Never thought I'd hear Jonathan say: "His ass got whooped!"
@andrewkelly20285 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing.
@Kolajer5 жыл бұрын
That's not the raciest thing he ever said, especially if you count his interview on other channels
@lisaonthemargins5 жыл бұрын
@c Omg lmao
@vivianieantegelo92775 жыл бұрын
Neither. Shitting.
@actually_a_circle3 жыл бұрын
Before watching I was sure this would be about some donkey in a bible story, but I was wrong, literally I guess
@TheModernHermeticist5 жыл бұрын
In the middle ages, both Jews and Christians used the four levels of interpretation: 1) the literal (better thought of as the 'historical'), 2) the analogical/metaphorical, 3) the moral, and 4) the anagogical/mystical. I think this system still has merit, which is why it endured for so long among so many people, even across religious boundaries.
@TheModernHermeticist5 жыл бұрын
...but your point stands, context is everything, and there is no such thing as purely descriptive writing (except maybe in instructions?), every text has a methodological approach.
@DoubtX5 жыл бұрын
I think the point about there being no literal an no metaphor is really great. I've thought to myself when describing things symbolically that I'm both describing things literally and metaphorically. But now I see that to talk about anything is both literal and metaphorical, and the two modes of communication are actually on a spectrum, where nothing is all of one and none of the other. There's really no hard separation. People just generally have a cutoff where things become too abstract and they start to call things metaphors, even if those things are perfectly clear and coherent.
@christophersurnname99675 жыл бұрын
Wow golden comment, perfectly articulates how I’ve felt for a long time now, especially in relation to the Bible.
@jimfoard56714 жыл бұрын
Piddle.
@heavens004 ай бұрын
Somethings are just literal tho. Like my kitchen floor being literally just tiles, mortar, and grout. But there's probably a metaphor in there somewhere......🤔
@jerikayemagdalena5 жыл бұрын
Anyone who studies linguistics knows this: all language is figurative. I've always thought that was hugely important for biblical exegesis. A lot of my work back in cog sci / neuroscience days on SYMBOLISM is echoed in your lectures, albeit from a different angle. I appreciate your work
@papercut71415 жыл бұрын
@The Theosist you understand that language and concepts can be wrong, right?
@foolfether5 жыл бұрын
@The Theosist I think you're not seeing the difference between 'language as a figurative cognitive process' (if I understood jerikaye correctly) and 'figurative language'.
@jabrown5 жыл бұрын
@The Theosist Can I follow your work anywhere?
@jimfoard56714 жыл бұрын
Phooh Phawh
@Babeman125 жыл бұрын
I feel like I'm slowly beginning to grasp this symbolic view of reality, but it's difficult because I've been so torn away from it through modern "literal" thinking. Why does it seem like NO ONE is teaching this though?
@icarovdl3 жыл бұрын
Because modern age just cares about rap music and naked woman. After the French Revolution and the Enlightment the west merged in this age of materialism and relativity, which is completly dumb and just a bunch of ideologies. Theres no search for a high knowledge, only dumb political ideologies
@sonicman522 жыл бұрын
@@icarovdl To be honest, I’ve had alotta fun listening to rap music and hanging with naked girls 😂 don’t knock it till you try it 😉
@icarovdl2 жыл бұрын
@@sonicman52 there's nothing cool about that, it is mortal sin, fornication, sodomy, adultery...and rap music is drugs and black dudes
@Verulam1626 Жыл бұрын
@@icarovdl Pageau has reccomended a book by Renee Guenon: Reign of Quantity and the Sign of the Times. Great read. There is a chapter called the Hatred of Secrecy which is basically explaining what you are saying. Also look into Leo Strauss and his rediscovery of esoteric writing. It recovers an old way to read (hermeneutics) that is abandoned with the advent of mass democracy or the rational society promulgated by the enlightenment. Also look into Clement of Alexandria's Stromata about writing and secrecy. The old sense of literal actually meant what was intended to mean by the author, which doesn't necessarily have to mean one, singular meaning. Intention and meaning can be layered. The intention of meaning is the intention of the "letter. It is obedience and adherence to its details. Understanding this clears up a lot of confusion and false dualities in how to read. All very interesting stuff.
@Verulam1626 Жыл бұрын
@@sonicman52 Yes. The flesh was meant to be enjoyed, but make sure it is salutary and not toxic. all in moderation
@JiveTurkey16185 жыл бұрын
It’s funny that “Literal” means actual but is also the root of “literature.” Which is always metaphor. Any time you use words you’re being literal about metaphors. 😂
@oambitiousone71005 жыл бұрын
💣🔥
@pontification78915 жыл бұрын
YESSSSSSS THANK YOU
@CuB_sTaR5 жыл бұрын
Literally
@jamesahern98645 жыл бұрын
Literally doesn't traditionally mean actually, but it has in current usage
@XxMadermanxX5 жыл бұрын
And that is called "idolatry" (reductionism of supreme quality).
@KrustyKrabbz25 жыл бұрын
Thomas said to him, “Master, we do not know where you are going; how can we know the way?” 6Jesus said to him, “I am the way..."
@mmccrownus24063 жыл бұрын
I AM is the way
@lisaonthemargins5 жыл бұрын
The important question is: Is he sitting or standing? Who knows
@UtarEmpire5 жыл бұрын
or if he has pants on
@oambitiousone71005 жыл бұрын
@@UtarEmpire 😅 Pants or no pants. That is the question.
@maxsiehier5 жыл бұрын
Or... Does the man have legs at all?
@cabal41715 жыл бұрын
It is irrelevant to the meaning of the video P.S. I think he's floating
@diarmaidobaoill41415 жыл бұрын
@@cabal4171 Ha! Nailed it.
@Querymonger5 жыл бұрын
This is going to be one of your most misunderstood videos lol. For people not used to ancient/symbolic thinking this just sounds like post-modern "it's all relative; reality is subjective" poison. For those thinking that, this is actually pretty much the opposite of postmodernism. Mr. Pageau is not attacking the idea of objective or absolute truth, just the modern materialistic concept of those things.
@christophersurnname99675 жыл бұрын
Yes! It is so not the post-modern line of thought at all, but could be so easily misconstrued as such.
@ladyowl91875 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I have no fucking idea what his going on about in most of his vids??? Its all a huge headfuck for me....
@jimfoard56714 жыл бұрын
I guess most of us aren't as astute as you apparently are. Pity us, ignorant souls all.
@uchechukwuibeji55324 жыл бұрын
I'm starting to open my eyes to it. From what I understand he's not attacking objective truth at all. I think he's talking about the patterns in which the objective and subjective work in the 1st place. There's a way that we observe reality, and that particular way is structured in a certain order/placement so that it gives us meaning. Everything gravitate towards meaning. Symbolism is when the "literal" and "metaphorical" marry one another. Which literally(lol) happens all the time. That's what I've understood from it anyway. I'm a bit new to symbolism.
@ryanjordan62953 жыл бұрын
Above poster is on the right track I think... the moment you perceive reality, it has already begun to bridge into the symbolic, because of the way your consciousness works, selecting out details to work into a narrative frame. You have no access to objective reality as such, without a frame. The stories we encounter in scripture just have more condensed language, more selective filters applied, making them more transmissible and meaningful long term. That doesn't make these stories less real.
