Sunday, March 31, 2019

Restore

4.7.19
Gabrielle Wilde

Restore
Fortune
恢复财富Huīfù cáifù
回復フォーチュン 
Kaifuku fōchun
ps126

When leadership restored fortune,
we were like those who received our portion.

We felt like those who dream while still awake.
There was the distinct feeling that this fortune wasn't fake.

Our mouth was filled with laughter.
It was like starting again after a climatic chapter.

The rider and the fighter were twins in the sky.
They fought for the standard to know how and why.

They released many captives from the burden of plight.
The captives were freed with the capacity for flight.

Courage watched leadership rise with his word.
Reason was challenged to struggle with the absurd.

The hunter drank in the storm faint though it had been.
He stalked the prey that he had yet to win.

The rider rested with his horse
in the investigation of the state of the forest.

Wildness preceded the primitive me.
Food and water have been granted to proceed.

Our tongues lifted sound above vocal cords.
Our joy was profound. Our bliss was adored.

Restore fortune with the cosmic sorter for order.
Grow us flowers plentiful as stars in the heavenly quarters.

Give us fertility instead of ashes.
Let water pour down while the lightening crashes.

Let oil be squeezed from olives or vegetables.
Let want be appeased, not made miserable.

Let the mantle of praise lift up the weakness of spirit.
Feel the energy of love before you hear or go near it.

Augurs of chance read spirits instead of birds.
Test your statements for the truth of the words.

Righteousness is based on faith with grace.
Redemption with Christ places destiny over fate.

Great things have been done for us in the strength of this time.
The length of light grows as sublimely prime.

Those who managed labor throughout the last year
made a memory to transcend the feeling of fear.

Celebrate the presence of the essential essence.
Gratitude for service beats sacrifice as penance.

Those who sowed seed with the toil of their tears
will reap joy with the music of love in the heavenly spheres.

The deluge washed the mass of seashells.
Polish was added to the shine of cells
and bells.

Those who went weeping to water their seeds
will return with shoulders of sheaves to fulfill basic needs.

This voice is like that of the cry in the darkness
unbroken in facing the strength of the starkness. 

Restore our fortune. Transform the harm of the past.
Let us have our portion. Give us confidence to last.

Making continual reparation for misdeeds from the past isn't a policy that will make fortune last. Liberals made the public pay for legal reform, then they make us pay for damage caused by the storm from the reform.

----------------------------

Psalm 126
In convertendo

1 When the Lord restored the fortunes of Zion, *
then were we like those who dream.
2 Then was our mouth filled with laughter, *
and our tongue with shouts of joy.
3 Then they said among the nations, *
"The Lord has done great things for them."
4 The Lord has done great things for us, *
and we are glad indeed.
5 Restore our fortunes, O Lord, *
like the watercourses of the Negev.
6 Those who sowed with tears *
will reap with songs of joy.
7 Those who go out weeping, carrying the seed, *
will come again with joy, shouldering their sheaves.

-------------------------

Isa. 43:20
The wild animals will honor me.
The jackals and ostriches will be grateful
for I give water in the wilderness;
rivers in the desert
to give drink to my chosen.

----------------------------

Wildness preceded the primitive me.
Food and water have been granted to proceed.

=====================

Phil.3:8
I have suffered the loss of things in order to gain Christ
not having a righteousness of my own, but one that comes through faith,
the righteousness from God based on faith.

----------------------------

Righteousness is based on faith with grace.
Redemption with Christ places destiny over fate.

=====================

John 12:8
'You always have the poor with you, but you do not always have me.'

----------------------------

Celebrate the presence of the essential essence.
Gratitude for service beats sacrifice as penance.

=====================

Gemini - twins
Taurus- bull
Orion - hunter
Mars - courage
Jupiter - leadership
Mercury - reason
Venus- beauty
Castor - rider
Pollux - fighter
Neptune - water, storm

Gemini is Latin for "twins," and it is associated with the twins Castor and Pollux in Greek mythology.
https://www.greekmythology.com/Myths/Zodiac/Gemini/gemini.html

The twins were Castor and Polydeuces (Pollux). They were known as the Dioscuri. Their sisters were Helen and Clytemnestra. They were the sons of Leda, Zeus and Tyndareus. Castor and Pollux were half-brothers.

Leda was married to King Tyndareus of Sparta. She was also seduced by Zeus, so the father's of both children were uncertain. The Discouri were inseperable and grew closer with age.

Castor was a famous horse tamer and Pollux, a superb boxer. When Castor was killed during a battle, Pollux was inconsolable and gave up his own life to be with his brother. Jupiter rewarded their love by placing their images among the stars. They shine side by side.

Majesty with Mercy
https://www.azquotes.com/picture-quotes/quote-however-many-and-however-great-and-burdensome-your-sins-may-be-with-god-there-is-greater-patriarch-tikhon-of-moscow-52-31-82.jpg

Tikhon of Moscow
b. January 31, 1865, Klin, Russia
d. April 7, 1925, Moscow, Russia

Klin
Russian Empire

Alexander II (1818-1881) was the Emperor of Russia from 2 March 1855 until his assassination on 13 March 1881. He was also the King of Poland and the Grand Duke of Finland. He emancipated the serfs in 1861. It was the first and most important of his reforms. The Emancipation Edict abolished serfdom throughout the Russian Empire.

There was an uprising in Poland in 1863. The land was stripped of its constitution and incorporated into Russia.

Alexander sold Alaska to the United States in 1867. He was afraid that the territory would fall into British hands in the event of another war.

Klin means 'wedge.' One of the towns by that name was located in the Toropets District of the Pskov Governate. Klin is located to the west of Moscow by about 85 km (55 mi.). It is south of St. Petersburg by about the same amount of distance. It is part of a basin that drains to the Baltic Sea.

Tikhon of Moscow

Tikhon was born as Vasily Ivanovich Bellavin in Klin, Toropets, Pskov of the Russian Empire on 31 January 1865.

Vasily studied at the Pskov Theological Seminary from 1878 to 1883. He graduated from the St. Petersburg Theological Academy as a layman at the age of 23 in 1888. He returned to the Pskov Seminary as an instructor of Moral and Dogmatic Theology.

He took monastic vows and was given the name Tikhon in honor of St. Tikhon of Zadonsk at the age of 26 in 1891. Tikhon was consecrated Bishop of Lublin on October 19, 1897.  Bishop Tikhon was made Bishop of the Aleutians and Alaska on September 14, 1898. This made him the head of the Russian Orthodox Church in America.

He reorganized the diocese and changed its name from "Diocese of the Aleutians and Alaska" to "Diocese of the Aleutians and North America" in 1900. The peripatetic bishop visited emerging Orthodox emigrant communities in various American cities, including New York City, Chicago and the coal and steel-making cities in Pennsylvania and Ohio. While living in the United States Archbishop Tikhon was made a citizen.

He returned to Russia in 1907 and was appointed Bishop of Yaroslavl. He was transferred to Vilnius, Lithuania on December 22, 1913.

He was elected the ruling bishop of Moscow by the Diocesan Congress of clergy and laity on June 21, 1917. Archbishop Tikhon was raised to the dignity of Metropolitan of Moscow on August 15, 1917.

An election on November 5 of the same year named him as one of the three candidates for the Patriarchate. Metropolitan Vladimir of Kiev announced that Metropolitan Tikhon had been selected for the position after a drawing of lots as the new Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church.

The Patriarch was widely seen as anti-Bolshevik during the Russian Civil War. Many members of Orthodox clergy were jailed or executed by the new regime. The 'prosecution' of clergy identified the socialist republic as anti-religious. Tikhon openly condemned the killing of the tsar's family in 1918 and protested the violent attacks by the Bolsheviks on the Church.

The Patriarch was accused of being a saboteur by the Communist government after the establishment of the USSR. He was imprisoned from April 1922 until June 1923 in Donskoy Monastery.

His public protest against nationalization of the property of the Church was used to incriminate him of criminal conduct. This persecution caused international resonance and was a subject of several letters to the Soviet government.

Patriarch Tikhon issued several messages to the believers under pressure in which he stated  that he is "no longer an enemy to the Soviet power." He continued to enjoy the trust of the Orthodox community in Russia despite his declaration of loyalty to the Soviets.

The Patriarch fell ill and was hospitalized in 1924. He served his last Divine Liturgy on 5 April 1925. He died two days later.

