Thursday, May 30, 2019

Revere

6.1.19



Revere
Life
反抗生活 
Fǎnkàng shēnghuó
リヴィア生活
Rivu~ia seikatsu
ps116
revere vitae

I love that I found help when I needed it.
Salvation came and I heeded it.

I felt desperate. My mind cried for direction.
Choice was compressed to this bit. I had to select protection 
from the danger of dereliction.

I found what I needed before the moment of crisis.
The rightness in choice was decisive. 

The cords of death had entangled me.
My sight was so strangled, I had to get free.

The grip of the grave grapple grabbed
until my adam's apple gagged
while seeing the sensible source sag 
from the sense perception had.

Sorrow drove sadness to the threshold of pain.
The horror drove madness to enfold the insane.

Then I cried for help
after yapping a yelp,
“What do I have to do to find safety?
I need it now. I need it greatly.”

The success of salvation is gracious.
It was so efficacious, it was almost salacious.

Nothing else is quite so profound
as wonder in the world once it has been found.

Defense is granted to the watchful
if only because the thoughtful 
watch for the goodness of the gospel.

I felt that I fell very low, but I was helped.
I exempted contempt for what I was dealt.

It is time to rest
now that I have been blessed
with the quest to sing of salvation with zest.

Stress from the test has worn my torn soul.
I will do my best to celebrate life as a whole.

I was rescued from death.
Help was given in the test.

My eyes shed natural tears.
I was grateful for my years.

My feet did not stumble
though I felt glad and humble.

I will walk in the presence 
of the divine essence
in the land of the living
to give thanks for the giving.

I believed even when 
I had been brought to a bend.
Then I said, 
“No one can be trusted
when your trust has been busted.”

False prophets lead those who believe them astray.
Truth is the safeguard against fake news for the day. 

How will I repay my debt
without regret 
for all the good things 
carried by angel wings?

I will lift up the cup of salvation 
and hold it high as a libation.

I will fulfill my promise to live
with reverence for life as a gift
in the rule of law that we win
in transcending sin.

Precious in the sight of divine Light
is the death of those who defended rights.
They lived good lives.

The transcendence of punishment for false conviction was celebrated
when Christ as the power of God on the cross was elevated.

The reward for agreement with the commandment to love is eternal life.
The Son spoke as the Father had granted inheritance to overcome strife.

I am a defender of rights. 
I have been resurrected as a good life
by the experience that brought me past strife. 

I tasted a glimpse of the abyss.
It was black and gray with white lights in the tryst.

I have been freed from the world of discrimination
to recount deliverance by narration.

My ear has been opened.
I hear sounds that are spoken.

From the same mouth come blessing and curse.
Speech should be the garden ground for verse.

Who do you say that I am?
You are anointed to pass the exam.

I was not rebellious,
reckless or helpless.

I did not turn backwards.
I spoke in exact words.

Bravery is most bold when prepared.
Faith looks for benign design to be shared.

Traditional revival celebrates regression to the legal process.
Conservative reform pushes for manageable progress.

Time starts to grow bold.
The word shares the beauty of hope.

Hope desires goodness
to add to the fullness.

Measure the base 
to secure great restraint.

The bug pulls this stem.
You straighten the hem.

The water's edge reached up onto the sand
in resignation to the limit allowed by gravity and land.

The bridge to love leads the way
to the right thing to do or say.

We are among those who have faith with courage.
We don't shrink back to be lost or discouraged.

I will offer thanksgiving as my sacrifice.
I will give thanks to the Giver of life.

The faithful abide in love with truth.
Grace and mercy act like salve that soothes.

I will speak with reason for the reasonable acceptance
of benefit for people in the presence 
of the divine essence
in the assembly in public
in the city of peace that is love lit
by the waters near where the dove sits. 

Yea Yah!
You fill me with awe!


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

116 Dilexi, quoniam
I love, because

1 I love the Lord, because he has heard the voice of
my supplication,
because he has inclined his ear to me whenever
I called upon him.
2 The cords of death entangled me;
the grip of the grave took hold of me;
I came to grief and sorrow.
3 Then I called upon the Name of the Lord:
"O Lord, I pray you, save my life."
4 Gracious is the Lord and righteous;
our God is full of compassion.
5 The Lord watches over the innocent;
I was brought very low, and he helped me.
6 Turn again to your rest, O my soul.
for the Lord has treated you well.
7 For you have rescued my life from death,
my eyes from tears, and my feet from stumbling.
8 I will walk in the presence of the Lord
in the land of the living.
9 I believed, even when I said,
"I have been brought very low."
In my distress I said, "No one can be trusted."
10 How shall I repay the Lord
for all the good things he has done for me?
11 I will lift up the cup of salvation
and call upon the Name of the Lord.
12 I will fulfill my vows to the Lord
in the presence of all his people.
13 Precious in the sight of the Lord
is the death of his servants.
14 O Lord, I am your servant;
I am your servant and the child of your handmaid;
you have freed me from my bonds.
15 I will offer you the sacrifice of thanksgiving
and call upon the Name of the Lord.
16 I will fulfill my vows to the Lord
in the presence of all his people,
17 In the courts of the Lord's house,
in the midst of you, O Jerusalem.
Hallelujah!

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

1 Corinth. 1:22-24

Jews demand signs. Greeks seek wisdom, but we proclaim Christ crucified. The crucifixion is a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles. Christ is the power and wisdom of God to those who are called. both Jews and Greeks.

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

The transcendence of punishment for false conviction was celebrated
when Christ as the power of God on the cross was elevated.

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

John 12:50

I know that his commandment is eternal life. What I speak, therefore, I speak as the Father has told me.

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

The reward for agreement with the commandment to love is eternal life.
The Son spoke as the Father had granted inheritance to overcome strife.

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

Impartial Judgement

Justin Martyr
b. 100 Flavia Neapolis, Judea
d. 165 Rome, Roman Empire

Justin was an early Christian apologist. He is regarded as the foremost interpreter of the theory of the Logos in the 2nd century. He was martyred alongside some of his students. He is respected as a saint by the Roman Catholic, Anglican, Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Churches.

Two of his apologies and a dialogue survived. The First Apology defended the morality of the Christian life. Various ethical and philosophical arguments were expressed to convince the Roman emperor, Antoninus, to abandon the persecution of the Church.

He also indicated that the "true religion" predated Christianity. The "seeds of Christianity" actually came before Christ's incarnation. These were manifestations of the Logos acting in history.

This notion allowed him to claim that historical Greek philosophers including Socrates and Plato were pre-Christians. The philosophical expression showed respect for moral standards that anticipated the morality of the Christian religion.

Flavia Neapolis

Flavia Neapolis translates from Latin as the "new city of the emperor Flavius." It was named in 72 CE by the Roman emperor Vespasian (r. 69-79). The name took the place of an older Samaritan village, variously called Mabartha ("the passage") or Mamorpha.

The settlement was located between Mount Ebal and Mount Gerizim. The new city lay 2 kilometers (1.2 mi) west of the Biblical city of Shechem which was destroyed by the Romans that same year during the First Jewish-Roman War.

Joseph's Tomb and Jacob's Well were holy places in the city. Neapolis prospered due to the city's strategic geographic position and the abundance of water from nearby springs. Territory was accumulated including the former Judean toparchy of Acraba.

The city was built on a Roman grid plan insofar as the hilly topography of the site would allow. It was settled with veterans who fought in the victorious legions. Other foreign colonists immigrated there as well.

Trajan became the emperor of Rome in 98. Trajan is remembered as a soldier-emperor who presided over the largest military expansion in Roman history. The empire attained its maximum territorial extent by the time of his death (117).

Emperor Hadrian (r.117-138) built a grand theater in Neapolis that could seat up to 7,000 people in the 2nd century CE.

Coins found in Nablus dating to this period depict Roman military emblems and gods and goddesses of the Greek pantheon such as Zeus, Artemis, Serapis, and Asklepios. Neapolis was entirely pagan at this time.

He is also known for his philanthropic rule. He had public building programs and implemented social welfare policies. He was the second of the Five Good Emperors who presided over an era of peace and prosperity in the Mediterranean world.

Justin

Justin was born into a pagan family in Flavius Neapolis, Samaria (now Nables) in 100. He defined himself as a Gentile. His grandfather, Bacchius, had a Greek name, while his father, Priscus, bore a Latin name.

The names support the speculation that his ancestors settled in Neapolis soon after its establishment. They may have been descended from a Roman "diplomatic" community that had been sent there.

He sought to find life's meaning in the philosophies of his day. This brought a series of disappointments, but he established a connection between Christian and Greek apologetic.

