Christianity | René Girard's Mimetic Theory

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  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2024
  • For Girard, Christianity is radically different from all other religions in one crucial aspect: it takes the side of the innocent victim and, in doing so, exposes the violence and deceit of worldly order. We will explore how this intuition of innocence begins to take root in the Hebrew bible and blossoms into a resounding declaration in the Crucifixion. Girard presents us with an anthropology of the Cross: a translation of Christian phenomena into this-worldly, humanistic language. Girard’s success in placing this world in the foreground, however, forces the other world and even God himself to retreat into the background. In Girard’s unorthodox Christianity, God’s absence is just as loud and jarring as humanity’s presence.
    00:00:00 Introduction
    00:03:36 The Myth Vaccine
    00:08:56 Cain and Abel
    00:14:19 Joseph and His Brothers
    00:18:30 The Incompleteness of the Hebrew Bible
    00:21:31 Completing the Message
    00:26:51 The Crucifixion
    00:30:18 Christ's Innocence
    00:33:50 Christ's Truth
    00:37:31 Christ's Love
    00:41:28 An Anthropology of the Cross
    00:42:31 Girard's Interpretation of Satan
    00:44:57 Girard's Interpretation of the Christian Revelation
    00:45:47 Girard's Interpretation of the Anti-Christ
    00:49:05 Girard's Interpretation of the Kingdom of God
    00:50:08 Girard's Interpretation of the Apocalypse
    00:51:08 A Christian Dictionary
    00:54:10 Girard's Unorthodoxy: The Sacrificial Reading
    00:56:45 Girard's Unorthodoxy: God's Absence
    01:03:17 Girard's Unorthodoxy: Historical Christianity
    01:05:39 Girard's Unorthodoxy: Apocalyptic Ambivalence

Komentáře • 71

  • @bi.johnathan
    @bi.johnathan  Před rokem +6

    To be notified of future lectures, essays, and book reviews, subscribe to my newsletter: johnathanbi.com/newsletter
    Full transcript: johnathanbi.com/interpreting-girard-lecture-v-transcript

    • @misiyengar6966
      @misiyengar6966 Před rokem +3

      Its the similarities and not the differences that leads to conflicts because both are vying for the same thing...this is what ironically seems to be at play when making this distinction between Christianity and Pegan religions...they are both similar and both vying for the same spot - being the religion of the whole humanity, that there's a need to vilify other by pointing out & exaggerating small differences that exist between the 2, when its evidently clear that broadly they are 1 and the same

    • @zxsw85
      @zxsw85 Před rokem +3

      Jacket came off, daddy ready to go

    • @bi.johnathan
      @bi.johnathan  Před rokem +6

      @@zxsw85 Lecture VI I give shirtless. Lecture VII David strips naked as post-credit scene.

    • @zxsw85
      @zxsw85 Před rokem +2

      @@bi.johnathan hahaha love it.

    • @Mistra2234
      @Mistra2234 Před rokem +2

      @@bi.johnathan That leaves space for an 8th lecture then. “Shirts Off: the mimetic progression of our dress code on set.”

  • @erict.styles3634
    @erict.styles3634 Před rokem +12

    I am currently listening to this video. I have yet to listen to the others. I have probably been Girardian for about 10-15 years. I am an African American Catholic Christian with a background in the performing arts. I have studied philosophy and theology at the graduate level. I've been working in ministry for twenty years. Girard helped me make sense of many things: the importance of the mythic impulse (we need it); the fundamental psychic reality that forms human community; the power of mimetic desire; the need for a victim, and how Christ both fulfills AND upends that.
    The commenters takes subtle shots at Catholicism; I can handle it, but they miss some really important nuances. In fact, I think what he misses are the nuanced ways Catholic ritual and sacramental theology (at their best) gives Christians a sustained way to re-member Jesus' revelation of the scapegoating mechanism. And I would say that the sacramental imagination, culminating in the Eucharist, gives a way out of the violent cycle. Many of my fellow Catholics spend way too much time focused on the "object" of the Eucharist (our evangelical brothers and sisters always find that strange and heretical) and not enough time recognizing that Eucharist is an "event." A fleeting moment, tied to the central life and death of Christ, that reveals the kingdom/reign of God, the beatific vision, the beloved community. For a fleeting moment, we can see what God has done, is doing, will do. We don't re-sacrifice Christ, we participate in the one event of the Cross.