@stefangernert34995 жыл бұрын
You are LITERALLY saving my life with what you do. I've came a log way since I discovered you in 2017. Thank you and God bless you
@sastracaksusa2728 Жыл бұрын
I'm Hindu, but I find these videos very helpful for understanding our scriptures, too.
@AlexLGagnon Жыл бұрын
That's because Jonathan speaks in tongues. 😂😄
@LukeShepherd-x9q4 ай бұрын
Interesting
@oambitiousone71005 жыл бұрын
This is the comment section par excellence of all my subscriptions.
@rexoffsender13225 жыл бұрын
The pursuit of meaning is a feature that is built into us. We are born to seek meaning, being the development of speech the earliest manifestation of this. Religions serve as frameworks to guide this instinct because we inevitably will confront events in which the meaning eludes us, and thus provide a framework which expands the meaning of reality and our place in the world. This is why atheist usually claim there is no meaning in life (even though most of them don't actually believe this). When we understand that religions serve as frameworks for reality, we can clearly see why Judaism, and then Christianity, have survived and replaced the ancient Paganism. Pagans had the problem that the framework was constantly shifting, with deities popping up all over the place, whereas Judaism, and by extension Christianity, centered the framework in God. A solid framework (solid as the rock Jacob placed where he dreamed with the gates of Heaven).
@neonpop805 жыл бұрын
Pagan religions had many deities that mapped to concepts, a big one is cosmological cyclical concepts. There was no problem with having many deities representing different aspects and no one faught over them until the Roman Cath church borrowed the Jewish one highest idol/ideal to represent Rome so it can centralize its power and rule over as many people as possible stripping them from the meaning inherent in a worldview that is tied to nature. This would be the militarization of religion as the Romans carried the XP flag, the Christus banner in which they would fight under, no different than a centralized concept of a higher ideal to fight for like contemporary Isis.
@SpartaIndigo5 жыл бұрын
@@neonpop80 Good for you. Great defense of paganism and the archetypal physics we live under. True definition of archetype is; an archetype changes ones nature and causes a compulsiveness when activated. I go deeper on my youtube channel on how the Greeks and modern Western science understood archetypes.
@neonpop805 жыл бұрын
@rex And also, Jacob placed the stone from which to anchor and build on to look up and see the great pillar that leads man to god. It is there, the place you call Heaven, at the home of Orion;the gate of heaven. For literally that constellation has the biggest hole. And if it weren’t for our “pagan” myths we wouldnt know anything about this. That there is a gaping hole in the Orion constellation unseen anywhere else in the cosmos. The opening gate of heaven. Where you and I once dwelt in the promised place in the highest conscious state closest to unity.
@jacobgray67620 күн бұрын
This seems so obvious to me now. The Dawkins-Peterson debate was a beautiful juxtaposition of the symbolic and scientific worlds.
@itsokaytobeclownpilled59375 жыл бұрын
I literally enjoy the hand gestures and facial expressions every time you say “I’ve said a million times” I enjoy your videos. They are thought provoking.
@AvB21065 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video. This topic is so helpful for people who come from modern traditions of christianity. A point one has to stress here is also that there is a tremendous amount of arrogance in expecting the bible to be written for a person like yourself, with your particular way of thinking and your understanding. As if its only about you. The lack of willingness of certain groups of christians to try to understand the worldview of previous generations and dive into exegesis the way it was done centuries ago is indeed a true tragedy.
@itsokaytobeclownpilled59375 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@Tyler_W5 жыл бұрын
I don't necessarily think it's arrogance, at least not all the time. I think it stems from helplessness and fear of confusion. They would suggest that it must have a simple, straightforward, readily transparent meaning because otherwise, how would most people be able to even understand what they're reading without a highly academic understanding of ancient Middle Eastern culture, symbolism and literature (something most people either don't or can't do). It's like if we were told that there's a life-saving cure to your terminal cancer inside a box and being unable to read it because the directions to open the box are in an abstract, ancient language that you don't understand. The fear is how will the average, common person anywhere around the world regardless of their own cultural context, intelligence or education level be able to understand biblical truth and way to eternal life on even a basic level if there isn't a meaning is readily apparent and simple enough to understand? While I fully acknowledge that biblical truth goes beyond purely the descriptive into the symbolic, there is a serious problem of making it overly intellectual. It limits the understanding of truth so that it can only truly be communicated to the common folk by enlightened philosopher-kings, and that sort of gatekeeping to God-given truth seems kind of antithetical to the idea that the gospel is supposed to be for everyone, even children, to know and understand.
@spearofsolomon5 жыл бұрын
Also funny about metaphor: for Protestants, when God finally came to earth in human form and spoke in man's words directly to men, saying, "This is my body," oh well that's just a metaphor. But the book of Genesis, somehow transcribed by Moses (?) as God spoke in his ear: that must be a literal description of what happened.
@johnrockwell58345 жыл бұрын
@Nathan Spears It is symbolic as the context shows. But the Book of Genesis. Yeah I agree with you with a lot but there is literal history.
@williampotter75725 жыл бұрын
Substance is what is most real, symbols only describe accidents.
@RoyalProtectorate3 жыл бұрын
There is a historical aspect to the bible in the sense that everything in it did happen
@nicoladibara19363 жыл бұрын
The creation story from the book of Genesis MUST be understood LITERALLY. Why? Because God says so in Exodus 20:11. And God cannot lie.
@spearofsolomon3 жыл бұрын
@@nicoladibara1936 Genesis 1:7 says "So God made the vault and separated the water under the vault from the water above it." Did God lie about that?
@davidvanvranken15955 жыл бұрын
I metaphorically can’t even right now with nothing being literal
@sennewam5 жыл бұрын
I can't even, it's odd
@scorpiss95 жыл бұрын
literal isn't a noun unless you're talking of litter cuz littering is very literal
@scorpiss95 жыл бұрын
@@Martin-cp5bb that's right. no-thing isn't a thing which means literal isn't a thing. Phew... It's a lot more pleasant when things aren't literal or else I'd be a headless king.
@scorpiss95 жыл бұрын
@@Martin-cp5bb do You mean it "Literally"?
@kennyblobbin5 жыл бұрын
Seems very easy for you. Go easy on us JP. We are trying. Thankyou for all your help!!!
@lindenbrook13203 жыл бұрын
Jonathan Pageau, what a blessing you are to the world! As a new Orthodox convert from Protestantism, this discussion has really helped me to connect the dots.
@theguyver4934 Жыл бұрын
Just like biblical and historical evidence proves that jesus and his apostles were vegatarians biblical and historical evidence also proves that the trinity, atonement, original sin and hell are very late misinterpretations and are not supported by the early creed hence its not a part of Christianity I pray that Allah swt revives Christianity both inside and out preserves and protects it and makes its massage be witnessed by all people but at the right moment, place and time The secred text of the Bible says ye shall know them by their fruits So too that I say to my christian brothers and sisters be fruitful and multiply Best regards from a Muslim ( line of ismail )
@apowave5 жыл бұрын
This is Pageau at his finest. 👏🏼👏🏼
@raymonddunne7153 Жыл бұрын
For someone who dabbled in a lot of stuff prior to becoming a catechumen in the Orthodox church this is helpful. It occurs to me that both literalism and purely poetic camps are lacking. Im getting help from my lectionary practice. One thing about this practice its dynamic. Every day another verse. So that day I ponder meaning and the next day gotta let it go to ponder another. Hopefully some seeds from the previous day will be planted in my heart that will bloom later. Then on Sunday hearing my priest comment on something I have been pondering just enhances the whole process.
