Showing posts with label Phil-aphorism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phil-aphorism. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2018

Aphorism of the Day, August 2018

Aphorism of the Day, August 31, 2018

The uneven pacing of innovation or conversion to new paradigms across different communities accounts for the lack of unity.  What does Amish Christianity have to do with Eastern Orthodox Christianity or with churches that have gone completely digital?  Innovation is relative to the context of the innovators and some are more receptive to technical innovation than innovation in the realm of ideas, doctrine and church practices.   The Amish are technological conservatives; they have conserved old technologies.  Other communities are conservatives in trying to set in concrete ideas forever, assuming that once something is "written" down it achieves a permanency that is perpetuated with each repetition even while they lose sight of the fact that the changing tacit epistemological contexts do not allow a permanence of any idea or belief.

Aphorism of the Day, August 30, 2018

The crucible of the writings of the New Testament involved a community of faith being born which decided to "deal" with the Roman situation rather than try to be like Amish-like synagogue communities resisting significant assimilation into participation in Roman citizenry requirements.  The Jesus Movement became a vanguard off shoot of Judaism which decided that "being separate" from the world was not a matter of external separation; it was a matter of interior separation of the Spirit of Christ rather than the spirit of the world.  The result was that the ritual purity rules of separation were made optional for Gentiles members of the churches.  This great paradigm switch in ritual practice brought the separation of Christians from the synagogue and since the New Testament writings were being written in this coming to practice of a new paradigm, the witness of Jesus in the Gospel was told and presented with this eventual outcome as the telos.  Christians were more adaptable to the reality of the Roman Empire and they welcomed the conversion of the culturally diverse peoples to the Gospel and the conversion did not require all the ritual purity practices that were required of Jewish proselytes.

Aphorism of the Day, August 29, 2018

The writer of the book of James declared that one could not be religious if one did not practice justice.  Lot of people think that the commandment about "taking the Lord's name in vain" is about using God's name in scatological utterance; taking the Lord's name in vain is really about presenting oneself as being "religious" and not doing justice in the practice of one's life.

Aphorism of the Day, August 28, 2018

I tried to exist without using words but then "not using words" was using words.

Aphorism of the Day, August 27, 2018

When prescribed religious behaviors lose their connection with training the inward being to let one's body language speak love and justice, then religious rules for the benefit of ceremony might be nice to build community identity and determine "who's in" and "who's out," but the great purposes of God's law are missed.

Aphorism of the Day, August 26, 2018

Ironic how many regard the various canonical collections of the Bible to be exhaustively the "word of God."  So when Paul was referring to the "word of God," one has to guess that he already knew that centuries later his letters would become part of a collection of writings which would be called the "word of God."  The Bible cannot exhaust the notion of word of God.  John's Gospel relates that in the beginning the Word was God and it became humanly instantiated in the life of Jesus, even while Word is the very fullness of all human life as it can ever be known.  Word of God would have to mean the very ground of human existence as it could ever be known.  As such a ground, it also is a ground of freedom and in the freedom that we have with how we articulate our words and deeds we need Exemplars of Word in human flesh and so we have Jesus.

Aphorism of the Day, August 25, 2018

The disagreements about how Jesus is present in the Eucharist are long-standing.  They can be found in the Pauline church in Corinth and in the Johannine Community.  Regarding "eating flesh and drinking blood," many decided no longer to follow Jesus.  Christians have been forever fighting over Eucharistic language and so there are terms like transubstantiation, consubstantiation, receptionism, Real Presence, symbolic and spiritual presence and more.  The Gospel of John relates that there is nothing more substantial or concrete than "Word" from the beginning which is the very basis for physical or concrete experience.  If we remove the "Word" basis of Eucharistic presence, we do not have anything.  Language has discursive habits of "literal" reference and figurative reference as well as many other kinds of references.  What is most literal is having the real presence of "Word" as the distinguishing basis of all human experience, without which, I could not have written "the distinguishing basis of all human experience."

Aphorism of the Day, August 24, 2018

"Eat my flesh, drink my blood."  To this some said, "This is a difficult teaching."  And they walked away.  John's Gospel in part teaches people that they can be poets and scientists at the same time.  The writer mocks through the oracle of Jesus, the crass literalists who want to be scientists when they are unable to awaken to the reality of their inner poet.  John's Gospel seeks to convert us to Christ and in the process one discovers the fullness of being a multi-discursive user of language.  Poetry is the ability to drink the ordinary water of life and taste it as extraordinary wine.

Aphorism of the Day, August 23, 2018

St. Paul used the metaphor of a soldier's protective gear to teach about what he regarded to be the battle of life.  He first claims that we are not fighting against flesh and blood or exterior foes; rather we are fighting an interior battle.  Each piece of exterior bodily armor is used to illustrate an interior armor of virtue that much "clothe" the spiritual person in order to undertake the interior battle.  The interior battle involves the formation of the "concrescences" of words that form and expedite the forces that guide our speech and deeds.  Prayer is the use of words to invoke the power of God as an interior organizing power toward the kind of peace and order which is the preparatory posture for how we act and speak.  The real battle in life happens in the battle of words within us and prayer is a sorting out method in mapping the word geography of our inner lives.  This mapping is the prelude to articulate the speech and deeds which become the exterior manifestation of our inner lives.

Aphorism of the Day, August 22, 2018

Truth is in the news and it wakens the differences of how people see the world.  The Greek notion of truth evolved to be consistent logical phrases in language which could purport to be universal and objective standards or principles.  Truth in the Hebraic sense tended to be more about continual pragmatic honesty in action as one is forming the character of one's life.  The more current notion of truth has to do with what can be "proven" in a juridical setting.  The ideal of juridical practice is that court procedures can arrive at juridical truths to execute juridical actions of declarations of guilt or innocence or the no-action of a hung-jury.  Juridical truth has both salutary and cynical outcomes and we have to live with both.  The cynical outcome is that some people have better access to better sophists to defend them through the kinds of persuasions to "win" their case.  Juridical truth can be a very isolated notion of simply "winning a court" case.  The greater ideal of law makes appeal to the Greek ideals of principles with categorial imperatives as well as the Hebraic notion of honesty in personal action and growth, and this highlight the "teaching" function of the law.  In the public world, truth as winning a court case seems to prevail and in the "he said, she said" disagreements, juridical truth is also political persuasion of getting votes for either "he said," or "she said."  Truth as coming to honesty in the deeds of one's life in forming the ethos or character of one's life does not always seem to matter in the juridical setting.  When the character of a person is a glaring issue in juridical events, there is often the necessity for multiple witnesses and unimpeachable evidence to counter the person who is unwilling to be honest.  The practice of the law is also often the ugly sausage making procedure of legally manipulating one unethical and dishonest person to achieve the goal of bringing another more prominent unethical and dishonest person to the justice of getting what is "deserved" because of the harm caused by dishonest and illegal actions.

Aphorism of the Day, August 21, 2018

If the Eucharist has become unmoored from the actually eating of a meal for sustenance it cannot be unmoored from the ethical practice of making sure that all people have the most basic medicine of life, namely, adequate food and clean water.

