I have spent the last several weeks reading almost nothing but Augustine, and today his basic approach finally clicked for me: He just wanted to understand what he already believed. He looked at the dogmas of the faith, the liturgical rites, and the tradition he'd received from his predecessors and - rather than simply believing with no investigation - wanted to construct an intellectual understanding that made his beliefs make sense.
I know this poster is not here to reply, but I figure I'll go off his post to start a conversation. I see from earlier that Augustine is his patron Saint. It makes sense he would be interested in original sin as well.
I do understand Augustine's sentiment, but this is where I think things can go off the rails. ie, rationally trying to make everything fit into a box. Obviously I think it's fine to use our intellect, but, especially now, there's a fine thing line in that there can be a need for control that is driving inquiry. At this point in history, in our "science world", where now we are trying to build systems to encompass everything, this has grown to outsized proportions.
He took the entirety of the faith as true and truly God-inspired, believing it with his whole heart, and wanted to understand it as well with his whole mind - to whatever small degree that's actually possible for our limited rationality. I think this is one of the things that made him such a rarity not just in the Christian world, but in the history of mankind as a whole.
If he recognized the limitations of our rationality to grasp the ineffible, then yes, that indeed makes him unique. It's the general trend in the mindset of later people that extrapolated to an over-systematic approach.
Also, I guess this is where neo-platonism overlaps. My understanding is that one of its central tenants was that the source of reality transcends being and thought and is naturally unknowable. It seems that's partially true. But we Christians are aware of this wonderful thing where we can know Christ deeply, but at the same time recognize that the depth of God is unknowable, beyond, infinite, etc.
don't think just the fact that a line of thought had been inspired by Platonism means it's inherently heretical. I think there can be a distinction drawn from the proper and improper use of this philosophy.
What are we talking about that is distinctive about Platonism? I contend that Plato's mindset was held, at least in part, by other ancient people as well. In particular I think people worked with the idea that the spiritual and material were much more connected than we normally do today. And by that I mean all things that are immaterial were basically acknowledged as spiritual. So, Plato was working from that. In particular when he's working through the forms. Essentially saying something like a chair has a more real counterpart, or form, behind it. Now-a-days we think the concept is just a general construct of our mind. Almost all ancient people did not think this way, however.
Embedded within Neo-Platonism is this idea of emanationism. This is the idea that God emanates outward, and that the only way to get back to "the Source" is to ascend through the gradations and ranks to get back to it. In other words, it is a denial of the direct access that we have to God as in the New Testament.
We talked about this in another thread. Doesn't emanation also deny God is sentient?