@eugeneylliez8293 жыл бұрын
A very nice video, thank you! It is rare to find such well done content on symbolism on the internet. I have studied the question of interpretation on several occasions at the University of Freiberg, both in theology courses and in the Yeshivot in which I was able to participate. I can therefore say that I have a solid initiation into hermeneutical problems from both the Christian and Jewish sides, both theological and philosophical, so I find your discourse really fundamental and I thank you for spreading it! My idea is the same as yours : there is no dualism. (N.B.: I replace italics with capitals in order to be able to vary the graphics of the text.) On the one hand, it is true that one must absolutely pass through the symbolic sense in order to understand the Bible, but in order to do this one must "enter" into the symbolic mentality, otherwise reading the Bible with a nominalistic understanding of symbolism will, in the long run, only be detrimental. In fact, if symbols are only representations ("allegories" would say Goethe, who dealt with the modern classification of symbols), then it matters little that they represent the divine: a gulf remains between the symbolised and the symbol, which no longer unites anything. Instead, 'symbol' means union. For this we need a logic, a semantics, a metaphysics and an anthropology of the symbol that are not nominalist but profoundly realist, as in Dionysius the Areopagite. On the other hand, one may wonder what a literalist reading means. In reality, those who believe they are reading a text 'literally' are only projecting onto the text their own narrow idea of what it means. Those who read literally are already interpreting... badly. Instead, Christians must learn to read as it is done in the Jewish Yeshivot. One must pay attention FIRST to the literal sense, because contrary to what many Western symbolists think, the elaborate (symbolic) sense never leaves its literal sense. One must question the literalness of the text: ask oneself why an event, of which the text is only a trace, has left that trace in writing and in that precise form, with its inconsistencies, and not another. Then one will discover that reading the text literally IS the way to understand it spiritually (symbolically, etc.) as well. Easy separations between literalism and symbolism are a thing of the past. As the jew proverb goes: < Even the researched sense of a verse never leaves its simple sense >.
@jaysonbirmingham18895 жыл бұрын
I love the new video format. The background allows you to use pictures that really aid in understanding.
@PhilLeith10 ай бұрын
This really helps me understand the things Jonathan talks about and how he talks about them.
@jasonroberts22495 жыл бұрын
Spot on analysis. Nothing is ever literal or ‘ordinary’; everything everywhere is simultaneously physical (profane), mental (psychic, subtle or symbolic) and spiritual (transcendent). Words themselves are symbols-“fingers pointing at the moon.’ You are getting right at the core of reality with this stuff. Jonathan do a video on René Guénon, I’m begging you. You are right in the same lane as him. Father Seraphim Rose said “It was René Guénon who taught me to seek and love the Truth above all else.”
@charlesclaxton9935 жыл бұрын
I've really enjoyed William Lane Craig's Defenders Class and the idea of Mytho-Historical for 1st few chapters of Gen. It's the True Myth that Tolkien talked about...... Literally.
@moderbro5608 Жыл бұрын
I think what people are asking is if the Bibel was video material instead of text would the pictures match with the descriptions , im not arguing the point just trying to understand it better . Can you elaborate?
@primitivaroots5 жыл бұрын
Ok, I think I got your point, and I could grant that in several cases. But let me try to go a little further. What about Jesus's crucifixion, death, burial and resurrection. Are these spiritual realities which find their best description in the story, or did they happen the way they are told? I mean, do you think Jesus was a phisical man, with a phisical body, being phisically crucified in a phisical wooden cross? Was His phisical body put in a phisical tomb, for a real span of time around 3 days, and was His phisical body phisically resurrected after that time? For me as a christian it seems important to hold that these are phisical descriptions of reality and not just simbolic descriptions. Agreed at least on this? Can your method of interpretation maintain all these facts as phisical descriptions of reality, though always revealed in a frame of meaning that is spiritual?
@MrTimberwolfsden5 жыл бұрын
I think his response would be similar to the conclusion I have reached on these manners, I think. Whether they physically occured in that description isn't as relevant as the reasons why they are described and communicated and what the story represents. Some hold it as significant because that is a clear indication of divinity and reinforces faith. For me, imagining that it was purely symbolic of death, sacrifice of son and father, forgiveness, transcendence, would that make the truth of the Bible or the words of Chirst less true? Would the message or meaning change?
@MrBenbenbenbenny5 жыл бұрын
Hi Luccas. Just a random Christian who's working through similar thoughts. I think there's a variation among the different types of stories. The Genesis stories, from my understanding, were stories that took common myths of the time and changed them to provide a more accurate description of who the Israelites saw their God as. Genesis 1 shows God is greater than the lesser things other people groups worshipped, showed people have value, and God is willing to rest among many other lessons. As you move through Genesis you start to see the stories transition more and more to historical accounts, still with selective details provided to highlight the meaning of the story. In my opinion, Christ lived recently enough where his life, death, and resurrection is afforded credibility by eyewitnesses. These eyewitnesses gave their lives for what they experienced with Jesus. There is of course details omitted in any story like Jonathan explains well, and they may have incorporated symbolism into their personal accounts of Christ's life but I don't have any issue believing the resurrection occured and that the authors of the gospels did not add this untrue detail to help propogate the message. Just my thoughts.
@MrBenbenbenbenny5 жыл бұрын
@@MrTimberwolfsden see I think the meaning there would change because while the gospels incorporate symbolism, I also think they are recounting events of Jesus' life. I don't know how we can jump to Acts and understand the story without the resurrection occuring if that makes sense. Thoughts?
@JH-ji6cj5 жыл бұрын
C'mon now, can we at least let this person know there is a *y* in physical, not two *i* (s)
@PenMom93 жыл бұрын
I think JP is saying at least the reality is not an ‘either/or’. Whether he thinks is a ‘neither/nor’ I could not say. I personally think his descriptions here and elsewhere show a ‘both/and’ philosophy, which is where I generally land as well.
@bright-noise5 жыл бұрын
This a really powerful and concise video to use against the purely materialistic view of religion, thanks 🙏🏻
@jasonroberts22495 жыл бұрын
What you describe about the combination of heaven and earth, logos and tropos sounds a lot like the Hindu concepts of purusha and prakriti, or yang and yin of Taoism, which comprise the male and female, or purpose and substance. This is why Christ often refers to His church as the bride and Himself as the bridgegroom. Because He represents the masculine essence of Heaven acting upon the passive potentiality of the material substance of Earth.
@RogerTheil5 жыл бұрын
Great points
@AlannaBoudreau5 жыл бұрын
Great points indeed - echoes Jung's concept of the anima and animus, too.
