T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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293.1 | A Penny Saved is a Penelope bound for Glory!! | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace on it | Wed Aug 21 1991 21:30 | 4 |
| It sounds like it's one of those Poor Richard quotes from Ben Franklin.
Peace,
Richard
|
293.2 | source | MEMORY::ANDREWS | into the black West went | Thu Aug 22 1991 10:15 | 8 |
|
Richard has it correct..
this quote is from "Poor Richard's Almanac" June, 1736..
...was this really worth a topic unto itself, Sweeney?
peter
|
293.3 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Thu Aug 22 1991 11:02 | 6 |
| Peter
Why not a topic unto itself? and was it necessary to be rude
to Pat?
Bonnie
|
293.4 | How'd he come up with that? | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Thu Aug 22 1991 12:12 | 4 |
| I'd be curious to know how Ben Franklin came to this conclusion.
From what I understand, like most of the Founding Fathers of America,
he was a Deist. This might have something to do with it.
|
293.5 | | MEMORY::ANDREWS | into the black West went | Thu Aug 22 1991 12:40 | 16 |
| bonnie,
the base note asks a question which has a simple answer. the entire
topic could be complete with the base note and one reply. if Pat
wished to discuss the quote and what the members might think of it,
then i could easily understand creating a new topic. since that is
not what he apparently intended then why not either create a "nerd
call" topic under which all manner of questions might be asked or
perhaps (although it wouldn't fit very well) put the question into
the Quotes topic.
thanks for calling me rude...i really needed that
peter
|
293.6 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Thu Aug 22 1991 12:58 | 8 |
| Peter
It appeared from the way you wrote your note, that you had
an additional adgenda with Pat that went beyond the actual
content of the note. I was attempting to point out how your
note could have sounded to another person.
Bonnie
|
293.7 | | MEMORY::ANDREWS | into the black West went | Thu Aug 22 1991 13:31 | 11 |
| bonnie,
if you were attempting to point out how my note might have been
perceived perhaps that is what you should have written instead
of characterizing me as you did.
i took the time and effort to verify and answer Pat's question fully
and completely. i could also question whether or not you have an
additional agenda beyond your replies.
peter
|
293.8 | a reasonable topic | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Thu Aug 22 1991 14:09 | 22 |
| I actually think that this question is good enough to spark
off an entire topic (but NOT a topic on noting manners,
IMHO!).
This quote is part of the religious background of the US. It
affects and reflects how we think about the relationship
between God and our everyday lives.
I've often suspected that this quote of Franklin's was
actually expressing skepticism about God's intervention in
human affairs. It is somewhat like saying: "God and 25
cents will buy you a cup of coffee." (Which, in earlier days
of less inflation, would be saying that God contributes
nothing. -- You think that God is helping you, but in fact it
is your own efforts that are accomplishing all the work.)
Of course, this quote is more usually directed at people as a
criticism, telling the listener to get off their seat and get
to work, rather than sit around and let God take care of
things.
Bob
|
293.9 | Total dependence on God | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Thu Aug 22 1991 14:40 | 14 |
| Thanks, I didn't think it was in the Bible, and I wanted to establish
that before proceeding with a discussion.
Self-help and totally placing one's life in the hands of the Lord seem
to be contradictory.
The phrase, in my mind has many uses: directed at someone who isn't
doing anything but expects the Lord's help.
Or as a defense of one's Christianity from some who says that they are
consumed with ambition and ignoring God.
I'd also like to speculate that the author of the phrase isn't entirely
comfortable with the idea that in God all trust is to be placed.
|
293.10 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Fri Aug 23 1991 12:21 | 5 |
| Peter,
I appologise for the poor wording of my reply.
Bonnie
|
293.11 | No one even has to ask! | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace on it | Fri Aug 23 1991 22:48 | 5 |
| Franklin's proverb has come in handy in justifying a second slice of
pie for dessert...I just go ahead and help myself to it! ;-}
Piece,
Richard
|
293.12 | Fiat Voluntatis Tua | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Sat Aug 24 1991 00:53 | 12 |
| I'm not sure why this note is being thrashed, but let me revise and
extend my remarks.