Aphorism of the Day, August 20, 2018

"Unless you eat my flesh and drink my blood..."  The writer of John's Gospel was trying to impart the belief that Eucharist is a very "physical" experience.  The Eucharist is a liturgical event which encodes through bread and wine taken within the mystical reality of the life of Christ being born in one and being renewed in one in the Eucharistic event because we exist in time.  The Christ becoming born in us must happen continually because we are "in time."  Because in the beginning the Word was God and is God, Word is able to create or designate in human experience "physicality."  The human experience of physicality is what makes scientists privilege the "empirical" experience as what is "really real" and most meaningful in the pragmatic sense of what can get done in the physical world.  The writer of John's Gospel takes this "physicality" and uses it to promote how really real and physical the mystical union with Christ is, a union that is celebrated in the Eucharistic event.  For the writer of John's Gospel, the mystical of the word and the physical cannot be separated; the mystical experience of Christ must become the physical experience of Christ as one's body, soul, and spirit begins to channel Christ physically in the world in doing love and justice to one's brothers and sister whom one sees to authenticate one's love of God whom one does not see.

Aphorism of the Day, August 19, 2018

Once John's Gospel proclaims that Word is the beginning of life as we know it, then the question becomes a question of the quality of word life in speech and deeds as body language.  We don't have any choice about being in Word; we get to have many choices about how we organize and constitute ourselves in words and how we help to constitute others in the values which we regard to be worthy to pass on.

Aphorism of the Day, August 18, 2018

In the beginning was the Word and the Word was God and all things came into being through the Word.  Word is co-extensive with the knowing of anything.   One might say that an infant and animals "know" things in their own way without word, but that is only our projection upon word-impaired states of being from the positions of already living, moving and having our being/becoming within Language.  The co-extensive insight about Word in John's Gospel is in my view, the most simply and yet most profound insight of all.  Word is the beginning of our entire anthropomorphic adventure.

Aphorism of the Day, August 17, 2018

In John's Gospel, Jesus says, "unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you."  John's Gospel is a teaching about the error of crass literalism and the Signs are an interpretive goad to get with the Spirit and the spiritual or other metaphorical meanings of the kind of abundant life that is being taught in the early church.  We are told that the "literalists" are offended by the cannibalistic implication and Jesus replies, "My words are spirit and they are life."  Physicality is a metaphor for emphasizing something being really real since in our preference for sensorial verification, we privilege "seeing is believing" even though everything happens because of the unseen configuration of words within us which creates the lens for seeing and interpreting meaning because as we told in John, Great Word is from the beginning of human life as we can know it and Great Word is God, and privileged as the essence of the anthropomorphism which dictates all that humanity can produce.  We do and see in human ways because it is the human way to have Language.  And Language is so wonderful to have a rainbow of discourses which co-exist and complement and we can be scientists and aesthetes at same time without contradiction.  Such complementarity amongst the discursive employment of having language is celebrated in the Gospel of John.  We are invited to be more than "one trick discursive ponies" with our understanding of language and our being language users.

Aphorism of the Day, August 16, 2018

Inebriation alters the state of mind and can evoke a sense of joyous enthusiasm (even though others states not so friendly can occur too).  St. Paul wrote don't be drunk with wine but be filled with the Spirit.  One might say that he was speaking about a "natural" high in that it was unaided by any mind altering substances, but it would be truer to say that he was writing about a "spiritual" high.  Certainly the experience of Paul was a "charismatic" experience, the experience of being enthused because one's having accessed something or Someone within oneself who provided the ecstasy of a kind of love which altered the brain's chemistry to render one euphoric in word, mood and deeds.  Many people's lives are missing the access to the kind of ecstasy and euphoria which can happen without resorting to addictive substances or behaviors.  Part of one's own adventure involves learning the experience of being "filled with Spirit" and accessing euphoria and ecstasy to accompany all of the other things that one must face, like drudgery, affliction, suffering, and the repetitive quotidian events of life.

Aphorism of the Day, August 15, 2018

It is a good day to remember that the Virgin Mary is the chief paradigm of all Christians in that she exemplifies the use of physicality as a metaphor for emphasizing that something is really Real.  What was really Real in the mystagogy of the early church?  That the life of Christ is born into each Christian and it happens when one is overshadowed by the Holy Spirit.  Mary as Mystagogue teaches the Pauline mystery of identity with Christ: "Christ in you, the hope of glory."  In the Tersteegen hymn there is a prayer request: "Let my soul like Mary's be thy earthly sanctuary...."

Aphorism of the Day, August 14, 2018

Writing and the passing of time.  Words are written in a sequential before and after and the sequences represent the passing of time.  Writing is done by an author in his or her "present tense," which means the general time of his or her existence when he or she is writing within a situation and location.  And writing involves one writing in a present tense about the past events when the people in the past had their own "present tense" yet it is only accessible to a later writer through memory and the evidence.  The writers/editors of John's Gospel in its development had many "present tenses" and each of those writing occasion reflected the exigent needs of the community for whom they were writing.  The past life of Jesus was presented in a way to serve the current explanatory needs of the church to teach the significance of the practice of Eucharist.  The bread of life discourse in John's Gospel is a presentation of the Eucharistic practices of a later church using the authorial and oracle voice of Jesus to teach the significance and the symbolism of the Eucharist using the Hebraic tradition regarding heavenly bread and the Torah as something that was to be "consumed" as sweeter than honey in the honey comb.  Jesus was the bread come down from heaven in the symbolism of the early church.  It would not make sense if the church was not a Eucharistic church.

Aphorism of the Day, August 13, 2018

The writer of the Proverb uses the seductive qualities of women over men in rather contradictory ways.  Young men are warned about the seduction of the harlots in the street, even while the writer of the Proverb proclaims the seductive qualities of Lady Wisdom who is trying to attract followers.

Aphorism of the Day, August 12, 2018

The Gospel of John is a recommendation for initiates in a new symbolic order.  Each person should do a review of the symbolic order in which they live.  How have you taken on language to derive the values and meanings of your life as they are manifested in the value expressions of your words and deeds?  If you can understand how your language codes your existence, you can understand your symbolic order.  Understanding one's symbolic order is a necessary prelude to working on changing things in one's symbolic order which do not measure up to the expressions of excellence that one may want because one has seen superior exemplars who have made one want to be a much better person in many ways.

Aphorism of the Day, August 11, 2018

Because we are worded-beings, each is born into a symbolic order of how words constitute one's life.  As infants we are linguistically impaired but we are the passive recipient of the linguistic codes of our culture and as passive recipients we are taught how to value what we experience from within and without.  As we progress to more fully claim agency in language use, we seek to become more the "authors" of our own lives.  Attaining greater agency in language also means that in the phases of our being passive recipients of language, we took on the benefits and the curses of our linguistic exemplars.  We can find ourselves wanting to have the power of agency to re-write the deep scripts of our lives which seem to determine us in ways that we've come to eschew.  One of the most profound ways to attain new authorial agency to change one's life is to be inspired by laudable exemplars who give us the power to convert toward the scripts of life which we want to act out towards what we regard to be excellence.