He was glorified a saint by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989. This canonisation process is generally considered an example of the thaw in Church-Soviet relations in the Glasnost era. Tikhon's relics are kept at the Donskoy Monastery of Moscow.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriarch_Tikhon_of_Moscow
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/Tikhon.htm

Tikhon Bellavin
吉洪贝拉文
吉洪貝拉文

吉  Ji          lucky             吉 kichi   good luck       Te        て          テ               Ti   티   tea             
洪  hong    deluge            洪 ko       deluge            -hon    ぃほん  ィホン        hon 혼  spirit           
贝  Bei       sea shell        貝 bai      shellfish           Be       べ       ベ                  Bel  벨  bell             
拉  la          seize              拉 ra        Latin                ra        ら           ラ              la    라   la                 
文  wen      culture           文 bun     style                bin      びん      ヴィン        bin 빈  empty       

-----------------------------

The deluge washed the seashells
to add polish to the luck of cells
and bells.

=====================                     


Thomas Hill Green
b. April 7, 1836, Birkin, United Kingdom
d. March 1886, Oxford, UK

Birkin

Birkin is a village in the south of North Yorkshire. The population was estimated at 141 people in the 2011 census. The name was recorded in the Domesday book as 'Birchinge.' This and the present name indicate that the village was built in an area wooded with birch trees.

It is located about 290 km (180 miles) north of London. It is about 145 km (90 miles) northeast of Liverpool. It is about 48 km (30 miles) southwest of York.

A Royal Commission into the Poor Law recommended changes to the system of parish poor relief in 1832. Many of its recommendations were incorporated into the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834. This statute maintained outdoor relief (relief given outside a workhouse), but led to more central control of the system.

St Mary's Church is located at the southern end of Birkin and dates from around 1150. Thomas Hill Green's father was the rector of St Mary's in the 1830's.

Thomas Hill Green

Thomas Hill Green was born in Birkin on 7 April 1836. Thomas was brought up by a nanny following the death of his mother when he was only a year old together with his sisters and three brothers. He was home schooled until the age of 14. He entered the Rugby School and remained for 5 years.

Green went to Balliol College, Oxford in 1855. He came under the influence of Benjamin Jowett. Jowett had been one of the first to bring a set of Hegel's writings to England. It was through him that Green became enraptured by idealism.

He found a justification for his instinctive egalitarianism in Hegel. He became firm friends with other students who were sympathetic to his political radicalism, such as AV Dicey, John Nichol and Edward Caird. Idealism led him away from the skepticism of Locke expressed by Berkeley.
He was elected fellow in 1860. He began a life of teaching in the university. First he was a college tutor. He was Whyte's Professor of Moral Philosophy from 1878 until his death.

The lectures he delivered as professor formed the substance of his two most important works. The Prolegomena to Ethics and the Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation were published posthumously, but they serve as a basis for conjecture as to what he taught.

He criticized the limitations of natural history in empiricism of Hume with the theory of evolution in the Prolegomena to Ethics.

He wrote in the Natural Science of Morals (s.5) "It is no wonder, therefore, that the evolutionists of our day should claim to have given a wholly new character to ethical enquiries. In Hume’s time a philosopher who denied the innateness of moral sentiments, and held that they must have a natural history, had only the limits of the individual life within which to trace this history. These limits did not give room enough for even a plausible derivation of moral interests from animal wants...Thus it would seem that for the barren speculation of the old metaphysical ethics we should seek a substitute in a scientific Culturgeschichte; in a natural history of man conducted on the same method as an enquiry into any other form of life which cannot be reduced to the operation of strictly mechanical laws."

The Principles of Political Obligation was written to subordinate the citizen to the state.
He wrote, "I have entitled the subject of the course 'political obligation.' I mean that term to include both the obligation of the subject to the sovereign, of the citizen towards the state and the obligations of individuals to each other as enforced by a political superior."

Green was an advocate for temperance. He referred to the work of Spinoza, Hobbes, Locke and Rosseau, but he came down in favor of state limitation of the citizen's conscience. He held that the state should foster and protect the social, political and economic environments in which individuals will have the best chance of acting according to conscience.

He stated time and again that the state could legitimately curtail the individual's freedom to accept the slavery of alcoholism. This became a prohibitive action in the case of the Temperance movement.

This was an oppressive definition of the concept of sovereignty. No one wants to endorse alcoholism as a right, yet the prohibition of alcohol as a product for the market is preemptive in the prohibition of the disease.

Given the appointment of a special prosecutor by the House of Commons for the precipitation of profit from military action, it amounted to a perpetuation of Puritan aggression without the explicit endorsement of the Westminster Confession.

Green was involved in local politics for many years through the University, temperance societies and the local Oxford Liberal association.

He campaigned for the right to vote to be extended to all men living in boroughs even if they did not own real property during the passage of the Second Reform Act (1867). Green's position was more radical than that of most other Advanced Liberals, including William Ewart Gladstone.

The right to vote is an important civil liberty. The Public Schools Act of 1868 would remove public schools from any direct jurisdiction or responsibility of the Crown, established church, or government, establishing a board of governors for each school and granting them independence over their administration.

The Act led to development of the schools away from the traditional exclusively classics-based curriculum taught by clergymen to a somewhat broader scope of studies.  This meant an opening for Hegelian idealism in evolution for Green. It was a legislative enactment that supported increased expenditure for the  government to control the rights of the population. It was an endorsement to promote revolution through insurrection around the globe for liberals.

It was in the context of his Liberal Party activities that in 1881, Green gave what became one of his most famous statements of his liberal political philosophy, the "Lecture on Liberal Legislation and Freedom of Contract".

He presented an anti-capitalist perspective. He wrote, "we are right in refusing to ascribe the glory of freedom to a state in which the apparent elevation of the few is founded on the degradation of the many." He was also lecturing on religion, epistemology, ethics and political philosophy at the time.

Most of his major works were published posthumously, including his lay sermons on Faith and The Witness of God, the essay "On the Different Senses of 'Freedom' as Applied to Will and the Moral Progress of Man", Prolegomena to Ethics, Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation and the "Lecture on Liberal Legislation and Freedom of Contract".

Green died of blood poisoning at 45. Approximately 2,000 local townspeople attended his funeral in addition to friends from his academic life.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Hill_Green
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/green/
https://history.hanover.edu/texts/green.html
http://fair-use.org/t-h-green/prolegomena-to-ethics/
https://web.archive.org/web/20050827091329/http://socserv2.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/green/obligation.pdf
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Schools_Act_1868

Thomas Hill Green
托马斯希尔格林
托馬斯希爾格林

托  Tuo     rest                       托  taku    requesting          To   と-  ト-        To   토  sat         
马  ma      horse                    馬  ba        horse                  ma  ま     マ        ma  마  hemp       
斯  si         this                      斯  shi       this                     su    す    ス         seu  스  switch           
希  Xi        hope                    希   ki         hope                  Hi     ひ    ヒ       Hil   힐   heel               
尔  er        you                       爾   ore       you                    ru    る    ル        Geu 그  that       
格  Ge       investigate           格  kaku   status                   Gu   ぐ    グ         lin    린  lin     
林  lin       forest                    林  rin        forest                  re   り-  リ-
                                                                                            n     ん   ン                           
---------------------------

The rider rested with his horse
in the investigation of the state of the forest.

===============

Friday, March 29, 2019

Praise

3.30.19
Sunrise, Florida

Praise
God
赞美神
Zànměi shén
神を賛美する
Kami o sanbi suru
ps148

Yeah Yah! 
You fill me with awe!

Help me see your revelation
with the gift of sensation.

Guide others also to see your design
with instruction both transcendent and sublime.

Recognize the value of light
for your sight!

Applaud the radiance of heaven.
Appreciate matter as creation with essence.

Shine like the sun and moon.
Let the beauty of stars be seen in the flowers that bloom.

Celebrate heaven as the essence of sky.
Let the brightness of highness shine in your inner light.

Let water fall on the face of the earth.
Let life be blessed with the grace of worth.

The cedar and pine will go in the wilderness.
The cypress will grow near water in the desert emptiness.

All may consider and understand
that this was done by the LORD's hand.

The Holy One has created this
as an expression of creative bliss.

Let creation praise the name of the Most High.
Let your heart sing with everything under the sky. 

The Word spoke and everything began to be.
The morning broke and this vision began to see.

The law was written into the fabric of life
to help us to live without excessive strife.

Grace was given to amend disgrace.
Test correction with respect for place.

Follow your lead 
in those who succeed.

That which you need 
should not cause you to bleed.

