm of limitation. Meaning sin is death is limitation. Thus fallen.
    That's what had always been the clearest to me, ar least.

  • @Your_Best_Story_Editing
    @Your_Best_Story_Editing 14 днів тому +1

    This is very clear. And I'll be spending the weekend thinking about it.

  • @johannakunze3300
    @johannakunze3300 Місяць тому +20

    I loved most of it, the pattern of human suffering very clearly articulated. What I did not understand was the part about the two trees and how St. Ephrem described it - they wanted the tree of life but it was easiert to eat from the other one?
    Anyway, as a psychotherapist it is always fascinating to me to witness, how most people "wake up", become more conscious, the more they suffer. And that if they accept the suffering, only then can they overcome it.

  • @patriciafrantz8833
    @patriciafrantz8833 Місяць тому +13

    I love this! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
    Jonathan, another day my son (11) hurt his leg bad and said "why did God created pain?" I said that we feel physical pain to protect us from something that is not going right. Then he said he didn't believe that diseases and pain exists because of the fall of Adam and Eve. I also find it hard to believe that the world could have existed without disease, for example, because of the structure of reality itself (corruption). Your explanation shed some light about being conscious of what is bad.
    I wish you talk more about it.

  • @Steve_Schiffenhaus
    @Steve_Schiffenhaus Місяць тому +4

    I speak for probably a lot of us in that I got really excited at the 16:20 mark when you described the becoming conscious of the tree of life and also refusing to die - would love to see you spend more time there - unless you have another video where you do that 😊

  • @SamanthaGluck
    @SamanthaGluck Місяць тому +1

    You have been such an incredible and amazingly positive influence on our family, Jonathan. Thank you!

  • @drewfriesen9025
    @drewfriesen9025 Місяць тому +22

    Thanks for what you’re doing Jonathan! It’s really been reawakened my spirit as I my eyes are opened to the spiritual realities of our world.

  • @jamesmaclachlan6595
    @jamesmaclachlan6595 Місяць тому +7

    I think I will definitely benefit from multiple listens to this. There's a lot to unpack. It ties together so many different things: ideas of sin, desire, aim, and suffering. It never occurred to me that there is some similarity between the Gnostics and the Buddhist idea of freedom from the wheel of reincarnation.

  • @simon-y2b
    @simon-y2b Місяць тому +15

    Thanks Jonathan. A good parallel would be the Greek myth of Androgynes by Aristophanes in Plato's Symposium. It tells of androgynous beings being split by the gods into men and women, destined to seek each other out to complete each other. This creation myth encourages men and women to find fulfilment in a romantic partner.
    However, the Bible's creation story highlights that 'the fundamental split that needs healing' is not between men and women, but between humans and God.

  • @josephpchajek2685
    @josephpchajek2685 Місяць тому +12

    This guy is legit delusional if he thinks this is any way to talk to an athiest.

    • @josephpchajek2685
      @josephpchajek2685 Місяць тому +5

      (He does not live in the real world, and has no concept of it)

    • @chadclement6148
      @chadclement6148 27 днів тому +2

      Such gobbledygook. I think it’s pretty clear to nonbelievers why and how humans post hocd suffering into a story about a fallen world. I was hoping in the video he would explain why he thought God would do this, why create something you would be dissatisfied in, then punishthat creation for The creators shortcomings., then create a obscure scenario that would save it. And after the creature is used up and dead, change them in a way to his liking, and then finally make them the way that he could have done from the beginning.

  • @ajafca7153
    @ajafca7153 Місяць тому +4

    Thanks Jonathan! I hope to see more of these videos again!

  • @user-st4rp2ce7g
    @user-st4rp2ce7g Місяць тому +25

    Just reread the Fall an hour ago. Perfect timing

  • @brando3342
    @brando3342 Місяць тому +2

    Loved this, Jonathan. Very good insights for sure. Thank you 🙏

  • @David-bo7zj
    @David-bo7zj Місяць тому +2

    Reading meister Eckhart right now and your explanation of Christ within this sacrificial context makes a lot of sense in the context of how Eckhart presents Christ. We need to choose our own perceptual death and surrender to become closer to this ‘good.’ But we are not conscious of what we are sacrificing ourselves to until after the fact.
    So much of our striving for the good is tied up in our meta perception, how we perceive others to perceive us. If we are sinful, we perceive others to be angry at us, as this meta perceiving eye is our conscience, and our conscience projects itself onto the world to reflect back to us this gap you speak of. What Christ says, according to Eckhart, is that we are to abandon ourselves so his spirit can dwell within the ground of our being or soul. “When he entered I had to fall away.” What does the son hear from the father? The father can only give birth, the son can only be born.
    If Christ is born in my soul then my meta perception is instantly fixed: I now perceive others to perceive me with love. My conscience now projects a loving gaze onto the world and this gaze is what I receive back. In this sense I don’t need to move toward the good because I am the good. “Whatever loves justice becomes possessed with justice, and becomes justice itself.” Or like St. Paul’s notion of sophrosyne vs enkratia. That I can become more sophrosynistic (act virtuously with less effort) through this sacrifice is evidence of the gap but is also what gives my life a foundational purpose.

  • @edujyoung
    @edujyoung Місяць тому +6

    You get better and better at describing this stuff! Thank you.

  • @user-fj4mx6uc4s
    @user-fj4mx6uc4s Місяць тому +15

    a week ago I had a fall, sliced an artery and some nerves. Discharged to home w/o pain meds. I have had a lot of time to think about pain this week and your video is timely in my life. I have been reflecting on how Jesus "endured the cross" for you and me. Also how the apostle Paul endured many sufferings on the way to Rome. The big difference between them and me is that I am suffering because I am a human being that draws breath. Pain is part of the price of admission of being alive. I was neither pursuing righteousness like Christ or Paul, nor pursuing sin like the 21 year old with gunshot wounds in the bed next to mine in the trauma center. But the fact that I'm laying here thinking how much Christ's suffering was greater than mine makes me think there is a purpose to my suffering. One person suffers and asks "why me God?", implying God is unfair. That person ends up ever so slightly more distant from God. Another suffers and recognizes the great gift of Christ on the cross, and thinks "Thank you for what you did for me that I couldn't do for myself, I need You, be with me please." I protestant Churches we sing "Nearer, my God, to Thee."

