Rodriel Gabrez wrote: ↑Thu Sep 25, 2025 3:43 pm Here's a related thread I posted in another forum which relates this topic back to Philosophy of Freedom. I'm not sure if it adds much to what has already been discussed here, but maybe it does. Ashvin provided a few comments in the other forum, so perhaps he'd be interested in transferring those here as well (although no worries if not). I ended the original post with a few quotes from a great work by St. Maximus the Confessor which seemed resonant.
Thanks for sharing it here, Rodriel, I will transfer my response with a few additional considerations.
What you are saying in its broad outlines rings true to me. In fact, I would expand it out to encompass, not just the Peter thinking of the Church, but all sense-derived conceptual expressions of humanity over the preceding centuries. We have to, in some sense, also 'submit to the authority' of the great philosophies, arts, and natural sciences, such that our intellectual faculties are refined and given proper orientation when steering into the supersensible domain. That is indeed a key facet of moral creativity, a skill that we need to learn and optimize on our journey. Yet we need to also be very clear on what we mean, concretely, by 'submit to the authority' and by doing that 'before attempting to deepen into the domain of supersensible perception'?
This topic has basically come up on the 'attaining spiritual sight' thread on the forum as well, among other places, in terms of the 'horizontal' and the 'vertical' vectors of development (and it's interesting to contemplate how this same theme emerges in the most varied forms, which can help sensitize us to shared soul curvatures that shape imaginative content at the surface). I think there is a great temptation in our time to treat these as separate vectors, as if we need to dabble around in sense-based thinking for a long time and establish the spiritual based on various intellectual arguments, before we ascend into the spheres of higher cognition. Yet, as Cleric and I have tried to point toward in many essays and posts (and which is expressed in PoF as well), the vectors have spiraled together through the Christ impulse and now the sense-based thinking only truly serves that Impulse when it becomes simultaneously a means of deepening into the supersensible.
Otherwise, if we don't perceive this overlap between the vectors, there is a great danger of veering off the strait and narrow way, instead 'submitting to authority' as an excuse to indefinitely avoid the supersensible. We shouldn't underestimate the momentum and force of these tempting tendencies within the soul. It is critical to notice that 'submitting to authority' in this way is the default state of the modern human soul. It is what the average person does on a daily basis through their peers, bosses, scientists, celebrities, social media influences, and so on. Even when we start on a spiritual path, we are first inclined to rely heavily on the statements of a priest, guru, initiate, etc. That is how the soul must start its seeking, but it would be a grave mistake to imagine this will propel its momentum into the future. The old functions of such authoritative institutions, which were proper in their respective times, will only grow more decadent in the upcoming years as inner circumstances evolve.
That's why I think we need to become as precise as possible about the true relationship between Peter and John thinking, about what it will practically look like going forward. And it's hard to see that relationship expressed in what normally passes for theological thinking within the Church these days, just as little as we can see it in what comes from natural scientific thinking within the standard institutions. It seems that a major transformation is needed in that respect. The Church teachings should be experienced more consciously as anchor points for exploring the supersensible depths. If they only remain unconscious anchor points, then souls will remain confined to a flattened plane of abstract tokens which are less and less capable of inspiring the moral life. But as you have often mentioned, such a transformation will be highly resisted by the institutions. I was looking for a place to mention this discussion between Pageau and Levin, and it seems to fit quite well here:
On the one hand, it is refreshing to hear someone like Pageau sound a bit of an alarm over the direction of Levin's project, while many others like Vervaeke, Kastrup, Hoffman, and so on, don't push back at all. Yet, on the other hand, we can sense how Pageau has absolutely no convincing way to address what Levin responds about these ethical questions. If we think about it, the only possible way to address these questions is through intimate knowledge of reincarnation and what happens between death and rebirth. When Levin expresses the sorry state of the World today and the extensive suffering, and when he mentions how he hopes future people will look back in astonishment of how we simply accepted the 'random bodies' we were allotted with deformities caused by 'cosmic rays', we can sense how anyone sensible will nod along in agreement unless they have a wider supersensible context into which such facts can be placed. Not just a theoretical framework of reincarnation and karma, which actually may cause even more suspicion of occult science, but a more intuitive feeling for these inner dynamics which can be artistically painted with precise concepts.
Yet that is exactly what we agree the Church will be highly resistant to. So when a modern intellectual soul confronts the astonishing scientific advances of Levin's research, on the one hand, and the uncertain promises of a nebulous afterlife in Heaven, on the other, how exactly will it be inspired to remain faithful to the Spirit and address the pain, suffering, illness, traumas, etc. from within? Will such promises still serve the same function in the modern soul that it did for souls many centuries ago, allowing it to weather the storms of materialistic life? I think the answer is clearly, no. So it seems to me that the Church can only hold open the portal to the supersensible for the intellectual soul if its finds a way to integrate such deeper knowledge, rather than to fiercely resist it as it does now. I am definitely curious to hear any further thoughts you have on this topic.