Cheer achievement
to leave bereavement
from disagreement.

The waves surge between distant shores.
Language stirs for the heart to roar.



Praise the Lord from the sea
you creatures that plumb the deep.

Praise God as Creator of fire, hail, snow, fog 
and tempestuous winds that stir the bog
with turtles and frogs.

Mountains and hills
support divine will.
Fruit, nut, olive and avocado trees
give variety to a diet of milk and honey.
Grains of all kinds 
bestow the blessing of peace in mind.
Wild beasts and domestic cattle
dodge or trample the snakes that rattle.
Creeping things feed the birds
that fly from branches with leaves like words.
Men, women, old and young together
sing your praises no matter what the weather.

Praise the divine name
with heart aflame.

A multitude sought salvation through the rolling hills.
They came from outside the state to seek divine will.

Jesus preached the love of God
as the path to life on which to trod.

I pray with joy for all of you.
You have shared good news 
for the bliss of truth
to guide your youth. 

Strength has raised the faith
to see faithfulness as something great.

Ignorance of the law is not wisdom.
Knowledge of concepts shapes vision.
Morality guides behavior away from destructive decision.

The study of an abstract general idea
shows false principles to cease as reasonable media. 


Take note of thought in contemplation.
Climb the ladder of letters to consummation 
in concentration.

The dexterity of the worker improves the quantity of work
with respect for skill developed in the production of a well defined cirque.

The principle of utility approves or disapproves of every action
for the happiness of the individual or government rejection of faction.

Yeah Yah!
You draw
goodness in awe
for justice in law.

----------------------------

148 Laudate Dominum
Laud the Masterful

1 Hallelujah!
Praise the Lord from the heavens;
praise him in the heights.
2 Praise him, all you angels of his;
praise him, all his host.
3 Praise him, sun and moon;
praise him, all you shining stars.
4 Praise him, heaven of heavens,
and you waters above the heavens.
5 Let them praise the Name of the Lord;
for he commanded, and they were created.
6 He made them stand fast for ever and ever;
he gave them a law which shall not pass away.
7 Praise the Lord from the earth,
you sea-monsters and all deeps;
8 Fire and hail, snow and fog,
tempestuous wind, doing his will;
9 Mountains and all hills,
fruit trees and all cedars;
10 Wild beasts and all cattle,
creeping things and winged birds;
11 Kings of the earth and all peoples,
princes and all rulers of the world;
12 Young men and maidens,
old and young together.
13 Let them praise the Name of the Lord,
for his Name only is exalted,
his splendor is over earth and heaven.
14 He has raised up strength for his people
and praise for all his loyal servants,
the children of Israel, a people who are near him.
Hallelujah!

----------------------------

Isaiah 41:19-20
I will put in the wilderness the cedar,
the acacia, the myrtle and the olive.
I will set in the desert the cypress,
the plane and the pine together
so all may see and know.
All may consider and understand
that the hand of the LORD has done this.
The Holy One of Israel has created it.

----------------------------------

The cedar and pine will go in the wilderness.
The cypress will grow by water in the desert emptiness.
All may consider and understand
that this was done by the LORD's hand.
The Holy One has created this
as an expression of creative bliss.

=========================

Phil. 1:3-5
I thank my God every time I remember you. I constantly pray with joy in every one of my prayers for all of you because of your sharing in the gospel from the first day until now.

----------------------------------

I pray with joy for all of you.
You have shared good news
for the bliss of truth
to guide your youth.

=========================

Mark 3:7-8
Jesus departed with his disciples to the lake. A great multitude from Galilee followed him. They had heard what he had done. They came to him in great numbers from Judea, Jerusalem, Idumea, beyond the Jordan and the region around Tyre and Sidon.

----------------------------------

A multitude sought salvation through the rolling hills.
They came from outside the state to seek divine will.
Jesus preached the love of God
as the path to life on which to trod.

=========================

George Berkeley
Principles of Human Knowledge
1710
Text

There is an advantage to investigating the doctrine of abstract general ideas.

"When men consider the great pains, industry, and parts that have for so many ages been laid out on the cultivation and advancement of the sciences, and that notwithstanding all this the far greater part of them remains full of darkness and uncertainty, and disputes that are like never to have an end, and even those that are thought to be supported by the most clear and cogent demonstrations contain in them paradoxes which are perfectly irreconcilable to the understandings of men, and that, taking all together, a very small portion of them does supply any real benefit to mankind, otherwise than by being an innocent diversion and amusement--I say the consideration of all this is apt to throw them into a despondency and perfect contempt of all study. But this may perhaps cease upon a view of the false principles that have obtained in the world, amongst all which there is none, methinks, has a more wide and extended sway over the thoughts of speculative men than this of abstract general ideas."

-----------------------------------------

The study of an abstract general idea
shows false principles to cease as reasonable media.

========================

Adam Smith
Wealth of Nations
1776
Text

"First, the improvement of the dexterity of the workmen, necessarily increases the quantity of the work he can perform; and the division of labour, by reducing every man's business to some one simple operation, and by making this operation the sole employment of his life, necessarily increases very much the dexterity of the workman. A common smith, who, though accustomed to handle the hammer, has never been used to make nails, if, upon some particular occasion, he is obliged to attempt it, will scarce, I am assured, be able to make above two or three hundred nails in a day, and those, too, very bad ones. A smith who has been accustomed to make nails, but whose sole or principal business has not been that of a nailer, can seldom, with his utmost diligence, make more than eight hundred or a thousand nails in a day. I have seen several boys, under twenty years of age, who had never exercised any other trade but that of making nails, and who, when they exerted themselves, could make, each of them, upwards of two thousand three hundred nails in a day. The making of a nail, however, is by no means one of the simplest operations. The same person blows the bellows, stirs or mends the fire as there is occasion, heats the iron, and forges every part of the nail: in forging the head, too, he is obliged to change his tools."

----------------------------------

The dexterity of the worker improves the quantity of work
with respect for skill developed in the production of a well defined cirque.

=========================

Jeremy Bentham
Principles of Morals and Legislation
1789

"The principle of utility is the foundation of the present work: it will be proper therefore at the outset to give an explicit and determinate account of what is meant by it. By the principle of utility is meant that principle which approves or disapproves of every action whatsoever, according to the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interest is in question: or, what is the same thing in other words, to promote or to oppose that happiness. I say of every action whatsoever, and therefore not only of every action of a private individual, but of every measure of government."

----------------------------------

The principle of utility approves or disapproves of every action
for the happiness of the individual or the government rejection of faction.

=========================

The Egyptian influence on classical Christian society was  ascetic, academic and social, but it lacked training in weapons for defense. It's a significant deficit with respect for the self-defense of citizens.

Persevere
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/2d/ff/cb/2dffcb5f0a1b31d9e941e4fba7a89598.jpg

John Climacus
b. 579 Syria
d. 649 Mount Sinai, Egypt

John moved to the Vatos Monastery at Mount Sinai when he was 16 years old. The location now holds St. Catherine's Monastery. He became a novice. He was taught about the spiritual life by the elder monk Martyrius.

John withdrew to a hermitage at the foot of the mountain after the death of Martyrius to practice greater asceticism. He lived in isolation for about 20 years. He studied the lives of the saints. His study helped him to become a leader of the monastic lay community. The monks of Sinai persuaded him to become their Igumen when he was about 75 years of age.

He wrote Κλῖμαξ in the early 7th century in response to a request from John, the Abbot of Raithu. Raithu was a monastery situated on the shores of the Red Sea.

Κλῖμαξ is the completed form for κλίμακα. It means to climb or scale. The climax is the height of the climb in this metaphor for the ascetic life. The monk was directed to carry a notebook to record his thoughts during contemplation. The title was translated to Scala Paradisi in Latin. It is usually translated as the Ladder of Divine Ascent in English.

The advice was offered to monks if they wanted to stay at the monastery despite the hardship associated with self-denial. It has been viewed as an aid to prayer and living as conservatively as possible for life in the "world." Confession to an elder monk was practiced to communicate strategy for living as an individual in the community.

The Ladder describes how to raise one's soul to God through the acquisition of virtue for the body. John Climacus used the analogy of Jacob's Ladder as the framework for this instruction. Each chapter is referred to as a "step" and treats a separate subject.

There are 30 steps in the ladder. The number corresponds to the age of Jesus at the beginning of his ministry with his baptism. The first 7 steps concern virtues necessary for the struggle to climb the ladder. The next 19 steps give instruction in how to avoid vice. The final 4 steps concern the higher virtues.

