Page 24 - C.A.L.L. #36 - Summer 2013
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Another example – almost a counter-example, yet nevertheless equally revealing – is the
ultimate concern with “success” and with social standing and economic power. It is the
god of many people in the highly competitive Western culture and it does what every
ultimate concern must do: demand unconditional surrender to its laws even if the price
is the sacrifice of genuine human relations, personal conviction, and creative eros. Its
threat is social and economic defeat, and its promise – indefinite as all such promises –
the fulfillment of one’s being. …
Faith is the state of being ultimately concerned. The content matters infinitely for the
life of the believer, but it does not matter for formal definitions of faith… (From pp. 1–4)
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…In the act of faith that which is the source of this act is present beyond the cleavage
of subject and object. It is present as both and beyond both.
This character of faith gives an additional criterion for distinguishing true and false
ultimacy. The finite which claims infinity without having it (as, e.g., a nation or success)
is not able to transcend the subject-object scheme. It remains an object which the
believer looks at as a subject. He can approach it with ordinary knowledge and subject
it to ordinary handling. There are, of course, many degrees in the endless realm of
false ultimacies. The nation is nearer to true ultimacy than is success. Nationalistic
ecstasy can produce a state in which the subject is almost swallowed by the object. But
after a period the subject emerges again disappointed radically and totally, and by
looking at the nation in a skeptical and calculating way does injustice even to its
justified claims. The more idolatrous a faith the less it is able to overcome the
cleavage between subject and object. For that is the difference between true and
idolatrous faith. In true faith the ultimate concern is a concern about the truly
ultimate; while in idolatrous faith preliminary, finite realities are elevated to the rank
of ultimacy. The inescapable consequence of idolatrous faith is “existential
disappointment,” a disappointment which penetrates into the very existence of man!
(From pp. 11-12)
*
A.D. Gordon (1856 – 1922)
The Here and Now Which is “Life Eternal*– Not a Sacrifice, (1911)
Insofar as I have not yet experienced a change in my purpose for living, there is no
reason for me to seek a new life, for I wll not find it. A new life is first and foremost a
new purpose for living. This idea is very simple and yet despite this it is no wonder that
many people do not understand it and consider it to be a strange idea. They say that it
is up to the individual who works to clarify for himself what it is that he wants – if he
wants to work and live by/for himself , or if he wants to work and live so that others
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