    • @johnmorrison2894
      @johnmorrison2894 Місяць тому +3

      I'm so sorry to hear about your fall and the pain you're enduring. Your reflections on suffering and its purpose are deeply moving. It's incredibly inspiring how you're able to find meaning and connection to Christ's suffering even in such difficult times. Your strength and faith are evident in your words, and they remind us all of the profound lessons in both pain and grace.
      I'll pray for you, that you find comfort and healing, and that you continue to feel God's presence with you. May your faith grow even stronger through this trial.

  • @gnubbiersh647
    @gnubbiersh647 Місяць тому +3

    I dont understand how EVERY right wing podcast, from Jordan peterson to matt walsh and others, can start talking about christianity AT THE SAME TIME, and nobody Calls it a grift

    • @jeffm.5071
      @jeffm.5071 Місяць тому

      How would that be a grift? Sounds more like a conspiracy

  • @l.sophia2803
    @l.sophia2803 13 днів тому

    I learned that I could take this video and the following comment section and feast on its meaning for a year, then start my own podcast or channel and make a career out of it. lol Its really that rich, once there are eyes ready to see it, a clear mind, and open heart to feel it deeply, because thats what He promised.. thank you all.

  • @jimmaty9922
    @jimmaty9922 Місяць тому +1

    YOU ARE GREAT, THANK YOU JON YOU ARE AN ARTIST AND A GREAT PHILOSOPHER

  • @goofyahhh254
    @goofyahhh254 Місяць тому +1

    Thank you. In my "journey" which I believe to be universal or archetypal, of course it is, but I want to say that simply the specific explanation of the Adam and eve story is not grasped by most Christians and my parents which is why when my mum explained it to me, it was literal.
    This rings true in a way that probably does for those people as well. They just may not have the words, and they themselves get confused about it.
    Thanks for this explanation, indeed it's one of the most profound ever and is a critical part of many people's learning of the garden of eden and the fall, but sadly it is never explained in any meaningful way. Thanks again.

  • @anything6398
    @anything6398 20 днів тому +2

    Why would an atheist even listen to your thought?
    Enlightenment is something that happens within, through knowledge and learning.
    Its not a belief in others or their lies.

  • @Dovus-V
    @Dovus-V Місяць тому +4

    Thank you Jonathan.

  • @marklefebvre5758
    @marklefebvre5758 Місяць тому +5

    I am reticent to comment, because I'm not sure if this is helpful at all. I hope it does not come off as too harsh. I think the issue here is that this is wrapping up many things into a very nice simple, easy package (which is likely correct for what I could follow). However, the assumption that the parts contained in here are understood in the same way by the audience you mention seems hopelessly optimistic. There are many much smaller steps that need to be made before this falls into place for an audience, especially a secular audience. Perhaps this will help, I think that someone like Paul VanderKlay sees John Vervaeke as just one step from the stop of a staircase which ends at 'going to church' or something. Whereas, I see John Vervaeke at the bottom of that same staircase. The illusion of 'just one step away' is caused by using the same language, but attaching different understandings (well, more like concepts) to the words. This is hard to discern, for sure, but there is evidence, John will say 'emanation' but then switch immediate to emergence and go on for some number of minutes. He hand waves the word, when it's clear that it doesn't contain the same importance (or more likely, concept and importance) to him as it does to more religiously minded folks. In the interest of wanting to 'agree' and not wanting (or maybe even being able to) drill down on every single word, things move on. To get more to the bottom of this would require a very long conversation, which I'd be happy to have publicly if that is helpful. I do apologize if this isn't helpful or too cryptic, I've been struggling for 4 years to explain the gap that I see to others.

    • @Cyrus_II
      @Cyrus_II Місяць тому

      I remember years ago, watching Jonathan and hear him Talk about patterns. Pattern of this pattern of this and that and the pattern of reality, etc.
      I had very little clue what he was talking about back, then perhaps only a little glimmer. pattern? pattern of what?
      The more I listen to him the more I understood how everything in reality is based on pattern. It sounds so obvious and trite now, but a pattern is a lens through which you perceive anything And it ends up being invisible to you And he just don’t realize how It is everywhere.
      Now, when I hear pattern, a lot of things light up in my mind and a lot of connections are made, But back, then, it was only a little glimmer.
      I think this was relevant to your comment

    • @ManuelPost
      @ManuelPost Місяць тому +1

      I think it's important to add to this that we have to account for the ground people stand on. When you're an atheist the way that you relate to these ideas and how they appear to you is completely different. They cannot participate with the same purpose and so they will organize meaning either in a way that's completely referencing themselves or in a manner that is disembodied. In other words they will focus on heaven or earth only.
      These flat maps are unable to contain the dynamical complexity required for understanding. They might be able to go along in your pattern and agree. But that means that they are enchanted for a bit. Then they will collapse it back into their existing framework and flatten it perverting whatever happened and end up in a Gnostic interpretation.
      In other words. You have to lay the foundation first. And that one exists in experience not in conversation.

  • @nicolasr7209
    @nicolasr7209 Місяць тому +7

    the very title of your piece betrays the limitation of your framework. It's common for religious people, in my experience, to assert that anyone who disagrees with their mythology, does so out of ignorance or hostility. Is it so difficult for you to see, that there could be any number of answers besides "the fall", that elucidate the situation you're trying to describe? Is it possible to come to conclusions that differ from yours, and not be "ignorant"?
    This kind of divisive arrogance might not be detectable by people who already agree with you. But if you're trying to reach people who don't- then you need to actually take alternative viewpoints seriously. This talk absolutely does not do that.

    • @JohnCamacho
      @JohnCamacho Місяць тому +1

      Exactly and Christianity is not the only religion out there. At least a dozen with hundreds of millions of followers each. Do these religions have people like Jonathan applying this kind of symbolism to somehow boost the meaning?

  • @nancyclark4917
    @nancyclark4917 Місяць тому +2

    Oh my! I think this is one of Jonathan's BEST! I NEEDED THIS!