We don't approach God proudly and say, through my own power, I have
merited salvation. Why did Christ die on the cross if we had the power
to save ourselves all along?
How is the act of "helping" ourselves reconciled to the Christian ideal
of "thy will be done".
What was Franklin's theology? "Let my will be done, and God, make it
so"?
|
293.13 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace on it | Sat Aug 24 1991 16:31 | 20 |
| Patrick,
My apologies for my levity in commenting on Franklin's proverb.
I think this is, in some measure, one of those seemingly paradoxical bits
of folk wisdom that have burrowed their way into our culture, such as,
on the one hand:
Haste makes waste (meaning do not hurry)
And on the other hand:
He who hesitates is lost (meaning you'd better hurry up)
Personally, I realize my own complete dependancy upon the Sovereign.
At the same time, I am aware of a deep and holy responsibility to take an
active - rather than a passive - role in serving as an instrument of Divine
will.
Peace,
Richard
|
293.14 | | DEMING::SILVA | Ahn eyu ahn | Sat Aug 24 1991 18:38 | 35 |
|
| Self-help and totally placing one's life in the hands of the Lord seem
| to be contradictory.
| The phrase, in my mind has many uses: directed at someone who isn't
| doing anything but expects the Lord's help.
This is just my opinion, but I feel that God will help us if we ask for
it, but I also don't feel in cases where we could do something about it, and
don't, isn't right. By this I mean maybe by trying to get out of it, as long as
we remember that by trying, God is there helping us. I'll give an example of
this.
I have been looking for an apartment to live in. I have looked and
looked, and asked God to help me find a place that would be best suited for me.
I gave no specifics, just let Him do the work. Now, I went out and looked,
thought several apartments were right for me, but none of the ones "I" thought
were good for me panned through. Then I did find one that would be ok, but
there were a couple of things about it that bothered me. One was the person
living there had a cat that used furniture as a scratching post, and he smoked.
But, where as nothing else panned out, I felt this is where God felt it would
be best. But, I kept looking up until the deadline, the 12th hour. I had just
gotten back from looking at studios, and I had the realtor drop me off at the
corner, instead of at my house. I walked across the street and ran into a
friend of mine. We started talking. It came out that he was looking for a
roomate, where there was no last or security deposit required, he knows the
landlords personally, and was within my price range. So, I took it. But, if I
didn't keep looking, it never would have happened. Again, this is just my
opinion, but I strongly feel as though God wants us to trust in Him, but also
doesn't want us to become lazy and just sit back and let Him take care of us.
This I feel is taking advantage of a good thing. How do others feel?
Glen
|
293.15 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Shower Power | Sat Aug 24 1991 19:18 | 7 |
| Glen,
You expressed and illustrated my understanding of this little
phrase *very* well.
thanks,
Karen
|
293.16 | Talents should be built upon and used. | CHEFS::PICKERINGB | W/W Services | Wed Aug 28 1991 04:43 | 15 |
| I agree with Glen. God gives us free will. I do not believe He wants
me to make no use of the talents He has given me. He wants me to do
everything I can, to the best of my ability and to channel this
activity to His Glory. So therefore, whatever I think is appropriate
to what I believe He wants, is what I do in order to fulfil His
purposes for me.
It may be different for others, Contemplative Orders for example, but
that's what I believe He wants me to do. This I see as helping Him to
help me.
Love,
Brian.
|
293.17 | | DEMING::VALENZA | It ain't over til the noter sings. | Wed Aug 28 1991 13:35 | 56 |
| Terrible things *do* happen in the world, to us and to other people.
The sun shines and the rain falls on the good and the evil alike, does
it not? While it may be comforting to believe otherwise, not
everything that ever happens to us or to others is necessarily "for the
best". To assume that God is always working behind the scenes to
manipulate the outcome of everything that happens is not consistent at
all with the view that humans have free will. It is also not
consistent with reality, unless you want to claim that, for example,
the Nazi holocaust was ultimately for the best, ultimately served God's
will in some way we don't understand, and was ultimately willed by God.