Aphorism of the Day, August 10, 2018

The Gospel of John includes a Book of Signs.  God as Word is the Author of life as it can be known and as God-Word as author, Jesus is the sign-ature of God within the known creation of everything through living and moving and having being in and because of Word.

Aphorism of the Day, August 9, 2018

To belong to a culture one needs to understand the codes and symbols of the culture.  Symbols often are very arbitrary and attain commitment without any obvious reason.  The Bald Eagle and the flag clad Uncle Sam are symbols for America and insiders understand, appreciate, love, cherish and defend the "codes."  John's Gospel includes codes and signs regarding how Jesus fits within salvation history.  All codes and symbol reside in having language, and so the Word which is God sets the foundation for all codes and symbols.  Within Word which is God, there arises the specific symbols or codes which pertain to Jesus Christ and his continuity with the symbols of the Hebrew Scriptures but also his being a bridge to a new future of the Gospel going global beyond the "cultural boundaries" of Judaism.

Aphorism of the Day, August 8, 2018

In the living bread discourse Jesus identifies himself with the living bread from heaven.  In the Hebrew Scriptures there is a relationship between the manna or bread from heaven and the Torah as God's Word from heaven by which people are supposed to live.  In John's Gospel this parallel between heavenly bread and physical bread is taught.  Christ is the Eternal Word of God from heaven make physically personal in Jesus.  And humanity in fact lives by the organization of Word; one could not even eat bread or prepare it if one was not already organized by the words that has taught humanity to make bread and eat it.  God as Word is therefore the actual "soul food" of humanity.  Jesus identified himself with this "soul food" which organizes all of human existence.  Eating the Eucharistic bread is admitting dynamic identity with Word, the mystical pre-substance of human life itself.  The bread of life discourse is about the relationship between bread and the Word that is responsible to its creation or being a part of human life.

Aphorism of the Day, August 7, 2018

Bread of life eaten makes one live forever?  John's Gospel is about how things that are external are made into things internal.  Hunger and thirst are not to be taken literal.  Eating the flesh of Jesus is not to be taken literal.  John's Gospel is about an internal make over and events in the landscape are mere metaphorical signs of the internal transformation to see life in an enhanced "poetic" way.  John's Gospel is based upon the prologue priority that Word creates and changes our lives from within and it is word which structures our interaction within our external environments.  John's Gospel is a poetry of the inner life of rearranging the furniture of words within so that we don't trip up in the changing arrangement of furniture of events in our external world.

Aphorism of the Day, August 6, 2108

It is easy to forget that the Bible is about the art of living with faith.  It is a book of "art" not science and not exact historical writing.  It is collage of metaphors to get us repeated opportunity to view and find insights to help us in the art of living with faith now.  The chief inspiration of faith is hope which is a sense of always having a future and knowing this one acts in accordance with this hope, one act in faith.

Aphorism of the Day, August 5, 2018

Seeking a sign from God usually means that one wants in an experiential occasion something to come into such a obvious foreground distinguishing itself from the ordinary background of everything else that is happening and goes without notice as signs.  When no fire is the ordinary experience then smoke in the air becomes a sign that marks and announces something.  Some people live with the redundancies of the background as an aid for the ever arising new to mark the new adventure of the day and which was noticed because of just doing the faithful background stuff and having a good portion of one's life on good automatic habits precisely so that one can notice how one's life is being marked by the new "sign of God."

Aphorism of the Day, August 4, 2018

One of the writing issues present in all of the Gospel has to do with informing Gentile members of the churches about the Judaic roots of Jesus in his time without anachronistically in blatant ways, imparting too much of the hint of the Gentile mission into the actual narrative of the life of Jesus.  It is done in subtle ways like with the foreign magi visit and the confession of the Roman Centurion or Greeks visiting a feast in Jerusalem asking to see Jesus.  But then there is also the evangelical charge of Jesus to go into all of the world and preach the Gospel, which surely implied the peoples beyond the Jewish diaspora.


Aphorism of the Day, August 3, 2018

Through word and language, naming of everything has come to be, even the naming of God in various specific languages, and John's Gospel even names Word as God.  Word is reflexive in that it uses itself to acknowledge that it is and word is used to acknowledge that there are language users.  Everything that is and can be humanly known starts with the assumption of language, language use and language users.  We even use language to speak about pre-linguistic states of being as an infant and so with language we pre-code every so called non-linguistic state of being.  Language is the human origin of all in that it is coextensive with awareness of existence and language has been used to even make such a claim.  

Aphorism of the Day, August 2, 2018

Jesus said that he was the bread of life come from heaven to give life to the world.  Certainly this is metaphorical in the Gospel of John in that it refers back to the fact that Word is God that brings all human life into existence including knowing that existence is something to be known.  Word comes mysterious from the human inward world, a heavenly place and gives life as it can be known by human beings.  The witness that any specific use and manifestation of word products is referential back to the fact that we have Word as the basis of human life.

Aphorism of the Day, August 1, 2018

Everything happens or becomes because of language, even the past.  Because we have language, we ponder an infinite regress.  An infinite regress comes into being when people have language to ponder the same and posit there was some everlasting pre-existing Great Language User who was a Plenitude from which there has been generated little limited language users as proof that existing in the web of Word is the unavoidable human trap that also provides us the imagination of freedom in pondering that words always signify the imaginable extra-linguistic Reality.

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Aphorism of the Day, July 2018

Aphorism of the Day, July 31, 2018

The writer of the Gospel John understands Jesus to constantly saying, "Don't be literal!"  It is not about the water in the well, it is about the fountain springing up from within.  It is not about getting bread to eat; it is about Jesus as a living bread and the sustenance for one's spiritual life.  So being spiritual means that one can dismiss the physical?  No, being spiritual means one takes care of the physical needs in the best actuarial wisdom that one can find and there is no actuarial wisdom in "hoarding" if one is concerned about adequate distributive justice for all.

Aphorism of the Day, July 30, 2018

Juvenal wrote about the Roman populace wanting "bread and circuses" with little regard for their cultural heritage and it was important for the Emperor to insure the same for the populace to keep revolt from happening.  Jesus, fed the multitude and the populace were both entertained and fed, thus making him the obvious candidate to be their king.  The writer of John's Gospel decries literalism; Jesus was not that kind of king.  In John's Gospel, Jesus was a Word-King.  His words were spirit and life and he wanted to give the constituting words to enter people and change their lives.  The authority of Jesus as Word-King in the lives of people was much more profound and enduring than being a "bread and circus" king.

Aphorism of the Day, July 29, 2018

After one has come to the realization that every experience partakes of being language, then it is up to each one to live and use language of values and make the case for the better values and the reasons for those better values.  Followers of Jesus from their community solidarity may want to make the case that the most adequate values are love and justice for the common good and pit the adequacy of that view against all others.

