Friday, July 12, 2013
The Parable of Hell
The Pharisees, who loved money, heard all this and were sneering at Jesus. 15 He said to them, "You are the ones who justify yourselves in the eyes of men, but God knows your hearts. What is highly valued among men is detestable in God's sight.
http://www.tidings.org/studies/fables200007.htm
http://www.christadelphia.org/pamphlet/p_lazarus.htm#10
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke+3%3A10-14&version=NIV
Christians should act similarly, but not the same. We, like the unjust steward, are stewards. We do not own anything, but we are given custody of certain resources by God for a time. We need to understand that our Lord’s return is at hand (or that our death will come), and that we cannot take money with us. Money will not last, but we will last for all eternity. The way we can use money so that it will last forever is to “make friends” of men, who will gratefully receive us in heaven. https://bible.org/seriespage/does-christ-commend-crook-or-sting-luke-161-13
And lo, Jesus spoke unto them and said:
A priest, a rabbi, and Micah the Samaritan walk into a bar. The priest orders some wine and says, I drink to Moses who gave us the Torah. The people in the bar say, "Hear, hear." The rabbi orders some wine and says, I drink to the Torah, which is man's way to God." The people in the bar say, "Hear, hear." Micah the Samaritan says, "I'd like to buy some bread and wine for the poor beggar in the corner there." The beggar stands up and is revealed to be the Angel of the Lord, who says to Micah, "Come with me, Micah. You will dine at your Father's house tonight."
This would have been very much in character with both the style and content of Jesus's speeches. Of, course, there is a sense of humor and irony. It doesn't have to be literally true, even if there is a Samaritan named Micah. The point of the story is gained without literalism
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
The Divorce Rate Is Absurd
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Easter Sunday: Communist Jesus vs. Real Jesus
or Jesus told me to vote for a Caesar that would take your money and give it to me
Been noticing a lot of memes about what a communist Jesus was and how he thought everyone should be communist.
This got me thinking about, among other things, the shift in thinking over Christianity's first century from a communal bunch of disciples waiting for the Second Coming to more independent Christian households looking to occupy themselves as the salt of the earth. The statement "For while we were yet with you, we gave you this rule and charge: If anyone will not work, neither let him eat"* has such a realist, capitalist character to it.
It is only in the early years of Christianity that there is the general expectation that converts will give up their worldly goods to the community of believers--an expectation so irresistible that new converts lie about the goods they elect to keep to themselves. The emphasis on helping the unfortunate and vulnerable becomes a more general injunction to not "be so heavenly that one is no earthly good" (as the modern saying goes).
A related meme I saw recently was one showing the Pope flying in his private airplane and comparing him to Christ who supposedly would have been toting around the poor with him in his private airplane. Jesus did travel by private boat, and while we don't know that he never took "the poor" with him, we are given the impression that he often sought conclusion and often traveled with only his inner circle of disciples with him.
Jesus irritates Judah Iscariot at some point by accepting a lavish gift from an acolyte. Judah maintains that the gift could have helped so many poor people, and Jesus claims (in so many words) that the wasteful misuse of wealth was inspired by the Holy Spirit. The narrative indicates that like an infamous televangelist Judah was planning to misuse the funds himself.
Jesus routinely lives by the hospitality of others. It would appear that Lazarus and his sisters own property and not only entertain Jesus but large groups of his followers. How much the travels of Jesus and his companions are funded by the businesses of his followers we don't know. Some of his inner circle abandon their fishing businesses in Galilee and we don't know how well those businesses ran themselves. It should be said that Jesus probably spent many a night on the ground and was likely at least as accustomed to poverty as to opulence. He has a reputation as a party-er, as he didn't seem to avoid feasts where there were wine, women, and song.
Given the interaction between Iscariot and Jesus, and the repeated reminders in the gospel narratives that the apostles were often missing the point of what Jesus was saying, it could make one wonder whether the idea that Jesus wanted them to live as a commune until his return was as mistaken an assumption as the idea that he was returning to them in the same generation.
But there is an interesting tension in people's thoughts about the person of Jesus, specifically with those who are looking for grounds to reject organized religion or traditional religion. Many of those who do, it seems, will gravitate to Jewish Jesus or to New Age Jesus, that is, to a story of Jesus as merely a Jewish reformer in the spirit of Gamliel or a story of Jesus as a Hindu guru who is trying to convey New Age truths to backward monotheists. Some people, inexplicably, assent to both narratives in some vague conceptual fog, allowing them to criticize Saul of Tarsus for being too Jewish (in his morés about gender roles) and for being too anti-Jewish (in his supposed expanded concept of grace beyond what Reformer Jesus intended).