As we all know, short term benefits or harm may not coincide with an
ultimate, higher benefit, so this view isn't at all simplistic, but I
think that the magnitude of certain atrocities (like the holocaust)
really stretch that argument a great deal.
There are two different kinds of theodicy here that just don't
coincide. One view explains the existence of evil in the world by
saying that we have free will, and thus are free to sin against God and
against other human beings. Another view claims that God intervenes in
nature and in the world to manipulate the outcome of events in some way
that is ultimately for the best--in other words, what we think is evil
only *seems* to be evil. Those two views attempt to solve the problem
of evil in opposite, and I believe contradictory, ways. Do we have
free will or don't we? The problem of evil will not go away as long as
you believe in a God who controls the world behind the scenes.
One variant on the view that God does manipulate the world is to assume
that bad things happen to people because they lack faith, or because
they haven't prayed often enough or hard enough. This view holds that
God can be finagled to manipulate the world around us, to our ultimate
benefit, if we just pull the right strings. This turns the issue of
helping ourselves back onto our own shoulders. It then becomes *our*
responsibility to help ourselves by asking for God's help in the right
way. This does not coincide with my own view of either God or the
world, however.
I believe that we can (and should) turn to God for guidance, but we
also have to accept the fact that the world doesn't always match our
expectations (or God's will) of how it should be. And it is up to us,
as free creatures, to take responsibility for our actions and pursue
the building of a more just world. This means that we can't rely on
God to serve as a deux ex machina who will intervene in some mysterious
way such that we will get bailed out of every unpleasant situation.
Sometimes our lives can crumble under the strain of the world's
pressures; sometimes what we wish for doesn't happen; sometimes things
are not for the best.
I therefore believe that we have to do what we can, with God's
guidance, to make the world a better place. We can do so, recognizes
that God shares in our sorrows and suffers with us when we suffer,
because God's sympathy and compassion knows no bounds. But we cannot
rely on God's guidance by sitting in a corner somewhere and waiting for
it all to happen. We have to make it happen, or at least try to make
it happen. That is all that God can ask for us to do.
-- Mike
|
293.18 | "the problem of evil"? | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Aug 28 1991 15:57 | 52 |
| re Note 293.17 by DEMING::VALENZA:
> To assume that God is always working behind the scenes to
> manipulate the outcome of everything that happens is not consistent at
> all with the view that humans have free will.
I do not assume that "God is manipulating everything for
good", yet I do believe that God works (as we all should) to
bring about good in the midst of and following bad
circumstances. Romans 8:28 states: "And we know that all
things work together for good to them that love God...."
Does this mean that each and every thing, good, bad, and
terrible, is willed by God? I don't think so. Does this
mean that every thing produces some good result in and of
itself? It doesn't seem to be saying that. Or does it mean
that taken together, not separately, "all things" work for
good?
(I think it's a separate argument to say, "Hey, God's real
powerful, right? If God is so concerned about good outcomes,
why doesn't God prevent the really bad things, like the
holocaust, instead of trying to fix things up afterward?" I
don't have a completely satisfying answer to that one, but I
suspect it has something to do with human free will.)
> Another view claims that God intervenes in
> nature and in the world to manipulate the outcome of events in some way
> that is ultimately for the best--in other words, what we think is evil
> only *seems* to be evil.
I don't think that the premise warrants the conclusion. Even
if God (and human beings) are involved in fixing up the
outcomes of events, it doesn't follow that what seemed like
an evil event is really good. Evil remains evil, but good
followed for reasons other than the evil itself.
> Those two views attempt to solve the problem
> of evil in opposite, and I believe contradictory, ways. Do we have
> free will or don't we? The problem of evil will not go away as long as
> you believe in a God who controls the world behind the scenes.
Mike, perhaps a dumb question: what is "The problem of
evil"? I've seen this phrase so often, yet I'm never sure
what kind of answer is expected. Is it like a math problem,
work it out and out comes the answer? Is it like a problem
with a car, find the right answer and the problem is gone?
Do the people who ask about "the problem of evil" expect evil
to disappear if only we have the right solution?
