Did Beethoven believe in God?
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Beethoven and religion
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Originally posted by kenneth:
Lisen to his Mass (op 123). Perhaps you will find an anser there?
Beethoven did beleive in God, but not in the christian God.
Even for the times, his conception of God was more broad, encompassing all religions as under the same paragrim (he beleived they were all different forms to worship the same divinity).
When he wanted to feel God, he didn't go to a church, he went about the green fields of Bonn or Vienna, celebrating his spirituality throught nature.
If i remember correctly, he even had a interest in foreign religions, even buddism.
Obviously, he was an inquiring mind and looked constantly for the truth and repuded accepted beleif, quite extraordinary for man born in the 18th century...
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While Beethoven was not a practicing Catholic throughout his life, he had been raised Roman Catholic, and made a point of confessing and recieving Last Rites before he died. He certainly believed in God.
Opus 131, why do you say he didn't worship a Christian god? I'm just curious; I'm not sure I have ever heard that before.
[This message has been edited by Tegan (edited January 30, 2004).]
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One of Beethoven's favourite books was Sturm's "Observations Concerning God's Works in Nature" ("Betrachtungen uber die Werke Gottes in der Natur"). "He saw the hand of God in even the most insignificant natural phenomenon".
"To me the highest thing, after God, is my honour."
July 26, 1822, to the publisher Peters, in Liepsic.
I would say he believed in God. He was a Roman Catholic albeit maybe not a practicing one.
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'Truth and beauty joined''Truth and beauty joined'
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Originally posted by Opus131:
Obviously, he was an inquiring mind and looked constantly for the truth and repuded accepted beleif, quite extraordinary for man born in the 18th century...
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'Man know thyself''Man know thyself'
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In a letter written to his friend Karl Ameda on 1 July 1801, Beethoven says :
"How often I wish you were here, for your Beethoven is having a miserable life, at odds with nature and its Creator, abusing the latter for leaving his creatures vulnerable to the slightest accident ... My greatest faculty, my hearing, is greatly deteriorated."
[This message has been edited by Ahmad (edited January 30, 2004).]
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It is rather odd to say a person believes in "God, but not the Christian God." God is God. There is no other God. People may have vastly different views of God (the Christians vs. the Muslims, etc.), but it's basically the same - an infinite being that is the cause of everything else.
To be really different from this, you'd have to believe in no God or many gods or some kind of "God is everything but nothing" idea. (There are plently of philosophies that hold one of these views, of course.)
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