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God the Father - "The soul can only enter the Sixth Chamber through the surrender of his own will - This means no unforgiveness, no jealousy, no anger, no selfishness whatsoever - The soul is completely devoted to obedience to My Commandments"
God the Father – “The soul can only enter the Sixth Chamber through the surrender of his own will – This means no unforgiveness, no jealousy, no anger, no selfishness whatsoever – The soul is completely devoted to obedience to My Commandments”
Holy Love Ministrieshttps://www.holylove.org September 5, 2021 Once again, I (Maureen) see a Great Flame that I have come to know as the Heart of God the Father. He says: “It is a special grace to be able to love My Will even in the midst of adversity. Such a soul is in the Sixth Chamber* of the United Hearts.** Few there are who abide there. These are the souls who – through grace – have been…
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Faust Bargain
Walking through life with the soul of a merchant.
Most interpretations focus on the bargain with the devil, knowledge, ambition, desire, modernity, or the limits of human striving. But what lies underneath all of those themes?
Faust assumes that existence is negotiable. The entire drama is built around the idea that there is something to gain, something to lose, something to exchange, and some power with which an exchange can be made. Whether that power is God, Mephistopheles, fate, destiny, knowledge, or fulfillment, the structure remains the same. Psychologically, Faust never abandons the conviction that reality must contain a hidden transaction.
"If I do this, I will get that."
"If I acquire enough knowledge, I will finally arrive."
"If I experience enough, I will finally be satisfied."
"If I reach the right state, the account will be settled."
In that sense, Faust is not merely a story about a pact with the devil. It is a story about the human inability to stop bargaining. Even when Faust rejects one object of desire, he immediately pursues another. Knowledge fails, so he seeks pleasure. Pleasure fails, so he seeks power. Power fails, so he seeks achievement. Achievement fails, so he seeks legacy. The form changes, but the structure remains. The deeper assumption is that somewhere ahead lies the thing that will justify everything.
The author and the audience often share the same hidden premise. They may disagree about what Faust should seek, but they rarely question whether seeking itself is based on a bargain. The psychological contract remains intact. What if there is no final exchange? Existence is not withholding fulfillment until the correct conditions are met? Reality is not a merchant? There is no counterparty sitting across the table? Then the entire Faustian structure begins to look different. The drama is no longer that Faust makes the wrong bargain but that he cannot stop bargaining.
Viewed this way, Faust becomes a archetype of many religious seekers, political revolutionaries, self-improvement enthusiasts, and even philosophers. They differ in content, but they often share the same structure. They believe reality contains a hidden door. If only they find the right key, fulfillment will arrive. If only they become wise enough, moral enough, successful enough, conscious enough, enlightened enough, loved enough, productive enough, then the account will finally balance. The bargain persists.
This is why the point about expecting nothing from the universe is more radical than it first appears. It is not merely atheism. Many atheists still bargain. It is not merely skepticism. Many skeptics still bargain. It is the abandonment of the transaction itself. In a strange way, that places you outside not only religion but also much of philosophy and spirituality. A large portion of both traditions is devoted to finding the correct terms of exchange between oneself and reality.
Faust is one of the greatest literary expressions of that impulse. The devil in the story is not merely Mephistopheles. The deeper devil may be the conviction that somewhere there must be a deal to be made. From that perspective, the most radical figure would not be the one who refuses the devil's offer. It would be the one who no longer believes there is anyone on the other side of the negotiating table. That person does not win the bargain. They walk away from the marketplace altogether.
Perhaps that is why such a position feels so rare. Human beings seem remarkably willing to give up almost anything except the hope that existence can somehow be persuaded to deliver what they want. This shows that we prefer to live in hope rather than have a final answer that does not exist. Any belief in something, because that's what it consists of, is self-abnegation and infantilism, but maybe the only maneuver to survive at all. The dream of negotiation survives gods, ideologies, and centuries of disappointment. It may be one of our deepest psychological habits and a veiled survival mechanism .
Scientific Self-Abnegation
My Scientific Station and Its Duties
The institutions of civil society are greater than the individual in the sense that most (not all) institutions endure for longer than the individual life, they maintain relationships with a greater number of individuals than any given individual, they touch upon a greater variety of lives and circumstances, and they are more widely distributed in space than is any individual. Whether it be an institution of science (a scientific research program, a discipline, or the lineage of an idea), of learning and education (i.e., a school or university), of literature (poetry, the novel, etc.), of social or political order (some nation-state, or even a political institution that transcends the nation-state, such as those monarchies that have survived into the age of nation-states), these institutions represent the cumulative contributions of many individuals over the longue dureé of history, and so draw upon orders of magnitude more experience than any one individual can command.