Bob
|
293.19 | | DEMING::VALENZA | It ain't over til the noter sings. | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:45 | 74 |
| Bob,
I think the "problem of evil" is of a philosophical nature. It isn't
concerned with eliminating evil, but with explaining how we can have
evil in the world if God is both benevolent and omnipotent. We are
told that an omnipotent God intervenes in the world, and yet evil
clearly exists. Tackling "the problem of evil" involves trying to
provide an answer to this question.
The "problem of evil" was a serious reason why I rejected belief in God
for a long time. When I eventually came to believe in God again, it
was only because I rejected the premises that were at the heart of my
original objection to a belief in God--in particularly, the premise of
divine omnipotence (at least as it is usually conceived). We are told
that, on the one hand, God brings about good in the world through His
divine intervention, and yet this same omnipotent God refrains from
intervening all the time, and certainly not in *every* case in which
evil occurs. The reality of the world is that evil exists. And some
people seem to believe that by praying to God, we can finagle Him to
intervene on our behalf when He would otherwise not have done so. I
don't agree with either of those conceptions of God.
What I had in mind by saying that God is assumed to be "manipulating
everything for good" is that if God is omniscient and omnipotent, then
every decision either to intervene or not to intervene in the world
must be based on whatever is best for the world. The decision *not* to
act in the world, by an omniscient and omnipotent being, is still a
decision. It's sort of like the song says, when you've decided not to
choose, you've still made a choice. This is all the more true in the
case of God. I was particularly thinking of Leibnitz's "Best of all
possible worlds" theory, which was how he tried to answer the problem
of evil.
I think you are correct that short-term evils can still be "evil", and
yet produce a higher good. On the other hand, it is possible to argue
that some short term evils may only "seem" to be evil when they
ultimately produce a higher good. For example, one could argue that
suffering builds character. Certainly, in some instances it does build
character, but I don't think it is in any way accurate to claim that it
always does so. Some evil seems to be completely senseless, and only
leads to more evil. In any case, if you accept the view that all
apparent evils are really for the best, then it seems to me that you
have to believe God is ultimately responsible for *everything* that
happens in the world, either by intervening when necessary, or choosing
not to intervene when the best possible result is occurring naturally.
This concept of "intervening" seems (to me, anyway) to emphasize God's
transcendance. My take on the problem of evil is based on the views of
process theology. I view God's role as being one of influence rather
than control. He acts as a divine lure, who creatively interacts with
each occasion of experience by offering the relevant possibilities.
Each occasion, however, is only partly determined by its "actual world"
(to use a term from Whitehead), which consists of past events as well
as God's presentation of possibilities. Process thought thus views God
as the source of novelty, but not the sole determiner of novel
outcomes. God influences, but does not control, according to process
thought. God, through his/her creative influence, has lured creation
to ever greater levels of complexity of experience, over billions of
years, and this has lead to the evolution of consciousness, and in
particular human consciousness. The higher degrees of complexity of
experience carry with them the *possibility* of evil; this is an
inherent aspect of the world as we know it. The possibility of evil is
a necessary part of this experience, though evil itself is not. The
possibility of evil is the price that we pay for living meaningful
lives. As free creatures, we have the responsibility to work to stop
evil through our free choices.
My view is that God therefore works through creation, who creatively
participates in the world, who offers novelty. I don't view God as
acting by manipulating the world whenever desired in order to bring out
some desired outcome. I do think that the problem of evil is a serious
one if you believe that God does intervene in the world.
-- Mike
|
293.20 | nature, or choice? | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Aug 28 1991 17:19 | 32 |
| re Note 293.19 by DEMING::VALENZA:
> I think you are correct that short-term evils can still be "evil", and
> yet produce a higher good.
I thought that I explicitly stated that evils don't produce
goods -- higher or otherwise. That was one of my main
points. On the other hand, I suggested that given that an
evil has occurred (or is occurring), God (or a human -- I
don't see much fundamental difference between humans working
for good and God working for good) can make a decision and
take action to bring about good from the circumstances at
hand.
The only difference is that it would seem to us that a
prescient God could have foreseen the evil and prevented it.