The final rung of the ladder lies beyond prayer (προσευχή / prosefchi), stillness (ἡσυχία / isychia ) and even dispassion (ἀπάθεια / apatheia). The last step is love (ἀγάπη / agape).

The book was originally written for the monks of a neighboring monastery. It became one of the most widely read books of Byzantine asceticism. The Ladder is recommended reading for the season of Lent that precedes Pascha (Easter).

It is often read in the trapeza (refectory) in Orthodox monasteries. Some places have it read in church as part of the Daily Office on Lenten weekdays as prescribed in the Triodion.

John Climacus died at Mt. Sinai in March 649. He was about 70 years old.

John Climacus
S. 约翰规模
T. 約翰規模

約  Yue       approximately       約   yaku   about          Jon   じょん   ジョン      Jon    존   zone 
翰   han      letters                    翰    kan     letters         Ku    く             ク            Keul  클   big     
規   Gui       regulation            規    chi       rule            ri       り            リ            li        리   lee     
模   mo        mold                    模    mo      pattern       ma    ま           マ              ma      마   hemp 
                                                                                      ka     か           カ              ku       쿠   ku   
                                                                                      su     す            ス             seu     스   switch   
-------------------------------

Take note of thought in contemplation.
Climb the ladder of letters to consummation
in concentration.

=======================

Self-Denial
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/74/06/2f/74062f28f150b2d23fa5be36bf0b0d16.jpg
   

Innocent of Alaska
b. August 26, 1797, Anginskoye, Irkutsk Oblast, Russia
d. April 12, 1879, Moscow, Russia

Anginskoye

Anginskoye is a city in the Irkutsk province of Russia. The province is in the district of Siberia. It is shown on the map as about 100 km (60 mi.) north from the border with China and 825 km (515 mi.) east of Irkutsk, the capital for the province. The capital is about 5200 km east of Moscow.

Map Russia
http://billbaroni.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/impressive-ideas-map-of-eastern-europe-and-russia-russia-russian-uplands-and-eastern-europe-google-search-social.gif

Anginskoye was probably a company town in 1797. Russian presence in the area dates from the 17th century. The Tsardom expanded east following the defeat of the Khanate of Sibir in 1582. Irkutsk had become a town by the end of the 17th century. A monastery was being built. Agricultural settlement was growing into what would eventually become suburbs outside of the town.

Trades and crafts began to develop in the 18th century. Gold and silver smiths appeared. The city became the capital of an enormous territory from the Yenisey River to the Pacific Ocean as the Russian state expanded. The capital played an important role in securing Eastern Siberian and Far Eastern territories.

Research expeditions were sent to the Kamchatka peninsula with Vitus Bering. His first expedition to the area took place from 1725 to 1730. The second was from 1733 to 1743.

The Russian Orthodox Church established the Irkutsk Eparchy in 1727.

Schools, technical colleges, science museums, libraries, theaters and book printers developed to promote culture for trade. The first school in Eastern Siberia was attached to the Voznesensky monastery (1672). It opened in 1725.

Irkutsk gained importance as the transportation and trade center for Eastern Siberia. Trade routes extended to Kamchatka, Mongolia and China. It became a center for a fifth of the provinces in Siberia. The Irkutsk Governorate was established in 1764.

Navigation and secondary schools were opened in 1754.

The 1780's saw the opening of the second public library in provincial towns in Russia, as well as a regional museum and an amateur theater.

The merchant class developed in the second half of the 18th century. Industrial and merchant companies began to explore the Aleutian Islands. The exploration extended to Alaska later.

The merchant companies formed the Russian-American Company in 1799 for trade in the Aleutian and Kuril islands along with the rest of the North-Eastern sea. Grigorii Ivanovich Shelikov was an accomplished seafarer. He founded the first colonies of Russian American with the Shelikov-Golikov Company.

Aginskoye was founded in 1781.

Innocent of Alaska

Innocent was a Russian Orthodox missionary priest. He was ordained the first bishop and arch-bishop in America. He was elevated to the Metropolitan of Moscow and all Russia. His missionary work included his ability as a scholar, linguist and administrator.

He wrote many of the earliest scholarly works about the native peoples of Alaska. He compiled dictionaries and grammars for their languages to develop a writing system. He translated parts of the Bible and religious works in the native language.

He was born in Anginskoye as Ivan Evseyevich Popov on August 26, 1797. His father Evsey Popov was a church server. He died when Ivan was 6. Ivan went to live with his uncle the parish deacon in Anga. He entered the Irkutsk Theological Seminary in 1807 when he was 10. The rector renamed him Veniaminov in honor of the recently deceased Bishop Veniamin of Irkutsk.

He married a local priest's daughter named Catherine in 1817. Ivan Veniaminov was made a deacon in the Church of the Annunciation on May 18 that same year. Veniaminov was appointed a teacher in a parish school after completing his studies in 1818.

He was ordained a priest in the same church on May 18, 1821. He was known as Father Ioann. Ioann was the Greek root for Ivan. It is same root for the English name John.

Bishop Michael of Irkutsk received instructions to send a priest to the island of Unalaska in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska at the beginning of 1823. Father Ioann volunteered to go.  He departed from Irkutsk accompanied by his aging mother, his wife, his infant son Innocent and his brother Stefan on May 7, 1823.

His travels over the islands greatly enhanced Father Ioann's familiarity with the local dialects. He devised an alphabet of Cyrillic letters for the Unagan dialect of Aleut. It was the most widely spoken. He translated portions of the Bible and other church material into that dialect in 1828.

Father Ioann was transferred to Sitka Island in 1834. He devoted himself to the Tlingit people and studied their language and customs. His studies there produced the scholarly works Notes on the Kolushchan and Kodiak Tongues and Other Dialects of the Russo-American Territories. The text had a Russian-Kolushchan Glossary.

Father Ioann journeyed to St. Petersburg, Moscow and Kiev in 1838 to report on his activities. He requested an expansion of Church activities in Russian America.  He received notice that his wife had died while he was there. It was suggested that he take vows as a monk.

Father Ioann at first ignored these suggestions, but, on November 29, 1840 he was tonsured a monk. He chose the name Innocent in honor of the first bishop of Irkutsk. He was elevated to the rank of Archimandrite.

Archimandrite Innocent was consecrated Bishop of Kamchatka and Kuril Islands in Russia and the Aleutian Islands in Russian America on December 15, 1840.  Bishop Innocent was elevated to Archbishop on April 21, 1850.

Map of Russia and North America
http://geocurrents.info/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Proposed-RussiaNorth-America-Rail-Connectionm.jpg

Archbishop Innocent took up permanent residence in the town of Yakutsk. He devoted much energy to the translation of the scriptures and service books into the Yakut (Sakha) language.

He was appointed the Metropolitan of Moscow on November 19, 1867. He replaced his friend and mentor, Filaret, who had died.  He undertook revisions of many church texts that contained errors as metropolitan. He also raised funds to improve the living conditions of impoverished priests and established a retirement home for clergy.

Mission work by the Russian Church followed the pattern established by Cyril and Methodius for the Byzantines. The Bible was translated into the native language. The liturgy was expressed in Slavonic until enough support was generated for translation.

Innocent died on March 31, 1879. He was buried on April 5, 1879 at Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra outside of Moscow.

http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/innocent_alaska.htm  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Innocent_of_Alaska https://i.pinimg.com/originals/74/06/2f/74062f28f150b2d23fa5be36bf0b0d16.jpg

Innocent Popov
伊宁斯波波夫
伊寧斯波波夫

伊   Yi             he                       伊  i         that one            Ino    いの  イノ      Ino 이노 Inno   
宁   ning        peaceful          寧  nei    rather                sen    せん    セン    sen 센    sen                   
斯   si              this                    斯  shi     this                     to       と           ト         teu  트   the     
波   Bo            surge                波   ha     waves                Po       ぽ        ポ        Po    포   artillery   
波    bo           surge                波   ha     waves                po       ぽ        ポ        po    포   artillery
夫    fu            husband          夫  fu       husband           fu        ふ        フ        peu  프   the       

----------------------------

The waves surge between distant shores.
The language stirs for the heart to roar.

