Argument 1: The Democracy of our Conscience (Suneidesis)
With and Without Religious Belief
We are going to start this journey in search of knowledge to build our house of knowledge by touching on a few things that need to be put out in front. There should be no misunderstanding that what we are pursing is agapé in democracy, unconditional love, spiritual love, which does not make us vulnerable—because we are never against ourselves at the same time.
Democratic Agapé and Tolerance
Democracy does not thrive when its diverse groups merely tolerate one another, for such fragile relationships can be easily manipulated. Turning away from such distant attitudes, from offensively trying to convert others to ignoring their existence, would it not be uplifting to experience a deep democratic agapé for each other? It would not require an external enemy, like the Nazis, which molded Americans last century into a democratic agapé for years to follow. And yet, now it is time to learn how to see followers of Nazism differently while still rejecting their beliefs.
We are not likely to encounter any external threat uniting Democrats and Republicans, for global politics now work within and across nations in a far more destructive way. Political parties in aligned nations favoring autocracy often bring their national policies of favoring each other to the point of—we win or we all go down.
Underlying political and other national groups though are belief systems, religious and nonreligious. But they comply with the politics of tolerance also when they do not practice agapé in their conscience (suneidesis).1 Thus, as we see so often, they too are easily manipulated against each other.
Most followers of Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Christianity, Buddhism and atheism only tolerate each other, especially under western religious beliefs in considering beliefs outside their own as false. But learning how to love the enemies of conscience non-religiously or religiously can change all that. We could have a deep love for one another through the democracy of our world awareness (suneidesis).2 It would underly a deep democratic love for one another within our national awareness (suneidesis), regardless of our nation’s form of governance in the world. Thoughtless dismissal of this indicates a willingness to tolerate blindness and its hatred.
In the face of such dismissal, we blindly wonder why we do not learn more from the past. Simply declaring “never again” is not enough. Despite our best efforts to educate the younger generation about past catastrophic mistakes, our national past has a part that blinds and disables our present understanding. This makes it impossible to “re-live” the errors of past generations in our present national awareness (suneidesis) and learn from them. We have no choice but to live them each generation or so on the soil of the earth. But that cannot teach us what we need to learn. With deep knowledge of agapé, unconditional love, in our national awareness though, all lessons can be re-lived in our world awareness and learned.
With and Without Belief in Jesus
Jesus said that if we do not believe in him, we should at least believe in his works. And underlying all of his works is his teaching on love for all, particularly our enemies. In democracy, it can be referred to as love for the enemies of our suneidesis, the principle. Therefore, learning or practicing the principle does not require religious belief or faith. It is a choice requiring knowledge to follow, which may or may not be part of our religion if we follow one. In any case, it is completely in line with Jesus’s teaching on the matter.
Usage of the words Name and Word
To respect everyone’s beliefs, I use the word Name to refer to God, Life, or any other belief one may hold concerning a higher power. Knowledge that I attribute to coming directly from Name, I call Word, meaning the Word of God, the Word of Life, or the Word of any other belief one may hold. This also enables me to keep my personal beliefs unknown and, thus, from becoming a distraction to this knowledge. If you just clicked to this link, please read the previous section about Jesus.
Names of Light
Since we are in the image of Name (God or Life), we too are names, more precisely names of light since Name is light. Knowledge of Word states that “you have a few names in Sardius who have not soiled their garments.” (Rev. 3:4)
Democracy
Our awareness (suneidesis) is a democracy, bearing witness to what is good or bad, sustained by thoughts when they are for everyone’s well-being. As knowledge of Word states it—their suneidesis bearing witness and the thoughts between them accusing or else defending [the goodness of caring for others’ well-being]. So loving an enemy of our suneidesis saves our democracy. This may sound counter intuitive until we see that our suneidesis is light—only when we make others more important in it without being against ourselves. This is the nature of agapé. Hating actions that are not for everyone’s well-being will not blind us, for it works from the light of our suneidesis making others more important, not their ideas.
