少点错误 2024年09月24日
In Praise of the Beatitudes
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文章探讨了作者对基督教的看法及对《圣经》中八福的解读,认为其表达了重要的道德观念,且具有普遍意义。

🎯《圣经》中的八福是耶稣对基督教道德概念的总结。如‘虚心的人有福了’,强调不要看重物质和地位象征,教皇方济各的行为是其体现。

💔‘哀恸的人有福了’,我们应珍视已逝去的事物,包括逝去的人、思想、建筑等,意识到美好事物的消逝。

🙇‍♂️‘温柔的人有福了’,要保持谦逊,认识到自己常可能犯错,有些自认为会让世界变好的行为实际可能会使情况更糟。

Published on September 24, 2024 5:08 AM GMT

I’m not Christian now, but I used to be. I parted ways with Christianity because I came to identify as more of an Empiricist - believing that knowledge should come from experiment and observation, not writings in old sacred texts.

But some of the writing in those old sacred texts is actually really good.

The King James Bible contains roughly 770,000 words, including a lot of different books written by different people at different times saying different things. However, the writings in the Bible are not equally important, and there is broad agreement (at least among mainline Protestants) about which parts are the most important:

The New Testament outranks the Old Testament. The Gospels outrank the rest of the New Testament (hence the phrase “Gospel Truth”). The words of Jesus outrank other material in the Gospels. The Sermon on the Mount outranks the other words of Jesus. The Beatitudes are the most important part of the Sermon on the Mount. If someone comes at you with a quote from St Paul, and you counter with a quote from the Beatitudes, then you win.

The Beatitudes are Jesus’s own eight bullet summary of the Christian concept of morality. 

Each of the beatitudes consists of a “blessed are the” part, followed by a “for theirs is” part. In my mind the “blessed are” parts are the meat. I’m going to go through them one by one, giving my interpretation[1] of what each of them means:

If this sounds a lot like a summary of liberal pluralism, then that’s not a coincidence. Key figures in liberal thought, such as John Locke, drew strongly from the moral principles in the Beatitudes.

The Beatitudes are particularly significant when you compare them to the “flaunt your status, be certain in your beliefs, crush your enemies, bow to the powerful, win by any means necessary” morality that has been the “default ideology” for most of human history, and that still exerts a strong gravitational pull.

The Beatitudes are of course not unique in expressing these sentiments. There are writings in Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, and Taoism that say similar things. Indeed I suspect that most reasonably successful societies have had some variant of these ideas, because a society has to resist the pull of “the default ideology” to avoid tearing itself apart. 

There are good reasons why Western society has been moving away from Christianity, and Christianity in practice has often done a poor job of following the principles laid down in the Beatitudes. But you don’t have to be Christian to revere the Beatitudes. We need them now as much as ever.

 

  1. ^

    The interpretation I give is pretty mainstream, but by no means the only interpretation. In particular, some people have more spiritual interpretation that are less applicable to non-believers.



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《圣经》八福 道德观念 宗教思考
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