=====================             

Self-Instruction
https://www.azquotes.com/picture-quotes/quote-we-each-decide-whether-to-make-ourselves-learned-or-ignorant-compassionate-or-cruel-maimonides-146-77-62.jpg
             
Moses Maimonides
b. 1135, Cordoba, Spain
d. December 13, 1204, Fustat, Egypt

Cordoba

The Iberian Peninsula is located in the southwestern corner of Europe. It is principally divided between Portugal and Spain. It also includes the small principality, Andorra, small areas of France and the British territory of Gibraltar. It is the second largest peninsula by area. It is smaller than Scandinavia. It is the second largest by population. The Balkan peninsula has more people.

The expanding Roman Republic took control of Carthaginian trading colonies along the Mediterranean coast during the Second Punic War (210-205). It took nearly two centuries to complete the conquest of Iberia, but control was retained for over six centuries.

The cultures of the Celtic and Iberian populations were gradually Romanized at different rates. Local leaders were admitted into the Roman aristocratic class. Hispania served as a granary for the Roman market. Gold, wool, olive oil and wine were exported from Hispanic harbors.

Germanic Suebi and Vandals together with the Sarmatian Alans entered the peninsula at the invitation of a Roman usurper in 409. This weakened the western Roman Empire's jurisdiction in Hispania.
The tribes had crossed the Rhine River in 407 to ravage Gaul. The Suebi established a kingdom in what is today modern Galicia and northern Portugal. The Vandals established themselves in southern Spain by 420. They crossed over to North Africa in 429. They took Carthage in 439.

The western Roman Empire was in a state of transition to a cultural entity. The political structure collapsed, but the laws and the Christian religion were retained.  The Byzantines had established Spania as an occidental province in southern Iberia with the intention to revive Roman rule throughout the peninsula, but the Visigoths or 'western horses' united Hispania after the sack of Rome by Alaric in 410.

Athaulf (411-415) took the northeastern portion. Wallia (415-418) extended Visigothic rule over most of the peninsula. The Suebians were restricted to Galicia. Theodoric I (418-451) allied with the Franks and the Romans to defeat Attila in the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains (451). Euric (466-484) ended Roman rule in the peninsula. He was the first king to give written laws to the Visigoths.

The kings of France intervened as protectors for the Hispano Roman Catholics against the Arianism of the Visigoths in the wars that followed. Alaric II (484-507) and Amalaric (511-531) lost their lives in battle.

Agila (549-554) became king after the death of Amalaric, but Athanagild (554-567) rose to challenge his succession. While Athangild prevailed, Agila seded maritime ports in the southeast to the Byzantines for assistance.

Liuvigild (568-586) restored political unity with a code that asserted equal rights for Visgoths and Hispano-Romans. Religous divisions led to civil war. Hermengild, the king's son, led a rebellion in 579 after he converted to Chalcedonian Christianity.

He was defeated and taken prisoner. He was put to death after refusing communion with the Arians. Recared (586-601) accepted the Catholic faith at the Third Council of Toledo (589).

Religious unity was the basis for the mixture of Hispano-Romans and Goths in Spanish blood. Sisebut (612-621) and Suintila (621-631) expelled the Byzantines from Spain. 

Nearly all the Iberian peninsula was conquered by Moorish Muslim armies from North Africa (711-718). The conquest was part of the expansion of the Umayyid Caliphate. Christians and Jews were given subordinate status as dhimmi or 'protected' under Islamic law.

The status allowed the practice of religion as people of the Book but they were required to pay a special tax. Their rights were inferior to those of Muslims.

Muslim Spain was known as al-Andalus. It was a succession of different rules that lasted from 711 until 1492.

Map of the Caliphate of Cordoba
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f8/Califato_de_C%C3%B3rdoba_-_1000-en.svg/1200px-Califato_de_C%C3%B3rdoba_-_1000-en.svg.png

Cordoba was a Roman settlement that was taken over by the Visigoths until the Muslim invasion. It was made the capital of the Muslim emirate. The Caliphate of Cordoba encompassed most of the Ibernian peninsula. It was a center for education and culture. It grew in size to become possibly the largest city in Europe in the 10th century.

Moses Maimonides
(1135-1204)

Maimonides was born in Cordoba in the Almoravid Empire on Passover Eve near the end of March sometime before 1140. The Moors had taken control of the Iberian peninsula. Jewish culture had experienced a golden age. He was one of the last representatives of the expression.

He developed an interest in science and philosophy at an early age. He read the Greek philosophers accessible in Arabic translations. He was deeply immersed in the education facilitated by Islamic culture.

Talmud scholarship had grown in Sura and Pembedita, two cities in the territory that had been Babylon. The Gaon was the head of the academy for the research. His authority was influential with respect for understanding the Talmud in the Judaic legal tradition.

Maimonides or Rambam was Gaonic with respect for Almohad legal thought. He was a Sephardic Jewish philosopher. He became one of the most prolific Torah scholars in the Middle Ages. He studied the Torah under his father Maimon. Maimon had studied under Rabbi Joseph ibn Migash, a student of Isaac Alfasi.

The Almohads were a Berber dynasty. They had conquered Cordoba in 1148. They abolished the dhimmi status. The loss of the status left Jewish and Christian communities with conversion to Islam, death or exile. Many were forced to convert, but due to suspicion of fake conversion, the new converts had to wear clothing that set them apart for public scrutiny.

Maimonides' family chose exile. Maimonides moved about southern Spain for the next ten years. He settled in Fez, Morocco eventually. He wrote his commentary on the Mishnah during the years 1166-1168.

There is no established formulation for the principles of faith that is recognized by all the branches of Judaism. Rambam wrote 13 principles that describe Judaic belief.

God
1. existence
2. unity
3. incorporeality
4. eternity
5. the sole object for worship
6. revelation through prophets

Moses
7. preeminent prophet
8. given Torah on Mt. Sinai
9. permanent law

Morality
10. divine awareness of human action
11. good rewarded; evil punished
12. Messiah
13. resurrection 

These principles have become widely held as the cardinal principals of faith for Orthodox Jews.

He traveled to the Holy Land with his two sons before settling in Fustat, Egypt around 1169. He prayed at the Temple Mount during his visit. He said that it was a day of holiness for him and his descendents.

Maimonides was instrumental in helping rescue Jews taken captive during the Christian King Amalric's siege of the Egyptian town of Bilbays. He sent five letters to the Jewish communities of Lower Egypt asking them to pool money together to pay the ransom. The money was collected and  given to two judges. These were sent to Palestine to negotiate with the Crusaders. The captives were eventually released.

Maimonides was appointed the Nagid of the Egyptian Jewish community around 1171. The leadership he displayed during the ransoming of the Crusader captives led to this appointment.

His brother David drowned on a trip to India.  Maimonides assumed the vocation of physician with the loss of the family funds tied up in David's business venture. He had trained in medicine in both Córdoba and in Fez. He was appointed court physician to the Grand Vizier Al Qadi al Fadil, then to Sultan Saladin.  He remained a physician to the royal family after the death of the Sultan.

Maimonides described many conditions, including asthma, diabetes, hepatitis and pneumonia in his medical literature. He emphasized moderation and a healthy lifestyle. His treatises became influential for generations of physicians. He was knowledgeable about Greek and Arabic medicine. He followed the principles of humorism in the tradition of Galen.

He did not blindly accept authority but used his own observation and experience. His medical writing sought to interpret works of authority so that they could become acceptable. He displayed respect for the patient's autonomy in his interactions in a way that today would be called intercultural awareness.

He wrote of his longing for solitude in order to come closer to God and to extend his reflections on the prophetic experience, but he gave over most of his time to caring for others.

Maimonides described his daily routine in a letter. He would arrive home exhausted and hungry after visiting the Sultan's palace where "I would find the antechambers filled with gentiles and Jews … I would go to heal them, and write prescriptions for their illnesses … until the evening … and I would be extremely weak."

He would receive members of the community even on the Sabbath. It is remarkable that he managed to write extended treatises, including not only medical and other scientific studies but some of the most systematically thought-through and influential treatises on halakha (rabbinic law) and Jewish philosophy of the Middle Ages.

Maimonides wrote his Iggeret Teman (Epistle to Yemen) in 1173.

He wrote The Guide for the Perplexed (1190) to reconcile the philosophy of Aristotle with Hebrew Bible theology by finding rational explanations for many events in the text.

It was written in Judeo-Arabic in the form of a three part letter to his student, Rabbi Joseph ben Judah of Ceuta, the son of Rabbi Judah. It is the main source of the Rambam's philosophical views as opposed to his opinion on Jewish law.

It is a systematic exposition on the theology of creation from Genesis and the chariot passage in Ezekiel. These were the two mystical texts in the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible).