  • @seankessel3867
    @seankessel3867 Місяць тому +1

    My goodness, sometimes it is so disappointing to catch a video like this posted on UA-cam. There are SOOO many questions that I'd like to ask of you Mr Pageau, as well as any other Orthodox Christians out there...but alas, I know it's just a waste of time and that I'd never be satisfied with any half-ass responses I might get.
    Oh well. Maybe one day I'll get to ask some of these in person from people who actually want to have a conversation.
    Keep up the good work anyway, and keep making that awesome art!

  • @Nickvarano222
    @Nickvarano222 26 днів тому

    Fantastic. I need to listen again.

  • @tomfrombrunswick7571
    @tomfrombrunswick7571 17 годин тому +3

    Not difficult it just makes no sense. It is not part of the Jewish religion which uses the same text. The idea that God made man who fell into sin and that this is bad and God has to kill himself is just absurd.

  • @AbrahamAustin
    @AbrahamAustin Місяць тому +1

    Very intriguing thoughts here. I think I understand what is being said about how the solution to the fall involves death, but I'd love to get checked on it. Does the following sound about right?
    Once I recognize the gap between where I am and my end goal, I have to supplant my desire for the end goal (at least temporarily) with a desire for working through the obstacle. If I could simply teleport myself from state to state, no shift of intent would be required, but since I can't do that, I must let my dream be usurped by work. Thus, the death of the dream, but a death that carries the potential for the dream to be reborn later as a reality.
    And this notion is explicitly laid out in Adam and Eve being told that it would be by the sweat of the brow and in great travail that they would find bread and children. Now that the had fallen they would recognize the good (the life of harvest), and the only way to get to it would be to sacrifice their previously carefree life for one of labor.

  • @Popscotch328
    @Popscotch328 Місяць тому

    Always a treat Mr. Pageau

  • @user-je3sk8cj6g
    @user-je3sk8cj6g Місяць тому +1

    Hi, atheist here. I have no problem understanding the concept of a "fallen world".
    What theists dont understand however is that this comes from experience a world where pain and suffering exist, and creating a fantasy about an existance upon which those bad feelings dont exist, and thus comes the idea of an "ideal world". But that's a fantasy, it's escapism.

    • @joe5959
      @joe5959 24 дні тому

      You can assert its a fantasy, but that doesnt do anything. We have strong reasons to believe the historical accounts are true, and Christ is God who revealed himself at a time in history, who explained, and demonstrated the validity and authority of himself and his teachings.

  • @devontristanking794
    @devontristanking794 Місяць тому

    Perfectly clear and very insightful. Thank you very much 🔥

  • @YellowRoseCreativeArts
    @YellowRoseCreativeArts Місяць тому

    Enjoyed the information and will be thinking more about what was discussed...

  • @mixingaband
    @mixingaband 26 днів тому

    Great video. Looking at the title, I wasnt really sure what you meant by "The Fall", as I'm not up on all the 'Christian story titles", but this was a key way to understand in non-religious terms the meaning of the story

  • @ethandelaney7423
    @ethandelaney7423 Місяць тому

    This was great. I thought this was one of the best and clearest ways of explaining the fall, in a way that doesn't make it about failing an arbitrary test.

  • @BrunoMira
    @BrunoMira Місяць тому

    Thank you, Jonathan!

  • @jonjacksongrieger255
    @jonjacksongrieger255 Місяць тому +1

    Great video. I think it would be interesting to bring in how secularists will use a series of disjointed narratives (like the trolly thing) which they believe informs their ethical decisions.
    I think some have faith in good of existence, but I’d like to better understand how this is tied to the resurrection.

  • @sonofamotherloader9037
    @sonofamotherloader9037 Місяць тому

    Hey Jonathan!
    This notion, the fall, is relative to my current essay where I’m analysing John Cassian from the 4th-5th century. I’m investigating what role asceticism plays in his theology. It’s so cool to see overlap, or perhaps propagation of ideas here and now with people from so long ago. The timing of this video was intriguing to say the least.
    Could you expand on the gnostics’ view of intrinsic evil suffering perhaps?
    Thank you for the content!☺️

  • @ChristIsKingPhilosophy
    @ChristIsKingPhilosophy Місяць тому +17

    Flawless. I think you could also add more "purposes" to show how it stacks and how each purpose does not contain itself, but rather is contained in another, giving rise to "rules" and "exceptions" (that attempt to rectify the rule by placing it in the correct place in the hierarchy of rules or purposes).

    • @Mamothrept
      @Mamothrept Місяць тому

      Yes very good suggestion!

    • @Art2GoCanada
      @Art2GoCanada Місяць тому

      Thank you Jonathan, you explain the fall that accounts for the common usage of broken to describe our shortcomings. Let go and let God, step 6&7, we progress along the path to the degree we are willing to sacrifice old ways of doing things. 📘🙏❤️🔥

    • @scottradcliffe8506
      @scottradcliffe8506 Місяць тому

      What's an example of an "exception" ?

    • @ChristIsKingPhilosophy
      @ChristIsKingPhilosophy Місяць тому

      @@scottradcliffe8506 King David disobeying the king (King Saul). You are supposed to obey the king. But in order to seve God prophet David disobeys the king for a higher principle. Another one in the same story... King David goes to a temple for food and the priest gives him and his followers food that was supposed to be for sacrifice (this is another exception).

  • @josephbrandenburg4373
    @josephbrandenburg4373 Місяць тому +2

    I listened to this three times and I really haven't got a clue what question you're answering, let alone how any of this answers it. I just don't see any connection between this and the "fall" as a concept or as it has been understood historically in Western Christianity

  • @scyrkirk
    @scyrkirk Місяць тому

    Merci Jonathan! Très utile et bien expliqué !

  • @4pharaoh
    @4pharaoh Місяць тому +1

    If you want to explain the fall, I would suggest you start by describing to those who are asking what the world (we) would look like if it (we) had not fallen.

  • @Golgibaby
    @Golgibaby Місяць тому +2

    Mahalo for the translation in meaning. This is what I appreciated in Dr. Peterson's Bible lectures.