His first teacher was a Stoic who "knew nothing of God and did not even think knowledge of him to be necessary." There followed a Peripatetic (itinerant philosopher), who seemed most interested in getting his fees.

Then came a Pythagorean, but his required course of music, astronomy and geometry seemed far too slow. Finally, Platonism, though intellectually demanding, proved unfulfilling for Justin's hungry heart.

His life was transformed at last after a conversation with an old man around 130: "A fire was suddenly kindled in my soul. I fell in love with the prophets and these men who had loved Christ; I reflected on all their words and found that this philosophy alone was true and profitable. That is how and why I became a philosopher. And I wish that everyone felt the same way that I do."

Justin continued to wear his philosopher's cloak. He sought to reconcile faith and reason. His teaching ministry took him first to Ephesus (c. 132) where he held a disputation with Trypho, a Jew, about the true interpretation of Scripture.

The Dialogue with Trypho teaches three main points. The Old Covenant is passing away to make place for the New. The Logos is the God of the Old Testament and the Gentiles are the new Israel.

These points were conceptually clear with respect for Christian reason, but they presented a problem to the status of the Jewish homeland. Jerusalem had been destroyed in 70. Jews were forbidden to live there.

The Jewish and Roman cultures began to overlap in the centuries just before the Christian Era.
Jews migrated to Rome and Roman Europe from the Land of Israel, Asia Minor, Babylon and Alexandria as part of the diaspora. The migration was stimulated by economic hardship and incessant warfare over the land of Israel between the Ptolemaic and Seleucid empires.

The Roman general Pompey in his eastern campaign established the Roman province of Syria in 64 BCE and conquered Jerusalem in 63. Julius Caesar conquered Alexandria c. 47 and defeated Pompey in 45. Judaism was officially recognized as a legal religion under Julius Caesar. The policy was followed by the first Roman emperor, Augustus.

Herod the Great was designated 'King of the Jews' by the Roman Senate in c. 40. The Roman province of Egypt was established in 30. Judea proper, Samaria and Idumea (biblical Edom) were converted to the Roman province of Iudaea in 6 CE.

Jewish–Roman tensions resulted in several Jewish–Roman wars from 66–135. These battles resulted in the destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple. The Jewish Tax was instituted in 70. Hadrian's attempted to create a new Roman colony named Aelia Capitolina c. 130.

Christianity was being developed from Second Temple Judaism by this time.

Jewish communities enjoyed privileges and thrived economically in Rome. They became a significant part of the Empire's population. The size may have grown to as much as ten percent. The Roman Twelve tables were a summary of the law. The Romans had seen that the Jews had a respect for law. They were educated enough to see that the ten commandments represented a better summary.

They also knew that they were willing to modify the code that had been established in Sumeria, Assyria, Babylon and Persia. 

It is difficult to say when the plan to convert Roman culture to monotheism was formed, but it is conceivable that Vespasian and Josephus agreed to formulate a biblical canon for a Gentile monotheism after Vespasian had adopted Josephus as his historian.

Justin moved to Rome and founded a Christian school. He engaged the Cynic philosopher Crescens in debate. He was arrested on the charge of practicing an unauthorized religion.

He wrote two bold apologies (i.e., defenses—from the Greek apologia). Justin's First Apology, addressed to Emperor Antoninus Pius, was published in 155. It attempted to explain the faith.

Christianity was not a threat to the state. It should be treated as a legal religion. He wrote "on behalf of men of every nation who are unjustly hated and reviled."

Antoninus Pius was Roman emperor from 138 to 161. Hadrian (r.117-138) adopted him as his son and successor shortly before his death. His reign is notable for the peaceful state of the Empire with no major revolts or military incursions during this time. He governed the empire without ever leaving Italy.

Antoninus portrayed himself as a magistrate of the res publica. He is credited with the splitting of the imperial treasury, the Fiscus. This splitting had to do with the division of imperial properties into two parts. The patrimonium were the properties of the "Crown."

The hereditary properties of each succeeding person that sat on the throne were transmitted to his successors in office regardless of their membership in the imperial family. Secondly, the res privata were the "private" properties tied to the personal maintenance of the Emperor and his family.

The res privata lands could be sold and/or given away. The patrimonium properties were regarded as public. It was a way of declaring that the Imperial function and most properties attached to it was public. It was formally subject to the authority of the Senate and the Roman people.

Antoninus introduced the important principle that accused persons are not to be treated as guilty before trial. It was to Antonius that the Christian apologist Justin Martyr addressed his defense of the Christian faith. Justin reminded him of his father's (Emperor Hadrian's) rule that accusations against Christians required proof.

He also asserted the principle that the trial was to be held and the punishment inflicted in the place where the crime had been committed. He mitigated the use of torture in examining slaves by stipulating certain limitations.

He prohibited the application of torture to children under 14 years though this rule had exceptions. Other limitations were applied to the use of torture and slavery.

Antoninus favored the principle of favor libertatis. This principle gave the putative freedman the benefit of the doubt when the claim to freedom was not clearcut.

Justin defended Christianity as a rational creed. He included an account of the Christian ceremonies of Baptism and the Eucharist.

Justin discussed the principal criticisms of contemporary Christians. These criticisms were presented as charges. The charges were atheism, immorality and disloyalty to the Empire.

He first argued that “the name” of Christianity by itself was not reason enough to punish or persecute. He urged the Empire to only punish evil actions instead. He wrote, “For from a name neither approval nor punishment could fairly come, unless something excellent or evil in action can be shown about it.”

He then addressed the charges more directly. He argued that they were “atheists” toward Roman gods, but not to the “most true God.” He acknowledged that some Christians had performed immoral acts, but urged officials to punish the individuals as evildoers rather than Christians.

Justin demonstrated his desire to separate the Christian name from the evil acts performed by certain individuals with this claim. He lamented how criminals tarnished the name of Christianity and were not true “Christians.”

He addressed the alleged disloyalty to the Empire. Christians do seek to be members of another kingdom, but this kingdom is “of that with God” rather than a “human one.”

He remarked that Christianity provides moral teaching for its followers. Many of the Christian teachings paralleled similar stories in pagan mythology. It was irrational for contemporary pagans to persecute Christians.

One of Justin’s most important themes involved his description of the logos. The word was a philosophical concept of order in reason with knowledge expressed by Heraclitus. Justin argued that Jesus Christ is the incarnation of the Logos.

This led him to the proof that any individual who had spoken with reason even those who lived before Christ are connected with the logos in the form of Christ are Christian in fact.

This theme was paramount to understanding Justin’s defense of Christianity. It was a groundbreaking statement in Christian apologetic. The use of the term “logos” indicated the use of prior philosophical teachings, but these teachings represented partial truth. They possessed and were connected with part of the overall logos.

Christianity represented the full truth (logos). Faith was not only a meaningful philosophy, it also completed and corrected prior thought to achieve the highest level of knowledge with reason.

The Second Apology was addressed to the Roman Senate. It was chiefly concerned with the rebuttal to specific charges of immorality that had been made against the Christians. He argued that good Christians make good citizens. The notion that Christianity undermined the foundations of a good society was based on slander.

Justin recounted the story of a certain woman who on hearing the teaching of Jesus and having become a Christian refused to comply with the immoral practices of her husband. The disagreements were so severe that she desired to be divorced. She was not encouraged to do so.

She continued in that relationship until it became ethically unlivable. She gave him a bill of divorce. The husband retaliated by bringing accusations against her before the Emperor. When he couldn't do anything to have her punished, he turned against the Christian leaders. The prefect Urbicus began a persecution.

It was the fallen angels and demons who incited such hatred and evil against the people of God. This view was in accord with the Book of Enoch (1 Enoch), which Justin viewed as scripture.

These demons are the spirits of those offspring born through the union of fallen angels and women before the Flood. They control humans through magic arts, libations and intimidating systems that hold people in bondage. They are exorcised by the Christians in the name of Jesus. All those in whom the Word dwells have been hated. Heraclitus and Musonius are examples.

The Christians were being accused of cannibalism and sexual immorality. Justin asked that if the Christians were pleasure-mongers, then why would they be fearless in the face of death for faithfulness to what they believe. Their faithfulness to Christ when threatened with torture or death proved that they are not pleasure seekers.

It was the accusers who had a system of religion in which humans were sacrificed to gods such as Saturn. Sexual immorality was openly practiced by them without shame.

Justin argued that if any group were to be persecuted, it should be the homosexuals that should be charged with sexual immorality. The replacement group argument for persecution was morally misdirected. It was implemented for centuries whenever the Roman government felt the people needed a group from whom to draw material wealth for the 'empire.' 