The first book begins with the thesis against anthropomorphism. There are many expressions in the Bible that refer to God in human terms. The "hand" of God is an example. He argued that it was an error to view the divine nature as corporeal.

The second book contains an exposition of the physical structure of the universe with the spherical earth in the center surrounded by heavenly spheres in accord with the Aristotle's description.

Aristotle's view of the eternity of the universe however is rejected. He uses an exposition of creation as outlined in Genesis to place the prophecy of Moses at the highest level. Subsequent lower levels reduce the immediacy between God and prophet.

Prophecies through increasingly external and indirect factors such as angels and dreams are allowed. The language and nature of the prophetic books of the Bible are described to conclude the book.

The third book presents a rational explanation of the mysticism in the chariot passage in Ezekiel. Jewish law did not allow the interpretation of the passage to be expressed explicitly.

The teacher was expected to give hints from which the student would acquire knowledge indirectly. Rabbinic writing on the subject often crossed the line from hints into explicit detail about the instruction.

Maimonides explained basic mystical concepts with Biblical terms that shared proximity to knowledge with heavenly spheres, elements and intelligence.  This was followed by an analysis of the moral aspects of the universe.

He deals with the problem of evil, free will, tests, trials, omniscience and providence. He argues that evil has no positive existence. It is a privation of goodness that proceeds from God. When scripture described evil as being sent by God it was an allegorical description.

He explained the reasons for the 613 laws in the 5 books of Moses in the Torah. His exposition departed from traditional Rabbinic explanation to favor a practical and physical approach. He concluded the work with the notion of a harmonious life founded on the correct worship of God.

The Guide influenced Christian thought. Thomas Aquinas and Duns Scotus made use of it. The negative theology contained in it also influenced mystics such as Meister Eckhart. It was also read and commented on in Islamic circles and remains in print in Arab countries. While it is not regarded as definitively Judaic by all of Judaism, it is respected for the philosophical intent.

Maimonides died on December 12, 1204 (20th of Tevet 4965) in Fustat.

Moses Maimonides
摩西迈蒙尼德
摩西邁蒙尼德

摩  Mo      rub                摩   ma   polish              Mo  も-     モ-       Mo 모  mother                 
西  xi         west             西   sei    west                se    せ       セ          se  세   three                   
迈  Mai      pass             邁   mai   excel              Mai  まい  マイ     Ma  마   hemp               
蒙  meng  cover             蒙   mo    ignorance       mo   も       モ         i      이    this       
尼  ni          nun              尼   ni      nun                ni      に       ニ        mo 모   mother               
德  de         morality       德  toku  ethics              de    で       デ        ni    니   nee                 
                                                                              su     す      ス        de   데   place
                                                                                                            seu   스  switch
-----------------------------

Ignorance of the law is not wisdom.
Knowledge of concepts shapes vision.
Morality guides behavior away from destructive decision.

======================                             

Well-Regulated Defense

https://www.azquotes.com/picture-quotes/quote-a-well-regulated-militia-composed-of-the-body-of-the-people-trained-in-arms-is-the-best-james-madison-18-35-70.jpg

Education and Arms

A well-regulated defense requires education and arms.

Calvin was extreme in his definition of government. He limited the organization of authority to the local council as directly under God.

The Reformed movement however contributed to the achievement of two major changes to western society. Education became a public institution. It has been paid for mainly with local and state taxes.

The right to bear arms was also a significant advance. It was initially used to achieve the overthrow of both the monarchy and parliament, but there is the more significant development in terms of the right to defense for citizens.

This element had been proposed by Hobbes as the right to defense against attack. It is his most significant philosophical contribution to political science.

This is a critical definition for the purpose of government. Law enforcement officials cannot always be where they are needed at the time of need. People have the right to defend themselves from attack. The right to bear arms is a fundamental advance in constitutional law.

Dominance
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/8f/a1/bc/8fa1bc995f89918f275d79d454747459.jpg


Augustine summarized the neo-Platonic view for his day with his definition of good and evil with respect for the political sphere. Neo-Platonism was popular as a philosophy because it could entertain the debate between monotheists and polytheists.

Slavery was still a social institution. Monarchy was regarded as the de facto case for leadership in the empire. The line of succession wasn't regarded as royal by the Romans.

There was still the longstanding resentment against aristocracy as the flagrantly corrupt social dimension of the political institution.

Augustine wrote the City of God to defend Christians from the view that they were responsible for the first downfall of Rome since the Gauls had ransacked the city sometime around 390 BCE.. Alaric had invaded the city in 410 CE. It was his third attack in Italian territory.

Ravenna had been made the capital of the western Roman empire in 402.

The optimists in Rome were looking at a long period to re-build the dominance of the city as a political power.

The college of cardinals and the papacy would eventually organize the Vatican to negotiate the organization of European tribal society into royal houses that would serve the unity of Christendom.

This was managed without slavery as an institution. It is conceivable that the status of serfdom was managed severely in order to justify organization without slavery, but the Christian Roman empire had managed to quietly abolish the institution.

There was most likely implicit cooperation with the eastern Roman empire to accomplish the achievement. The Byzantines occupied a position between the Europeans and the more eastern part of the Middle East.

John Chrysostom had complained about the mistreatment of slaves when he was the Patriarch of Constantinople (398-404). The Byzantine empire probably allowed the ownership of slaves or there was a translation issue.

The distinction between a slave and a serf was conceptually subtle. A serf was regarded as part of the staff who cared for the property. They were treated as part of the responsibility for managing the property. They were in this sense part of the property.

A slave was owned as property. Even in Rome some slaves were caretakers and others were trained as gladiators. The difference in lifestyle among slaves was significant. Those who were trained as gladiators could be used as soldiers in private armies.

The size of a private army could make the difference with respect for who beat whom in a report regarding the outcome of a conflict.

When it came to the competition between kingdoms in empire or the contest between empires, the distinction could be easily blurred to make it a non-issue for debate.

Slavery had to be outlawed because the categorization of a human as a piece of property allowed for shackles in the trade, whips to induce labor while enslaved, torture when accused of criminal behavior or the death penalty when found to be too troublesome. Slavery could not be allowed as legal or moral in a civilized society.

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Grow


Grow
Your
Likeness
增长你的相似
Zēngzhǎng nǐ de xiāngsì
あなたの似姿を育てる 
Anata no ni sugata o sodateru
ps83

Our tabernacle is like those of others, but who is like our God?
We have entered the land of promise from the wilderness we had trod.

We meet to worship in a holy place
that holds that which cannot be held, the sacred space for grace.

We raise our hands in prayer
for guidance from the essential presence anywhere. 

We listen to the scripture read
to consider the dignity of law for the living and the dead.

This is the west.
Do your best.
Let God do the rest.

Our enemies have made a commotion
against the way we celebrate devotion.



They have taken crafty counsel against your faithful.
Their disruption has been disrespectful.
Their speech has not been grateful.

They said that they wanted to cut us off as a nation.
The children of the light were not to be remembered for the celebration
of salvation.

The gods who did not make heaven or earth
will perish from the heart of essential worth.

Their lot consulted together and formed consent.
They organized against your covenant. 

The tents of the red earth and the desert wanderers
teamed together with the cave space conjurers.

The cults of the strong, the moral, the reward, the hidden, 
and the valley dweller conjoined with the other bidden.

The band of the archer conspired with the rebel cause.
The conspiracy aspired to break your laws.

The elements for strife and destruction were drawn to a spring
to destroy the settlement of the faithful united by what defense would bring. 

They met their elementary end at the encampment by the water.
The outcome had been predicted by both prophet and augur.

The principle element for matter
has been identified as hydrogen for the mad hatter.

Their leaders became disciples of the wolf and raven.
The power of light had denied shade to their haven.

They were not allowed to take our houses in their possession.
We did not grant concession to their aggression.

God made them into a wheel to be rolled back.
We were allowed to continue on our projected track.

As fire burned the wood and the flame set the mountain ablaze,
they were driven back by the tempest that enveloped the terrain.

Their hearts were filled with shame.
They had not sought the wonder of your name.

Let those who reject your common law
be confounded by the absence of reverence and awe.

Let all people know that the name of the Lord for our existence
shines as the most high above the earth for consistent insistence
on the right to defense for assistance.

Many died through the one man's trespass
so the gift of grace in Christ Jesus might amass. 



You had lifted up the Son of Man. You saw that I am he.
I have spoken as the Father had instructed me.