    • @erict.styles3634
      @erict.styles3634 Před rokem +3

      I hit the reply button too quickly!! I think the commentator does a good job, though I am a little turned off by the style. It reminds me a bit too much of the Catholic version of "traddiness" (traditionalist). The fancy trappings, the seriousness and all the leather chairs.... I expect cigars to show up! It feels fairly triumphant. I don't know the commentators and have not yet watched any of their other videos ...... (oooo orgies in the Vatican! way to go, guys... an untrue, cheap shot) .... but I get a libertarian feel from it ... and I lean clearly into the liberationist direction. That being said, we can find common ground. We have to; especially as practicing Christians.
      And yes, the Eucharist is at the center of it all... even from a Girardian Catholic perspective. (Remember that in the end, Girard, when he returned to Christianity, he did so via the Catholic tradition.) I propose that the Eucharist does not replace loving the neighbor, but as source and summit of Christian life, it is the event and place in which we find ourselves together hearing and responding to God's love and call. It is a font, a school, a crucible, a sanctuary, a maker of the Church and the little Christs... and we go out from it still imperfect, (clearly). But Jesus said remain in love, stay together, and feed the sheep.

    • @erict.styles3634
      @erict.styles3634 Před rokem +5

      Haha also, all the great Christian monastics would tell novices "If you came here to escape the world, you will be quickly disabused of that folly. The so-called world is here because you and I are here. Christianity is not likely easier in the monastery. If you do this "right" you will be wrestling even more than before."

  • @johnwrickgaming8806
    @johnwrickgaming8806 Před 2 dny

    There's so much depth to provide starting from Adam and Eve leading up to the Manifestation of Jesus, it's at this point, Unmistakable. Really appreciate a new/different perspective!

  • @Rita-zp5yd
    @Rita-zp5yd Před rokem +9

    As I acknowledge the logic of Girard's theory and recognition of the scapegoat phenomenon in human history and its exposure in the Gospels, I understand something in a new way: love and forgiveness is a new path to follow, a path established by Christ's life. The doing of love cannot be separated from the modeling of the "how to" love in Christ's life: He wept, He prayed to His heavenly Father, He refused rivalry, and denounced violence, and he forgave from the cross. Love involves a relationship between human doing and transcendent intuition. Neither Christ nor Girard waits for unanimity. Christ's "how to love" is set in motion. Girard follows Christ in this "how to" love and his writing style while oblique (see M Kirwan's work) is not difficult or confounding. Reading his work obliquely, rather than cutting to the chase, so to speak, has itself been a way of walking that path however falteringly, the way of conversion. Lastly, a word about Christ's sword: discernment.

  • @Ldianecoleman
    @Ldianecoleman Před rokem +4

    Almost, but not quite. "Lord, have mercy; Christ, have mercy; Lord, have mercy." Think about it for a while in light of everything else you have so brilliantly described.

  • @justinmalin9197
    @justinmalin9197 Před rokem +6

    This whole series was phenomenal, but this was by far my favorite lecture of the series. The views will come in time. What a time to be alive. Apocalypse may be at hand, but there’s strange corner of the internet that is coming together in a beautiful way. JBP, Rogan, the Weinstein Brothers, Lex, Schmachtenberger, Chris Williams, Breedlove, Vervaeke, Huberman, Peter Attia, Curt Jaimungal, and so many others are getting at the deeper aspects of humanity through various disciplines. It’s just wild and I hope we’re in some sort of cultural rebirth.