He was confident that his teaching was that of the Church at large. He knows of a division among the orthodox only on the question of the millennium and on the attitude toward the milder Jewish Christianity.

He personally was willing to tolerate the division as long as its professors in their turn did not interfere with the liberty of the Gentile converts. His millenarianism seems to have no connection with Judaism, but he believes firmly in a millennium in the Christian eschatology.

Justin saw himself as a scholar, but his skills in Hebrew were either non-existent or minimal. He published an attack on Judaism after collaborating with a Jewish convert to assist him with Hebrew. The criticism was based upon a no-longer-extant text of a Midrash.

Opposition to Judaism was typical of church leaders in his day. Justin was particularly antagonistic towards Jews and regarded them as a cursed people. His anti-Judaic polemics have been cited as an origin of Christian antisemitism. He was the first to argue that the Romans had no responsibility for the death of Jesus. He supported the idea of Jewish deicide.

Justin referred to written sources consisting of narratives of the life of Jesus and quotations of the sayings of Jesus as "memoirs of the apostles" and less frequently as gospels. He said the texts were read every Sunday in the church at Rome. The "memoirs of the apostles or the writings of the prophets are being read as long as it is allowable." (1 Apol. 67.3)

He was denounced by the cynic philosopher Crescens to the authorities after a debate with him in the reign of Marcus Aurelius according to Tatian (Address to the Greeks 19) and Eusebius (HE IV 16.7–8). Justin was tried together with six companions by Junius Rusticus the urban prefect from 163–167. His execution can reasonably be dated by the prefectoral term of Rusticus.

The prefect told the accused to approach to make a sacrifice to the gods. Justin said, "No one in his right mind gives up piety for impiety." The prefect warned them that they would be tortured without mercy if they did not obey.

Justin replied that it was their desire  to be tortured for Jesus Christ. Sacrifice for him would result in salvation. They would be given firm confidence at the more terrible universal tribunal of their Lord and Savior. All the martyrs said, "Do as you wish." They were Christians. They did not sacrifice to idols.

Rusticus read the sentence, "Those who do not wish to sacrifice to the gods and to obey the emperor will be scourged and beheaded according to the laws."

The martyrs were beheaded to consummate their confession of faith in their Savior.

Justin Martyr
S. 贾斯汀殉道者
T. 賈斯汀殉道者

贾 Jia      trade                    賈  ko      buy                            Ja   じゃ       ジャ      Jeo  저  moth     
斯 si        this                      斯  shi    this                             su   す          ス           seu  스  switch 
汀 ting   sandbank              汀   tei    water's edge               tin  てぃん  ティン   tin   틴   tin         
殉 Xun   martyr                  殉   jun   resignation                Jun  殉         殉           Sun  순  the       
道 dao    way                      道   do    road-way                   kyo  教         教           gyo  교  school 
者 zhe    he who                 者   sha   someone                  mono  者        者           ja     자  character                     
--------------------------

The water's edge reached up onto the sand
in resignation to the limit allowed by gravity and land.

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

Lectionary Justin M
wiki Justin M
wiki Nablus Flavius Neapolis
Christianity Today Justin M

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Transcend

5.30.19
Ascension Day

Transcend
Inhibition
超越抑制
Chāoyuè yìzhì
トランセンド抑制
Toransendo yokusei
ps47
transcende inhibitionis

Transcend your limits with the management
of  creation for enfranchisement.

What is the measure
for your household treasure?

What do you need to do
to produce a value for more than you?

Recognize what's right about your achievement
in the production of service with the power at your finger tip.

Applaud the ascension you people.
Shout to God with joy that is regal.

The providence of mind imitates design
for the conservation of goodness for the date line.

Divine design subdues prejudice to increase productivity
to leave appreciation for objectivity.

Inheritance is a model for conservation
in the management of property for station
in relations.

The Son has gone up in a cloud.
He has risen with authority endowed.

See the future of your leadership in him.
You will develop the ability to play to win. 

Sing praise with your voice
to make beautiful music a choice.

The light of love shines for all the earth.
Sing praise for all that you are worth.

The law of nations governs the world.
The standard for divine authority has been unfurled. 

Nobility has grown in behalf of people
with the Father of nations reincarnate sequel.

Rulers heed the power of the Spirit.
Real presence is exalted near it. 

Scripture shows the path to hoe
based on precedent that has been known
to grow service from that which we have sown.

Reform of punishment in the legal code
is documentation of what our ancestors bestowed.

Classical consciousness was the unstated objective for circumstance.
Justice with Iesu Christus  was the straight on check for the determined stand.  

Christ ascended to rule with authority
in the individual expression of uniformity.

Apostolic power bears witness to God in the temple with peace
with work and prayer in the effort to improve ease
despite the storms that cause damage to material increase.

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

47 Omnes gentes, plaudite
All people, clap

1 Clap your hands, all you peoples;
shout to God with a cry of joy.
2 For the Lord Most High is to be feared;
he is the great King over all the earth.
3 He subdues the peoples under us,
and the nations under our feet.
4 He chooses our inheritance for us,
the pride of Jacob whom he loves.
5 God has gone up with a shout,
the Lord with the sound of the ram's-horn.
6 Sing praises to God, sing praises;
sing praises to our King, sing praises.
7 For God is King of all the earth;
sing praises with all your skill.
8 God reigns over the nations;
God sits upon his holy throne.
9 The nobles of the peoples have gathered together
with the people of the God of Abraham.
10 The rulers of the earth belong to God,
and he is highly exalted.

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

Acts 1:1,6-9

I wrote about all that Jesus did and taught in the first book, Theophilus. The book was from the beginning until the day when he was taken up to heaven after giving instructions through the Holy Spirit to the apostles whom he had chosen.

When the apostles had come together, they asked him, 'Lord, is this the time when you will restore the kingdom of Israel?' He replied, 'It is not for you to know the times or periods that the Father has set by his own authority. You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you. You will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, all Judea, Samaria and to the ends of the earth.' When he had said this as they were watching, he was lifted up and a cloud took him out of their sight.

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

Scripture shows the path to hoe
based on precedent that has been known
to grow service from that which we have sown.

Reform of punishment in the legal code
is documentation of what our ancestors bestowed.

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

Ephesians 1:20-21

God put this power to work in Christ when he raised him from the dead and seated him at his right hand in the heavenly places far above all rule, authority, power, dominion and above every name that is named not only in this age but also in the ages to come.

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

Christ ascended to the rule with authority
in the individual expression of uniformity.

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

Luke 24:51-53

While he was blessing them, he withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven. They worshiped him and returned to Jerusalem with great joy and they were continually in the temple blessing God.

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

Apostolic power bears witness to God in the temple with peace
with work and prayer in the effort to increase ease.

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

Fully Human Nature

Ascension of Jesus

The ascension provides another element of the royalty in the authority of Jesus. The resurrection had demonstrated that his instruction had to be lived to perpetuate the Church.

It was to take on the incarnation of faith in the people as testimony to the real presence of Christ in Jesus. This makes the Eucharist a sacramental element in the expression of the Christian faith. It is a perpetuation of the transformation of Roman society from polytheism to monotheism.

The ascension is not just a titular exaltation. He is not just seated on the throne of glory to support an empty expression of elitest theism. He has risen above the partiality of prejudice for the benefit of the public.  He is the executive authority for the Church as a model for civilized life.

The gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles is presented as a single work from the same  author. It provides the only narrative account of the ascension. Luke chapter 24 tells how Jesus led the eleven disciples to Bethany, a village on the Mount of Olives, where he instructed them to remain in Jerusalem until the coming of the Holy Spirit: "It came to pass while he blessed them, he parted from them and was carried up into heaven. They worshiped him and returned to Jerusalem with great joy."

Acts 1 describes a meal at which Jesus commanded the apostles to await the coming of the Holy Spirit. A cloud took him upward from sight. Two men in white appeared to tell the disciples that he will return "in the same way you have seen him go into heaven."

Luke and Acts appear to describe the same event, but present different chronologies. Luke placed it on the same day as the resurrection. The Acts had it forty days afterwards. Various proposals have been put forward to resolve the contradiction, but the question remains open.

The Gospel of John has three references to ascension in Jesus' own words: "No one has ascended into heaven but he who descended from heaven, the son of man" (John 3:13); "What if you (the disciples) were to see the son of man ascending where he was before?" (John 6:62); and to Mary Magdalene after his resurrection, "Do not hold me, for I have not yet ascended to my father..." (John 20:17).