This is all a thought-provoking backdrop, I think, to the cultural battle over whether Christianity means entrusting the government with our Christian duties (as Elizabeth Warren seems to believe). Is the Mosaic respect for property rights (thou shalt not covet, thou shalt not steal) something unbecoming to modern Christians, making libertarianism (along with the republicanism of the Federalist Papers) antithetical to Christianity? Or is both libertarianism and Christianity in accord with voluntary support for the poor? Are they not both antithetical to involuntary support for the poor? The only act of coercion attributed to Jesus is the commercialization and merchandizing of spirituality in the Temple. In this he does not seem to be railing against either commerce or capitalism but against a Temple-trader monopoly that allowed people to be charged/taxed with exorbitant fees to fulfill their religious obligations, and against the profanity of it being allowed in the Temple itself?
There is a conflict in many Christians between the reality of being community members providing for their families and the austerity suggested by Christ in abandoning familial responsibilities for the cause, between trusting fully in grace and the perfection of "go and sell all your possessions and give the money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven", between the simplicity of penitence and the implication that heaven will reject the one that doesn't loudly and proudly claim Jesus as his spiritual leader. Between the gospel spoken of by Paul in his letter to the Galatians and the hard gospel described in John MacArthur's The Gospel According to Jesus. Between the burden that is easy and light and the small gate to the narrow road.
And what about Jesus' death? I don't think it makes much sense to most people, Christian or not, that God would require a man, perfect or otherwise, to suffer an agonizing death before being willing and able to forgive transgressions. Perhaps it is something that we can only understand imperfectly, if at all. If it is unlikely that the Apostles were willing to die terrible deaths themselves for a man whose resurrection was faked, maybe the man that survived crucifixion might be a little on the inscrutable side. I don't think people have tried that hard to understand the nature of the "good news" that Jesus taught before he died for our sins. What basis for forgiveness did he teach? How did he say people could be put right with their Creator? What specifically was the good news?
But it seems more than a little insipid to say that he simply said that people should all be nice to each other and that this is the crux and gist of his message. (And at least as insipid--and irresponsible--to suggest that his message was essentially that people are obligated to trust in a worldly empire that defines and enforces a right to other people's money. Are we to no longer make distinction between what is Caesar's to take and what is God's? "Render unto Caesar that which is God's, because Caesar is God's man"?
All of this makes me wonder whether it is neither the case that Jesus was simply a wise teacher, nor that Christendom (or the New Age movement, for that matter) has well understood the spiritual life offered by Jesus. It's a deeper mystery that shouldn't be exploited -- not for the financial gain of "ministers," not for the opportunism of "altruistic" politicians, and not for the self-righteous glory of social reformers.
WWJD? He'd have you vote for Progressive Caesar. |
This got me thinking about, among other things, the shift in thinking over Christianity's first century from a communal bunch of disciples waiting for the Second Coming to more independent Christian households looking to occupy themselves as the salt of the earth. The statement "For while we were yet with you, we gave you this rule and charge: If anyone will not work, neither let him eat"* has such a realist, capitalist character to it.
Another distinction: Obama's kingdom IS of this world. |
A related meme I saw recently was one showing the Pope flying in his private airplane and comparing him to Christ who supposedly would have been toting around the poor with him in his private airplane. Jesus did travel by private boat, and while we don't know that he never took "the poor" with him, we are given the impression that he often sought conclusion and often traveled with only his inner circle of disciples with him.
Jesus irritates Judah Iscariot at some point by accepting a lavish gift from an acolyte. Judah maintains that the gift could have helped so many poor people, and Jesus claims (in so many words) that the wasteful misuse of wealth was inspired by the Holy Spirit. The narrative indicates that like an infamous televangelist Judah was planning to misuse the funds himself.
Jesus routinely lives by the hospitality of others. It would appear that Lazarus and his sisters own property and not only entertain Jesus but large groups of his followers. How much the travels of Jesus and his companions are funded by the businesses of his followers we don't know. Some of his inner circle abandon their fishing businesses in Galilee and we don't know how well those businesses ran themselves. It should be said that Jesus probably spent many a night on the ground and was likely at least as accustomed to poverty as to opulence. He has a reputation as a party-er, as he didn't seem to avoid feasts where there were wine, women, and song.
Given the interaction between Iscariot and Jesus, and the repeated reminders in the gospel narratives that the apostles were often missing the point of what Jesus was saying, it could make one wonder whether the idea that Jesus wanted them to live as a commune until his return was as mistaken an assumption as the idea that he was returning to them in the same generation.