  • @bobshalom8408
    @bobshalom8408 Před rokem +3

    wow! am enjoying most of this. Away from the actual content, which speaks for itself, David's attention and listening skills are just over the bar. I don't whether I am the only one grasped. I am literally waiting for the camera to turn to him😊😊😊

  • @ChrisOgunlowo
    @ChrisOgunlowo Před 7 měsíci

    Fantastic. This one ebbs with the resonance of a beautiful music, especially towards the end when it beats hard on Christ as the antidote to our flawed human and cultural systems. And the elixir is not to a promise of peace but to unsettle us positively. Wow!

  • @SM-gl3in
    @SM-gl3in Před rokem +1

    Great job and thank you for putting this together . You are a natural

  • @nuggetoftruth-ericking7489

    I really enjoyed this talk. Thank you.

    • @bi.johnathan
      @bi.johnathan  Před rokem

      Thanks for engaging with our content.

    • @bradmock1419
      @bradmock1419 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@johnathan-bi this series and Rene Girards books are excellent explanations of the fruit that infected man's mind from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. The principles that make death possible.

  • @MrJohncraciun
    @MrJohncraciun Před 10 měsíci +1

    Love these lectures men, thank you both for your efforts.
    One point I feel you should cover is process by which we learn to love our neighbors.
    When Jesus was asked which commands were the highest Jesus says to FIRST love the lord with all you mind heart and soul and then live your neighbor.
    The reason for this is simple. People do not know how to love eachother they have to learn perfect love from the Father. This creates a dependency on God by which we grow to realize to to properly, as Thomas Aquinas says “ Desire the good of the other” which is to love.
    Humanism in the church will only make more anti christ pagan church’s.

  • @jiashuzhou8265
    @jiashuzhou8265 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Been enjoying this series as a reformed Christian so far, but this episode brought me to a halt. This part of Girard's thinking is by all Christian measures(the ecumenical councils) heretical, and I wonder why Girard is celebrated as a Christian/ Catholic philosopher. Perhaps a better way to look at Girard is this. Girard is reading the Bible from an anthropological and sociological perspective, and his insights are clarifying and helpful only insofar as they are related to the fallen human condition. I think he paints accurately the hell we are getting ourselves into when left to our own means, and Girard's pessimism is radically honest in this sense. Nonetheless, Christ's atonement is not only emblematic (setting the right paradigm, traditionally known as the recapitulation theory of atonement) but also vicarious/ substitutional.

    • @brandonbloch3144
      @brandonbloch3144 Před 2 měsíci

      It’s probably just indicative of the dearth of Christian philosophers in academia today. Therefore, one who is extolling the virtues of Christianity, even from an anthropological perspective, is still celebrated just simply for engaging with the canon and taking it seriously. So even though very unorthodox, he stands out as one of the highest profile academics from recent times that has incorporated Christianity positively in his work.

  • @misiyengar6966
    @misiyengar6966 Před rokem +4

    Its the similarities and not the differences that leads to conflicts because both are vying for the same thing...this is what ironically seems to be at play when making this distinction between Christianity and Pegan religions...they are both similar and both vying for the same spot - being the religion of the whole humanity, that there's a need to vilify other by pointing out & exaggerating small differences that exist between the 2, when its evidently clear that broadly they are 1 and the same

  • @brandonbloch3144
    @brandonbloch3144 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Your conception of Satan as all worldly power reminds me of a line from the Zhuangzi that states it similarly: “I’ll stand here and sing it straight from the heart: those who are good at ruling All-under-heaven are not right.”

  • @GrayNicolls-vs8yw
    @GrayNicolls-vs8yw Před rokem +1

    This is actually a really insightful dialogue, I have never thought in this way. BTW, what is Jonathan holding in his hand all the while he is speaking?😅

  • @gerudoking3180
    @gerudoking3180 Před rokem +2

    This is really fascinating. I’m under the impression that the more accurate you are to Scripture, ironically the fewer views you may receive. The world we live in now isn’t a big fan of God (or, rather, what He is truly thinking, as opposed to blind, passionate fervor to please Him.)
    Might I recommend the Concordant Literal Version if the Bible? A.E. Knoch and a group of translators used the Greek, Hebrew and Aramaic words and put them in their proper place. You may find even more accuracy to the claims you’ve already pointed out. Great lecture!