Jesus is claimed to be the apocalyptic "one like a son of man" of Daniel 7 in the first and second statements.  The last has a curious element. Why should Mary be told not to hold the risen but not yet ascended Christ, while Thomas was later invited to touch his wound?

Various epistles (Romans 8:34, Ephesians 1:19-20, Colossians 3:1, Philippians 2:9-11, 1 Timothy 3:16, and 1 Peter 3:21-22) also refer to the ascension like Luke-Acts and John. It is equated with the post-resurrection "exaltation" of Jesus to the right hand of God.

There is a consensus among scholars that the brief ascension account in the Gospel of Mark (Mark 16:19) is a later addition to the original version of that gospel.

Ascension stories were fairly common around the time of Jesus. These were known to the gospel-authors. The stories signified the deification of a noteworthy person. The Romans adapted stories about ascension for their emperor.

The ascension of the son of man in Judaism was an indication of divine approval. Another function of heavenly ascent was as a mode of divine revelation reflected in Greco-Roman, early Jewish and early Christian literary sources. Particular individuals with prophetic or revelatory gifts were thought to have experienced a heavenly journey during which they learned cosmic and divine secrets.

Figures familiar to Jews would have included Enoch from the Book of Genesis and a popular non-Biblical work called 1 Enoch; the 5th-century sage Ezra; Baruch the companion of the prophet Jeremiah (from a work called 2 Baruch, in which Baruch is promised he will ascend to heaven after 40 days); Levi the ancestor of priests; the Teacher of Righteousness from the Qumran community; the prophet Elijah (from 2 Kings); Moses, who was deified on entering heaven; and the children of Job, who according to the Testament of Job ascended heaven following their resurrection from the dead.

Non-Jewish readers would have been familiar with the case of the emperor Augustus whose ascent was witnessed by Senators; Romulus the founder of Rome, who, like Jesus, was taken to heaven in a cloud; the Greek hero Heracles (Hercules); and others.

The common thread linking all the New Testament ascension references reflected in the major Christian creeds and confessional statements is the exaltation of Jesus. It is by his ascension that Christ, the Son, took his seat at the right hand of God, the Father, in Heaven: "He ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of God the Father almighty." (Apostles' Creed)

It implies that the fully human nature of the Son was taken into Heaven. It marked the beginning of Christ's heavenly rule.  its hold on the Christian imagination is evidenced by its importance in Christian art through the centuries.

The Feast of the Ascension is one of the ecumenical feasts of the Christian liturgical year. It is celebrated along with the Passion, Easter, Pentecost and Christmas. Ascension Day is traditionally celebrated on the sixth Thursday after Easter Sunday, the fortieth day from Easter. Some Roman Catholic provinces have moved the observance to the following Sunday to facilitate the obligation to attend Mass.

Jerome held that it was of Apostolic origin, but the ascension was originally part of the liturgical celebration of Pentecost as the coming of the Holy Spirit. It developed as a separate celebration only slowly from the late 4th century onward.

It begins with a three-day "rogation" to ask for God's mercy in Catholic tradition. The feast itself includes a procession of torches and banners, the extinguishing of the Paschal candle and an all-night vigil. White is the liturgical color. The procession represents Christ's journey to the Mount of Olives and entry into heaven.

The orthodox tradition has a different calendar. Easter is called Pascha. Pascha is celebrated in consonance with the Jewish Passover. It is determined by the lunar cycle. It can be celebrated up to a month later than in the Western tradition. The ascension is also celebrated 40 days after Pascha in accord with the biblical account.

The Anglican communion continues to observe the feast, but most Protestant churches have abandoned the traditional Christian calendar of feasts.

wiki on Ascension of Jesus

Modes for Perception

G.K. Chesterton
b. 5.29.1874 Kensington, London, UK
d. 6.14.1936 Beaconsfield, UK

Gilbert Keith Chesterton was an English journalist, writer, poet, lay theologian and literary critic. He has been called the "prince of paradox". Time magazine has observed of his writing style: "Whenever possible Chesterton made his points with popular sayings, proverbs, allegories—first carefully turning them inside out."

He is well known for his fictional priest-detective Father Brown and for his reasoned apologetics. Even some of those who disagree with him have recognized the wide appeal of such works as Orthodoxy and The Everlasting Man.

He routinely referred to himself as an "orthodox" Christian. He came to identify this position more and more with Catholicism. He eventually converted from High Church Anglicanism.

Kensington, London

Campden Hill is located in Kensington, West London. The hill contains  the former deer-park of Holland House. The remains of the important mansion stands on the south-west corner of the hill. The south-west side of the hill is to the east of Holland House. It is characterized by large Victorian houses which are part of the Phillimore estate.

Kensington is an affluent area in general. This is a trait that it shares with Chelsea, its neighbor to the south. The area has some of London's most expensive streets and garden squares. The Holland Park neighborhood became particularly high-status at about the turn of the 21st century.

G.K. Chesterton

Gilbert was born in Campden Hill in Kensington, London, the son of Marie Louise, née Grosjean, and Edward Chesterton. He was baptised at the age of one month into the Church of England. His family was irregular in the practice of the Unitarian religion.

Chesterton was educated at St Paul's School. He then attended the Slade School of Art to become an illustrator. The Slade is a department of University College London where Chesterton also took classes in literature. He did not complete a degree in either subject.

He married Frances Blogg in 1901. The marriage lasted the rest of his life. He credited Frances with leading him back to Anglicanism. He later considered the form to be a "pale imitation" of Christianity. He entered full communion with the Catholic Church in 1922.

He began working for the London publisher Redway in September 1895. He remained there for just over a year. He moved to the publishing house T. Fisher Unwin in October 1896 where he remained until 1902.

He undertook his first journalistic work as a freelance art and literary critic during this period. The Daily News gave him a weekly opinion column in 1902. This was followed in 1905 by a weekly column in The Illustrated London News. He continued to write there for the next 30 years.

He showed a talent for art early in his career. He had planned to become an artist. His writing shows a vision that clothed abstract ideas in concrete and memorable images.

Even his fiction contained carefully concealed parables. Father Brown is perpetually correcting the incorrect vision of the bewildered folks at the scene of the crime and wandering off at the end with the criminal to exercise his priestly role of recognition and repentance.

Father Brown entreated the character Flambeau to give up his life of crime in the story "The Flying Stars" for example. His was told that he still had youth and honor, but these would not last in the trade.  Men may stay on a level of good, but no one was able to stay on one level of evil. That kind of road led down. "Many a man I've known started like you to be an honest outlaw, a merry robber of the rich, and ended stamped into slime."

Chesterton loved to debate. He often engaging in friendly public disputes with such men as George Bernard Shaw, H. G. Wells, Bertrand Russell and Clarence Darrow.

He was a large man. He stood  6 feet 4 inches (1.93 m) and weighed around 286 lbs (130 kg). His girth gave rise to a famous anecdote.

He remarked to his friend George Bernard Shaw, "To look at you, anyone would think a famine had struck England." Shaw retorted, "To look at you, anyone would think you had caused it."

A lady in London asked why he was not "out at the Front" during the First World War. He replied, "If you go round to the side, you will see that I am."

Chesterton wrote around 80 books, several hundred poems, some 200 short stories, 4000 essays and several plays.

The priest-detective Father Brown appeared only in short stories. He was depicted as "shabby and shapeless." His face was "round and expressionless, his manners clumsy." He dropped typical Chestertonian quips as he solved ghastly transgressions not with Holmes-sharp logic but "by 'getting inside' the criminal mind."

He based his conclusions on his knowledge of human nature rather than using deductive methods to discover the perpetrator of a crime. This knowledge was drawn in part from his experience in the confessional box, but also from his recognition of his own capacity for evil.

The mystery story became less a portrait of the detective's personality and more a puzzle that the detective and the reader could both solve under the influence of Chesterton's Father Brown.

The Man Who Was Thursday is arguably his best-known novel.

His political thought divided the various parties into dominant trends. The whole modern world has divided itself into Conservatives and Progressives. The business of Progressives was to go on making mistakes. The business of Conservatives was to prevent mistakes from being corrected.

He was a convinced Christian long before he was received into the Catholic Church. Christian themes and symbolism appear in much of his writing.

The Church of England presented a dilemma to Roman Catholics. Catholics defined the pope as the vicar for Christ and the head of the Church. English law has declared the sovereign for the state to be the head of the Church in England. Papal claims to power over secular authority had raised opposition to the same.

The Renaissance was a resurgence of interest in classical culture. This included art, literature and philosophy. The culture had an emphasis on construction with the attendant artistic forms. Statues and paintings adorned buildings that had structural geometric expressions in style. Writing came closer to mass distribution due to the invention of the printing press.