@sophrapsune2 ай бұрын
This understanding of representation is so very critical. It goes to the heart of the modern world and the assumptions of thought and language that have ultimately broken our society. We need to recover a more sophisticated use of language and narrative to be rescued from our cultural and moral collapse.
@ChibiBoxing5 жыл бұрын
Thanks to you and Peterson I was able to look at the scriptures in a more metaphorical way, when I was small and I made pilgrimage to churches far away from my city this wasnt taught to me, and I understand why, it might sound arrogant but the approach is far more intelectual, and that tends to throw people off, you need really really put your head into it and make an actual effort into understanding this, it took me 24 years. This is why at this age Im approaching little by little to the orthodox church, amazed and touched by their traditions and the focus on self, there arent a lot of orthodox churches sadly, but I'll be in contact with one in the future, thank you so much for your videos and for your words. Much love from Argentina.
@Bicicletasaladas5 жыл бұрын
Si usted es ortodoxo de nacimiento, lo felicito por su regreso a la fe apostólica. Pero si es católico le pido que no abandone la Iglesia de su bautismo. Nada de lo que enseña Jonathan es estrictamente ortodoxo. Este razonamiento simbólico ya era común a ambas iglesias en el comienzo.
@ChibiBoxing5 жыл бұрын
@@Bicicletasaladas Es muy acojedor ver a alguien hablando mi lengua nativa acá. Entiendo lo que me quiere decir, pero con todo respeto voy a disentir, jamás he visto la simbología que he visto a través de la fé ortodoxa, pero voy a seguir su consejo a menos en parte, voy a nutrirme de lo simbólico en la fé católica, le deseo lo mejor!
@Bicicletasaladas5 жыл бұрын
@@ChibiBoxing cuando hable con ortodoxos, acuérdese de mí y cuénteme si sus sacerdotes tienen el entendimiento profundo que enseña Jonathan. Mi opinión es que no. Que ambas iglesias hemos sufrido una gran amnesia y ya no entendemos las cosas así. Pero por gracia del Espíritu Santo paráclito sí las seguimos viviendo así. Creo que el problema es que el símbolo, como la verdadera fe, se vive antes de pensarse. El símbolo nos comprende (a veces hacemos actos o decimos cosas que son simbólicas) y lo ejecutamos con nuestros actos, inclusive con el acto de pensar. Recuerde bien sus peregrinaciones de infancia. La vida cristiana no es en esencia llegar a una comprensión cabal de las sutilezas de lo simbólico y lo literal o el significado de un texto. Y sin embargo la vida cristiana si tiene un símbolo fiel en la peregrinación de un niño a un templo lejano. Ud. estaba viviendo un simbolismo profundo de la esencia de toda su vida como cristiano. Todo eso cifrado en la santa y piadosa costumbre de peregrinar que tenemos los católicos
@ChibiBoxing5 жыл бұрын
@@Bicicletasaladas No veo con desdén mis peregrinaciones, sin duda fueron cuando menos momentos significantes. Puede que tenga razón en lo que dice; quizás Jonathan es una gran excepción, quizás el mejor camino es el propio que uno haga guiado por esos conceptos, tanto cristianos como ortodoxos, como dice usted, el símbolo nos comprende a todos y lo hacemos físico con nuestras acciones, mi vida desde hace unos meses sigue estos parámetros, aunque es difícil, jamás viví tan plenamente. Gracias por sus palabras amigo, son de gran ayuda a alguien que está "buscando".
@mythosandlogos5 жыл бұрын
From the very first chapters of Genesis, it’s explicitly clear that the Bible isn’t a literal, scientific, or historical textbook. I just finished a video on this last week! Please accept an earnest thank you for all of your influence on my understanding of the world. Our community is so much better for having you in it.
@mythosandlogos5 жыл бұрын
@The Theosist Please let me clarify! It can be difficult to get ideas across clearly in a small comment. I don't use the word "myth" on this channel in the sense of "something untrue" but in the sense Webster describes in definition 1 here www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/myth That being a traditional story or parable. Also, of course there are historical intention and narratives in the Old Testament! What I meant to communicate was the difference in a textbook, which is about facts, dates, statistics and such, and scripture, which uses history as a tool in a story about salvation. Thank you for giving me a chance to clarify my words! Wishing you the best.
@fullarmorofgod82704 жыл бұрын
#Mythos & Logos .... 🤔God says what he did... how he created the earth , sun, moon, man, woman, animals, the stars.... everything... God tells us exactly what he did in non metaphorical language (now of course the bible has depths such as Genesis 1:16 "and God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: he made the stars also) not only is God telling you about how he created and intended the lights, the sun & moon which he made clear he LITERALLY created the sun moon and stars but u can go deeper and see that the greater light ruled the day being analogous to God and Jesus being greater then the lesser light the devil.... but if anyone cannot see that the bible is literal then the truth is not in you not only that but you are LITERALLY blaspheming God Almighty by calling him a liar... creation itself testifies to the Creator... to put your faith in your own understanding rather then God? You cannot even understand the literal word let alone the deeper mysteries of Gods word bc God is not in you... repent before its too late
@mirceanicula9198 Жыл бұрын
To try to understand what the Bible is about through scientific method and archeology is like trying to understand who someone is by killing them making a dissection instead of just asking. You will find nothing and you will destroy the very thing that you are trying to understand in the process. The truth is something alive and it is carried in culture, in the stories and the people that know the stories. It is something that it is alive in us.
@justice30433 жыл бұрын
Phenomenal content brother. Truly outstanding!
@hrkellem28485 жыл бұрын
"There's no such thing as literal" is right up there with "Of course Santa Claus exists." Love it!
@Brad-RB5 жыл бұрын
Is a dictionary literal? A word is defined by other words and the definitions of those words eventually circle back to the first word. It's a giant book of comparisons. We compare things we don't understand to the things that we do understand.
@jungatheart63595 жыл бұрын
"Every original language near to its source is in itself the chaos of a cyclic poem: the copiousness of lexicography and the distinctions of grammar are the works of a later age, and are merely the catalogue and the forms of the creations of poetry." -Percy Bysshe Shelley 'A Defence Of Poetry' (1820) This "cyclic poem" is essentially the linguistic aspect of Logos, and dictionary definitions in Shelley's formulation are more metaphorical than literal. Literal truth is, ironically, perhaps the most academic and least 'real' thing of all.
@DavidianCrest5 жыл бұрын
Brad Bilski Fine point.
@neonpop805 жыл бұрын
Such is consciousness, building a map or a conception/ideal/idea/idol of an object giving it dimension as a subject. Building on layers and layers of map and before you know it we are convinced we're in a simulation because the world is so layered now that it is in fact a simulated map of some base reality that now has receded into memory.
@Brad-RB5 жыл бұрын
@@neonpop80 Exactly. Civilization is itself a virtual reality.
@Brad-RB5 жыл бұрын
@@jungatheart6359 Your comment really has me thinking. It would seem that early written language would have copied the oral tradition which probably used poetry or songs to help remember the stories. Prior to that humans would have used body language and dramatic interpretations to convey ideas. So literature is just an advanced form of the game of charades.