> My view is that God therefore works through creation, who creatively
> participates in the world, who offers novelty. I don't view God as
> acting by manipulating the world whenever desired in order to bring out
> some desired outcome. I do think that the problem of evil is a serious
> one if you believe that God does intervene in the world.
I am probably not that far from your position as it may at
first seem. I don't view God as "acting by manipulating the
world whenever desired in order to bring out some desired
outcome" any more than humans do. We both have our limits;
ours may be due to our nature, God's may be due to nature or
choice.
Bob
|
293.21 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Glasnote. | Thu Sep 05 1991 16:12 | 73 |
| In "The Brothers Karamazov", there is a scene where Dmitri confesses his
recent bad fortune to his brother Alyosha. It seems that he has been
openly cheating on the woman his engaged to, and even stole 3000 rubles
that his fiance entrusted to him. In his preface to this confession, he
philosophizes on why has he did these things.
Much like his father, he seems to feel compelled to live out a role. In
fact, one of the interesting things about this novel is that many of the
characters in the novel are caught up in their respective roles; the
father, Fyodor Karamazov, plays the buffoon, for example. One of the
problems with living out a role, doing things because that is what the
role demands, that the actor seems to be absolving himself from any
moral responsibility for his actions. Dmitri Karamazov tells his
brother how he, in assuming his role, has debased himself:
"I go on and I don't know whether I'm going into darkness or to
light and joy. That's the trouble. Everything in the world is a
riddle! And whenever I've happened to sink into the vilest
degradation (and it's always been happening) I always read that
poem about Ceres and man. Has it reformed me? Never! For I am a
Karamazov. For when I do leap into the pit, I go headlong with my
heels up, and I am pleased to be falling and pride myself on it.
And in the very depths of that degradation I begin a hymn of praise.
Let me be accursed. Let me be vile and base, only let me kiss the
hem of the veil in which my God is shrouded. Though I may be
following the devil, I am Thy son, O Lord, and I love Thee."
He is not doing these things because they make him happy. The woman
he is cheating on is a good person; the other woman, Grushenka, is
much less principled. He admits this at one point, resigning himself to
the fate that his role has commanded. When he marries Grushenka, he
will simply accept what happens: "I'll be her husband if she will have
me, and when lovers come, I'll go into the next room. I'll clean her
friends' galoshes, light their samovar, run their errands."
Perhaps living out a role helps to solve the dilemmas that we are faced
with, when decisions would otherwise become difficult. Later in the
same scene, Dmitri repeats his complaint: "God sets before us nothing
but riddles."
I am not an educated nor cultured man, Alyosha, but I've thought a
lot about this. It's terrible what mysteries there are! Too many
riddles weigh men down on earth. We must solve them as we can, and
try to keep a dry skin in the water.
Having gotten himself into hot water, Dmitri now wants Alyosha to help
him. Regarding the 3000 rubles that he owes his fiance, he asks
Alyosha to convince their father (who Dmitri despises) to provide him
that amount as a gift. More importantly, both he and Alyosha turn to
God for help. Alyosha says, "I believe that God will order things for
the best, that nothing awful will happen." Dmitri responds, "And I
will sit and wait for the miracle." Dmitri adds an implication,
however, that if the miracle doesn't happen, he may play his role
again, this time resorting to a drastic measure that is nevertheless
consistent with the character he is assuming--murder.
I think this incident in Dostoyevsky's novel (which I am currently
reading, and still have a long way to go before I finish) bears
directly on this discussion. Dmitri was playing a role rather than
taking responsibility for his actions, and then waiting for God to bail
him out. Alyosha, the monk, is deeply religious, and certainly places
his trust in God to resolve everything for the best. Herein lies the
problem, as I see it. Rather than expecting God to bail him out, it
seems to me that it would have been better for Dmitri to have acted
responsibly and morally from the beginning, and to thus accept the
consequences, whatever they might be, knowing that he did the best that
he could. This comes with recognizing that it is his responsibility to
take action as necessary, and thereby to act responsibly. This,
instead of simply relying on God to determine the outcome and hope that
all will turn out for the best, seems to me to be a prime example of
"the Lord helping those who help themselves."
-- Mike
|