  • @peterfrance702
    @peterfrance702 Місяць тому

    Whoosh! Straight over my head - like I have wandered into the advanced class and there is a whole new lexicon to grapple with. I suspect this gives me advantages

  • @angoz8432
    @angoz8432 Місяць тому

    Great video. Could you talk about the atonment and the meaning of Christ's death? I would love to hear your explanation on this

  • @jasonbennett9910
    @jasonbennett9910 4 дні тому +4

    "...there has to be some cosmic fall..."
    NO THERE FUCKING DOESN'T!
    😂😈😂😈😂😈😎😎

  • @i_assume
    @i_assume Місяць тому

    Very much needed, thank you.

  • @matthewscunningham
    @matthewscunningham Місяць тому

    Talking about the giving into temptation and the sin and explaining that a bit more might help. It feels a little brushed aside under the metaphor of the Nature of our consciousness.

  • @patrickshepherd1341
    @patrickshepherd1341 Місяць тому +1

    I have to offer some criticism, but i promise it's good faith. I see a lot of content that attempts to explain this topic to atheists. In this case, and in most cases, one point of the explanation is that atheists basically don't believe in transcendental meaning and therefore can't really justify why we perceive some things as good and some as bad. Further, in this video and in most cases, it's framed as though the atheist wrestles with the idea of why there is a gap, unable to really find a satisfactory answer.
    The problem is that if you bring this up to an atheist, they're likely going to be able to give you a perfectly well thought out answer, and i feel like you've done this enough to know that. I feel like this is basically just meant for believers, and won't have much if any value with regards to atheists because it just assumes too many wrong things about them from the outset.

  • @ErinMagner82
    @ErinMagner82 Місяць тому

    I really enjoyed this explanation. As for mortality, I imagine that having to both suffer to acquire knowledge and be immortal would be incredibly cruel and therefore if at any time there's a repentance for having chosen the knowledge of Good & Evil death is always a possible end to your suffering.

  • @kevinfarrell9678
    @kevinfarrell9678 Місяць тому +3

    Love my Brother in Christ! Great talk! Thank you very much Jonathan.

  • @tonox0
    @tonox0 Місяць тому +1

    This was a home run, my friend. I'm saving this one straight to favorites.

  • @krc493
    @krc493 Місяць тому

    Great first pass on the argument, I suggest a written account for people like me that need to read the argument to better understand it for sharing in our own circles to people without this understanding

  • @TulkOrkan
    @TulkOrkan Місяць тому

    It was coherent and enjoyable, granted i watched it on double speed.

  • @user98344
    @user98344 Місяць тому +1

    5:04 From our need of survival

  • @jonmartin3220
    @jonmartin3220 Місяць тому

    Wonderfully clear, thank you

  • @mattcarlson5345
    @mattcarlson5345 Місяць тому

    Absolutely loved this. Wondering if there’s value in discussing the resolution of the cosmic pattern within the fall and its implications at different levels. Does the symbolism in Revelation point to relevant patterns from an eschatological standpoint? Thanks

  • @2.decayed
    @2.decayed Місяць тому

    i think using the phrase "falling short of the ideal" and then expanding upon what that means in the case of Man and God outside of time in the garden, can be helpful

  • @vicentealencar9132
    @vicentealencar9132 Місяць тому

    You have explained the fall in the psychological aspect. How would you explain the fall in the social aspect of today s society? How does the fall relates to our familiar relationships?

  • @s.d.gloria8434
    @s.d.gloria8434 Місяць тому +1

    Thank you! This was helpful. I will chew on this for a while. The fall ist both a description of what we experience when we desire and at the same time more than simply a description: it`s in a way taking the experience serious and giving a hint on what this reality is, that we find ourselves in. Inspires me for talks to my dear atheist / materialist friends, who also have their own ideas how things could be better than thtey are right now. Take this serious: you have an idea, that things are not, what they ought to be...

  • @Shotzeethegamer
    @Shotzeethegamer Місяць тому

    Want a Right and Wrong without a justification for Rightness and Wrongness (that is neither circular or arbitrary)

  • @michaeldunn4847
    @michaeldunn4847 Місяць тому

    Thank you. I had never before thought of the process of getting to one's goal was 'suffering', even if very 'small', but it makes a lot of sense. Think of the physiotherapist who prescribes various exercises to heal the body. The exercises expose the weakness of certain muscles. At the beginning they are even somewhat painful to perform until the muscles are stronger. Back to Genesis: the serpent reveals to Eve that she is not like God, and realises that she does want to be like God, and so she must learn the difference between good and evil.

  • @iDealaeDi
    @iDealaeDi Місяць тому +1

    i appreciate this because most of our division as humans is just a language barrier.

  • @LeonardoKunrath
    @LeonardoKunrath Місяць тому

    It is very good. To make it even more clear, you could draw some simple pictures. It helps people to see better the abstract. By the way, I loved the idea of desire (or yarn) as a mechanism of everyday life. We 1) see something good we don't have or need; then 2) we desire or yarn for it - feel the disconfort and pain of the lack; 3) Then this desire move us towards action to get it. 4) When we get it, we are satisfied - for a while. Yes. This describes reality. We desire, then act to eliminate desire and feel satisfied. Now imagine if we did not desire in the first place - would we feel already satisfied? No... On the contrary: lack of desire is a symtom of depression... Because, deep down, we know that the better good or what we need continues to exist... In some sense, that is why not desiring the greatest good (God), therefore not seeking Him, in order to get the greatest satisfaction, leaves people in an "existential depression"...

  • @maximus505
    @maximus505 Місяць тому +1

    This is really insightful - thank you. However, I wish you had come full circle and explained a bit more why the fall happened. This is a great explanation of what the fall is, but in the context of a loving omnipotent god, was the fall allowed to happen (maybe even intended) and if so why? In essence the fall is a separation from God - maybe the fall is necessary to know and love God? Can you truly know something without experiencing being separated from it? Some thoughts… I can’t remember exactly the framing from the beginning of the vid but I think it’d be good to make sure the ideas presented address completely the initial framing. Still enjoyed very much!