But there is an interesting tension in people's thoughts about the person of Jesus, specifically with those who are looking for grounds to reject organized religion or traditional religion. Many of those who do, it seems, will gravitate to Jewish Jesus or to New Age Jesus, that is, to a story of Jesus as merely a Jewish reformer in the spirit of Gamliel or a story of Jesus as a Hindu guru who is trying to convey New Age truths to backward monotheists. Some people, inexplicably, assent to both narratives in some vague conceptual fog, allowing them to criticize Saul of Tarsus for being too Jewish (in his morés about gender roles) and for being too anti-Jewish (in his supposed expanded concept of grace beyond what Reformer Jesus intended).
This is all a thought-provoking backdrop, I think, to the cultural battle over whether Christianity means entrusting the government with our Christian duties (as Elizabeth Warren seems to believe). Is the Mosaic respect for property rights (thou shalt not covet, thou shalt not steal) something unbecoming to modern Christians, making libertarianism (along with the republicanism of the Federalist Papers) antithetical to Christianity? Or is both libertarianism and Christianity in accord with voluntary support for the poor? Are they not both antithetical to involuntary support for the poor? The only act of coercion attributed to Jesus is the commercialization and merchandizing of spirituality in the Temple. In this he does not seem to be railing against either commerce or capitalism but against a Temple-trader monopoly that allowed people to be charged/taxed with exorbitant fees to fulfill their religious obligations, and against the profanity of it being allowed in the Temple itself?
There is a conflict in many Christians between the reality of being community members providing for their families and the austerity suggested by Christ in abandoning familial responsibilities for the cause, between trusting fully in grace and the perfection of "go and sell all your possessions and give the money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven", between the simplicity of penitence and the implication that heaven will reject the one that doesn't loudly and proudly claim Jesus as his spiritual leader. Between the gospel spoken of by Paul in his letter to the Galatians and the hard gospel described in John MacArthur's The Gospel According to Jesus. Between the burden that is easy and light and the small gate to the narrow road.
Ironic anti-capitalist merchandizing of spirituality Also, buy the baseball cap |
But it seems more than a little insipid to say that he simply said that people should all be nice to each other and that this is the crux and gist of his message. (And at least as insipid--and irresponsible--to suggest that his message was essentially that people are obligated to trust in a worldly empire that defines and enforces a right to other people's money. Are we to no longer make distinction between what is Caesar's to take and what is God's? "Render unto Caesar that which is God's, because Caesar is God's man"?
All of this makes me wonder whether it is neither the case that Jesus was simply a wise teacher, nor that Christendom (or the New Age movement, for that matter) has well understood the spiritual life offered by Jesus. It's a deeper mystery that shouldn't be exploited -- not for the financial gain of "ministers," not for the opportunism of "altruistic" politicians, and not for the self-righteous glory of social reformers.
Anti-capitalist propaganda equating supply side economics with a celebration of wealth and a lack of concern for the poor. |
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Red Dragon
I like Edward Norton as an actor. However, I think a good actor can be miscast. It is not a reasonable expectation that a good actor can fit seamlessly into any part, even if one takes gender and looks out of the equations.
I don't think Norton was the right choice for Red Dragon. Now there were possibly some directorial and script choices that could have helped communicate how the character is going over the edge and being overtaken by his unique ability. I think the previous adaptation of Harris' book, Manhunter, did a better job of communicating this point. The re-make however did a better job thrilling the audience with vile disgustingness. (It is a word; I just used it.) The re-make seemed to mainly communicate this through trauma: Will Graham has gotten so close to serial killers that he almost dies. In
The opening scene where Will Graham figures out Lecter: You know this will happen at the outset. The film didn't do a good job giving the impression that Graham's unique abilities led him to a gestalt. You see him open a cookbook and it's like "Lecter is obsessed with gourmet, the killer is also obsessed with gourmet." It needed something more to not seem like a random leap, even if it gave the film a slower start. There is a drawback to the obsession with immediate box office profit over making a good film. But in long-term thinking, I don't think the film did that well in either box office or rentals over all. It is a modest success at best (i.e. it probably didn't lose money) and not a critical success.