---------------------------------

83 Deus, quis similis?

1 Keep not thou silence, O God: hold not thy peace, and be not still, O God.
2 For, lo, thine enemies make a tumult: and they that hate thee have lifted up the head.
3 They have taken crafty counsel against thy people, and consulted against thy hidden ones.
4 They have said, Come, and let us cut them off from being a nation; that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance.
5 For they have consulted together with one consent: they are confederate against thee:
6 The tabernacles of Edom, and the Ishmaelites; of Moab, and the Hagarenes;
7 Gebal, and Ammon, and Amalek; the Philistines with the inhabitants of Tyre;
8 Assur also is joined with them: they have holpen the children of Lot. Selah.
9 Do unto them as unto the Midianites; as to Sisera, as to Jabin, at the brook of Kison:
10 Which perished at Endor: they became as dung for the earth.
11 Make their nobles like Oreb, and like Zeeb: yea, all their princes as Zebah, and as Zalmunna:
12 Who said, Let us take to ourselves the houses of God in possession.
13 O my God, make them like a wheel; as the stubble before the wind.
14 As the fire burneth a wood, and as the flame setteth the mountains on fire;
15 So persecute them with thy tempest, and make them afraid with thy storm.
16 Fill their faces with shame; that they may seek thy name, O Lord.
17 Let them be confounded and troubled for ever; yea, let them be put to shame, and perish:
18 That men may know that thou, whose name alone is Jehovah, art the most high over all the earth.

tabernacle- tent for worship
Israel- Seat/Light/god of gods - Judgement
Edom- red earth
Ishmael- desert wanderers; desolation god
Moab- from father; incest in royal line
Hagar- this reward
Gegal- strong, moral
Ammon- the hidden
Amalek- valley dweller
Philistine- tribe of hestia, the hearth
Tyre- rock
Assur- archer
Lot- envelop
Midian- strife
Sisera- servant of light
Jabin- the wise
Kison- lay bait
Endor- spring settlement
Oreb- raven
Zeeb- wolf
Zeba- power of light; beauty
Zalumna- shade denied
Jehovah- I am

The tabernacle in a church differs from the tent for worship in the wilderness, but it is a symbolic reminder of the wilderness experience.

Church Tabernacle
Text
"When I was growing up, anytime I visited a church I immediately saw the..."

Jeremiah 10:11
The gods who did not make the heavens
and the earth will perish from the earth under the heavens.

---------------------------

The gods who did not make heaven or earth
will perish from the heart of essential worth.

====================

Romans 5:15
The free gift is not like the trespass. If the many died through the one man's trespass, much more surely have the grace of God and the free gift in the grace of the one man, Jesus Christ, abounded for the many.

---------------------------

Many died through the one man's trespass
so the free gift of grace in Christ Jesus might amass.

====================

John 8:28
So Jesus said, 'When you have lifted up the Son of Man, then you will realize that I am he. I do nothing on my own. I speak these things as the Father instructed me.

---------------------------

You had lifted up the Son of Man. You saw that I am he.
I have spoken as the Father has instructed me.

====================

Pope Sixtus III
Rome, Italy
d. 28 March 440, Rome Italy

Sixtus was born in Rome in the 4th century.

The Christian religion had changed in that century. It had gone from a persecuted sect to the official state religion. Constantine had been one of those who issued the Edict of Milan in 313. The edict expressed tolerance for Christian and returned property that had been confiscated.

He had acted as a judge in the Donatist controversy in North Africa in 316. The Donatists had argued that the priests had to be faultless for the sanctity of the sacraments. They had also pressed to prevent the lapsed from reconciliation with the church. The error for their sect persisted from the 4th to the 6th century.

Constantine had moved his capital to Byzantium on the Bosphorus. He built the city from 324 to 330. It had Christian architecture. Churches were allowed in the city limits. No pagan temples were built. Rome had yet to build churches.

The capital was renamed for him. He convened the Council of Nicea in 325 to resolve the Arian controversy. The Nicene Creed was composed during this conference. The creed declared that the Church was to be one holy catholic and apostolic.

Constantine died in 337. He had 3 sons. Constantine II ruled Spain, France and Britain. He was killed when he tried to take Italy from his brother Constans. Constans added his brother's territory to his own.

He was killed in 350 when his army revolted against him with Magnentius. Constantius, the ruler for the Eastern empire, gathered his forces, defeated Magnentius and took the entire empire.

Constantius had outlawed pagan sacrifice in 341. He had all pagan temples closed in 346. He decreed the death penalty for pagan sacrifice in 356. The severity against polytheism was not his only involvement in religion.

Constantius objected to the term homoousias, meaning of the same nature, to describe Christ. He favored the term homoiousias, of a similar nature, along with the Arians. Orthdox Christians were deprived of their positions as bishops. Their churches were given to semi-Arians.

Constantius had no children from which to select a successor. He selected Julian, the husband to his sister. He made the selection even though Julian was an ardent classical scholar. Neo-Platonism was fashionable as a philosophy among both Christians and non-Christians in the 4th century. He managed to keep his passion for paganism in classical culture hidden from Constantius, his brother-in-law.

Julian did what he could to restore polytheism as a religion when he became emperor in 361. He opened the temples that had been closed. He recruited and re-organized a clergy to compete with the Christians. He restored Christians who had been categorized as heretical by the Ecumenical Council. He had Orthodox Christians removed from teaching positions.

Plato had taught reincarnation in his philosophy. Julian saw himself as a reincarnate Alexander the Great. When he received report of a threat from the border near Persia, he set off to conquer their empire. He was killed in battle at the age of 32. The year was 363.

Usurpations, rebellions and barbarian invasions threatened the stability of the empire in the years that followed the death of Julian. Jovian took over as emperor. He reversed Julian's anti-Christian edicts.

He nominated Valentinian as his heir, then died. Valentinian made his brother Valens the emperor for the east.

Ambrose was chosen as the bishop of Milan in 374. Valentinian died in 375. Gratian is elected as his successor. Valens was killed in 379. Gratian nominated Theodosius the Great as his replacement.

Theodosius took over the eastern portion of the empire in 379.  He authorized the use of the death penalty for pagan sacrifice. He declared Nicene Christianity to be the legal religion for the empire in 380. He convended the Council of Constantinople in 381.

The First Council of Constantinople was not convened until 381. It approved the current form for the Nicene Creed. It also condemned the teaching of Apollinarius as false. He had argued that there was no human mind or soul in Christ. The council awarded honorary precedence over all churches except for Rome.

Honorius was the emperor in the west in 423. His brother Arcadius was in the east.

Honorius was celebrating a victory over the Goths at the Roman Colosseum when the games were interrupted by an Egyptian monk named Telemachus. He pleaded for the games to stop. He was killed. The emperor decreed a stop to the games in 399. The Colosseum was closed in 405.

The games had been started as a pagan rite for human sacrifice to propitiate the anger of the gods for wrong associated with the death of a public official. Closing the games was an inevitable consequence for the rise of Christianity as the official religion.

John Chrysostom criticized rich nobles for their cruelty to slaves sometime around 401 when he was Patriarch of Constantinople.

Aurelius Augustine

Ambrose baptized Augustine and his son, Adeodatus, in Milan during the Easter Vigil on April 24-25, 387. He was ordained a priest in Hippo in 391. He was elevated to the rank of bishop in 395. He wrote his Confessions soon after his consecration. He remained in that position until his death in 430.

The City of God was first published in 426.

Italy

Ostrogoths invaded northern Italy in 405. The force led by Radagaisus attacked Florence. The next year Stilicho recruited soldiers from slaves by offering them freedom and two pieces of gold. He forced the Germans to retreat to Fiesole, where they were starved into surrender. The Germans who were not slaughtered were sold as slaves. Radagaisus was beheaded even though he capitulated.

Honorius learned of his brother's death in 408 while returning to Ravenna. Stilicho persuaded the western emperor to allow him to go to Constantinople to protect young Theodosius.  Alaric, leader of the Goths, was sent as a master general of imperial armies against Constantine in Gaul.

The minister Olympius made Honorius suspect that Stilicho was going to kill Theodosius II. A military revolt killed many of the top officials attending on Honorius. Stilicho marched to Ravenna, but he was executed by Heraclian.

Honorius excluded those who were not Catholic from office. The policy rejected many skilled pagans and Arian barbarians. Roman troops were accused of killing barbarian auxiliaries. A large number of foreign soldiers were stimulated to join Alaric in Noricum.