    • @seantoal5261
      @seantoal5261 Місяць тому +1

      I think that the fall shouldn’t have happened, and God would’ve given us everything we have now but infinitely better had we made the right choice. Despite our eyes falling away from the truth of unity with God, Christ reveals the spirit of the right choice in the garden. That kind of a man gives everything to do the right thing. At least that’s how it’s been coming together in my head. It’s hard to see how we could know white without black, or how anything could exist without pain and suffering. But I don’t trust my understanding to be the foundation of what could be if things were better. It’s not beyond God. Anyway, that’s what I’ve been thinking recently.

    • @maximus505
      @maximus505 Місяць тому +1

      @@seantoal5261 Appreciate your thoughts!

    • @russellpizel3750
      @russellpizel3750 Місяць тому

      I think the answer lies in understanding love - what it is and what it isn't - for there to be love, there needs to be the condition of "not love"

    • @maximus505
      @maximus505 Місяць тому

      @@russellpizel3750 interesting thought..

  • @tylerswedan4742
    @tylerswedan4742 Місяць тому

    I think that was a wonderful explanation, however, it would be interesting if you tried to explain it again so people can decide if there are improvements that can be made. Hearing things like this explained in multiple ways is always useful, and it would be a good experiment to learn what works in the explanation and what doesn’t.

  • @ryanshue6308
    @ryanshue6308 Місяць тому

    Jonathan, I've been following you since 2019 and have benefited greatly from your insights and explanations, leading me into the Orthodox Church. I think your description of the "gap" is confusing. You say "there's a gap between what you think should be and what is in the world" (2:37), and "every time you move towards purpose you will have that problem of the gap between where I want to go and where I am" (17:00). This can be heard as development and growth itself being a problem, which is dangerously close to saying that creation is inherently evil/fallen. I know this is not your intention, but I don't think you're making clear the difference between the gap between good and evil and the gap between development and telos.
    I think a better symbol is the idea of a path or way. When one is on a path there is a gap between where they want to go and where they are, but nevertheless there is a sort of rest within the motion so far as they know they are on the best path to take them to their desired end and they have the experience of "approaching". The fall then is not the gap between where you are and your desired end, but between where you are and the Path. This reflects the manner Christ defines himself: "The Way, the Truth, and the Life." I think this may also relate to St. Maximus' idea of "ever-moving rest".

  • @leanneglascott6836
    @leanneglascott6836 Місяць тому

    Hi Jonathan. Loved your video. Wonder if it would help to explain to secular people what your trying to show through the lens as an artist. As an artist who feels, sees and experiences the Divine or as some artists like to refer to it as 'Source". Aliveness vs Death i.e. examples what you instinctively 'feel' say in a conversation as 'true' vs something that's 'off'. How the internal world 'speaks' to us if we listen in its own language - our experience of the world - our felt experience. How, in a group of people we long to impress, or belong to, to can lapse into actions that don't align with our truest values and goes against who we truly are. We 'listen' to someone else and go along with it - the consequences of which we sometimes regret - morally, it grates us, because it is not what we would 'normally' do. We might feel agitated and we might ruminate on it constantly. Homer Simpson had an Angel on one shoulder and the 'Devil' on the other. One was to stay and drink more beer, devil, the other was its time to go home to your wife. The external experience and the internal experience are 'one' -we are affected by what we say and do - internally as well as externally. We all know this. We have several modes of 'connection' - true connection - The connection to a higher 'source' - of life itself (the longing) and to others. When we fall out of connection with either of these 2, for the most part, we feel it -its embodied. Source lies in True Connection to whats actually Alive in the moment. To others and to life itself (which is to whats alive with another when you are actually present and connected - we feel it -we become enlivened when it is true and real) which is Source, God, The Divine, The True - even with another.
    My felt sense as an artist has enabled and strengthened this. Our humanity.

  • @keeponrockin85
    @keeponrockin85 Місяць тому +1

    This is a great explanation, and clearly explained!
    The question that came up for me though is: what then is the role of Christ? Is He simply just for example of what we should strive for? Or is His role more than that? (Of course I have my opinion, and believe you would agree His role is more, but I only heard the "example" perspective here).
    Or to put another way, how does Christ, as the lamb of the world, tie into The Fall? Certainly Christ is more than just an example of how we're missing the mark.

    • @keeponrockin85
      @keeponrockin85 Місяць тому

      Also I want to thank you for what you do, I have learned and grown as a Christian so much, because of God's work through you an sharing these ideas and videos with us!

    • @ikkinwithattitude
      @ikkinwithattitude Місяць тому +1

      Christ's role is to redeem the suffering that we experience as a result of the Fall -- He makes it meaningful by taking it into Himself and therefore transforming it into a path to divinization.

  • @ethanb2554
    @ethanb2554 Місяць тому +1

    15:56 so there was suffering before the fall? And suffering isn't necessarily an inherent consequence of the fall?

    • @ikkinwithattitude
      @ikkinwithattitude Місяць тому

      My understanding is that the distance we currently experience as suffering still would have existed, but it wouldn't have been experienced as suffering without the Knowledge of Good and Evil.
      One way I've been thinking about the consequences of the Fruit is as a description of the difference between the experience of humans versus animals. Animals pursue goods instinctively and wholeheartedly; they rarely consider what they're giving up in the process, so it's not painful to do so. Humans, in contrast, are always aware of the sacrifices they must make to reach their goals, which makes covering the distance much more painful.

  • @travisrobson5889
    @travisrobson5889 Місяць тому

    I read The Fall, Genesis 3, after this video in an attempt to see how what you've said squares up with the bible. Perhaps I need to rewatch your other recent video on The Fall, but I'm struggling to map this distance/duality/suffering picture to what I'm reading in the bible. How does the snake fit in? (My guess is that most of your analysis addresses events after the apple is eaten.)

  • @luke-appleton1
    @luke-appleton1 Місяць тому

    Hey Jonathan, thank you so much for this! I’m wondering if you’ve ever watched Loki Season 1 & 2? It’s one of the most stunning series I’ve watched because I believe it touches on these topics in Genesis & with Jesus in an Jungian sense and shows free will (knowledge of good and evil) vs union with God (sacred timeline under He Who Remains) as a fundamental theme throughout it. I would love if you have any thoughts on the series after watching it, your insights always blow me away

  • @yunusmulla8709
    @yunusmulla8709 Місяць тому +2

    Crystal clear! I didn't comprehend the last bit about "structural relationship and what we're perceiveing as good", although that's my low knowledge and intelligence perhaps.

