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Ladders

I’m reading such a difference from Christianity now in the ca. A.D. 600 The Ladder of Divine Ascent. Here are some examples:

1.

“God is the life in all free beings. He is the salvation of believers or unbelievers, of the just or the unjust, of monks or those living in the world, of the educated or the illiterate, of the healthy or the sick, of the young or the very old. He is like the outpouring of light, the glimpse of the sun, or the changes of the weather, which are the same for everyone without exception. ‘For God is no respecter of persons.’ “

I can hear the snort with which a Christian now would greet this description — a Christian used to hearing and saying “ethics aren’t situational”, “but those people worship a different God”, “God bless America.”

2.

“Do whatever good you may. Speak evil of no one. Rob no one. Tell no lie. Despise no one. Show compassion to the needy. Be satisfied with what your own wives can provide you. If you do all this, you will not be far from the Kingdom of heaven.”

Contrast this with “Accept Jesus as your Lordnsavior; do it today!”

3.

“The true teacher is one who has received directly from heaven the tablet of spiritual knowledge inscribed by God’s own finger, that is, by the active working of illumination. Such a one has no need of other books. … Do you imagine that plain words can describe the love of God? Do you imagine that talk of such matters would mean anything to someone who had not experienced it? If you think so, then you are like a man who with words tries to convey the sweetness of honey to people who have never tasted it.”

To which a Christian now would shout, as he shouts at everything either soulful or intellectual: “The Bible is the repository of knowledge!”

4.

I can’t think how often I’ve heard Christians bemoaning their prayers: “I ask for thus-and-so and He does not give it”; “I desire that this-or-that be removed and He does not remove it.” Instead:

“Prayer is the mother, and then the daughter, of tears. Prayer is an expiation of sin, a bridge across temptation, a bulwark against [later doing others harm]. Prayer wipes out conflict. It is the work of angels and the nourishment of everything spiritual.”

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  1. John
    October 23, 2009 at 23:16 | #1

    I suppose the first three Christians now are fundamentalists much like myself – the fourth one seems not to have read II Corinthians 12:7-9, or Matthew 26:39.

    • Porter Doran
      October 23, 2009 at 23:17 | #2

      Oh thanks for those references, John.

  2. Porter Doran
    October 23, 2009 at 23:16 | #3

    I have a bad habit of ranting in my entries.

  3. Porter Doran
    October 23, 2009 at 23:16 | #4

    Do you know, I’d rather say “Prayer is the daughter, and then the mother, of tears” although I also take the point of the author.

    • John
      October 23, 2009 at 23:17 | #5

      Yes! Yes, I actually thought just that when I read it. But then either may be true.

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