Charles_F_Bell wrote:Kdot wrote:Not sure I follow. He doesn't seem to hate the Whovillians - only their devotion to Christmas. Or am I misreading the original intent?
in the same way Scrooge is not evil but perhaps misguided by his certain obsession. Christianity is about redeemable "bad" people who can be turned to good that unfortunately discounts and rarely recognizes that there are people who are irredeemably evil -- even leaving open the possibility that Christ could have been turned by Satan in Gethsemane -- particularly in the context of mental disease in which evil over good is not chosen. One does not pray or plead a bipolar paranoid schizophrenic to goodness, nor is there any permanent turn to goodness of the drug addict who can start up again far more easily than he can quit. However, Christianity is closer to the truth for drug addicts than secular therapists who only weakly mention the harm and destruction caused to others by addiction and indeed other non-biologic obsessions. How does a secular therapist (psychologist) help OCD? It is rather a sort of aversion therapy and not an appeal to empathy and pointing out suffering of others caused by one's actions (evil).
In Christianity, there is the belief all people are irredemably evil. This is the doctrine of original sin. No matter what we do, we will sin. Even if you don't actually murder someone, you might wish someone dead, which, spiritually, is the same thing for Jesus. But everyone can be redeemed through supernatural intervention occasioned by accepting Jesus Chirst as Lord and Savior. No exceptions, and some research indicates that addicts are helped by a strong religious faith. The 12 steps of AA, and related programs, all have leaning on a supernatural power, or one greater than oneself, to overcome the addiction. It's doubtful that Jesus could have turned in Gethseme, as when the soldiers came, he stood against the torture of Herod and Pilate. You perhaps are thinking of his Temptation in the desert, where Satan offered him all the kingdoms of the Earth, and he refused.
I haven't read the story, but the classical movies about Scrooge have him in the existential situation Reinhold Neibuhr talks about when he analyzes original sin as an encounter with mortality and finitude. The Ego is the source of sin, as it pits us against, well, everything, but it is necessary to take care of oneself. The anxiety of finitude and mortality leads to sinful behavior (alienation from God and Man). Scrooge suffered this, and needed to have the spiritual centeredness that resulted from a supernatural enounter.
As to the Grinch? He didn't hate the Who's, just Christmas, and wanted to take it away from everyone. But then, he too gets redeemed.
Merry Christmas, everyone.