@8JFTW5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video Jonathan - your explanation of reality as neither metaphor nor literal/factual but as the confluence of both of these realities has really helped me. I’m new to the faith and my only contact with other members of the church is with materialist Protestants who believe in evil spirits; I suspect they are generally staunch literalists. Literalist/overly “accurate” interpretations have always felt “off” to me, so this has given me both insight and relief. Thank you!
@josepharnett72563 жыл бұрын
WOW ... thank you Jonathan. This is so meaningful to me I can't help but to feel it was sent to me today. Thank you.
@johnmainwaring65563 ай бұрын
This was pretty helpful, but in answer to your question at 17:00, why it's not as weird is because IT IS metaphorical. In the physical world we inhabit to literally, e.g. "cut off your hand because it offends you" would be wrong/weird and illegal/impractical. So surely Christ used metaphor to communicate spiritual realities using physical imagery. In other words we use 'token' gesture sometimes in this world. Perhaps in an alternative world we might do some of the things we say metaphorically here in a more literal way. I personally do not hold to transubstantiation as you appear to, but you might clarify here whether, during communion, you still are eating bread, but by definition and interaction with the logos in that moment by faith you do - in a true sense - eat of His body because He willed it so. I believe the bread and wine are symbolic, invoking a spiritual reality to be experienced by faith, as with baptism.
@christoffersjogrentrombone39132 жыл бұрын
Let us who enjoy The videos by Jonathan be the light for other people. It will take time but that’s our mission in life.
@bondedoreneguenon32025 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the content, I watch your videos to help me speak english, you pronounce your language very well and i can fully understand everything you say.
@Theodore_Pugin2 жыл бұрын
I would've snubbed this 2 years ago, but it makes more sense each time I think about the nature of meaning and truth.
@franciscafazzo346011 ай бұрын
I hope I heard you correctly because it helps me to classify you with the rest. You said there's no such thing as the literal ridiculous statement
@Mr.MattSim5 жыл бұрын
On this subject, I recommend Owen Barfield's "Poetic Diction" (book), and "The Meaning of Literal" (The Rediscovery of Meaning and other essays)
@TheRealValus5 жыл бұрын
"A perfectly true thought, expressed in very sound terms, can satisfy the reason without giving any impression of the Beautiful; but in that case certainly there is something false in the statement. *It is essential that Truth be in Glory.* Splendor of style is not a luxury, but a necessity." ~ Léon Bloy (Pilgrim of the Absolute)
@Okayand335 жыл бұрын
2 videos in 2 weeks and my mind has been blown twice. Thank you Johnathan for the uploads! Im trying really hard to understand this topic: So stories/narratives/descriptions can not be literal because it would lead to including all that can be included(the indefinite). The literal perception requires only measurement-like and quantifiable thinking that will not allow for its viewers to narrow in on the purpose which it was seeking. When asked "how was your day?" You do not sit down for hours and go over every single minute. You cant remember every minute of your day. Literal interpretation begs the impossible. Literal interpretation is impossible The metaphorical perception tells viewers that any narrative that sounds absurd, irrational, distasteful, or doesnt clearly outline a set guideline or plan to achieve something,.. simply outright has no meaning or purpose. "It is just there for decoration. Thats all" "Its just for fun." Is it?
@jake96743 жыл бұрын
Interesting video - I do have a couple questions: 1) In your worldview how would you define lying? 2) How is your theory of truth different that espoused by postmodernists? 3) By what authority does God judge us, if any judgement he would make must necessarily come from within a frame? I realize given your understanding of God this question doesn't quite make sense, but I hope you see what I'm getting at. Put another way - if Christianity wants to say it's "better" or "superior" or "the truth" by what reference point does it make this claim? 4) Similarly, what does Jesus mean when he says "I am the truth"? From whose frame is this claim being made? Is he the truth unto himself, is he truth from my perspective, or is it both, or something else? What if I am not living a Christian life or don't believe in Christ? In what sense then is Christ the truth with respect to my worldview?
@MissingTheMark5 жыл бұрын
Something curious is I've found that the literal/metaphorical distinction is very useful when dealing with very young children. E.g. I ran into problems when explaining to my 3 year old child that he had to let me clean him after he used the potty so that the poop monster wouldn't eat his bumm (i.e. so he wouldn't get a painful rash). Then I discovered he was imagining something with teeth and fangs that would rip large chunks of him out, like a dog or a tiger. Employing the literal/metaphor distinction was the quickest way I could get him to understand what parts of the description were significant and which were not, especially going forward for later things where he imaged the wrong thing. All of this was a way of navigating that he didn't have the attention span to understand the ways in which bacteria in the wrong place for too long can cause painful sores, and other such things where he simply didn't have the capacity for detail. But he also had a hard time knowing which parts of a simplified description were the most relevant ones, too; eventually saying to him, "this is a metaphor, not literally" came to mean "don't assume you know what I mean, ask which are the most important parts", except in a way that worked.
@LagMasterSam2 жыл бұрын
This is why I can't wrap my head around the idea that people didn't make a literal/metaphorical distinction in the past. I remember being barely 4 years old and not having a clue about anything that was slightly metaphorical. I remember it bugging the hell out of me that people would say things that didn't make sense to me. So... how can anyone grow up and not gain the ability to distinguish literal and metaphorical statements?
@MissingTheMark2 жыл бұрын
@@LagMasterSam it's not that they don't have the ability. It's that when you grow up more, you realize that about many important things the distinction is irrelevant. Eg kids have to be older to learn that "a few" is not 3, but rather an indeterminate number that depends on context, or that one cannot measure "a moment". In like manner, there are all sorts of things where the details are completely irrelevant.
@Verulam1626 Жыл бұрын
I think you kind of missed the point. You are alluding to the fact that there are multiple interpretations for different interpreters. Johnathan is not excluding this possibility and is merely pointing to a spectrum of interpretation that transcends the dichotomy by including them and thensome. He is getting to the more original meaning if the word literal which simply means how something was intended to mean according to the details, it is adherence to the letter. That is why he says "yes" to Genesis. He is more against anachronisms of interepration , and the jaded meanings of metaphor and literal have become too skewed in modern times to be of any use. That is why your example is somewhat irrelevant. In the case of a three year old, they simply don't have the cognitive development to understand what you mean in your own words, that is why you use terms somewhat fathomable to them. If we're to use your own terms to someone who could not fathom them, it would also be somewhat of an anachronism. Your example is ironically inapplicable to what Johnathan is conveying.
@franciscafazzo346011 ай бұрын
Why could you just teach your son? What instead? You might as well tell him santa claus is gonna wipe his ass
@MissingTheMark11 ай бұрын
@@franciscafazzo3460 I'm sorry that you're stupid.
@joanebf5 жыл бұрын
The quality of this camera is better. The content as good as always.
@catw52945 жыл бұрын
Your "fight" description example was eye opening for me. Thx
@Mateus-fh8dp2 жыл бұрын
The video you referred in the beginning and this one are giving me an "overdose of symbolism". It is as if Christianity is "the" story of mankind, of the human condition. The stories in the Bible describe a reality, but I think the problem with the materialist is that, for him, it is as if "reality" is only one particular section of reality as such, the corporeal modality one could say. The story of the Fall describes something which is not restricted to that section which comprises the narrow mental horizon of the materialist.