  • @sleepy_boi_2250
    @sleepy_boi_2250 Місяць тому

    love this work harder bro you got this

  • @juancarlos-uv8gm
    @juancarlos-uv8gm Місяць тому

    A quick way to summarize it, although losing a lot of detail in the process, is to note that the atheist criticizes the moral failings in others without having an objective law that determines good and bad.
    Now I take you to another example:
    The atheist criticizes the errors or shortcomings of believers or the world, based on a light that is not theirs, they believe that by noticing the shadows in others, they are the source of light, but they do not realize that in reality the The source of light is behind them, and it is Christ, in other words they criticize the imperfections of the other people in the room, which are visible thanks to the Light that Christ emanates, and at the same time they do not see theirs because they are looking, to the others, they themselves are turning their backs on Christ, their backs on the light, they do not see their own shadows but they do see those of the others in the room. and instead of turning around to let the light challenge them and their shortcomings be visible, instead of looking for the Creator of light and for Him to be the one who perfects us, they are left with the consolation that at least they detected the evil on other people, without realizing that in the process they condemn themselves.
    This can happen to ourselves as Christians.
    Let's say that to be a Pharisee you don't have to be a Christian or a believer, it is that attitude of "standing at the door, not passing through it and not letting others pass."
    of being an obstacle to revelation.
    There is much more to learn from this video of yours Jonathan, I had to listen to it several times to understand it, not because your explanation is bad but because I am multitasking. good topic to meditate on.

  • @wisebluehillwarrior6411
    @wisebluehillwarrior6411 Місяць тому

    It would be brilliant to see a conversation with Alex O’Connor and you about the garden of eden and the fall…

  • @marcokite
    @marcokite Місяць тому +2

    Starts at 3 minutes

  • @ronsmith8340
    @ronsmith8340 26 днів тому

    In terms of Spirituality it's called "Echoes and Reflections." How you perceive the world around you is a reflection or echo of your inner self. In Sanskrit you have the Ahankara, or "The 'I' of invented things" - 'invented things' being perceptual/relative reality. It's your ego or your sense of 'I am', which is the basis for your beliefs in God. Your internal reality. According to Donald Hoffman, the world-renowned neuro-scientist - "The objective reality is that all reality is subjective." According to Anil Seth, "Our brains hallucinate our realities".
    Both science and Spirituality are on a par with this, they only use a different language to say the same thing.
    From a psychological perspective, if someone can't understand their own placement there are unconscious frameworks that create that perception and make them feel dissociative. Trying to correct psychological disorders with Christian dogma is destructive.
    Considering that 'the Fall' is based on Sumerian/Mesopotamian mythologies is just another part of the control mechanism to make people feel bad about themselves so that they 'seek salvation' in what is really nothing more than story to scare children and weak-minded people.

  • @parkercoelho9036
    @parkercoelho9036 Місяць тому +5

    I don’t understand how this addresses the question of whether there is actually any meaning at all. Like couldn’t the desire we experience just be misinformed and not actually have a fulfillment?

    • @Luisffaraj
      @Luisffaraj Місяць тому +1

      Meaning and desire are two different categories. The former is ontological and the latter is psychological

    • @Theo_Skeptomai
      @Theo_Skeptomai Місяць тому

      ​@@LuisffarajAre you asserting this supposed "fall" as described in Genesis is a _factual_ account?

    • @parkercoelho9036
      @parkercoelho9036 Місяць тому +1

      @@Luisffaraj That makes sense. But the reason I asked this is that i think the atheist today doesn't say "Why is this desire in me?" I think they would say that even though I "feel" desire, this is just a product of my evolutionary history, but it is just a delusion and that we can't trust that the desire is real.

    • @alexpaskalis4248
      @alexpaskalis4248 Місяць тому +1

      The fundamental problem is the disconnect between the atheist’s professed belief juxtaposed to how they actually live. Ie They still seek and behave as if there is an objective purpose to existence even in their hypocrisy of morality. In the end, they are just blaming God for why they can’t be their own “God.”

    • @Theo_Skeptomai
      @Theo_Skeptomai Місяць тому

      @alexpaskalis4248 Are you willing to answer some straightforward questions concerning your comment?

