3.22.20
Keri Russell
Feel
Real
真实感
Zhēnshí gǎn
リアルに感じる
Riaru ni kanjiru
ps132
Realis sentiunt
Remember what your leadership endured.
Those more skilled, trained the will to ensure.
A goal had been set with the mind
that an ability might be refined.
You decided that it was what you wanted
if it made you feel like you would be counted.
"I will not return to my home
nor continue to roam.
"I will not let my eyelids close
nor my eyes let sleep dispose
until I make this skill my will
in the energy of gratitude distilled."
Ark of the Covenant
The presence of divine essence
was fruitful in the precious pleasance
beyond the extended luminescence
reaching for the message of heaven
and left in the gladed nescience.
The ark of the convenant
became the law of governance.
The sacrifice of animals
became the animus of annals.
The assembly that preceded the temple
became the template for the vessel.
Animals had been shaped as gods
until faith overcame superhuman odds.
A tribal leader was made a king
to protect his nation's productive ring.
The tribe of Benjamin was chosen first.
Judah rose when Saul by his actions was cursed.
David became the first of the royal dynasty
whose line sought to govern righteously.
Faith in the One replaced the trifles of many.
Essential government stood against the frenzy.
Let us experience the dwelling place
for the Word where the promise is the case.
Let your light shine on your Book
that those may see who care to look.
Let your priests be robed for celebration
that your people may sing with joy and elation.
Do not turn the face of your Anointed
from the mission that has been appointed.
The line of succession is for reform.
Manageability is the sovereign norm.
The fruit of your body is a standard set
in the continuum policy must get.
The covenant of promise must be respected
or the progress sought will be deflected.
The command of law will testify to public benefit.
Youth will learn with words recommended.
Verbal and written speech show thought
for communication that has been taught.
Communication points to policy
for the public in the historic odyssey
Speech is important for instruction
but induction must suffer correction from deduction.
Instruction is aimed at dutiful action
so thought can be reduced for automated satisfaction.
The one who had heard from the gift asked if he had seen all the sons.
He was told that the youngest was keeping the sheep for the other ones.
The beloved was called to present himself to the priest as prophet.
The beauty of duty was seen in the image that his appearance promised
for the monarch's office.
The prophet who heard the call anointed him in the presence of the others.
The beloved was blessed with the spirit of love and courage before his brothers.
The priest as prophet withdrew from the family home
to retreat to a height from which he could roam.
Youth will rejuvenate life in age
as the fountain that befits the sage.
Elders will assimilate new knowledge
to fit patterns defined by accredited college.
Live as children of the light.
Fruit is found in what is good and right.
Take no part in the works of darkness.
Expose them as acts that harm us.
Everything exposed by the light becomes visible.
The visible becomes evident as no longer not seen or invisible.
The new self calls the old to awake from the dead
that Christ may shine as the life that lives for faith instead.
Was being born blind because he or his parents had sinned?
He was born blind so the miracle of healing could be worked in him.
I am the light while I am in the world.
Sight by faith is the standard unfurled
in the wind to whirl.
The man washed in the pool to which he had been sent.
His sight was found in his consent.
Communion celebrates real presence in Church.
It is the essence of the sentence that works in the search
for goodness for the body that works.
The host assumed the real presence of Christ with the tincture of wine.
It became the body and blood of the Word made flesh.
The taste of it was relished. The consumption of divine energy was mine.
The knowledge of his Word in action relieved my distress.
Zion is the lion for life that searches for truth.
Habitation builds protection against strife for you.
'My resting place will be the heart
that has been circumcised as the ark for art.'
Need will be blessed with provision.
The poor will not be divided more with the derision
of the division.
The promise of good faith has become the mission.
Priests will be clothed with the joy of salvation.
The faithful will sing to bless the sovereign nation.
The horn of beloved duty will flourish.
A lamp has been prepared for those anointed with courage.
Our enemies will feel the shame of their blame.
Government will allow industry for product names.
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132 Memento, Domine
Remember, Dominated
1 Lord, remember David,
and all the hardships he endured;
2 How he swore an oath to the Lord
and vowed a vow to the Mighty One of Jacob:
3 "I will not come under the roof of my house,
nor climb up into my bed;
4 I will not allow my eyes to sleep,
nor let my eyelids slumber;
5 Until I find a place for the Lord,
a dwelling for the Mighty One of Jacob."
6 "The ark! We heard it was in Ephratah;
we found it in the fields of Jearim.
7 Let us go to God's dwelling place;
let us fall upon our knees before his footstool."
8 Arise, O Lord, into your resting-place,
you and the ark of your strength.
9 Let your priests be clothed with righteousness;
let your faithful people sing with joy.