@RabbiSteve5 жыл бұрын
Well done and said, as are so many of your video talks. Thanks for sharing this.
@ruslpit2615 Жыл бұрын
Love the way you explain our reality.
@_Eamon5 жыл бұрын
The term 'symbolic truth' is really helpful as an idea totally outside of the literal-metaphor dichotomy. Thank you.
@erfeyah14015 жыл бұрын
Hello Jonathan and thank you for another interesting video. I understand what you mean but I am not convinced at all about the church acting as a genuine spiritual body. I am from Greece so when I see these photos of the priests of the streets I also know first hand what many of these people are doing and thinking cause I have experienced it. One thing I can say is that the priests are full of greed for power and wealth while the believers dwell in superstition, fanaticism and magical thinking. Where is the work towards inner development? I know it is in the scriptures, the saints and some scholars but if it is to be found in the church today I can not see it. It would be interesting to talk about how the church today can assist in genuine inner development and how to find the wise among the hypocrites.
@JonathanPageau5 жыл бұрын
Yes, I understand the problem you are suggesting. In this case, I think the best is become that which we want the church to be, rather than look and complain about all those that are falling short. Once you start on that path, you will find, like a magnet, that you will attract around you people, priests, monks, hierarchs who are attempting the same.
@ChibiBoxing5 жыл бұрын
@@JonathanPageau "I think the best is become that which we want the church to be" the more people do this, the bigger the message it is, I hope the churches that we commune to change their ways.
@nicholasdonin14655 жыл бұрын
God knows who is and isn't the body of the church. The last sermon at my church, the physical building, described the function of the church, the body of Christian peoples as a whole, to the actual human body. A hand doesn't understand the function of an ear, a foot the function of the nose etc. But the foot cannot say that it has no need of the hand and vice versa. But when you look at these priests, yes you can judge their actions as being against logos, but when it comes to their spirit, only God can judge if they're his. And when referring to the body, just rest assured God knows who's with salvation and who isn't. All you can do put your home within logos and disassociate from those who would detract you from that.
@michalolos17155 жыл бұрын
Dear friend, i pretty much understand your point of view as this was the way I was looking at things pretty much still very lately. Coming from Roman-Catholic background then switching to Protestantism I also was missing this inner development - it just was not to be found and experienced there and I felt like all the ceremonies going on around were just empty for me. The more i try to study the Orthodox Christianity the more I come closer to understanding that the Orthodox Church its theology and practices is full of inner spiritual development. The Father's teaching on passions, virtues, prayer, liturgy, man as a creation, God, etc. - it is just loaded w/ inner spiritual development within the community of Church. I honestly do not know whether the inner spiritual development is still taught in most of the Orthodox churches in Greece, but there are churches where all the traditions are still adhered and the inner spiritual development is available and taught - for example churches at the Mount Athos are the places where you could find what you are looking for. The tradition of Hesychasm as elaborated in the book of Philokalia is loaded w/ this. As Jonathan says: ''Once you start on that path, you will find, like a magnet, that you will attract around you people, priests, monks, hierarchs who are attempting this true inner spiritual development within Orthodox Church.
@itsokaytobeclownpilled59375 жыл бұрын
urnotfunny atall Why would any Christians be interested in the Talmud?
@ambassadorcarlousdewayne30823 жыл бұрын
Agape unconditional Love 💯🎯🥶💯 continue keeping your head held up high and eyes 👀 open wide open keep painting 🎨 Theses pictures to frame purpose as above so below Real realized reality explained
@theranova993 жыл бұрын
I agree 100% with you, even if what you say is almost unintelligible.
@christophersurnname99675 жыл бұрын
You are doing a good thing with these videos. That literal vs symbolic duality that so many ppl perpetuate is very annoying and limiting to ppls understanding. Often ppl think that interpreting the Bible in any way other then literal means it is taken less seriously, when that is not necessarily the case at all.
@falcon00jr755 жыл бұрын
I think one thing to distinguish is the various types of literary genres in Scripture. I think Jonathan would affirm an historic Adam and an actual Fall of man into sin. If mankind did not fall/ lose communion with God/ be under His wrath and curse/ made liable to all the miseries of this life. . . Then there is no need for an historic Savior. The patterns in Scripture are amazing and daily I'm in awe of the comprehensive providence and redemption story that is sufficient in the Word, manifested in worship, and experienced through our life.
@hglundahl5 жыл бұрын
8:27 I agree, reality is not value neutral. Again, this does not in any way, shape or form imply it cannot be literal or literally described.
@Cephalonimbus5 жыл бұрын
Owen Barfield wrote several books on this subject. I highly recommend "Saving the Appearances": it goes into great detail about how this "illusion of literalness" began, what its problematic side-effects are and what we might do to overcome it. Other books of his go more in depth about the specifics of language and meaning that also tie into the same topic, but Saving the Appearances is probably the best general overview.
@SpartaIndigo5 жыл бұрын
Do you literally mean there is no such thing as literal?
@ENTERTAINMENT-tc3uq4 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂 I think you know the answer to that. Literal is literally not literal.
@heavens004 ай бұрын
@@ENTERTAINMENT-tc3uqSometimes a thing is simply just literal. My window pane is literally glass, for instance. I wonder what the manufacturer was trying to say with that.....🤔
@uchechukwuibeji55324 жыл бұрын
Hmm...I'm struggling with understanding the Elijah symbolism. What pattern does that follow exactly? I'm kinda new to this style of comprehension.
@hoolialynn265 жыл бұрын
This is why I love the passages about the potter and the clay. That's some logos meeting tropos right there. :)
@robiszabo9035 жыл бұрын
This is the most important video you have made yet.
@malpais7765 жыл бұрын
If you are saying that there can be no intelligibility without a mediating context I agree. Setting a context seems to me to be necessary to describe or interpret anything. Even if we are mistaken about the meaning of a story , or an experiment it will produce a new context for situating the facts or require us to re -- evaluate or revise our facts in a new context. "The facts" don't seem meaningful without a mediating context. Or perhaps, one might say without a context for transmitting the facts nothing relevant can be communicated. There seems to be no medium of transmission without a context. Question: Maybe this is just a chicken and egg problem, but: What's the criteria for accepting which context ( or metanarrative) I am willing to accept for the positioning of the "facts" to reveal their most comprehensive and direct relevance to me? Is it the story itself that sets the context through which all other facts are interpreted? Whatever the context thru which "the facts" of the story are transmitted mediation seems to be involved. What this means, or why this is the case? I don't know.
@cameahgill84645 жыл бұрын
Thank you Jonathan 👏👏👏 I’m not a Christian and it’s partly because I’ve always been frustrated with both Christians who put disproportionate importance into a simple literal interpretation and over emphasize dogmatism without giving a why to the how and broader society who likewise interpret the Bible literally and over simplify in order to tear up the straw man. It’s only been recently that my soul has begun to reconcile this for my mind these erroneous interpretations and teachers like you have popped up to help.
@jimfoard56714 жыл бұрын
You're right. He IS a genius. Remarkable. He is just so . . . so . . . well YOU know!
@telemarq74815 жыл бұрын
This is very challenging for someone still stuck viewing the world from a materialist perspective, but in a good way!