The individual, in virtue of being a biological being, is, by birth, part of an institution—viz. the family—that transcends the individual, and the family is part of a community that transcends both the individual and the family. By using “transcends” in this context I am not attempting to smuggle in a valuation; I am not arguing that an institution, in virtue of being an institution, is better than, or superior to, or in any sense preferable to, an individual; I am only asserting that institutions are greater than individuals in the sense described in the above paragraph.
Given the inherited resources at the command of an institution—being the work of many minds over a period of hundreds or possibly even thousands of years—no individual is as sophisticated as some institution to which the individual might hope to make a contribution. The individual may have novel insights or unique experiences not yet integrated into the institution, and these insights and experiences may be assimilated by the institution, which is thereby enriched by the individual. However, sophistication does not derive from any one insight or experience, but rather from collective and organized experience that allows us to contextualize any one insight or experience by comparison and contrast with peer insights and experiences, which may supplement or check, may expand or limit, individual insight or experience.
No individual today can even approach a comprehensive grasp of human knowledge, so that one’s only hope of making an enduring contribution to a discipline is through specialization in a disciplinary silo. Each and every one of us works piecemeal on an edifice of human knowledge that is far greater than any one individual, and so transcends any one individual in a way that no individual can attain.
Let us focus on the institution of science in relation to the individual scientist, who hopes to make a valuable and lasting contribution to a scientific discipline and to scientific knowledge: in order to make such a contribution, the scientist must subordinate himself to the scientific institutions such as they are. The more he subordinates himself, the greater his contribution can be, since his effort and energy is channeled into achievements defined by the discipline and not by the individual. And it is the disciplinary structure of knowledge that is the measure by which we track the growth of human knowledge.
The ontogeny of the individual does not coincide with the phylogeny of the discipline. And though the individual must pass through a developmental process in order to arrive at the point at which they are capable of making a contribution to the development of the discipline as that discipline stands in his time, the discipline is unaware of and unconcerned with the individual development of those who contribute to its phylogenetic development.
In so far as the individual remains an individual, and wants to do justice to their own development as an individual human being, they will need to pass through all the stages of human development, and experience for themselves all of the errors that are part and parcel of the developmental process. But the institution need make no concessions to personal desires or the need to recapitulate a developmental process that has already been repeated with tiresome familiarity millions upon millions of times over. The institutions of knowledge gain the most when all individual development is placed to one side—bracketed, as Husserl would have it—and all development is focused on the state of the discipline as it is in the present, and not upon the individual and their needs for development.
If an individual wishes their contribution to science to be a personal contribution, and to carry with it the mark of their “distinctive” (read: human, all-too-human) personality, this individuality can only come at the cost of an admixture of highly sophisticated science alongside basic errors from the individual’s developmental process. In the case of science, this means making juvenile philosophical errors that philosophers would recognize immediately, and, in the case of philosophy, it means making juvenile scientific errors that scientists would recognize immediately. The interpolation of the individual and the personal into this transcendent body of scientific knowledge can only render this body of knowledge less perfect than if the individual and the personal were entirely excluded.
The scientist, in order to make a contribution, must utterly and completely subordinate himself to the institution of science, if not abase himself, and the more completely he subordinates himself, the more likely his contribution is to be of enduring value. As an individual, he has almost nothing to offer the institution of knowledge. This disciplinary subordination would constitute an act of scientific self-abnegation, completely surrendering one’s individuality to the institution that is more comprehensive and more sophisticated than any individual experience could ever be.
Only as a scientist who has fully embraced F. H. Bradley’s vision of My Station and Its Duties can the individual make a contribution to scientific knowledge by meticulously carrying out the duties of his station as a scientist and fulfilling that role as a role and not as an individual with a personal and private life understood to be intrinsically valuable in its own right. In his social role as a scientist, the scientist can contribute to scientific knowledge; in his role as sovereign individual, he has nothing to contribute to scientific knowledge. These two faces of the individual are disjoint as they relate to the production of knowledge.
Absolute powerlessness
In the end we are faced with the awesome paradox of Christian faith that defies human definitions of power. In Jesus’s apparent absolute powerlessness on the cross, indeed the complete self-abnegation of Jesus on the cross, God has radically overturned all human notions of power. Out of weakness comes strength; out of powerlessness comes power; out of death comes resurrection, life. This is part…
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categorized under the heading compromise
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