    • @bi.johnathan
      @bi.johnathan  Před rokem +1

      I’ll check it out. Thanks for engaging with our work!

  • @ivanvrljic6221
    @ivanvrljic6221 Před rokem +3

    Johnathan how long until you have a discussion with JBP? I've listened to most of his stuff and judging by how new all of this is to me is I doubt he has come across much of Girard's work. A conversation between you two would be straight 🔥🔥🔥

    • @bi.johnathan
      @bi.johnathan  Před rokem +2

      Interesting idea but nothing is on the books yet!

    • @1901elina
      @1901elina Před rokem

      All I could think of while listening to all of these is that JBP is extremely influenced by Girard. And there's also a recommended video on my right of him talking about Girard lol (that I haven't yet watched). JBP mentions original sin and envy and Cain and Abel etc etc and talks about it all very similarly.

    • @1901elina
      @1901elina Před rokem

      JBP has also talked about believing in God as an ideal not an actual thing, and hell being something right here on earth. He has a whole lecture series interpreting the Biblical stories in anthropological terms.

  • @jdkrider
    @jdkrider Před 10 měsíci +1

    I'm greatly appreciating these videos; thank you for posting them. However, please correct your pronunciation of "thou." It rhymes with "how" and "now", not "though" or "know."

  • @JasonPaulMusic
    @JasonPaulMusic Před rokem +6

    What non-Christian Girardians are missing is that in Christ, in the particular way he has instituted (Eucharist, the Church), his divine radical love of neighbor is actually possible through us. Without the supernatural, the best a non-Christian Girardian can do is marvel at it from afar.

    • @nat.serrano
      @nat.serrano Před rokem +1

      agree, the super natural help is the holy spirit

    • @JasonPaulMusic
      @JasonPaulMusic Před rokem

      @@nat.serrano indeed. The Girardian’s have rightly concluded apocalypse is unavoidable…but only if we rely on our own power.

  • @7layeroscillator807
    @7layeroscillator807 Před rokem

    "For Girard, this symbolized that the link between mob violence and life, between violent expulsion and worldly peace, had been fundamentally broken."
    any readings on the 3 days between death & resurrection that can help explain what Girard means here? How did it show those bonds fundamentally broken?
    Thank you :)

  • @MrYost-xx5bj
    @MrYost-xx5bj Před 2 dny

    Did Jonathan memorize all of his words to make this a sort of a videoed socratic dialogue?

  • @megancyloneight9822
    @megancyloneight9822 Před rokem +1

    Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals - how does N's view of the Noble Man compare with Jesus' noble shift from persecutor to victim?

  • @InquilineKea
    @InquilineKea Před rokem +1

    Lol, I always wonder if Peter Thiel being named *after* Peter the disciple carries deeper meaning behind it...

  • @Sanguillen39ify
    @Sanguillen39ify Před měsícem

    Girard was heavily influenced by Simone Weil, who spoke quite a bit about the subjects related to in this video.

  • @nurfuis
    @nurfuis Před 26 dny

    Rockin' the 'spenders.

  • @zxsw85
    @zxsw85 Před rokem +2

    Let’s fucking goooo

    • @bi.johnathan
      @bi.johnathan  Před rokem +5

      - Said Jesus to the disciples. Mark 3:15

    • @zxsw85
      @zxsw85 Před rokem

      @@bi.johnathan plot twist, everything Jesus said was a Straussian comment.

  •  Před rokem +2

    You mention that Christ rejected anger altogether, but didn't he got angry himself with the marketplace at the temple?