Alaric offered to withdraw into Pannonia for more money and an exchange of hostages, but Honorius, guided by his minister Olympius, declined. Alaric entered Italy for the third time and besieged Rome in 408.

The Roman empire had six emperors in 410: Honorius and his nephew Theodosius, Attalus at Rome, Constantine and Constans at Arles and Maximus at Tarragona.

The patriarch Theophilus was succeeded by his nephew Cyril of Alexandria in 412. The neo-Platonic philosopher Hypatia was in her forties. She was admired for her beauty and wisdom. She lectured to large crowds. She was the friend of the pagan prefect for Egypt Orestes.

Cyril menaced the Jews. Some Christians were killed. Cyril banished the Jewish and allowed their property to be taken. Orestes was insulted by a large crowd of monks. One who hit him with a stone was executed. He was hailed as a martyr by Cyril.

Another group of angry monks believed that Hypatia hindered reconciliation between Orestes and Cyril. They dragged her to a church, tore off her garments and it is reported that they dismembered her.

Theodosius II married Athenian-educated Eudocia in 421. Two years later she was declared Augusta. Honorius allowed Constantius to be crowned Augustus and his wife Placidia Augusta in the same year. Young Theodosius and his sister Pulcheria did not recognize the elevation in rank in Constantinople. Constantius died seven months later. Placidia took refuge with her family in Constantinople. Honorius died in 423 after a 28 year reign.

Theodosius and Pulcheria supported Placidia and her 4-year-old son Valentinian as opposed to a usurper named John.  Placidia agreed to return Dalmatia and part of Pannonia to the East. Theodosius exiled John's envoys and sent a large army commanded by Ardaburius and his son Aspar to take Ravenna. They were accompanied by Placidia and Valentinian.

The fleet that carried them was scattered in a storm. Ardaburius was captured and taken to Ravenna. Aspar attacked the city. John was captured and publicly executed before Aetius arrived with an army of Huns. Aetius as a boy had been a hostage with Alaric and with the Huns. Aetius agreed to support Placidia. The Huns were bought off with money and returned to their homes. Valentinian III was named Augustus at Rome in 425.

Sixtus III

Sixtus was a prominent priest in Rome prior to his elevation to the papal office. He corresponded extensively with Augustine of Hippo. He was chosen as the 44th pope on 31 July 432.

The Council of Ephesus was convened in 431 to settle the Christological controversy surrounding Nestorius. Nestorius was the Patriarch for Constantinople (428-431).

His teaching rejected the long-used title of Theotokos for Mary the mother of Jesus. The debate over Christ's human and divine natures turned on whether Mary could legitimately be called the "Mother of God" or only "Mother of Christ".  He had taught that Christ's divine and human nature were distinct persons. Mary was the mother of Christ but not the mother of God.

The council gave her the Greek title Theotokos (literally "God-bearer", or "Mother of God") It is regarded as an integral part of the tradition that supports Christian theology. Nestorius was deposed. The title was retained. Sixtus approved the results for the council. A large church was built in Rome and dedicated to the Mother of God as a response to the decision of that council

He fought Nestorianism and Pelagianism. Pelagius had taught that a sin-less life could achieve salvation by the work of asceticism. This salvation was attainable by free will. The Council of Carthage had condemned his teaching as heretical in 418.

Jerome identified Pelagius as Irish. Pelagius was highly educated. He spoke and wrote Latin and Greek fluently. He became better known when he moved to Rome around 380. He enjoyed a reputation for austerity.

Pelagius was concerned with the moral laxity of society. He blamed the laxity on the theology of divine grace that was preached by Augustine. He began to teach a very strict, rigid moralism that emphasized a natural, innate human ability to attain salvation

Sixtus was associated with the construction and restoration of a number of churches in Rome. He restored several Roman basilicas while he was pope. These included Saint Peter’s and Saint John Lateran.

Old St. Peter's Basilica was the 4th-century church begun by the Emperor Constantine the Great between 319 and 333. Both this church and its successor had the entrance to the east and the apse at the west end of the building like all the earliest churches in Rome.

Santa Sabina on the Aventine Hill was dedicated during his pontificate. He built the Liberian Basilica as Santa Maria Maggiore, whose dedication to Mary the Mother of God reflected his acceptance of the Ecumenical council of Ephesus which closed in 431.

He defended the supremacy of the pope over local bishops. He asserted jurisdiction in Illyria when the emperor wanted to transfer it to the control of Constantinople. He held that the position of the archbishop of Thessalonica was head of the local Illyrian church. The position was defended against the ambition of Proclus of Constantinople.

He attempted to restore peace between Cyril of Alexandria and John of Antioch.

Sixtus died in Rome on 28 March 440.

Sixtus
西斯
西斯

西     Xi      the West         西 sei       west        Shiks       しくす  シクス        Sigseu   식스  six   
斯     si       this                 斯 shi       this          tus            とぅす   トゥス       tuseu     투스   tooth 

---------------------------

This is the west.
Do your best.
Let God do the rest.

====================

https://www.unrv.com/empire/timeline-4th-century.php
http://www3.northern.edu/marmorsa/4thcentlec2004.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_seven_ecumenical_councils#First_Council_of_Constantinople_(381)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_in_the_5th_century
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelagius#Beginnings


James Solomon Russell
(December 20, 1857- March 28, 1935)

James Solomon Russell was born enslaved in Mecklenberg County Virginia shortly before the American Civil War. He became an Episcopal priest and educator. Russell founded Saint Paul Normal and Industrial School. This later became Saint Paul's College. He declined two elections to become bishop to continue the direction for that (now-closed) historically black college.

James Russell was born on the Hendrick plantation in Mecklenburg County.  His family began sharecropping in Palmer Springs, Virginia after the Civil War. James began attending a local school whose schoolmaster allowed tuition to be paid in labor and farm products. The schoolmaster and superintendent encouraged him to continue his education.

He was admitted to the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute in 1874. Financial constraints required that he support himself. He began to teach near home. He also worked when the college was not in session. Russell decided to become a member of the Episcopal Church around this time. He secured admission to the newly formed Bishop Payne Divinity School in 1878.

Bishop Whittle ordained Russell a deacon on March 9, 1882. He sent him as a missionary back to Mecklenburg County. He worked in Lawrenceville, Virginia. The diocese authorized funds to build a church for his parishioners as well as a horse to assist on his missionary travels. He was ordained as a priest in 1887.

Russell and his wife began teaching African Americans in a room at the tiny new church in January 1883. This expanded and eventually became Saint Paul Normal and Industrial School. It expanded its enrollment and curriculum due to his enthusiasm and aggressive fund-raising effort.

Rev. Russell was named Archdeacon of the newly formed Diocese of Southern Virginia in 1893. He was charged with working among African Americans. The number of African American churches in his diocese increased from none to 37 as a result of his ministry. The churches had more than 2000 communicants.

He later became the first African American to be named to the Board of Missions of the Episcopal Church. He served in that capacity from 1923-1931.  Russell was elected as Suffragan Bishop of Arkansas in 1917, but declined the honor in order to continue his work at the school. He also declined when notified of his election as Suffragan Bishop of North Carolina.

Russell founded an annual farmer's conference in 1904. He was inspired by Booker T. Washington. He urged African American farmers to stay out of debt and to vote despite the institution of poll taxes and Jim Crow laws by Virginia's Constitution in 1902.

Archdeacon Russell was awarded an honorary degree from the Virginia Theological Seminary in 1917. He was the first African American thus honored. He was also granted an honorary doctorate in laws from Monrovia College in 1922. He was named Knight Commander of the Humane Order of African Redemption by the President of Liberia. He won the Harmon Award in 1929.

James Solomon Russell died at the President's house in Lawrenceville on March 28, 1935 after an extended illness. He was buried at the school cemetery. Archdeacon Russell's autobiography, Adventure in Faith, was published in 1935.

The historically black college developed financial problems after the success of the American Civil Rights Movement. It closed in 2013.

James Russell
詹姆斯罗素
詹姆斯羅素

詹  Zhan     verbose            詹  sen   verbose            Jemzu  じぇ-むず     ジェ-ムズ                   
姆  mu        matron             姆  bo      wet nurse        Ru          らっ           ラッ         
斯  si            this                 斯  shi     this                  seru       せる             セル                       
罗  Luo        to catch          羅  ra       gauze                                             Jeimsu   제임스 James 
素  su           element           素  su      principle                                        Leo          러           the 
                                                                                                                   sel           셀           cell 

---------------------------

The principle element for matter
has been identified as hydrogen for the mad hatter.

====================