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Originally Posted by well named
Yes, I think I was explicitly saying that there is no methodology of the sort you are asking about, at least in eastern orthodoxy. I also think this shouldn't be too surprising given that we're talking about spiritual truths, and given how Christianity speaks about "spiritual" things and truth in general.
With reference to the bolded, I don't wish to constrict the possible types of methodology, but as a loose working definition I guess I would personally mean something similar to an algorithm: a series of steps to follow which lead to a result, in this case, the confirmation or denial of a claim. This shouldn't be too restrictive imo. There's no reason something like the following could not be considered a methodology under my definition:
1) Allow the holy spirit into one's heart
2) Pray about the claim
3) Receive the answer.
Not to suggest that the above is what I think you or anyone is doing exactly, just that I'm making no demand that methodologies presented ITT have to be directly analogous to the scientific method.
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Both are very connected to God and man's relationship with God in Christianity, and that relationship is understood primarily as being mysterious. The greek word for the Sacraments of the church is mysterios. It's not just the truths themselves that are taken as mysteries, but the entire process of drawing near to God in faith, because it is a process of Grace that is directed by a fundamentally mysterious and unknowable entity, i.e God.
Would you say therefore that acceptance of religious claims is non-rational? For clarity, I tend to make a distinction between non-rational (not able to be explained by reason) and irrational (kinda the same, but pejorative and suggestive of
bad reasons). E.g. I consider my dislike of cucumber to be non-rational, but not irrational.