Aphorism of the Day, July 28, 2018

In language mysticism or the mysticism of language, it is blessed to arrive at the default position of the interpretative insight of having and using language.  Everything after that basic interpretation, over which one has no choice, are other interpretations, some of which are merely the carrying out of the automatic language traditions that one has been taught from birth and others are arriving at a language agency such that one is choosing from a range of possible interpretive screens through which to process data from within and data from without.  In language mysticism one arrives at the John 1:1 insight, "And the Word was God."

Aphorism of the Day, July 27, 2018

The Gospel of John came to textual form and redactions so many decades after the actual life of Jesus, it is a presentation of the life of Jesus to understand how his life was the source of what had become the actual spiritual practices of the churches in the subsequent decades after Jesus.  This Gospel is a semiotics or a symbology on the genealogy of the practices of the churches using Hebrew Scriptures and attending traditions (apocrypha and apocalyptic), the life of Jesus interpretatively re-told and the witness of the apostles to present to the user Christo-mystaphiles (lovers of the mystery of Christ within) insights on the transformative practices of the community.

Aphorism of the Day, July 26, 2018

An infant is the passive recipient or object in the process of being coded by language users until the infant attains the age and ability to be a language using coder.  Becoming a language coder means that one receives the language traditions of one's environment where one is raised.  The language traditions means that one takes on the received interpretations of one's community and the longer one lives, the more one both repeats those received interpretations while at the same time accidentally or purposefully becoming an inventor of new language products inclusive of the individual style of interpretation that one brings to those products.  Jesus, in the Gospel, adds language about the memorial experience of one's birth, (a seeming pure primordial state of being) the time before having language and becoming an active interpreter of experience via language.  He actually called it a new birth, since it was a forgotten birth due to the layers of interpretations that old men like Nicodemus had accrued to become unable to access the original joy of simply having been born.   Yet even the naming of such a new birth was but a insight that was born in signifying words about a mysterious past called in language, "one's birth."

Aphorism of the Day, July 25, 2018

In the presentation of Jesus in the Gospel of John, if one is being literal, then one is missing the "spiritual" point.  Is the multiplication of the loaves literally about regular mass feeding of people so that Jesus can be a good king and provide bread for the populace?  No, it is a story to promote the Eucharistic practice of the church in the belief that Jesus is the living bread come down from heaven.  In John, Jesus is Word, his words are spirit and life.  Christ=Word=God=Life.  The Gospel of John is all about Word and how word constitutes human life in the many discursive ways of Word.  John uses word, artistically, literarily, not literally and spiritual meanings in the stories of Jesus are the message to those wanting to be mystagogues.

Aphorism of the Day, July 24,2018

As quick to give answers about his theology as Paul seemed to be, he also had lots of disclaimers which proved that he was a "love mystic."  In his praise of love, he said he only knew in part while the experience of love was the greatest.  He said the love of Christ surpassed all knowledge.  He wrote that to love is to fulfill the law.  In the end the experience of love was more profound than his writings.  Paul's writings could be seen as "community pragmatics" to help the members of the Christian Movement get along with each other and negotiate their own self identity.  But Paul in his most profound insights said: It is all about love.

Aphorism of the Day, July 23, 2018

The feeding of the multitude by Jesus in John is one of the signs.  Signs in the Gospel of John is the baffling trope to trick people to move from the literal to the spiritual.  The literal people wanted to make king because he could provide food; the disciples in the Johannine community were being taught to switch their interpretive mode because the feeding of multitude was a sign of the continuing manna from heaven in the Eucharistic practice of the church.  Jesus, himself, was the living bread from heaven.  The discerning mystagogue understood the "Sign."  Literal interpreters today still want to make Jesus part of a political force to rule "their" world.  People still miss the "signs" that are found in John's Gospel.


Aphorism of the Day, July 22, 2018

In medical anthropology, one discovers how culturally conditioned the notions of health, wellness and sickness and disease are.  If religious society functions also as "public health" authority and declares sickness as an unclean state that threatens the "healthy" community, then the people who end up being named as unclean and sick have their being totally characterized by the negative that they cannot be well, even if they feel "well" enough to be regarded as worthy of existing within the reciprocity of community.  Jesus was one who dismantled the religious medical classification of "unclean" for sick people and he touched them signifying they had a place in his life, in the life of God and in the life of caring community.  The faith expressed in Jesus was the ultimate healing "placebo" instantiating the psychosomatic basis of health and illness and the psychosomatic is heavily conditioned by social context in how the language of a culture allows a person to constitute oneself regarding the question "Am I sick or healthy and how do others regard me regarding health and sickness?"

Aphorism of the Day, July 21, 2018

The writers of the New Testament dealt with the issue of the clash of their Gospel lifestyles with the clash of the values of the dominant culture of the Roman World.  On one extreme, one could adopt a separation something like the Amish do in America to avoid interaction with the American culture.  One can say to the culture at large, "Come to our enclave and conform to our rule of life, if you want the Gospel."  Such tactics do not make the Gospel accessible to the peoples of one's world.  John the Baptist seemed to say come to the Jordan wilderness to hear my message; Jesus seemed to say, "Go to the people where they are."  Both strategies are found in the New Testament witness and in the history of the church.  It is perhaps a question of style, ethos and personality as to the strategies of living in the world and not being of the world.  How much of the culture can be "baptized" and integrated as a part of Gospel style?  In American Evangelical churches, there was a time when "Rock" or "Popular" music was regarded to be "worldly" or even "satanic."  Now every church aspiring to be the proverbial "mega" church is built like a TV studio stage set and filled with guitars, drums and "Rock" music that has been Jesus-ified.  The spectacle that was once a "rock concert" is now "church."  It may be that the social aspect of being "entertained" is a key aspect of the effervescence of "successful" religious gathering and a key aspect of "entry level" Christianity.

Aphorism of the Day, July 20, 2018

The Gospel present Jesus and the disciples like being the head of ER and residents at a busy Emergency Room in a large city hospital, because they are thronged by sick people.  In the Palestine of Jesus' time, one might understand an entire class of people designated as "sick."  Under the religious public health classification in the Purity Code, sick meant "unclean" or "defiled" and therefore untouchable, because of the fear of infection and contagion.  The sick had to be socially quarantined.  The popularity of Jesus was that he was accessible to a class of people who were designated as untouchable.  He ate with "sinners" or people designated as "unclean" because they were far from being ritually observant people.  He touched the sick and allowed them to touch him, thus breaking the segregation codes which pertained to the class of sick people designated as "unclean."  In fact the very essence of the inner personalities of sick people was designated as being "unclean" spirits.  By declaring forgiveness for "unclean" sinners and by inviting "unclean" sick people back into community for care and healing, Jesus began the salvation social movement which became the church.  The church has often become so concerned about her own "purity codes" and has at times and places become seen as an unwelcoming place for many who don't fit the appearance of the initiation "requirements."  Renewal in a salvation social movement is often called for within or without of the church.