As one critic said:
I don't think Norton was the right choice for Red Dragon. Now there were possibly some directorial and script choices that could have helped communicate how the character is going over the edge and being overtaken by his unique ability. I think the previous adaptation of Harris' book, Manhunter, did a better job of communicating this point. The re-make however did a better job thrilling the audience with vile disgustingness. (It is a word; I just used it.) The re-make seemed to mainly communicate this through trauma: Will Graham has gotten so close to serial killers that he almost dies. In
The opening scene where Will Graham figures out Lecter: You know this will happen at the outset. The film didn't do a good job giving the impression that Graham's unique abilities led him to a gestalt. You see him open a cookbook and it's like "Lecter is obsessed with gourmet, the killer is also obsessed with gourmet." It needed something more to not seem like a random leap, even if it gave the film a slower start. There is a drawback to the obsession with immediate box office profit over making a good film. But in long-term thinking, I don't think the film did that well in either box office or rentals over all. It is a modest success at best (i.e. it probably didn't lose money) and not a critical success.
As one critic said:
Where Mann and Demme steered the hokum away from dull genre generalities, Ratner's point-and-film literalness churns out a thriller by rote, shorn of the psychological dogfighting that distinguished the first two films.The mechanical nature of the film regardless, I didn't think of Norton's performance as mechanical but just not the character that was needed. And it is up to casting and directing to match the performance with the role. Norton is capable of presenting a character with a dark side, but it didn't come across in this film. Even if that had been the case (which would have been an improvement) I still feel like Father Brian Finn (Keeping the Faith) has become a detective.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Stefan and Jelena - A Story of Shakespearean Proportions
Not that there haven't been plenty of adaptations, but done with a lot of historical and cultural accuracy, a Serbian-Croatian adaptation of Romeo and Juliet would pack a lot of punch. The grittiness of actual feuding, the all too real animosity...
"My Serbian friend was walking hand in hand with his Croatian girlfriend," Reddit user EvolvedBacteria explained. "When an old lady asked her how she could dare to walk next to a Serb, she kissed him. (For more, click here.)
On a similar note, there was a pretty good miniseries on the Hatfields and McCoys with Kevin Costner and Bill Paxton starring as the namesake patriarchs. I looked up some of the history online, and while the series tried to fill in some details, the actual history was at least as strange as the show depicted. It was as though some cosmic soap opera had been written for their lives.
Monday, March 11, 2013
The Law of Gravity
Ever notice that we want cause-and-effect to work for us when we make good decisions but we want a reprieve from Heaven when we don't?
Damn, we hate anything that resembles karma. We want a world where gravity keeps things together and organized as it does in our own, but doesn't allow you to get hurt.
Hell, many of would prefer a world where nature balances out resources without creatures consuming each other. Natural forces that create without natural forces that destroy.
This is only being human, I'm afraid. It isn't, of itself, ignorance. It's an intuition that resists being born on a game preserve, merely staving off the inevitable long enough to produce more meat products like ourselves. We would like the special care that a child deserves to get from his/her parent to pervade our lives, and emanate from all parts of the universe. And maybe this, the experience of such a sense of care, is something that can only be achieved through spirituality and religious intuition. The intuition is (hopefully) nurtured by a family that truly loves us and celebrates our existence.
We watch nature shows because the Circle of Life seems majestic and beautiful when viewed from outside, from Above, as it were. Viewed as though we were not some of the artful bits of protoplasm getting churned through the amazing machine. We don't watch these shows with a sort of "snuff porn" perversion. We watch with a taste of the mystical, an entheogen that will allow us to hear the jungle as the shaman does, though in a way that is made palatable to our Western rationalism.
Nature seems to not suffer fools. So the most appealing idea of heaven on earth to many, naturally, is a material world in which we are fully protected against both caprice and our own mistakes. This is so much more appealing than an internal process of prayer and introspection to adjust ourselves to harsh realities. But does the same impulse to rid reality of harshness lend itself to rejecting reality? Is it a propensity toward dishonesty?
It is understandable to desire the universe to be governed by laws that are both efficient and comprehensible and yet somehow fulfill the Hippocratic oath to "do no harm." But is the desire self-serving and immature? It seems that fanciful laws such as these might embody a universe with free will essentially squeezed out, with no room left over for good or evil, with only a tame world left over, governed by "nice" laws.
Damn, we hate anything that resembles karma. We want a world where gravity keeps things together and organized as it does in our own, but doesn't allow you to get hurt.
Hell, many of would prefer a world where nature balances out resources without creatures consuming each other. Natural forces that create without natural forces that destroy.
This is only being human, I'm afraid. It isn't, of itself, ignorance. It's an intuition that resists being born on a game preserve, merely staving off the inevitable long enough to produce more meat products like ourselves. We would like the special care that a child deserves to get from his/her parent to pervade our lives, and emanate from all parts of the universe. And maybe this, the experience of such a sense of care, is something that can only be achieved through spirituality and religious intuition. The intuition is (hopefully) nurtured by a family that truly loves us and celebrates our existence.