Classical literature was surprisingly progressive in the sense that Homer had written the Iliad and the Odyssey to protest war. Virgil wrote in a way that asserted that war was a fate established by the gods. While Plato and Aristotle had conceded to slavery as an institution, other philosophers did not.

This adaptive aspect of classical culture gave European society a justification for seeking change in the established political and social conventions.

Inventions were entertained for practical application. The value of the inventions extended into the common household when industrial production was to become one of the evolved conventions.

Science was looking to define the elements as a productive feature in design when they weren't used to justify violent aggression or cruelty in punishment. The Reformation touted itself as more scientific than the superstition promoted by the rites and rituals associated with traditional Roman religion.

Classical culture also entertained slavery and cruelty in punishment as means to accomplish goals in construction, art and government. This aspect of the competition between Catholicism and Protestantism was entertained by both sides of the argument. Royal families made statements to distance themselves from slavery and the mistreatment of natives in foreign lands.

It can't be said that the Roman Church maintained neutrality when it came to the Royal Act of Supremacy. While the Romans had allowed for monarchy in the secular leadership of kingdoms, the election of the pope was a development of a republican political form.

Monarchy was a developmental step beyond the primitive state of tribal life. The republicans considered their form of government to be more civilized, but certain actions were massively destructive according to descriptions of the events.

The Church of England had to battle insurgents from the Roman Catholic Church and the Calvinist Reformation. The battle was such that the Calvinists were allowed success if only to maintain the right to a national church. Prejudice against Roman Catholicism became a norm for a long time.

The Royalism of Hobbes and the Oxford Movement paved the way for the Anglo-Catholicism of writers like G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936), T.S. Eliot (1888-1965) and C.S. Lewis (1898-1963).
The recognition that baptism and the eucharist were rites instituted by Jesus defined the rites as sacraments.

This allowed the Anglican Church to reincorporate liturgical forms that had been rejected as papist inventions to promote superstition. Research into Ecumenical documents affirmed that there was a long standing connection between the Church of England and the doctrine espoused by the ecumenical councils.

The notion that Christianity was a cultural entity that looked at Roman Catholic and Protestant developments of a single religious view suggested that impartial judgment regarding faith was the mark of a good Christian.

Chesterton's apologetic works were key in the conversion of C.S. Lewis. His playful style was adopted by that writer. Poet T.S. Eliot remarked that he "did more than any man in his time … to maintain the existence of the [Christian] minority in the modern world."

Chesterton's first published books were of poetry. Poetry is usually distinct from journalism. There is a close connection between his poetry and his everyday journalism. T. S. Eliot described  Chesterton's poetry as 'first-rate journalistic balladry.'

The Rolling English Road

The description turns out to have been particularly perceptive since it is a reminder about his essential characteristic as a writer. His first aim was to comment on the political and social questions of the day in his verse as in all his written work.

C.S. Lewis and T.S. Eliot managed to avoid the disparagement of other religious views.

Chesterton faced accusations of anti-Semitism during his lifetime that continued posthumously. He had been an early supporter of Captain Dreyfus in France, but he turned into an anti-dreyfusard by 1906. His fictional work included caricatures of Jews, stereotyping them as greedy, cowardly, disloyal, communists from the early 20th century.

Chesterton considered the royal decree of 1290 by which Edward I expelled Jews from England in a work of 1917 titled A Short History of England. The policy remained in place until 1655. He wrote that the popular perception of Jewish moneylenders could well have led Edward I's subjects to regard him as a "tender father of his people" for "breaking the rule by which the rulers had hitherto fostered their bankers' wealth."

He felt that Jews were "a sensitive and highly civilized people" who "were the capitalists of the age, the men with wealth banked ready for use."

These might legitimately complain that Christian kings, nobles, popes and bishops had used for 'Christian' purposes such as the Crusades and the cathedrals "the money that could only be accumulated in such mountains by a usury they inconsistently denounced as unchristian; and then, when worse times came, gave up the Jew to the fury of the poor."

It looks like at least some of his Semitic statements were made in order to criticize that Christianity which was Christian in name only.

Chesterton made it clear that he believed that there was a "Jewish Problem" in Europe in The New Jerusalem. He believed that Jewish culture, not  ethnicity, separated itself from the nationalities of Europe.

He blasted German race theories. He wrote: "the essence of Nazi Nationalism is to preserve the purity of a race in a continent where all races are impure." Then he turned his perspective and defined Hitlerism as "almost entirely of Jewish origin" in the Judaism of Hitler.

The BBC invited Chesterton to give a series of radio talks in 1931. He accepted. He delivered over 40 talks per year from 1932 until his death. He was encouraged to improvise on the scripts. This allowed his talks to maintain an intimate character as did the decision to allow his wife and secretary to sit with him during his broadcasts.

The talks were very popular. A BBC official remarked, after Chesterton's death, that "in another year or so, he would have become the dominating voice from Broadcasting House."

Chesterton died of congestive heart failure on the morning of 14 June 1936 at his home in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire. His last known words were a greeting spoken to his wife.

Gilbert Chesterton
吉尔伯特切斯特顿
吉爾伯特切斯特頓

吉 Ji        lucky              吉  kichi     joy                     Gi   ぎ       ギ          Gil   길   way             
尔 er       you                  爾  ji          you                     ru   る       ル          beo   버   bur     
伯 bo      elder                伯  haku    chief                   ba   ば-    バ-           teu    트   the               
特 te       unique             特  toku     special                to    と        ト        Che   체   sieve                 
切  Qie   tangent            切  setsu    cut                      Che ちぇ  チェ       seu   스    switch           
斯  si        this                斯  shi       this                      su    す       ス          teo   터    foundation 
特  te       special            特  toku    special                 ta     た                    teon  턴   turn                 
顿  dun   arrange            頓  ton      suddenly             ton  とん   タトン                                               

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

Classical consciousness was the unstated objective for circumstance.
Justice with Jesu Christus was the straight on check for the determined stand.

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

GKC Poetry Foundation
GKC org
Lectionary GKC
JKC Christianity Today 

Sunday, May 26, 2019

Conserve

6.2.19

Morena Baccarin 

Conserve
Goodness
保持良好
Bǎochí liánghǎo
善を守る 
Zen o mamoru
ps97
bonitas universalem
conservationem generabilium

Let the earth rejoice in conservative reform.
Conservation protects productive value as the norm.

Clouds and darkness surround the power of the storm.
Light and energy still shine above the darkest forms.

Celestial fire shines, hides or crackles at different times.
Illumination is the source for sight in the respective climes.

Lightning lights the world with jolts.
The earth sees forms with the electrical bolts.

Mountains melt from sight in a downpour that approaches omnipresence.
Wetness in  the atmospheric reality is allowed near the essence of real presence.

The heavens declare the righteousness of divine glory.
People see the God of nature's story.

The worship of false belief is detrimental to faith.
Reason is required to keep reality straight.

The capital and the cities of faith rejoice
when justice in judgment is given voice.

The power of love shines above the earth.
The God who created reality helps us to see mental and material worth.

Divine design loves those who value goodness
for the correction of criminal behavior to redeem human fullness.

Joyful gladness springs for the true hearted.
The light of love shines for those who are not heartless.

The Most High God was not acceptable to polytheistic belief.
It declared allegiance to authority higher than the imperial chief. 

Christ had been since before the beginning and will be beyond the end of time.
He was the incarnation of the divine Son in man until his body was crucified.
He rose again on the third day until he ascended to the Empyrean to reside.  

Jesus made the Father's name known to the faithful.
He showed love that those who believed would feel grateful.

Rejoice in the faith that will achieve rightness.
Give thanks to the Lord who heals blindness.

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

97 Dominus regnavit
Dominance is king

1 The Lord is King;
let the earth rejoice;
let the multitude of the isles be glad.
2 Clouds and darkness are round about him,
righteousness and justice are the foundations of his throne.
3 A fire goes before him
and burns up his enemies on every side.
4 His lightnings light up the world;
the earth sees it and is afraid.
5 The mountains melt like wax at the presence of the Lord,
at the presence of the Lord of the whole earth.
6 The heavens declare his righteousness,
and all the peoples see his glory.
7 Confounded be all who worship carved images
and delight in false gods!
Bow down before him, all you gods.
8 Zion hears and is glad, and the cities of Judah rejoice,
because of your judgments, O Lord.
9 For you are the Lord,
most high over all the earth;
you are exalted far above all gods.
10 The Lord loves those who hate evil;
he preserves the lives of his saints
and delivers them from the hand of the wicked.
11 Light has sprung up for the righteous,
and joyful gladness for those who are truehearted.
12 Rejoice in the Lord, you righteous,
and give thanks to his holy Name.