    • @bi.johnathan
      @bi.johnathan  Před rokem +1

      This is a good question. I will suggest a preliminary distinction that may help: in Girard’s reading, Christ asks us to refrain from violence which is related to but distinct from anger. (Although, chasing the money lenders out does seem to be borderline violent)

    • @jaimes7966
      @jaimes7966 Před rokem

      There is an esoteric contextual reading of that with Christ relating the body as the temple, after the clearing takes place where he hints on the crucifixion. verse 21, John 2:13-21. The body of Christ represents also the communion, union and coming together of polarities from his Sacrifice.
      Perhaps a Giradian sense would be not to sell out on desires for this union, which is implied to be quite serious. The particular mention of doves which is associated to the spirit, is also mentioned in particular in Matthew without sheep (members of flock) and oxen (represents labour). Selling out the spirit, or to use the spirit as a scapegoat would be pretty damning, since it represents the unity of spirit, where the whip describes what’s coming with our conflict and disunity - the anger is from our anger from scapegoating, which Christ mirrors, after-which describes the union, a preferable alternative.

    • @connorcreegan
      @connorcreegan Před 6 měsíci

      It's worth reading Aquinas on this particular topic, as he clarifies many of the confusions surrounding anger:
      www.newadvent.org/summa/3158.htm

  • @DylanNissley
    @DylanNissley Před rokem +1

    Are there groups, communities that practice a Girardian Christianity or something close to it?

    • @bi.johnathan
      @bi.johnathan  Před rokem

      Not that I know of.

    • @erict.styles3634
      @erict.styles3634 Před rokem +2

      I think it would be a mistake to try and create a "Girardian" denomination. He himself was a Catholic. It would be better for all of us to simply try to learn from him, critique him, and absorb into our own traditions (confessions) what is useful. and leave it at that.

  • @InquilineKea
    @InquilineKea Před rokem +1

    omg he's on a roll!!
    I totally forgot about religion for some time, but in transhumanism/AGI we will create God again

  • @orangesurfboard2238
    @orangesurfboard2238 Před 4 měsíci

    One thief does not denegrate Jesus and is granted access into paradise. Also, one could say the people at the foot of the cross do not either.

  • @ericmiller6828
    @ericmiller6828 Před 6 měsíci +1

    First, thank you for these videos. As I refresh myself with Girard's theories, I've enjoyed your analysis and I concur with many of your commentors - Girard's development on Jungian theory does seem to be the philosophical evolutionary branch from which Peterson and Pageau seem to have sprung. Secondly, if I may, I humbly submit some constructive critique. I found your video element rather distracting from your lecture. Watching you both intensely looking at each other so constantly created a separation with the audience (i.e., myself). I found myself feeling the third wheel in a great conversation. This is unfortunate, as much potential lay in another format of presentation. Perhaps if there were a classical lecture model (e.g., a figure facing and delivering content to camera) I might feel like a student observing a lecture. Perhaps if the silent partner were to offer more input or even present expositional questions I might feel invited into the narrative of this oratory essay. That being said, thank you for this excellent series of lectures.

  • @damnmexican90
    @damnmexican90 Před 2 měsíci

    Christ can do both friend.
    Theres a reason why he is the Logos and King of Kings

  • @elel2608
    @elel2608 Před 13 dny

    45:21

  • @luchador1764
    @luchador1764 Před rokem

    Mom: We have Jordan Peterson at home.

  • @alexandramarco4107
    @alexandramarco4107 Před rokem +1

    Humans created god... it is mistaken belief that God created humans. "Jesus came not to send peace, but a sword" -another 180 twist. Girard understands that the scapegoat mechanism has been revealed, a peaceful kingdom on earth with love, truth and non-violence is possible-perhaps unlikely. But a new religion, and a new Christ-like figure can emerge from the apocalyptic ashes.

  • @Vhbaske
    @Vhbaske Před měsícem

    The same mith

  • @universalbasicincomeAI

    Faaaaaaa

  • @ytjoemoore94
    @ytjoemoore94 Před 2 měsíci

    Seems like cope

  • @elel2608
    @elel2608 Před 8 dny

    50:01