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O Felix Culpa

In other discussions with Christians here (discussions?.....๐Ÿ˜€ ) I have spoken of Christianity having a greater breadth, width and depth than their own Protestant Reform theologies appear to suggest. This met with the usual nonsense.

Rather than debate with them, I thought I would mention the "O Felix Culpa" of the Catholic Church, but understood more deeply in the great Eastern Orthodox Tradition.

[i]Felix culpa is a Latin phrase that comes from the words felix, meaning "happy," "lucky," or "blessed" and culpa, meaning "fault" or "fall". In the Catholic tradition, the phrase is most often translated "happy fault", as in the Catholic Exsultet. Other translations include "blessed fall" or "fortunate fall"[/i]

The fall (obviously mythic.....who on earth actually "fell"...Cro magnon man? Neanderthal Man?) understood not as a shocking rebellion against God but as something offering blessings. Another image of God evolves.

Think about it or not. It is our choice.

Just to add, one book I am now dipping into is on the artistic depictions of the Resurrection in the first millennium. There were two sorts. One, Christ is shown alone, rising in glory. In others, He rises hand in hand with Adam, with Eve, with All. The former became part of the iconography of the West, the latter of the Eastern Church.

As I see it, the consequences are fairly obvious.
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Moving on, implications of the "O Felix Culpa" as found throughout the Christian Faith.

That the "knowledge of good and evil" is in fact a necessity. This if finite creatures are to eventually return to the Source - the Source as the origin of all opposites.

A return to "innocence", but not the innocence of the unaware child. More returning to the beginning and [i]knowing it for the first time[/i] having passed through the fire.

There is a genuine Theodicy here but that is not really my interest.

All this is, to use the phrase of another, "interesting shit" to me.

The finest exploration of all the themes involved is found for me in the dialogue between Thomas Merton and D.T. Suzuki, "Wisdom in Empiness" contained as Part 2 of Merton's book of essays, "Zen and the Birds of Appetite".