Aphorism of the Day, July 19, 2018

From a cursory reading of the Gospels one can get the impression that countless number of people were sick and in need of healing.  Sin, sickness and death defined the social conditions meaning that being unhealthy in one's behavioral life, in the aging process of the body and having no vision of afterlife health characterizes the human condition.   The witness of Jesus is that behaviors can improve and get better, bodily health can be better when the sick are included in community and not quarantined by religious law, and resurrection heals death by making it a single event in the continuity of a person forever.  By presenting a vision of future afterlife health, death is not a sucking final entropy meant to demoralize every human act until it happens; it is a mere event in the future becoming of person.

Aphorism of the Day, July 18, 2018

In an endless chain of interpretation of interpretation of interpretation, where does one stop for making a decision based upon how a particular interpretation directs human agency?  In most decision, past redundancies of interpretation have one's decisions on near automatic in the repetitions that are ingrained in memorial traces of our behaviors.  A new event of significant agency in one's life involves selection of an interpretation which might be colored by selection of persuasive values.  Do I chose out of self interest?  Bodily need?  Care of others close?  Care of a stranger?  Preservation and protection?  Future well-being?  Sacrifice for a common good?  Agency ends up being determined by both automatic habits of interpretation and also by the degree of freedom that we have when the tacit knowledge of the exigent circumstances presents a limited number of choices.

Aphorism of the Day, July 17, 2018

Jesus observed the large crowds who were like "sheep without shepherds."  Even in our day of widespread education, the masses tend to be sheep who are "either-or" thinkers who can be exploited by leaders who repeat simply phrases as simple "truths" without any critical thinking about logical outcomes.  The strongest propaganda agents are advertisers who create the need for products and crowds suddenly feel bereft without such products.  In the realm of politics, there is much exploitation of the "crowds" around the world.  The early church proposed that Jesus was a "good shepherd" who did not exploit the crowd that was vulnerable; rather Jesus promoted the use of power, wealth and knowledge for the care of people.  If people who seem to be in leader positions do not use power, wealth and knowledge to care for those who need it, they are not followers of Jesus Christ, the Good Shepherd.

Aphorism of the Day, July 16, 2018

In any event there is a string of interpretations of language users.  Language is made flesh in bodily response and actions.  One's life is constantly constituted by the many interpretations that have been learned such that most seem to the automatic habits of our lives.  When the automatic habits seem to be habits of learned fear or aggrandized pride, some deep level re-interpretation must take place to interdict.  The beginning of interdiction is the realization that everything is equal in "being an interpretation."  From there one moves to assess the values which drive our actions based upon interpretations that we have come to believe are wrong or harmful.

Aphorism of the Day, July 15, 2018

One of most obvious things of life is to realize that we use language to come to the realize that we are using language and using language is the prior condition for anything human at all that can be known.  Even to cite the pre-linguistic state of being, we have to have language to state the same.  Having language, language having us brings into being all extra-linguistic reality and though language seems to be the subsequent Second, its arrival actually creates the condition of First and Second.

Aphorism of the Day, July 14, 2018

With human language, we name God and lots of other "totalities," probably because we need the imagination of a comprehending view of things to presume to know how all particular things fit together and to posit a way for conflicting human beings to find a way to survive living together.  God is the perhaps the most enduring "tactical totality" that has come to human language, even though, having human language is perhaps the most embracing human unifying totality of all.

Aphorism of the Day, July 13, 2018

John the Baptist was an unbribed soul and he became popular enough to be arrested.  If he had been but a crazy homeless man shouting on the edge of the city, he probably would have been ignored.  But his preaching and his utterances had to have been spread wide enough to reach the palace of Herod, particularly John's pronouncement about the impropriety's of Herod's marriage to his brother's wife.  Putting John in prison would "shut off" his public voice; beheading him would make his voice go away.  But even as Jesus became much more after his death, John the Baptist became much more after his death as his life, ministry and community were perpetuated as the proto-community of Christ.  The Gospels trace the origin of the Christian community to their origins within the community of John the Baptist.  The closeness of John and Jesus in their friendship was the model of appreciative transitions between the community of John and the community of Jesus.

Aphorism of the Day, July 12, 2018

King Herod heard about the fame of Jesus and said that he must be John the Baptist, raised from the dead, whom he had beheaded.  This observation of Herod certainly functioned to promote the closeness of John with Jesus and would have reinforced the notion that the community of Jesus was the legitimate successor of the community of John the Baptist.

Aphorism of the Day, July 11, 2018

The community of John the Baptist could probably be called the proto-church since their leader issued significant reform for the Judaism of his time.  The antipathy expressed between John and the religious authorities and the practice of making everyone a "proselyte" by requiring a baptism for renewal and repentance presaged the later division between the followers of Christ and the synagogue, the coup de grace being the dispensing with the ritual purity requirements for the reception of the Gentiles into the community of Christ.

Aphorism of the Day, July 10, 2018

John the Baptist has a marvelous birth story, like that of Isaac and Samuel.  Jesus had a miraculous birth story.  John the Baptist had a tragic death by decapitation.  His death perhaps signaled a significant succession of Jesus in the lives of the former followers of John.  The death of Jesus in contrast to the death of John attained redemptive significance and his death became the mystical power to "die" to the selfish self in the theology of Christo-identity of Paul.

Aphorism of the Day, July 9, 2018

John the Baptist gets lots of "ink" in the Gospels, probably because Jesus was a "member" of his community and because the early Christians wanted to appeal to the followers of John to become followers of Jesus.  The Gospels present contrasting parallels of the lives of John and Jesus and the success of the Christian communities meant that "take up my cross and follow me" became a catch phrase of discipleship, whereas, "lose your head in decapitation and follow John," did not become a phrase of mysticism for the followers of John.

Aphorism of the Day, July 8, 2018

What is the point of having a rule of life and having daily faithful habits of prayer and study?  Faithfulness builds the character of being in a right relationship with God and oneself and this character is crucial to weather the times of failure and success.  The character of faithfulness weathers all because one has realized that knowing one's identity with God in Christ is its own reward.

Aphorism of the Day, July 7, 1018

In human cycles, we can be like people who wish that harvest time could always be and that butterflies could perpetually break forth from cocoons, conveniently dispensing with the former phases which precede harvest or the birth of a butterfly.  This lack of patience and tolerance for the developmental cyclic phases  in human endeavor indicates a shallow faith which does not take into account the reality of freedom in time for the cycles of time.  Modern travel has allowed us to "cheat" time cycles by being able to have our fruit  out of season and by knowing that butterflies are being born somewhere all of the time.  But in human endeavor and in human society the cycles of conversion to the new require patience.  Ironically, Nazareth, the hometown of Jesus were not "ready" for him and neither were all of the villages where Jesus sent his disciples.  The conditions of receptivity of the soul are not easy to predict and this means that one has to learn how to be patiently faithful through all of the cycles in the relevance of Gospel becoming manifest for someone.