  • @23Hiya
    @23Hiya Місяць тому +1

    Not sure if this is the kind of feedback you're looking for, but I'm a nonbeliever and I can share thoughts I had after listening to the presentation.
    1. As someone who doesn't believe in God anymore I think a more accurate title for the video would have been something like "Offering a Christian take on contingency," or something like that. From my perspective the persistent sense of lack goes all the way down to something like an ameoba. Even a creature like that "experiences" a persistent lack because homeostasis or what you might call fulfillment or completion or purpose is only ever acheived in fleeting moments. The organism's entire existence is a fitful dissolution into its simpler elements. The same can be said of any living system. They are drawn by mechanisms of varying complexity toward homeostasis, but by virtue of their constitution that homeostasis never lasts and so presents a never ending lack. A creature that could be convinced, psychologically or otherwise, that it was finally sated would simply die. I suppose this could point to a transcendent God shaped hole, but it could just be that we are always, as finite contingent creatures, feeling entropy nipping at our heels in underdetermined ways that can be interpretted to mean any number of things. In humans and other primates you're dealing not just with physiological needs, but social ones as well that are built on top of the never ending physiological lack. Hence the capacity for the experience of moral lack. Add to that that humans have to develop. We all understand pretty quickly that we're smaller, weaker, etc. as children.
    Anyway, I don't want to ramble, but the point is that this seems like a perfectly serviceable story about why people experience lack of all kinds. So you're quite right that everyone experiences lack, but my sense is that if you really do want to make a case to an atheist your real work is to explain very explicitly what your story provides by way of explanation that a much more local and contingent one doesn't.
    2. I also think that you may have the dilema backwards. If you believe in an omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent God who has promised and can guarantee paradise at some point in the future, then the Christian is bound much more tightly to say that everything that comes to pass, as in every single moment, is the best that it could possibly be in light of its role in obtaining paradise. You could step back in the abstract and say that we aren't yet in paradise, but that doesn't change the perfection of each divinely ordained step toward paradise. It is the straightest possible path. Why do Christian's who have this knowledge and believe it still bemoan the various kinds of lack that accompany history? It seems that they should have to say that it couldn't have been better. History is as good as it could possibly be and still acheive its perfection in the age to come.
    By contrast a naturalist has various ways of making sense of the notion that things are not as we would like them to be and so generate motivation to work toward changing them. The current state of affairs is totally contingent. If some small thing had been different in the past then the present would be different. There's no divine plan to thwart. It all could have been otherwise and so could be otherwise. And just to head off the obvious retort, even someone like me who thinks that everything is more or less deterministic isn't being inconsistent if I have the desire to change something. It could be the case that I was determined to have the desire and determined to feel the elation of solving the problem. That I can't somehow get outside of the system to confirm if that's true is irrelevant. There isn't a contradiction in going about making choices even if on reflection it seems likely that all my behaviors are ultimately completely constrained by various kinds of causal forces. This is completely separate from the conflation that gets made between a deterministic universe and a person's individual sense of self-efficacy. To be very blunt, I think it's cheap slight of hand to tell someone that if everything's determined your choices don't matter. The only perspective from which they don't matter is one to which no human has any actual access.
    Again, assuming that you do want to engage with non-believers, I would think you have to do a better job motivating the choice of a Christian narrative beyond these pretty standard points and give some sense as to why yours is the right way to construe the dilema you describe.
    3. It's also not super compelling to me when you tell someone who was raised in a Christian culture that they carry lots of Christian assumptions. That shouldn't be surprising to anyone. I think a secular Western world could be a better world than a Christian one, but that world would be a child of the actual Christian history of the West. It would necessarily carry forward recognizable assumptions. That doesn't mean that it would secretly be a Christian society anymore than Christianity is secretly Judaism or Judaism is secretly whatever came before it. Your child is not you despite having a whole host of recognizable features. My sense is that you have to make a much more positive case on this point than just saying that everyone is using Christian categories and assumptions. This is important also because while Christianity does have a unique way of combining certain ethical norms and cultural practices those norms and practices can be observed in places and times where there weren't Christian influences.
    Cheers

    • @kingfisher1638
      @kingfisher1638 Місяць тому +1

      Agreed. How do you feel about de-Christianized neo-platonism in the style of Julian the Apostate? From what I've gathered, the more positive or useful aspects of Christian philosphy stem from neo-platonism and it seems a logical metaphysical place to end up, considering a post-Christian naturalist viewpoint. It respects much of Christian philosphy but places Christ as a philospher or prophet figures rather than a divinity. The symbolic aspects of Christ that Pageau is enamored with are returned to the pantheons and the demiurgic respectively. It understands gnosticism but comes to the opposite conclusion about the information, that the material is not evil, it is amoral, infinite, and made from the same chaos to order process that the Gods themselves are made of.
      In other language, de-Christianized neo-platonism accepts that communing with the God above the gods is most likely to end up with titans and forces of chaos answering. The gods, and more specifically the king of the gods, are the entities which form the defeated titanic forces into habitable order. It is their judgement of order from chaos which we rely upon to produce/access morality.

    • @23Hiya
      @23Hiya Місяць тому +1

      @@kingfisher1638 Sounds interesting. I don't know anything more about it than what you've taken the time to share. I am one of those 'let a thousand flowers bloom' sort of secularists so if this framework helps order your life in ways that connect you to yourself and others then dive deep.
      I will say that I appreciate the caution that you describe. I'm pretty boring philosophically. I like William James and Richard Rorty, and so I'm not super interested in figuring out the true nature of the divine because I can't imagine how I could confirm whatever suspicions or theories I might generate. I think we would find common cause in encouraging others to receive communications from the divine very carefully.
      I also think that we could find commonality in the sense that the constraints that our environments place on us are the seed beds for moral categories and reasoning. The regularities and contraints that we are stuck with and in make certain intuitions more plausible than others and so make different first principles thinkable or actionable.
      And finally, Richard Rorty uses the image of polytheism to describe his aspirations for a democratic polity and I find myself in agreement that this is a good starting place. Here too, you and I could be allies.
      Anywho, thanks for sharing.

  • @drumfun100
    @drumfun100 15 днів тому

    Yes, now I understand why going shopping is so painful! 😅 Its a microcosm of the existential suffering that I'm trapped in! Ha ha!
    I'd love to hear more from you on what jesus offers as a solution to this problem. There's a lot of talk from you and JP on old testament descriptions and I feel the time is right for some solution based conversation! ....Let's go Jonathan. 😊😊

  • @davidjames3954
    @davidjames3954 Місяць тому

    I would say live in the moment and the gap will vanish, the gap is us thinking too much.The animals do what they need to do and dont think too much about it, no point in trying to know everything when it is impossible for us to do so , live in the moment and dont sweat the small stuff as they say.

  • @robertflury3349
    @robertflury3349 Місяць тому +1

    This is an issue I've been interested in understanding better but I haven't been able to get a grip on, so yeah it was helpful. This is the first time I've heard of Saint Ephraim, I'll check him out. If someone could break it down into digestible bites or steps that would be cool.

    • @willhedges6639
      @willhedges6639 Місяць тому

      From what I understand, he is a very challenging read but best of luck

  • @MrMarccj
    @MrMarccj Місяць тому +1

    Hey Jonathan,
    My two penneth worth as you asked...
    You're explaining to a Christian, not an athiest. I'm playing the role of an athiest in the below comments.
    Just some technical points, you can substitute out technical words like 'telos', or explain them in the moment. You go on to explain telos but this happens later than first use. What are gnostics and gnostic heresies and gnostic thinking why are they bad? Something about adding another layer of God, this time evil? Maybe skip over the gnostics?
    You need to explain the idea of a gap from different angles at the outset. Once the idea of the gap is as clear as can be, only then go into Voltaire was it? and religious ideas.
    You seem to be trying to explain the idea of a gap both horizontally and vertically. The vertical gap is not clear and may need an explanation of 'the vertical' first. Is 'the God shaped hole' vertical or horizontal? I presume athiests don't go for the God shaped hole idea anyway.
    Avoid the word 'suffering' in the early explanations. You can use JBPs idea of delayed gratification and then translate this idea into how religion talks about it.
    Who are Adam and Eve and what is their story? And what *is* the fall?
    Overall, if you want to get this across to an athiest, it's better to start with a scientific question, explore this scientific idea, then move across to how religion tackles the idea. Always start with the science.
    The idea of the gap and the fall are still not 100% clear to me but here are some ideas that may be useful. The gaps between atoms, molecules, cells, animals, etc. The gaps between musical notes. Where does a thought come from? The gap between wish and action, habits and addictions. Husband and wife. Parents and child. Want and have.