Our suneidesis is in a state of blindness when we make ourselves or our group more important in it, being against anyone who challenges us, the seeds of hatred. As a result, we often are in a state of extreme complacency, thinking it is alright not to love outsiders, as long as we do not hate them. And sometimes loving them in our suneidesis is all we can do when their hatred makes it unwise to express agapé for them in the world. At the same time though, expressing anger in the world ourselves, anger that works from agapé for everyone’s well-being, when necessary, is wise, for such anger possesses the self-control to do no harm.
Those we love this way in our hearts, therefore, often do not know that we see them as more than just fellow citizens. We see them as part of the democracy of our suneidesis, albeit a part for blind members. But when they sense that we care for their well-being, as physically blind people sense, in time, it comes against the blindness in their suneidesis telling them that we are blind and not them, that we work against them and that we are the ones full of hatred.
The Principle of Conscience (Suneidesis)
We are all capable of deceiving ourselves, being incapable of knowing that we are spiritually blind. But we can quickly come out of it by honestly examining ourselves with the only absolute standard of suneidesis—to make all others more important without being against ourselves, the principle of suneidesis. Without it, we keep deceiving ourselves by telling each other in our groups how much we love each other and hate or at least do not love others, the antithesis of mature democracy. If we see, we do not judge others for this. We recognize blindness with compassion even when it is used against us, for the power of agapé and knowledge is greater.
Saving the democracy of our country requires that we use the principle to build the house of knowledge in our suneidesis, to save democracy there first.
Giving all our Agapé to Name
After Word taught that we should give all our agapé, unconditional love, to Name, it (he) added that we should love our neighbor as ourselves. If we take the words all our agapé literally, there is none left for our neighbor, leaving the correct interpretation of loving our neighbor as ourselves to be loving our neighbor as though they were ourselves.
In other words, instead of giving all our agapé to Name directly from ourselves, we should work through each other as ourselves to give all our agapé to Name. As light, we permeate each other and Name, so we permeate each other to love Name. But we must make each other more important so that we do not eclipse others with our own light. This has the sense of working through each other as ourselves. We do this as individual and collective agapé names at the same time in our singularity, thereby also loving one another as we give Name all our agapé. This is the agapé light of democracy in our world suneidesis.
When we believe that we are giving all our agapé to someone as an independent name, for example, a spouse, child or parent, we are unaware that we are actually giving that agapé to Name through them, for the reflective light of agapé starts and ends with the singularity of Name. Minor as this may seem, apply it to giving all our agapé to Name through a blind member of the light of our democracy, an enemy of suneidesis.
We can measure the height and weight of a person and know their age, gender and ethnicity, but the suneidesis sees none of these appearances. Under the principle, the suneidesis sees only conscientious names who are part of a singularity that has no past or future but encompasses both, each of us known individually by our agapé name and awareness of friends and foes of the world suneidesis.
Suggested Articles:
The Eyes of Democracy (Introduction and Index of Articles)
Suneidesis, pronounced soon-eye-day-sis, is a Greek word that joins our natural awareness with our sense of conscience. Click on the link for a detailed explanation. It is central to this teaching. Using this foreign word regularly in discussions helps us get accustomed to experiencing something new and positive working in our awareness itself. When the word conscience is used, it will refer to the aspect of suneidesis that involves right and wrong, but this aspect cannot be separated from our co-conscientious awareness of all things.
If I understand that my awareness of something as simple as a cup includes co-conscientiousness, I do not allow myself to get blinded by the cup alone but know it as part of all creation at the hands of the Creator or the universe, depending on one’s beliefs. Spiritual maturity does this naturally.
The repetition of suneidesis is meant to challenge you to consider this dimension in your awareness. Apologies, but it will only be a necessary annoyance until it becomes natural.
We may reshape our democracy. We have been having some troubling moments in the last - maybe 40 years. The gap grew rapidly after the Second World War. And people had to pay the price. And many people revolted in unrecognized terms, unaccepted terms. These are things every single one of us must contemplate. And find ways to bring the outcast, the marginalized of any type. Every single solitary soul on the face of this earth is equally susceptible to pain, death, health, hunger. Fear has driven people to hurt the “other guys” who actually don’t want anything but to go home, eat dinner with their loved ones. Go to bed feeling safe. And do it again tomorrow!
Treat each other as equal human beings. The animals can. So can we!!!