We watch nature shows because the Circle of Life seems majestic and beautiful when viewed from outside, from Above, as it were. Viewed as though we were not some of the artful bits of protoplasm getting churned through the amazing machine. We don't watch these shows with a sort of "snuff porn" perversion. We watch with a taste of the mystical, an entheogen that will allow us to hear the jungle as the shaman does, though in a way that is made palatable to our Western rationalism.
Nature seems to not suffer fools. So the most appealing idea of heaven on earth to many, naturally, is a material world in which we are fully protected against both caprice and our own mistakes. This is so much more appealing than an internal process of prayer and introspection to adjust ourselves to harsh realities. But does the same impulse to rid reality of harshness lend itself to rejecting reality? Is it a propensity toward dishonesty?
It is understandable to desire the universe to be governed by laws that are both efficient and comprehensible and yet somehow fulfill the Hippocratic oath to "do no harm." But is the desire self-serving and immature? It seems that fanciful laws such as these might embody a universe with free will essentially squeezed out, with no room left over for good or evil, with only a tame world left over, governed by "nice" laws.
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Child of Europe
There can be no question of force triumphant
We live in the age of victorious justice.
Do not mention force, or you will be accused
Of upholding fallen doctrines in secret.
He who has power, has it by historical logic.
Respectfully bow to that logic.
Let your lips, proposing a hypothesis
Not know about the hand faking the experiment.
Let your hand, faking the experiment
Not know about the lips proposing a hypothesis.
Learn to predict a fire with unerring precision
Then burn the house down to fulfill the prediction.
— Czeslaw Milosz
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Got My Black Belt in 'Bloated Bureacracy'
Seems like the larger a company gets and/or the more involved with federal regulations it gets, the more that company buys into certain ideas:
- The cure for anything is a regulation, a new process rule, or a new standard. The problem isn't that people aren't thinking for themselves; the problem is that they are doing entirely too much thinking for themselves.
- The key to competitiveness is really optimization, not innovation. That's why it's important to reward and recognize (and build whole hierarchies for) for optimizing (or really, the gesture of optimizing).
- Better to automate "employee development" as much as possible. Personal mentorship is overrated, and only works if you actually encourage leadership anyway.
- We can replace actual leadership with aphorisms about leadership.
- We can replace actual accountability with slogans about accountability.
- You can promote ethical behavior by coercing employees to sign documents averring they intend to behave ethically.
Et cetera.
One of the effects on engineering (assuming that a big company has such a division) is that a company will expect their engineers to feel empowered to control his process [don't be dismayed is this sounds like gibberish--it is gibberish] while choosing their tools for them, both intellectual tools and instrumental tools.
The "leadership" in big companies tend to see nothing wrong with this. (Until recently, Google may have been an exception.) They absolutely don't see where the conflict lies. Big corporations nowadays tend to appoint short-sighted optimization junkies (i.e. lean process black belts [more gibberish]) out of the manufacturing area. You see, in engineering we work with ideas and, so the story goes, don't actually make anything.
What good are ideas anyway?
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Black Dahlia Avenger
I've been reading Black Dahlia Avenger and it's quite a page-turner.
I'll try not to give anything away, even though the identity of the killer is not something you find out at the end of the book. Far from. But that's not the most important revelation.
It is a "Columbo mystery" in case you are a mystery. More of a howdunnit than a whodunnit. But more of a whydunnit than a howdunnit, really. As in the Colombo mysteries, the real mystery is how the truth will eventually come to light. And a whoelsewasitdunnit-to. And a whywuzzinitsolved. (That aspect might be especially scary.)
But even beyond that, the way the investigative material comes together with the personal remembrances of the author are amazing.
Steve Hodel paints a picture of a place on the Gold Coast where intellectual elite, the entertainment elite, the artistic elite, and the elite of corruption and hedonism all converged on a certain home in L.A. The personal remembrances touch upon several celebrities. Doesn't come across as namedropping but a revelation of how, in Southern California, people-who-know-people actually tend to, well, know people. The sordidness of the scene will revolt you, as artists purport to transcend morality by indulging a mix of egotism, vengeance, and thrill-seeking as they send their message to scoety that they are free of traditional morality.
It's an investigative odyssey. One I recommend.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Shampoo ain't netchural
Washing hair with shampoo is not a natural act it would seem. How long has humanity had soap and chandlers, let alone hair soap? Shampoo is just soap modified specifically for hair.
Given this, why does it feel so unnatural for me to go without washing my hair? I can't stand the way my head feels after a day without washing. It's grimy and itchy. I hate it.
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