@y3ll0wk1ng95 жыл бұрын
The very nature of universe is a symbollic one, so does we, the human beings. The same is for the Holy Grial, the Philosophal Stone, Crist. "All the myths are true, Sophie. Because they last longer, they are even more real that the so called 'real world' ". - Promethea, by Alan Moore.
@GameFunHQ5 жыл бұрын
Modernity really made a number o us when it comes to understanding meaning.
@Tyler_W3 жыл бұрын
Kinda feels like certain aspects of "modernity" is a prison I sometimes have a hard time thinking my way out of
@RogerTheil5 жыл бұрын
Thank you Jonathan, everything is integrated.
@karlasears99855 жыл бұрын
So helpful I would more talks on this subject I know I will listen several more times to embody it more and recieve a better understanding. Thank you Jonathan!
@splitdog Жыл бұрын
This is great. Thank you. GTG
@tasfa105 жыл бұрын
How do you go from "there is no such thing as an absolutely complete description of an event" to "there's no such thing as a literal event"?? Those are very different! You do know what people mean when they ask if you think Christ literally walked on water - it's the immediate, most obvious, interpretation of the sentence. When I say I drank coffee this morning, altho you don't know each detail, such as the color of the cup, the temperature and amount of coffee and how many sips I took (because the description can't be 100% complete), you do know exactly what I mean by the small information I'm giving you and you know it's a description of a literal event! You could check the security camera and confirm it or disconfirm it. It's not up to interpretation and altho details are missing, the central idea is to be taken as the immediate sense of the sentence "I drank coffee this morning". If you're in court being accused of stabbing your neighbor, there is no confusion behind what it means that you did or didn't. It doesn't have any obscure meaning, it's to be taken literally and either you did do it or didn't. No juggling words around. This has nothing to do with such a thing as a "scientific view of the world"! It is just the most basic common sense and the only reason why we can understand each other at all when we talk - we agree on what sentences mean! Otherwise we couldn't talk, there would be no difference between History and fiction, poetry and technical texts, and you couldn't follow an instructions manual! Instructions manuals are to be read considering the immediate sense of the words. When people ask "Did Christ literally walk on water?" they mean, and you know it, "did he move by placing one foot in front of the other, in liquid water, while not sinking, contrary to what everyone else's able to do, in the immediate sense of the words, in the same sense that I literally drank coffee this morning and in the same sense people are asked if they stabbed their neighbors in court?". The answer is either "yes" or "no". "There are no neutral events behind the descriptions of the events" is avoiding the question because you're upset the other person is thinking of the story in those terms. Yes or no. You can then add that you believe the stories are not very useful if read considering the immediate sense of the words (literally) but you can't honestly pretend you don't know what you're being asked or that there's no answer for the question. You can say "I beat the crap out of that guy!". That's valid! But if I ask "did you literally beat crap out of him?", the answer is "Obviously no!". You can say "I broke a girl's heart". But if I ask "did you literally break it?", the answer is "Obviously no!". You can say "Christ walked on water". But if I ask "did he literally walk on water", the answer is NOT "You can't access neutral events behind the description of events!" Just because you think of the stories as useful descriptions of reality, like figures of speech and poetry are, you shouldn't refuse to say their meaning is not the immediate sense of the text. Everything else sounds like acrobatics to avoid saying "no, they didn't really happen" (IN THE SENSE THAT EVERYONE AGREES FOR THE WORD "HAPPEN")
@jawz20055 жыл бұрын
Reading through the comments I was quite worried by the responses; seeing yours was a relief. I wonder if he has children? If they see this video he will be in danger.
@hrkellem28485 жыл бұрын
Sorry, didn't read the whole comment, just wanted to say: no one is going to care if you drank a cup of coffee this morning in 2000 years. Security camera or not ;) Terrible example.
@tasfa105 жыл бұрын
@@hrkellem2848 well, I don't know what that has to do with anything, but to engage with you, apparently people do still care if those guys drank wine during that supper 2000 years ago
@cameahgill84645 жыл бұрын
you’re missing the point completely.
@nodakrome5 жыл бұрын
So did Elijah appear before the Messiah came?
@tgenov9 ай бұрын
Much of what is being said here intersects neatly with the work of pragmatist philosophers in the wake of Richard Rorty. Some relevant quotes: There are no privileged descriptions. No description; or interpretation comes closer to reality than any other. Some descriptions are more useful for some purposes than others. No description is true in a vacuum.
@cvetislavstoyanov43675 жыл бұрын
What's your take on the Collective unconscious / elementary ideas (Bastian)?
@AlannaBoudreau5 жыл бұрын
Flannery O'Connor's quip "If it's just a symbol, then to hell with it" (speaking of the Eucharist) always struck me as unintentionally ironic (though I can never know that for certain: I really wish I would ask her directly, "What is it you're really saying, madam?"). I was Catholic for 25+ years but left about two years ago for a number of reasons, one of them being the erratic literalism that's wielded in a triumphalist manner. It often struck me as intellectually and spiritually lazy/arrogant: epiclesis equals hyper-saturation of God, QED, and don't you forget we've got the monopoly on Him. Some Catholics are able to exist within the tension borne out of a mathematical certitude toward the Divine, but for me personally, it felt disingenuous and caused too much cognitive dissonance. Language is symbols. The woman needed symbols & metaphors to express disdain toward symbols & metaphors- to express anything and everything! - as we all do.
@cabal41715 жыл бұрын
I suggest reading his brother's book: Matthew Pageau, The Language of Creation. It provides even more context to what Jonathan says in all his videos; but especially this one.
@Tercel_Champion5 жыл бұрын
One of the most important videos I have ever watched.
@TheScriptureTruth5 жыл бұрын
Jonathan is completely wrong here. There is meaning behind the events and stories in scripture, there are deeper truths and deeper understandings to be found if you only choose to see them. Also, there truly is such a thing as literal meaning in scripture, as there are spiritual and prophetic meanings as well. In fact, a true Bible study reveals that many (most) passages in the scriptures have three valid interpretations: The Literal (the story taken at face value), The Spiritual (The deeper meaning teaching God's Will and God's Way), and the Prophetic (That which is to come). Jonathan used the story of Adam and Eve as an example. The story of Adam and Eve in the Garden is A LOT more than just a simple story of eating an apple and making God mad. In fact, the entire redemption story of Jesus Christ is beautifully told in the story of Adam and Eve and it has all three valid interpretations (literal, spiritual, and prophetic). It is one of the most amazing passages in all of scripture when understood deeper than the simplistic way Jonathan seems to want. The Word of God is not a John Grisham novel, you don't just read it and "enjoy the simple stories" as nothing more than that. The Word of God is exactly that. It is God's Word given directly to us in a supernatural and powerful way, and the fact that stories in the scripture have many different meanings, some literal and most more than literal, is proof of the supernatural nature of its creation.
@lzzrdgrrl73795 жыл бұрын
Does Jordan gets closer to what you have in mind, using Adam end Eve as example?....... kzbin.info/www/bejne/f5fMZn6hjc6aadU Also Jonathan is looking at how the human mind works and how that mind (should) approach scripture, the supernatural and the limitations of our consciousness.......