Aphorism of the Day, July 6, 2018

Each person's life has "timing" for being in the mode to receive new life changing insights.  One can preach advanced physics at a child and a child is not ready.  Spiritual time is also sensitive; not everyone is ready to be at the same place in the timing of their lives as everyone else.  Hard knocks make some people bitter and misanthropic while they make other people empathetic; what determines the particular outcome of processing human experience?  Timing for positive transformation of one's life is a mystery for the one being transformed as well as for the discerning evangelists who want to bring good news to people all of the time.

Aphorism of the Day, July 5, 2018

The people of Nazareth could not understand how one of their own could be a carpenter and a rabbi.  It is easy to "lock" a person into our own familiar version of who we want them to be.  The switch from carpenter to rabbi and traveling itinerant wonder worker was too much for people to allow in social mobility for Jesus.  It probably is an indication of how Jesus had remained "hidden" from his own hometown folk.  There is envy involved when "one of us" suddenly is getting fame beyond the border of the village where one lives.  It is a shame that one can lock oneself away from receiving insights from the people who are most accessible because of pride.

 Aphorism of the Day, July 4, 2018

Jesus was regarded to be misunderstood by his hometown residents of Nazareth.  They did not know about how he attained his wisdom.  Wasn't he just Joe and Mary's boy in the carpenter shop?  Jesus was more misunderstood in his own time; he became appropriated and understood in an expansive way as the Risen Christ.  However, the Jesus of Nazareth was amazing enough for a minority of people to confess that he had morphed into be the Christ, who was all and in all.  How did the historical Jesus morph into the Christification of all?  This is totally consistent with the proclamation of Christ as being the Word from the beginning who was God and who created/creates all things as they can be humanly known.  That human existence is constituted by Word is a truth which was given an ultimate Personality.

Aphorism of the Day, July 3, 2018

Once a context becomes "Christian," what is often lost is the serendipity of the Gospel becoming relevant in personal ways which are tellingly appropriate to the events of one's life.  Many religionists are more interested in "cultural" Christianity for political control rather than letting the winsomeness of the Gospel of love find its place in people's hearts without cultural pressure.  Kierkegaard once complained, "All the dogs in Denmark have faith," probably meaning that people had the automatic cultural faith without having the kind of personal faith which dramatically changes one's life towards the values of Jesus.

Aphorism of the Day, July 2, 2018

"A prophet has no honor in is own country."  Such a phrase might mean "familiarity breeds contempt," or a local person who attains fame becomes the target of envy which breeds scorn.  The evangelical missions as commanded by Christ had a strategy: Go and stay only where you are accepted.  If you are not received then move on.  There is timing and serendipity in how a person takes on new information that can "save" one's life in finding a new direction for one's life.  One cannot force a person to be in the "receptive" mode; if one can or does then it does not lead to genuine change or conversion.  If one converts to please the converter, then the conversion will not be authentic.  If one converts because one is forced to convert, then "conversion by oppression" negates the winsomeness of the message.

Aphorism of the Day, July 1, 2018

How did Jesus save people from sin, sickness and death?  He relativized these as events with temporal duration by offering them an abundant life which had no duration.  So, in sin, sickness and death, Jesus just kept saying, there is Some More.  By declaring a perpetual future sin, sickness and death are limited to stages, events and occasions with temporal duration, and they are much less than the Perpetual Future.

Saturday, June 30, 2018

Aphorism of the Day, June 2018


Aphorism of the June 30, 2018

The religious classification of sin, sickness and death in the time of Jesus, left too many people isolated from access to a sense of health and salvation in light of the reality of sin, sickness and death.  Jesus instituted new meanings about sin, sickness and death, thereby integrating them into a new program of salvation or PROFOUND HEALTH that one could anchor faith on and so let health rather than illness, salvation rather than sin define the normalcy of one's life.

Aphorism of the June 29, 2018

Sin is the state of not fully keeping the laws and so represent a sickness of human behaviors and so in part is a sickness of the volitional organ.  Sickness is experience of mental and body disease and distress defined by one's society and one's own sense of what one believes pain to be.  Death is at least viewed as personal bodily finality in the current life.  Sin, sickness and death have come to languages of meaning in all cultures and all people with language use have tried to find ways to integrate the three into a coherence which allows for the maintenance of life, given the reality of sin, sickness and death.
Aphorism of the Day, June 28, 2018

Sin, sickness and death have come to prominently define human experience.  The witness of the life of Jesus is not so much to deny the three but to redefine the relative significance of the three based upon the promotion of an indeterminate Future whereby everything gets eschatologically verified as a script by a Writer who with dynamic futurism writes that everything had to happen in the way that it did, not to cause it to have been so in the past, but to assert the power and creativity of the Future.  What will the Future make of our Today?  And who is doing the Future rewrite of the meaning of everything and who will be around to access the meanings of everything?

Aphorism of the Day, June 27, 2018

There is a utopian assumption that hangs over the Hebrews Scriptures that change as expressed in the passage of time could be expressed without any negative occasions in human experience of time.  Aging, sickness, death and the misbehaviors called sin all seem to dominate a system in flux with competing and conflicting encounters between all entities in flux.  There is a dream that wishes for the perfect timing of everything altogether, but it is the human dilemma to be perpetually caught in the mistimings of life.  Salvation history in written forms of the writers does not so much solve the dilemma as to dance with it.


Aphorism of the Day, June 26, 2018

It seems as the Hebrew Scriptures are writings which arose to deal with the negative events of change, namely, sin, death and sickness.  In the classification system of clean and unclean, these three were labeled as "unclean" and "unintended" by a "holy=most clean" God.  Apparently the intention of God was to train the naïve Adam and Eve away from their innocence so that they could partake of the Tree of Life in the middle of the Garden.  The implication of this utopian idealism is that one could go from innocence to holiness and eternal life without the detour of sin which meant knowing good and evil in the wrong way.

Aphorism of the Day, June 25, 2018


A specific biblical trope for retroactively proclaiming Providence of the past is the wonderful, miraculous and marvelous birth stories.  In the aftermath of the fame of the hero, it was a common rhetoric to show how the greatness must have been present from the very beginning of the life of the hero; hence the wonderful birth stories.


Aphorism of the Day, June 24, 2018

The great law and all laws if they are good are based upon wisdom insights gained from probability of occurrences of certain events.  Laws and the practice of lawful behaviors confront the reality of the freedom of what might happen to anyone.  Faith is the ability to live with actuarial wisdom knowing fully that probable occurrence does not guarantee actual occurrences.  Faith is the ability to live with actual occurrences.  Perhaps the secret of having faith is that it can be fully informed by the powerful phenomenon of Hope, the sense of having a future, even when my future apparently ends at my death.  Hope provides the apparent impulse that one does not cease to be or to have been at one's death.

Aphorism of the Day, June 23, 2018

"Are you afraid?  Have you still no faith?"  The transformation of the energy of fear to the energy of faith is a major task of life.