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

Acts of the Apostles
Chapter 16

The sixteenth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles records the second missionary journey of Paul with Silas and Timothy. His first mission had been with Barnabas from 47-48 CE. This journey is dated in 49.

Lydia and her household had been converted while they were in Phillipi, a Roman colony in Macedonia. A slave girl who made money for her owners with fortune telling had been yelling that Paul and his companions were slaves proclaiming the salvation of the Most High God. Paul commanded her to stop in the name of Jesus Christ.

Acts 16:19-21

When the owners saw that their hope of making money was gone, they seized Paul and Silas and dragged them into the market-place before the authorities. When they had brought them before the magistrates, they said, 'These men are disturbing our city. They are Jews and are advocating customs that are not lawful for us as Romans to adopt or observe.'

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

Claudius was emperor when Paul and his entourage went to Phillipi.

Claudius was born on 1 August 10 BCE at Lugdunum (modern Lyon, France). He had two older siblings, Germanicus and Livilla. His mother, Antonia, may have had two other children who died young.

His maternal grandparents were Mark Antony and Octavia Minor, Augustus' sister. This made him the great-great grandnephew of Gaius Julius Caesar. His paternal grandparents were Livia, Augustus' third wife, and Tiberius Claudius Nero.

He was named princeps by the Praetorian guard, Gratus, when his nephew, the emperor Caligula, was assassinated. He ruled from 41-54.

He emphasized his his place within the Julio-Claudian family. He adopted the name "Caesar" as a cognomen. The name still carried great weight with the populace. He dropped the name "Nero."

While Claudius had never been formally adopted either by Augustus or his successors, he was the grandson of Augustus' sister Octavia. He felt that he had the right of family. He also adopted the name "Augustus" as the two previous emperors had done at their accessions. He kept the honorific "Germanicus" to display the connection with his heroic brother.

Since Claudius was the first Emperor proclaimed on the initiative of the Praetorian Guard instead of the Senate, his repute suffered at the hands of commentators such as Seneca. He was the first Emperor who resorted to monetary recognition as a means to secure army loyalty. He rewarded the soldiers of the Praetorian Guard that had elevated him with 15,000 sesterces.

He dispatched a force of 40,000 troops and several war elephants across the English Channel in 43. The Romans had soon conquered a stronghold at modern day Colchester. They eventually succeeded in capturing the Catuvellauni tribal leader Caratacus.

Claudius conducted a census in 48 that found 5,984,072 Roman citizens. Adult males with Roman citizenship were counted. Women, children, slaves and free adult males without Roman citizenship were not counted. This was an increase of around a million since the census conducted at Augustus' death.

He had helped increase this number through the foundation of Roman colonies that were granted blanket citizenship. These colonies were often made out of existing communities, especially those with elites who could rally the populace to the Roman cause. Several colonies were placed in new provinces or on the border of the Empire to secure Roman holdings as quickly as possible.

Macedonia had been fully annexed by the Romans in 148 BCE. It was not one of the new colonies established by Claudius.

The people of Rome were tolerant of most religious expressions. That tolerance was largely limited to religions that were polytheistic. The Roman authorities didn't care who you worshiped as long as you included the emperor and didn't create problems with other religious systems.

Christians and Jews were monotheistic. They refused to worship the emperor or acknowledge him as any kind of deity.

Claudius banished all Jews from the city of Rome in 49. This was the year that the Roman owners of the fortune teller announced that Paul and company were slaves of the Most High God in the Roman colony of Phillipi was in itself a public declaration that the belief was not viewed as acceptable to Roman custom.

Early Church in Rome
---------------------------

The Most High God was not acceptable to polytheistic belief.
It declared allegiance to authority higher than the imperial chief.

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

Rev. 22:12-13

'I am coming soon. My reward is with me to repay according to everyone's work. I am the Alpha and Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end.'

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

He had been since before the beginning and will be beyond the end of time.
He was the incarnation of the divine Son in man until his body was crucified.
He rose again on the third day until he ascended to the Empyrean to reside.

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

John 17:25-26

Righteous Father, the world does not know you, but I know you. These know that you have sent me. I made your name known to them. I will make it known so the love which you have loved me may be in them and I in them.

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

Jesus made the Father's name known to the faithful.
He showed love that those who believed would feel grateful.

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

The Martyrs of Lyons
2 June 177

There were missionary centers at Lyons and Vienne in Gaul which had drawn many Christians from Asia and Greece. Persecution began in 177.

Christians were excluded from the public baths, the market place and from social events in public life at first. They were subject to attack when they appeared in public. There were Christian homes that were vandalized.

The government became involved at this point. They began to take Christians into custody for interrogation. Some slaves from Christian households were tortured to obtain confessions. They were induced to say that Christians practiced cannibalism and incest.

These charges were used to arouse the city against the Christians. Enmity was directed particularly against Pothinus, the aged bishop of Lyons; Sanctus, a deacon; Attalus; Maturus, a recent convert; and Blandina, a slave.

Pothinus was beaten then released to die of his wounds a few days later. Sanctus was tormented with red-hot irons. Blandina was tortured all day long. She would say nothing except, "I am a Christian, and nothing vile is done among us." The survivors were put to death in the public arena.

This story of martyrdom was set in a time of transition in Roman culture. Rome was being gradually guided to monotheism from polytheistic belief.

The Gauls had sacked Rome 387 years before the first year of Christ Jesus. Rome had become a republic. They had rejected the monarchy of the Estonians. They were not well organized for defense.

The Roman Republic began its takeover of Celtic Gaul in 121 when it conquered and annexed the southern reaches of the area. Julius Caesar significantly advanced the task by defeating the Celtic tribes in the Gallic Wars of 58-51.

Rome would not accept Christian monotheism until some time after Constantine established  Constantinople as the new Rome in 330.

Roman culture was still polytheistic in the 2d century. The republic had become an empire. Commodus was the Roman emperor with his father Marcus Aurelius from 177 to his father's death in 180.

Marcus Aurelius was the first emperor since Vespasian (r.69-79) to have a legitimate biological son.
He was the fifth in the line of the so-called Five Good Emperors. Each of these had adopted his successor. Adoption for succession had been started as a policy to select the emperor when Julius Caesar had adopted Octavian and added him to his will.

The family line of succession was difficult to maintain in the competitiveness between the Patricians.

It seems to have been the firm intention of Marcus Aurelius that Commodus should be his heir. Marcus granted Commodus the rank of Imperator on 27 November 176.

He became consul for the first time on 1 January 177. This made him the youngest consul in Roman history up to that time at the age of 15.

The title Augustus was given to his son in the middle of 177. This gave his son the same status as his own. They shared power formally.

It was at about this time that the Christians were reportedly martyred in Lyon. Lyon was a Roman city in Gaul. It was called Lugdunum. It was established by a former officer of Julius Caesar.

The colony was located at a strategic point. It was situated to launch the invasion of Germania for conquest.

It grew into a city with a large population and public constructs. It became the capital of Roman Gaul.

Aqueducts were likely built between 20 and 10. A large number of monuments were also built during the same period. The oldest theater in the three Gauls had about 4500 seats. It was opened in Lyon between 16 and 14 by decree of Augustus. This theater was later expanded under Hadrian to include around 10,700 seats.

The Amphitheatre of the Three Gauls was inaugurated in 19 CE. It was later enlarged circa 130–136. The altar of the federal sanctuary of the three Gauls was renovated during the same period.

The site of the present basilica was on the top of Fourvière hill. It was the heart of the Roman city during the apogee of its power. The forum, a temple, probably the Curia and the Basilica were located there.

A circus was built during the 2d century. The location is uncertain. This monument was mostly known through a mosaic which depicted it. Antoninus Pius created an Odeon of 3000 seats about 160. An odeon was a 'singing place' for musical competition.

The legate of Roman Gaul resided in Lugdunum and managed its three constituent provinces; Gallia Belgica, Gallia Aquitania and Gallia Lugdunensis.

The priesthood of the Imperial cult was the highest federal administrative office to which the Gallic Roman citizens could be elected. The election was held in Lyon in a temple of which we do not have any archaeological traces. The priests were elected by their cities. They held a worship throughout the year of which the highlight was a ceremony in August.

Delegates from all Gaul came to worship the emperor during this ceremony. The meetings were not regarded as sacramental. People were appointed from this meeting in order to form the Council of Three Gauls.