@thomervin74504 жыл бұрын
I love when people say, "if you only choose to see," as if heathen atheists like me are all of a sudden able to forget their beliefs. lol.
@johnnyd23836 ай бұрын
This is an exaggeration on the side of this Orthodox brother. Two ancient schools of theology: Alexandria and Antioch were originally understood to be using two different exegetic approaches to the Bible interpretation - Alexandria was predominantly symbolic, while Antioch was predominantly literal. Recent analysis revealed that they were much closer in exegetical method than was previously imagined. Both schools stressed the importance of literal interpretation, both allowed that literal interpretation did not exhaust the meaning of the biblical texts. Alexandrians adopted the allegorical (symbolic) techniques of the philosophical schools, whereas the Antiochene reaction was the protest of rhetoric against such a way of handling texts. Both schools were in some respect correct, as Bible is indeed to be interpreted in both ways - symbolic and literal.
@jasonroberts22495 жыл бұрын
This is one of the most mind opening videos I’ve ever watched
@DarrenEllisMusic13 жыл бұрын
literally is pretty much, exactly as described
@maxjamesfashion5 жыл бұрын
Good video, I mean that literally.
@nickyalexa77443 жыл бұрын
I literally believe (almost) every bible story occured. BUT there is dual purpose in every story, and the metaphorical/symbolic meanings are more important, but also require initiation to understand and are harder to master/grasp. For example, Job. I believe he literally lived and went through those described things, BUT the deeper meanings of the story are why it can still be relevant today. Same with Jesus.
@mattclassics3 жыл бұрын
Where in St Maximus should I look for this material?
@brady1575 жыл бұрын
I'm really appreciate these kind of videos, I'm personally not a fan of the pop culture videos.
@gregoryw46625 жыл бұрын
Great to hear your thoughts on this. I am somewhat new to the symbolic worldview and am having trouble describing the difference between symbol and metaphor
@jenesaisvraimentpasquoimet84733 жыл бұрын
I don't really what is the point of the work of Jonathan Pugeau... could you explain me more precisely?😅
@jasonroberts22495 жыл бұрын
A good analogy to think of is binary versus Windows/GUI with respect to computer language. If something is true at the binary level, then it’s also true at the Windows level, including all the innumerable intermediate levels between those two. And if something is false on the binary level then it must be false on the Windows level too. And vice versa. So the question is not whether something is literally or symbolically true: the question is whether the thing is true or false.
@Jim-Mc3 жыл бұрын
I like this. If I understand correctly, one is more foundational than the other. The physical is therefore contingent on the spiritual.
@Evan44844 жыл бұрын
Still needing some clarity on your position. Did the resurrection of Christ's body actually happen in space time or is your position that it doesn't matter? Thanks for the thought provoking videos.
@ciarandudley38005 жыл бұрын
Language is itself already a metaphor in its etymological sense of "metapherein" ‘to transfer’. Logical judgments and syllogisms are (through the copula) transferences of meaning, the fluid determinateness or identified moments of a differentiated concrete essence.
@aryanz66 Жыл бұрын
Thank you, I love Christ and may he help us
@markocms5 жыл бұрын
If you receive communion, the molecules of bread and wine will integrate in your body and blood. So the union is both spiritual and in flesh. No metaphor.
@dennisb16985 жыл бұрын
Literally!
@DryRaven5 жыл бұрын
Jonathan, I have had a problem with your videos recently that distracts me from your content which I greatly enjoy, and makes me personally worried about you as well. When you speak about those who see the world from the dominant cultural perspective, I sense some frustration and anger and impatience, and even some condescension and some laughing/joy/pleasure at their humiliation. It seems to me that people are lost and trying their best to find some anchor from the suffering, and have all sorts of burdens in their lives that prevent them from investing the kind of time you've had to develop a meaningfully different perspective. The position that appears obvious from your eyes was probably once not obvious to you, and certainly is not obvious to those people. I wonder if it might be useful to see if you can find a way to look at folks like the protestants, in such a manner that they don't involuntarily inspire your contempt. Your videos have greatly enriched my life, I just wanted to point you in the direction of what looks like a blind spot from my perspective.
@JonathanPageau5 жыл бұрын
Yes, you have a point. I have an arrogant streak that I need to work to trample down, so thanks for the reminder.
@kristgalitsina3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this comment! It best captures what I try to avoid in my speech and it made me even more aware of the reason for why I shouldn't engage in such patterns of thought.
@alteracco2715 Жыл бұрын
According to this, everyone experiences religious symbolism subjectively depending on the events of one's life, it is like a moral map towards everything that is good for us But this gives rise to a question : Is is the right thing to communicate the end product of the subjective meaning acquired from the divine scripture to other people?
@daisyviluck7932 Жыл бұрын
I would say “yes” because they may have an insight that helps you and vice versa. And if we can take these insights to help other people , that’s good
@davidpfaff98795 жыл бұрын
Good discussion!!
@gk26774 жыл бұрын
I agree with some sceptical comments that it sounds more like a way to say no, of course, nothing described happened in forensic sense or in the sense of the modern historical standards but would anyone care? Just to note that the classical quadriga biblical interpretation included literal dimension along with moral , allegorical etc. It’s certainly more of a scholastic approach which is more popular with the Western Church but I doubt that all Eastern traditions are that mystical and opposed to categories as Johnathan seems to favour And again it seems that Christian story makes very intentionally a very clear historical claim, in a very literal sense so that the risen Lord can be literally seen and touched in our human ,fallen world. Paul keeps insisting that Jesus has risen in a very literal sense - 400 people saw Him, no less and that’s precisely to make the point that ,hey, it’s not just your Greek philosophy and speculation, that’s real thing
@YouTubeComments5 жыл бұрын
so what youre saying is, the resurrection didnt actually happen??? (jkjkjk, but seriously many people will still come away thinking this)
@maxsiehier5 жыл бұрын
What ya mean by "actually"
@oambitiousone71005 жыл бұрын
I'm missing the secret knowledge as this is exactly what I thought. It's the keystone of Christianity, but it won't penetrate my materially-biased mind. I can apply Jonathan's not literal/not metaphor premise to stories like Jonah and the Whale, but the resurrection isn't as easy. The whole faith pivots on accepting that it happened, really and truly. A guy died and came back to life, walked around, talked to his friends, then went away (rose?). Is there a book I can read? Would love to unstick this thistle.
@sunbro69985 жыл бұрын
His brother wrote a book called "The Language of Creation", you can get it on amazon. It is a technical manual on symbolism. I also have a video about it on my channel.
@peteroleary94475 жыл бұрын
@@oambitiousone7100 Christ's disciples, who witnessed His death and _literally_ saw Him afterwards didn't believe. Peter, James, and John - who witnessed the transfiguration of Christ - questioned among themselves what Jesus meant by "risen from the dead". So it's not a question of a guy dying and becoming alive again. These Apostles glimpsed for a moment a reality that transcended their categories, that is seeing someone as He truly is.
@SAR-re1fx5 жыл бұрын
@@peteroleary9447 I always took the resurrection as him accomplishing was he was supposed to do. He entered heaven when he died... Thats it. It might be literal resurrection or symbolic.