7. Religious Language: Symbols

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  • Created by: Alasdair
  • Created on: 17-06-17 15:59
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  • 7. Religious Language: Symbols
    • Tillich
      • Religious language operates as a symbol - points towards "Being-Itself"
        • Not as a sign as signs do not participate in what they signalise (they have no meaning outside of context)
      • Systematic theology - symbols are not literal assertions
        • Point to something beyond themselves
        • Participate in that to which they point (intrinsically linked)
        • Symbolism opens up otherwise hidden levels of reality and many interpretations
          • Open to all people to understand
        • Open up levels and dimensions of the soul that corresponds to those levels of reality
      • Symbols are independent of empirical criticisms:
        • "you cannot kill a symbol by criticisms in terms of scientific and historical research"
      • God can only be expressed through the use of symbolic language
    • Rhandall
      • Symbols are motivational -
        • fire up passionate emotions
      • They are social
        • Strengthen social bonds and have common social understanding
      • Communicative
        • Express faith better than religious language due to limitations of religious language
      • Clarify and disclose our experience of the divine, same way as poet/artist reveal hidden depths
    • Criticisms
      • Tillich is too vague in saying symbols partake, it is the person not the actual symbol partaking
      • William Alston
        • Tillich removes real and existential significance of religious statements
          • E.g. "God loves His creatures", Tillich says it must be taken symbolically, however Alston says this renders the statements meaningless
      • John Macquarrie
        • Criticises Tillich but not symbols
        • There is no difference between a sign and a symbol
          • E.g. clouds are both a sign and symbol of rain
        • Proposes an existential response
          • Symbols and sign link to human existence as they evok feelings of awe, devotion, trust - akin to feelings we should have towards God.
            • Good example: the rile of washing in religions - the ritual symbolises the cleansing of sin
        • Similarity of relation
          • Symbols are like analogies.
            • E.g. the images of Jesus in The Gospel of John: the Living Water, the Light of the World, Good Shepherd; the True Vine. Symbolic relations of proportion are in operation

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