Aphorism of the Day, June 22, 2018

The Book of Job is a wisdom story written against those who pretended to know the precise cause and effect relationship about why things happen to people in life.  Lots of people promote their formula for blessing, even sell or preach their prosperity "Gospel."  It you do this, then God will bless you in this specific way $$$$.  If things are going wrong, then you didn't do this in the right way.  There is nothing wrong with wisdom formulas based upon good actuarial wisdom in acting and planning according to probability theory, but the Plenitude includes a infinite number of things in causal relationships (because all things exist in relationship) with an infinite number of things so no one can presume to have a "final" and perfect formula for good or bad things happening to this or that person.  Bad things happen to faithful people: see Job, Jesus and Paul.  Good people learn to live with faith when things appear to go well or appear to go badly, because they believe in a Plenitude of a future eschatological verification for having faith in good times and bad times.

 Aphorism of the Day, June 21, 2018

The "Jesus sleeping in the boat" periscope is teaching story for disciples of Jesus.  The disciples wanted the best positions in the kingdom of heaven and they apparently thought that having Jesus as their friend meant they were suddenly exempt from the normal clashes of nature's systems and human program; they thought they should not be exempt from a wind storm on the lake even when as fishermen they probably had never expected that exemption.  In the story Jesus rises to calm the sea and make a point about faith being the condition of being persuaded by God on the entire continuum of human experience from birth even to beyond the grave.  If you think that there is a chance you might perish in the storm, then alas, you will be forced to play that winning card, the resurrection.  In meantime, always already, be faithful, persuaded that the Plenitude already includes everything that you can experience.

Aphorism of the Day, June 20, 2018

The preachers of prosperity who believe that wealth and having planes is verification that God has blessed them might consider what St. Paul endured:  "afflictions, hardships, calamities, beatings, imprisonments, riots, labors, sleepless nights, hunger;...."  Apparently Jesus was "sleeping in the boat" of his life storms without being a snap-snap personal interventionists on his behalf whenever he wanted it.   There is a symbiotic relationship between the wealthy whom Jesus said could not easily inherit the kingdom of God and the preachers who fleece them and also the not so wealthy poor who want to be wealthy to prove that God loves and blesses them.   The preachers say wealth is God's blessing and the wealthy say,  "Amen, my wealth is justified and I must feed the ideological voice of the one who confers God's blessing on my wealth."  Having faith in the midst of having no privileged exemptions from the weal or woe that can come to anyone means living like Paul did when he said essentially that he had learned to be content in any circumstances.   The lifestyles of Jesus, Paul and St. Francis represent a different counter-prosperity to the "Fly High  Church" preachers who want millions to fly high in their expensive planes.

Aphorism of the Day, June 19, 2018

One needs to be careful not to confuse the discourse of the miraculous with the discourse of science when reading the Scriptures.  The miracles or signs are discursive ways of dealing with the conditions of freedom.  If one relies upon an interventionist mentality about "miracles" one usually forgets about the antecedent miracle that everyone wants in first place, namely, don't let anything bad happen to me in the first place.  Don't let anything bad happen to me is /would be the miracle to end all miracles.  Freedom does not work that way and so we must learn how to have faith, that is, live with hope in the midst of accepting that outcomes are "open."

Aphorism of the Day, June 18, 2018

The pericope of Jesus walking on the water and calming the storm provides some insights.  Why doesn't our "favor" with God mean that we are exempt from the threat and danger of wind storms, floods, hurricanes, volcanoes, fires and all manner of ill-timed encounter with the harmful effects of nature when we are in the wrong place at the wrong time?  It seems as though faith means learning to live with the conditions of freedom in our world rather can being granted special exemption.  The walking on the water by Jesus symbolizes the "surfing" on the conditions of freedom and "staying" on our boards until we arrive ashore.

Aphorism of the Day, June 17, 2018

For Jesus and for Paul, the kingdom which was most visible to the eyes was the Roman Empire.  What inner constitution did they need in order to see God's kingdom as the telling order of life while the Caesar pranced on the public stage of the visible?  Paul called it faith; Jesus told Nicodemus that he could not see beyond the obvious if he did not have another birth into another realm as its citizen.  

Aphorism of the Day, June 16, 2018

St. Paul's notion of faith was an understanding of having an inner constitution of persuasion such that one did not see things in a "human" way any longer.  Faith was the quality of having an "infused" sight that was perceptive beyond the sense of mere physical sight.  Such a view is instantiated in the Jesus discourse with Nicodemus as being born of the Spirit and being born again or from above and having such a "new birth" experience one understood the inner significance of things.  The parables of Jesus are presented as koan-like stories which trick the quotidian habits of seeing and require a seeing that is imbued with the eyes of another kind of wisdom.

Aphorism of the Day, June 15, 2018

St. Paul, "We walk by faith and not by sight."  What does that mean?   We pretend we are blind and like the proverbial "blind ninjas" we negotiate our existence?  The New Testament word for faith is "pistos" and this word is also used for belief.  I think that resorting to the more classical Greek usage of the word "pistos" adds fullness to the words faith and belief.  These words have almost become "boiler plate" words and in redundancy of use have lost their signifying power.  In classical Greek rhetoric, the goal was "pistos" or persuasion.  Belief or faith essentially are the actions and attitudes of life which manifest what one is persuaded about.  St. Paul states a truth; we are persuaded about and act upon things that we don't see.  We can be persuaded and act by "love" which we cannot see and yet know that it is a true and worthy motivation in our lives.  Everyone, always, already walks by the unseen production of our lives through the hidden words inside of us which both create for us what we are seeing and define and articulate our behaviors within what we think we are seeing.  The articulation of our worded products in seeing, acting, speaking, and writing express our faith or that about which we are persuaded.  We cannot help but live lives which manifest signs of what we are persuaded about.

Aphorism of the Day, June 14, 2018

The Gospels may have been initially private to their communities and not generally available.  They were written with "cryptic" messages which initiates could understand when instructed in "private."  The presentation of the parables instantiate the "privacy" of understanding the kingdom or realm of God.  Caesar pranced on the public stage of his kingdom; the realm of God had to be perceived in a completely different way in the midst of such an ostentatious public show of "being king."  How could the realm of kingdom of God be presented "underground" as the mystagogy of these growing private gatherings of Christian mystics?

Aphorism of the Day, June 13, 2018

Paul wrote, "We once knew Christ from a human point of view..."  From his conversion he believed that he came to know Christ from a spiritual or divine point of view.  Paul did not cease to be human after his conversion; he believed that he had an "enhanced" insight regarding the meaning of Christ.  And Christ became for Paul quite an expansive metaphor.  He could be "in Christ," and he could be crucified with Christ and he could lose sight of whether he acted from his own ego state or whether Christ lived within him.  He could write that Christ is all and in all.  What is all and in all?  Word.  For Paul, the historical Jesus had returned to be the eternal Word which was from the beginning, was God and is what created/creates/ is creating/ will be creating everything as human can known things to be.

Aphorism of the Day, June 12, 2018

Jesus said the realm of God was just like grain that grows.  The realm of God is inclusive of the entire cycle of life.  We may prefer perpetual harvest but every cycle is equally necessary and so one should exercise faith to perceive the divine within the particular phase that one is in.