The Romans of Lyon supported the victims of the Great Fire of Rome under Nero in 64 by sending the sum of four million sesterces. They were victims of another fire the following year.  Nero sent the same amount to rebuild the city. This fire was known only by a text by Seneca. It has never been corroborated by archaeological evidence of a fire.

Vindex, the legate of Lugundum revolted against Nero with part of Gaul in 68. The people of Vienne besieged Lyon during the conflict, but had to leave the battlefield after Vindex was defeated.

Galba (r. 68-69) was the new emperor briefly. He punished the people of Lugdunum for supporting Nero. Lugdunum found favor with another emperor, Vitellius (r.69). He chastised the people of Vienne in the political upheavals during the Year of the Four Emperors.

Christianity was brought to Lugdunum by the Greeks from Asia Minor who had settled there in large numbers. The Christian community sent a letter to the Christians in Asia Minor in early June 177 CE.

The letter gave the names of 48 of their number who had suffered martyrdom in the Croix-Rousse amphitheatre. Pothinus, first Bishop of Lyon, was among them. The church was to recover quickly. Ireneus, the successor of Pothinus, became the first great Christian theologian.

The two Augusti celebrated a joint triumph on 23 December of the same year. Commodus was given tribunician power. This gave him authority equivalent to that of a tribune of the plebs or the military.

Lectionary Martyrs of Lyon
wiki Commodus
wiki Roman Gaul
wiki History of Lyon

Friday, May 24, 2019

Draw

5.25.19

Draw
Dawn
画出黎明
Huà chū límíng
夜明けを描く
Yoake o kaku
ps.19

Draw dawn
without flaw
for awe.

The heavens declare the beauty of divine majesty.
Benign design is the work of the Creator's reality.

Sweet daughter
by the altered altars 
that nature offers
you know you oughta
dance like the otter
plays in water.

Dance daughter
for your offers
from alien paupers
without flying saucers.
.
You will be loved
because you are a loving dove.

The story for glory
grows glory for the story
with the warning that violence
is not the catalyst for change or silence.

Cruelty creates atavism for pain 
and disdain.

We have been brought out of the house of misery.
We have been delivered from the bitterness of injury.

The helpful priest brought the law before the assembled body.
He read for their hearing that they might understand the godly.

All were washed as one body by the Spirit.
Divine presence was invoked to draw near it.

The Word went out so people could hear it.
It was proclaimed in the assembly to embody the spirit.

The beach was a good place to find seashells.
It was a break from work in between bells.

Love is the votive motive
for motoring in a better locomotive. 
L’amour is the automotive lotus.

Society needs signs.
Individuality seeks wisdom for mind.

My mind perceives an object of knowledge as thought.
Sensible quality is recognized by another thinker's reasoned lot.  

Knowledge of the structure of the world and the activity of elements;
the alterations in solstice and equinox for change in seasonal relevance;
the nature of animals and temper of wildness in beasts;
the power of the spirit and thought in human beats;
the varieties of plant and the virtue of roots for subsistence;
produce wisdom about the nature of existence.

The beginning, middle and end of time
establish relevance for the relativity of the objective mind.

I learned how the hidden is revealed as manifest 
by instruction from the wisdom of using statements to test.

Controlled experiment helps to rule out false presumption.
Mathematical measure in variant quality produces formulation about function.

Knowledge is for wisdom in the management of material resources.
Wisdom is the spirit of intelligence in discourse with power as the source. 

The scribe of history who has been trained for the kingdom of heavenly essence
is like the author of explanation in variant relations for the real presence.

The cross celebrates crucifixion
as the cement for the conviction
that pain is the friction
that precedes the reconciliation
of conflict in resurrection.

The crucifixion of that which is false about belief
is part of education with redemption for the relief of grief.

Faith looks past the impossible
to possibility. 
The promise of the promisable
is seen 
as believed with maturity
for fertility in civility. 

Creativity in the present 
presence presses forward with intent
into the future until it has passed
into the past as it has been cast 
for reverie 
or review 
by memory
as true.

Love is true.
Love is you.

Reason and beauty close the day.
Another day is on the way.

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

19 Cœli enarrant
Heaven declares

1 The heavens declare the glory of God,
and the firmament shows his handiwork.
2 One day tells its tale to another,
and one night imparts knowledge to another.
3 Although they have no words or language,
and their voices are not heard,
4 Their sound has gone out into all lands,
and their message to the ends of the world.
5 In the deep has he set a pavilion for the sun;
it comes forth like a bridegroom out of his chamber;
it rejoices like a champion to run its course.
6 It goes forth from the uttermost edge of the heavens
and runs about to the end of it again;
nothing is hidden from its burning heat.
7 The law of the Lord is perfect
and revives the soul;
the testimony of the Lord is sure
and gives wisdom to the innocent.
8 The statutes of the Lord are just
and rejoice the heart;
the commandment of the Lord is clear
and gives light to the eyes.
9 The fear of the Lord is clean
and endures for ever;
the judgments of the Lord are true
and righteous altogether.
10 More to be desired are they than gold,
more than much fine gold,
sweeter far than honey,
than honey in the comb.
11 By them also is your servant enlightened,
and in keeping them there is great reward.
12 Who can tell how often he offends?
cleanse me from my secret faults.
13 Above all, keep your servant from presumptuous sins;
let them not get dominion over me;
then shall I be whole and sound,
and innocent of a great offense.
14 Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight,
O Lord, my strength and my redeemer.

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

Wisdom 7:17-22

God gave me knowledge of what exists
to know the structure of the world and the activity of the elements;
the beginning, end and middle of times:
the alteration of the solstices and the changes in season;
the nature of animals and temper of wild beasts;
the power of spirit and the thoughts of human being;
the varieties of plant and the virtue of roots.
I learned what is secret and what is manifest
for wisdom, the fashioner of all things, taught me.
There is in her a spirit that is intelligent, holy,
unique, manifold, subtle, mobile, clear, unpolluted,
distinct, invulnerable, loving the good, keen and irresistible.

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

Knowledge of the structure of the world and the activity of elements;
the alterations in solstice and equinox for change in seasonal relevance;
the nature of animals and temper of wildness in beasts;
the power of the spirit and thought in human beats;
the varieties of plant and the virtue of roots for subsistence;
produce wisdom about the nature of existence.

The beginning, middle and end of time
establish relevance for the relativity of the objective mind.

I learned how the hidden is revealed as manifest
by instruction from the wisdom of using statements to test.

Controlled experiment helps to rule out false presumption.
Mathematical measure in variant quality produces formulation about function.

Knowledge is for wisdom in the management of material resource.
Wisdom is the spirit of intelligence in discourse with power as the source.

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

Matt. 13:52

He said to them, 'Every scribe who has been trained for the kingdom of heaven is like the master of a household who brings out of his treasure what is new and what is old.'

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

The scribe of history who has been trained for the kingdom of heavenly essence
is like the author of explanation in variant relations for the real presence.

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

Discipline with Joy

Bede (bead)
c. 673, Jarrow, Northumbria
d. 26 May 735, Jarrow, Northumbria

Bede is regarded as the greatest Anglo-Saxon scholar and the father of English history.

He was an English Benedictine monk at the monastery of St. Peter and its companion monastery of St. Paul in the Kingdom of Northumbria of the Angles.

He is well known as an author, teacher and scholar. His most famous work, Ecclesiastical History of the English People, gained him the title "The Father of English History".

His ecumenical work was extensive. The writing included a number of Biblical commentaries and other theological works of exegetical erudition.

Another important area of study for Bede was the academic discipline of computus. This was otherwise known to his contemporaries as the science of calculating calendar dates.

He established the practice of dating forward from the birth of Christ (Anno Domini – in the year of our Lord). The practice eventually became commonplace in medieval Europe.

Bede was one of the greatest teachers and writers of the Early Middle Ages. He is considered by many historians to be the single most important scholar of antiquity for the period between the death of Pope Gregory I in 604 and the coronation of Charlemagne in 800.

He was a skilled linguist and translator. His work made the Latin and Greek writings of the early Church Fathers accessible to his fellow Anglo-Saxons.

Jarrow

Jarrow is a town in northeast England. It is located on the RiverTyne.

The river is formed by the confluence of the North and the South Tyne. The northern part has its source close to the Scottish border near the village of Kielder. It is 118 km (73 miles) in length.
The South Tyne rises in the hills of Alston Moor in Cumbria. The river empties into the North Sea not far from Jarrow. The town is only 7.25 km (4.5 miles) from the sea.