  • @blargh2845
    @blargh2845 Місяць тому +1

    Brilliant.

  • @davidgordon7717
    @davidgordon7717 20 днів тому

    In a lighter vein the image of the cautionary warning on the tube train platform came into my mind - it says “ Mind the Gap””

  • @alphatucana
    @alphatucana Місяць тому

    A good description, but I feel that there needs to be a clearer, point-by-point, explanation of why the Atheist conception of 'good' doesn't make any sense. It was in there, but hard to understand for someone who hasn't heard the concept before.

  • @Skammee
    @Skammee Місяць тому

    My neighbor has a beautiful garden , everyday out there tending it and by afternoon he needs some libations to ease the strain . Sadly he falls regularly and cannot get up without help and cursing "Goddammit , this gravity is hell " does this make him Godly ?

  • @spiritualpolitics8205
    @spiritualpolitics8205 Місяць тому

    I think this is excellent, modulo a few parallel insights...
    It's interesting to ask to what extent is e.g. the stoicism of Marcus Aurelius "isomorphic" with Christianity in the sense of which you are talking about the Fall.
    Meaning, need one the ontological overhead of Christianity, or does this simply provide one very powerful Jungian lattice down into the essential truth that we are indeed fallen, fallible, highly morally tenuous creatures, often in danger of going vastly awry, even beyond our best plans. Hamlet himself addressed this conundrum in his lapidary "Our wills and fates do so contrary run / That our devices still are overthrown; / Our thoughts are ours, their ends none of our own".
    There has been a great deal of hubris among the New Atheists, but this does not of course posit by the converse the Christian metaphysical edifice. But let us say that Christianity ratifies certain deep truths about human nature -- our contingency and moral limits, our need for a transcendent moral frame, the uselessness of utopian dreams...
    To what extent can a post-postmodern like myself synchronize with you on the psychological depth of the truth of many of these dogmas without necessarily making any ontological leap of faith -- beyond the Tillich-like affirmation of some "ground of being"?

  • @joolz5747
    @joolz5747 Місяць тому

    Thank you sooo much. This, when I would probably have to listen to a couple times. And if you wanna make it more simple for me, that would be great!😅

  • @ryanwells7037
    @ryanwells7037 Місяць тому

    Get rid of the idea that there is a gap. Couldn't that be what a secularist might say instead of accepting that there is a gap and saying '"I have to do something about the gap or at least understand the gap."
    I really liked this video you did.

  • @1991jj
    @1991jj Місяць тому

    I really think JP would benefit from Lacanian thought on the imaginary, symbolic and the real in his work. I think it would add another dimension of depth.

  • @yossariandunbar2829
    @yossariandunbar2829 Місяць тому

    Great video, but I think making reference to the five transcendentals can be very useful to explaining the fall to atheists, especially as they tend to be reverant towards their Greek forebears.

  • @jeffhotes2673
    @jeffhotes2673 Місяць тому +8

    Thank you, Jonathan.

  • @AlexLGagnon
    @AlexLGagnon Місяць тому

    I have to admit the difficulty I encounter whenever I speak about good and evil to atheists is their moral relativism card and the idea that whatever we elevate as being good, both morally and physically, is simply conditionning, social alienation that we made up through evolution for the sole purpose of survival.
    I would appreciate if anyone could say something about that.
    Thank you for your generosity in sharing with us your meditation on the topic, Jonathan.

    • @ikkinwithattitude
      @ikkinwithattitude Місяць тому +1

      My inclination is to argue that "good/evil" and "promotes/undermines human existence" are merely two ways of describing the same dynamic when the latter is properly understood.
      Sure, they might quibble with the focus on existence over survival, but that can be justified readily enough by pointing out that there's something memetic in a Dawkinsian sense about human consciousness that seeks self-perpetuation in a realm apart from physical survival. ;)
      To say that certain behaviors consistently promote survival/existence is to say that there's a certain stable order at the heart of existence. The atheist would be hard-pressed to reject that and retain science, but the existence between that and God is purely linguistic.

    • @AlexLGagnon
      @AlexLGagnon Місяць тому

      @@ikkinwithattitude Thank you! The will of making one's consciousness persist in a realm outside of the physical one is an idea with which I can defend my view. Take care friend!

    • @ikkinwithattitude
      @ikkinwithattitude Місяць тому +1

      @@AlexLGagnon I'd be careful making the argument too much about the will, actually. The quicker you get to something recognizable as a soul, the more likely you are to get pushback from a materialist.
      The real advantage I see in bringing up memetics is that it only functions if informational constructs are entities capable of being subject to selection -- in other words, if there are real non-material entities.
      And that means that memetics are a perfect means by which to undercut materialism, especially since it's very difficult to argue that natural genetic selection isn't a mere subset of memetic selection. In fact, if the world operates on the principle of selection and selection operates on the level of information, then the proponent of scientism might be better off seeing the world as made of information rather than of atoms!
      If you can get the atheist to start thinking of the world in terms of Object-Oriented Programming rather than clockwork, he'll find concepts like forms -- of which the soul is an example -- a whole lot more compelling. And once he believes that bodies are generated by informational constructs rather than informational constructs by bodies, that's when the survival of the soul (as opposed to mere valuable information) can be argued compellingly.

  • @mobspeak
    @mobspeak Місяць тому

    It was a good explanation, but the Adam and Eve part was a bit fuzzy, could have gone a little bit more into detail, also touching on original sin some more.