Aphorism of the Day, June 11, 2018

Mustard seed faith is perhaps a metaphor for the unnoticed prominence of the background.  All of the attention is given to the "foreground" even while unnoticed background redundant and repetitive acts of faith and kindness keep the foreground from collapsing in its own "narcissism" of self important.  The foreground says, "I am important because everyone is recognizing me," whilst standing on the scaffold of the unnoticed foundation for the braggart even to speak.

Aphorism of the Day, June 10, 2018

In the effort to change the narrative words of Jesus into "official" doctrine and practice the church derived to classify certain sins as "eternal" or unforgivable.  Jesus did say if one called one's brother a fool, one could be guilty of the fires of Hell (Gehenna=garbage dump in the Valley of Hinnom).  Blasphemy against the Holy Spirit was another unforgivable sin.  When has the church chosen to be canonical and juridical about words of pronouncements of Jesus and brought them to doctrine and when have they let the words of Jesus remain as hyperbolic and figurative?  The church has never had the "official" doctrine or canon law to pluck out eyes and cut off hands for people who used them in "offending" ways.  Interpreters of the Bible have often been inconsistent in how they have brought the words of Jesus to actual pragmatic practices within the church.  Snake handling is not at universal practice in churches, but some find biblical basis for its practice.  Making everything in the Bible universally applicable for everyone all of the time is surely a very fallible way of interpreting and regarding the Bible.

Aphorism of the Day, June 9, 2018

The term "unforgivable" is often used to designate an act which is truly offensive and repugnant.  Jesus used it to designate the calling of his exorcisms as being in league with the devil.  The Gospel present the opponents of Jesus as saying that he was mad, a drunkard, and that he had made a pact with the devil.  His opponents demonized his healing act of exorcism.  Jesus stood up for his deep personal motive, namely, the Holy Spirit as being the One who would cast out impure spirits and create a clean heart.  He said it was unforgivable to call a good act, evil.  When discernment is so distorted by the need to bring down an opponent, one truly commits unforgivable acts.  Finding grace in life is about learning how to discern good as good and evil as evil and knowing that one needs the Higher Power of the Holy Spirit to keep one in the "state of forgiveness."

Aphorism of the Day, June 8, 2018

In one of the option from the Hebrew Scriptures for proper 5 of Year B in the lectionary cycle, the event of the "Fall" is coupled with the "unforgivable" sin against the Holy Spirit in the Gospel.  So in one reading, Eve said to God, "the serpent/devil" made me do it.  The religious leader said about the exorcisms of Jesus: "the devil made you do it."  A title of a Rolling Stones song is "No Sympathy for the Devil."  The powerful impairment of good in a free system has the devil as a higher power to impel and trick the "lower" agents, men and women.  The ultimate impairment of good is when these lower agents of freedom confront the human embodiment of Good Freedom, Jesus, and they designate his act of creating a clean heart in someone by dispelling the inner agents of chaos, as powered by the evil one.  Jesus, standing up for the Holy Spirit, who is Personified Pure Heart and who makes hearts pure, says it is unforgivable to call the Pure Holy Spirit, impure.

Aphorism of the Day, June 7, 2018

The story of the Fall provides an explanation for the human tendency to be in the state of selfishness, known as sin.  Can selfish beings do nothing other than selfish acts?  How can God love selfish beings, doing selfish acts?  Can selfishness be converted to the "sense of oneself living in love with others?"  The biblical key is to love that Worthy One first as the prelude to exploring the lovability of one's neighbors.  If we begin with the demand that others be "worthy" of our love, we will end in disappointment because of their eventual failure to be "omni-competent" to our needs.

Aphorism of the Day, June 6, 2018

There is a confusing grammar found in the Bible and in our common speech about sin and forgiveness.  We sometimes leave the direct object out of a sentence and it can seems as though the indirect object "stands in or takes the place of the direct object."  God forgives sins seems to be an abbreviation of God forgives the sins of Phil.  The sins of Phil actually are unforgivable; why should such imperfection and their outcomes ever be forgiven.  But God does forgive the sinner.  This entire grammatical dilemma is a word study in the dilemma between "becoming" as the prior reality before "being" is abstracted from the states of becoming.

Aphorism of the Day, June 5, 2018

Did one member of the Trinity ever stand up for the reputation of another member of the Trinity?  When Jesus was accused of casting out demons by Beelzebul, the Lord of demons, he defended the Holy Spirit by saying such an accusation was an unforgivable sin.  How could one designate such an event of personal deliverance as being performed by an "anti-Holy Spirit?"  How could one call "good, evil?"  People in opposing political and religious paradigms are often so "mean" to each other they often call another's good, evil because they cannot rise to a more encompassing common good.

Aphorism of the Day, June 4, 2018

In the classification of sins, from the words of Jesus, the sin against the Holy Spirit is the unforgivable sins.  In the context, it would seem that such a sin involves the attribution of a work of the Spirit to the work of the devil and would indicate the condition of such distorted sense of discernment so as to call "white, black."  Does unforgivable mean "eternally unforgiven?"  Or would it imply that any sin is unforgiven until one is in the discerning state of mind to acknowledge one's fault and "ask" for forgiveness?  That one might seem to be in the habit of perpetual sin would not foreclose the possibility of higher power interdiction of one idolatrous habit.

Aphorism of the Day, June 3, 2018

One can understand the apocalyptic fervor in the first century for Jews and Christians and any who suffered because of Roman domination.  Roman domination was such an imposing reality that the end of it could only be conceived of with an impacting intervention of the divine.  Irony of ironies; the apocalypse did not happen but what did happen was the apocalypse (the unveiling) of the persuasive love of Christ which eventually "took over" the Roman Empire.

Aphorism of the Day, June 2, 2018

The purpose of the Law or laws is to teach body language "correct" behaviors for the varying situations in life pertaining to the people and the Great Person with whom one must live.  The purpose of the Law is not to focus upon the "dead letters of crass literalism" in legalism but to understand the living Spirit of the Law in the training to know and sense the appropriate thing to do and say in each context of one's life as behaviors are governed by love and justice.

Aphorism of the Day, June 1, 2018

The most general a law is stated without contextual details, the less likely it can be deconstructed by future contexts.  For example, Love God with all your heart and love your neighbor as yourself.  This general law is hard to falsify within a context because it asks that love be the motive and the effort of one's life at all times.  Some laws have too many contextual details which means they can promote ambiguity in their interpretive application.  For example, Remember the Sabbath to keep it holy by performing no labor.  Obviously, Christians do not observe a Jewish Sabbath and the labors of Sabbath are in question, like can one heal on the Sabbath or rescue one's farm animal in distress?  A house rule might be for a child to clean one's room every Saturday morning but such could be overturned in case of fire, flood, emergency or absence from the residence.  Legalists try to make detailed contextual rules universal general rules and they usually do it merely for the assertion of their own authority.

Prayers for Easter, 2024

Friday in 3 Easter, April 19, 2024 Good Shepherd Christ, when we need help please send us good shepherds; and when we see others who need he...