St. Peter's Tower

The monastery of Saint Paul was located in Jarrow in the 8th century. It is now called the Monkwearmouth–Jarrow Abbey. The abbey was a Benedictine double monastery in the Kingdom of Northumbria, England.

A double monastery is a separate community of monks joined together with one of nuns in a single institution. They were more common in the monasticism of Eastern Christianity. The institution was started in the 4th century. This kind of monastery was established in Anglo-Saxon England, Scotland, Ireland and Gaul.

Monks and nuns lived in separate buildings but were usually united under an Abbess as head of the entire household. They would have chanted the Liturgy of the Hours and attended Mass together in the Chapel. Either an abbess or an abbot would normally have control over both houses. It was only in exceptional circumstances that each would have its own superior.

Jarrow became a center of learning along with the abbey at Wearmouth. It had the largest library north of the Alps due to the widespread travels of Benedict Biscop, its founder. Bede helped to build the library with his extensive written work. The library contributed significantly to the growth of English Christianity.

Bede

Bede gave his birthplace as "on the lands of this monastery". He is referring to the twinned monasteries of Monkwearmouth and Jarrow.

Bede's first abbot was Benedict Biscop. The names "Biscop" and "Beda" both appear in a king list of the kings of Lindsey from around 800. The listing of his name with kings suggests that he came from a noble family.

Bede's name reflects West Saxon Bīeda. It is an Anglo-Saxon short name formed on the root of bēodan "to bid, command". The name also occurs in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, s.a. 501, as Bieda, one of the sons of the Saxon founder of Portsmouth.

The Liber Vitae of Durham Cathedral names two priests with this name, one of whom is presumably Bede himself. Some manuscripts of the Life of Cuthbert, one of Bede's works, mention that Cuthbert's own priest was named Bede. It is possible that this priest is the other name listed in the Liber Vitae.

He was sent as a puer oblatus at the age of 7 to the monastery of Monkwearmouth by his family to be educated by Benedict Biscop and later by Ceolfrith. An oblate is in the status where he is considering whether of not to be tonsured as a monk. His hair was cut in a special way after he agreed to take vows for life. 

It was fairly common in Ireland at this time for young boys, particularly those of noble birth, to be fostered out as an oblate. The practice was also likely to have been common among the Germanic people in England.

Monkwearmouth's sister monastery at Jarrow was founded by Ceolfrith in 682. Bede probably transferred to Jarrow with Ceolfrith that year.

The dedication stone for the church has survived to the present day. It is dated 23 April 685. The young monk would have been required to assist with menial tasks in his day-to-day life. It is possible that he helped in building the original church.

Plague broke out at Jarrow in 686. The Life of Ceolfrith (710) records that only two surviving monks were capable of singing the full offices. One was Ceolfrith. The other was a young boy.

The boy had been taught by Ceolfrith according to the anonymous writer. The two managed to do the entire service of the liturgy until others could be trained. The young boy was almost certainly Bede. He would have been about 14.

When he was about 17 years old, Adomnán, the abbot of Iona Abbey, visited Monkwearmouth and Jarrow. Bede would probably have met the abbot during this visit. It may be that Adomnan sparked Bede's interest in the Easter dating controversy.

Bede was ordained a deacon in about 692 when he was 19 by his diocesan bishop. John was bishop of Hexham.

The canonical age for the ordination of a deacon was 25. His early ordination may mean that his abilities were considered exceptional. It is also possible that the minimum age requirement was often disregarded.

There might have been minor orders ranking below a deacon; but there is no record of whether he held any of these offices. He was ordained a priest in about 702 when he was 30 with the ordination again performed by Bishop John.

He said of himself: "I have devoted my energies to a study of the Scriptures, observing monastic discipline, and singing the daily services in church; study, teaching, and writing have always been my delight."

He was the first person to write scholarly works in the English language. Only fragments of his English writings have survived.  He wrote extensively in Latin. He wrote commentaries on the Pentateuch and other portions of Holy Scripture.

His best-known work is his History of the English Church and People. This is a classic which has frequently been translated. It gives a history of Britain up to 729.

It recorded how the Celtic people were converted to Christianity during the first three centuries of the Christian era. The invasion of the Anglo-Saxon pagans took place in the 5th and 6th centuries. The Anglo-Saxons were subsequently converted by Celtic missionaries from the north and west and Roman missionaries from the south and east.

His work is our chief source for the history of the British Isles during this period. He cited the sources for his information. He also wrote hymns, other verse, the first martyrology with historical notes, letters, homilies, works on grammar, chronology and astronomy. He was aware that the earth is a sphere.

He was the first historian to date events ANNO DOMINI. He was the earliest known writer to state that the solar year is not exactly 365 and a quarter days long. Even the Gregorian calendar (one leap year every four years) requires some adjusting if the months are not to get out of step with the seasons.

He translated the Gospel of John into Old English, completing the work on the very day of his death.

Bede (bead)
S. 贝德
T. 貝德

贝  Bei      sea shell       貝  bai    shellfish     Be    べ   ベ        Be  베  the   
德  de       goodness      德  toku  virtue         de    で    デ       de   데  place                                                             
--------------------------

The beach was a good place to find seashells.
It was a break from work in the cell between bells.

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

Wiki Bede bio
Lectionary Bede
Wiki Jarrow

George Berkeley
Principles of Human Knowledge
1710
Text

"1. OBJECTS OF HUMAN KNOWLEDGE.--It is evident to any one who takes a survey of the objects of human knowledge, that they are either IDEAS actually imprinted on the senses; or else such as are perceived by attending to the passions and operations of the mind; or lastly, ideas formed by help of memory and imagination--either compounding, dividing, or barely representing those originally perceived in the aforesaid ways...

"2. MIND--SPIRIT--SOUL.--But, besides all that endless variety of ideas or objects of knowledge, there is likewise something which knows or perceives them, and exercises divers operations, as willing, imagining, remembering, about them. This perceiving, active being is what I call MIND, SPIRIT, SOUL, or MYSELF. By which words I do not denote any one of my ideas, but a thing entirely distinct from them, WHEREIN THEY EXIST, or, which is the same thing, whereby they are perceived--for the existence of an idea consists in being perceived."

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

My mind perceives an object of knowledge as thought.
Sensible quality is recognized by another thinker's reasoned lot.

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

How is a statement to be assessed for the sense of truth without the knowledge of definitions?


Popper formed a great critique of Plato, Aristotle, Hegel and Marx. Plato was too directed toward the defense of the absolute with the sword of Damocles.

He felt that those people who were prone to rebellion had to be warned that they would suffer the death penalty for the consideration of such a thing.

This system of thought resulted in the formation of a number of small kingdoms that failed to organize for unity.

Aristotle didn't agree with the absolute, but he substituted universals. A universal was something that was true anywhere.

The kingdoms united with the greatest aggressor in military battle to extend the boundaries for the empire as far as possible. This resulted in an unsustainable 'unity.'

Hegel engaged in the revolutionary thought of setting empires against each other. His idealism was directed against agreement with virtually anything proposed by the opposition.

Marx teamed with Engels to put Hegel in a class struggle until the end of time. They predicted that the success of capitalism would be such that workers would have to unite in order to overthrow the government that supported the capitalists.

Their economic theory produced a degenerative economic value. Their theory of numbers was such that labor was the 'majority' that had to make executive authority meet their demands.

The prohibition of education in labor meant that their demands remained poorly defined. Essentially, they demanded benefit for minimal productivity. They were paid to do as little work as possible.

This is where Popper works against the value of his own statement for an open society. He instituted a strange loop. He advocated for the overthrow of government with the vote instead of rebellion, but the definition for the purpose of government was only defined as not tyrannical.

This leaves the government susceptible to attack from the Hegelians and Marxists. They define the government as tyrannical to see if they can win the next election.

The history of government has been such that defense from attack allows for the defense of borders. These borders can be united with others for the same purpose.

The goal of cooperation with other nations whether allied or non-allied keeps the alliance sensitive to the needs of the people who pay for it with tax money.

Capitalism actually allows an economy for competition in providing a product or service that is valuable to consumers anywhere. The borders for the country provide a context for the measure of the competition.

Border security and immigration reform are necessary in the definition of context. Immigrants have to register to be legal. They can't be allowed to vote. This is the line of demarcation between a citizen and an immigrant.

Immigrants can't be given benefits from taxpayers. They can't be allowed to take jobs from citizens. They came to the country for employment or to get away from where they were.

They haven't been paying taxes or working for national security here long enough to give them something that belongs to those who have been working for it in this country.

An open society can be too open. We need statements with definitions to establish a sense of measure for what is true.