10 For your servant David's sake,
do not turn away the face of your Anointed.
11 The Lord has sworn an oath to David;
in truth, he will not break it:
12 "A son, the fruit of your body
will I set upon your throne.
13 If your children keep my covenant
and my testimonies that I shall teach them,
their children will sit upon your throne for evermore."
14 For the Lord has chosen Zion;
he has desired her for his habitation:
15 "This shall be my resting-place for ever;
here will I dwell, for I delight in her.
16 I will surely bless her provisions,
and satisfy her poor with bread.
17 I will clothe her priests with salvation,
and her faithful people will rejoice and sing.
18 There will I make the horn of David flourish;
I have prepared a lamp for my Anointed.
19 As for his enemies, I will clothe them with shame;
but as for him, his crown will shine."
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The host assumed the real presence of Christ with the tincture of wine.
It became the body and blood of the Word made flesh.
Chn. 主人用酒tin假装了基督的真实存在。
Zhǔrén yòng jiǔ tin jiǎzhuāngle jīdū de zhēnshí cúnzài.
它成为了圣言造血的肉身。
Tā chéngwéile shèng yán zàoxiě de ròushēn.
Jpn. ホストはワインのチンキでキリストの真の存在を仮定しました。
Hosuto wa wain no chinki de Kirisuto no shin no sonzai o katei shimashita.
それはみことばの体となり、血は肉となりました。
Sore wa mi kotoba no karada to nari, chi wa niku to narimashita.
Krn. 주인은 포도주의 팅크로 그리스도의 실제 현존을 가정했다.
ju-in-eun podojuui tingkeulo geuliseudoui silje hyeonjon-eul gajeonghaessda.
말씀의 몸과 피가 살이되었습니다.
malsseum-ui momgwa piga sal-idoeeossseubnida.
Ltn. Et exercitum accepit reali praesentia Christi, cum iam imbutus vinum.
Verbum caro factum est corporis et sanguinis Domini.
Itln. L'ospite assunse la vera presenza di Cristo con la tintura del vino.
È diventato il corpo e il sangue della Parola fatti carne.
Spn. El anfitrión asumió la presencia real de Cristo con la tintura del vino.
Se convirtió en el cuerpo y la sangre de la Palabra hecha carne.
Frn. L'hôte a assumé la présence réelle du Christ avec la teinture de vin.
Il est devenu le corps et le sang du Verbe fait chair.
Gmn. Der Wirt nahm die wahre Gegenwart Christi mit der Tinktur des Weins an.
Es wurde der Körper und das Blut des fleischgewordenen Wortes.
Dtch. De gastheer nam de werkelijke aanwezigheid van Christus aan met de tinctuur van wijn.
Het werd het lichaam en bloed van het vleesgemaakte Woord.
Czch. Hostitel převzal skutečnou přítomnost Krista s tinkturou vína.
Stalo se to tělem a krev Slova udělala tělo.
Hng. A házigazda a borkészítéssel feltételezte Krisztus valódi jelenlétét.
Ez lett az Ige testének és vérének testévé.
Trk. Ev sahibi, şarap tentürü ile Mesih'in gerçek varlığını üstlendi.
Sözün bedeni ve kanı eti oldu.
Grk. Ο οικοδεσπότης ανέλαβε την πραγματική παρουσία του Χριστού με το βάμμα του
κρασιού.
O oikodespótis anélave tin pragmatikí parousía tou Christoú me to vámma tou krasioú.
Έγινε το σώμα και το αίμα του Λόγου που έγινε σάρκα.
Égine to sóma kai to aíma tou Lógou pou égine sárka.
Rsn. Хозяин предполагал настоящее присутствие Христа с настойкой вина.
Khozyain predpolagal nastoyashcheye prisutstviye Khrista s nastoykoy vina.
Oно стало телом и кровью Слова, ставшим плотью.
но стало телом и кровью Слова, ставшим плотью.
The host assumed the real presence of Christ with the tincture of wine.
It became the body and blood of the Word made flesh.
The taste of it was relished as the consumption of the energy as mine.
The knowledge of his action relieved my distress.
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Ephratah- fruitful
Jearim- wood
Psalm 132:3-5
Song of Ascents
Psalms 120-134 are known as the Songs of Ascent. Each starts with the superscription Shir Hama'aloth (Song of Ascents).
Four of them (Psalms 122, 124, 131 and 133) are linked in their ascriptions to David. One (127) is ascribed to Solomon. Three of them (Psalms 131, 133 and 134) have only three verses. The longest is psalm 132.
There are two references to the Songs of Ascents in the Mishnah (the oral Torah). These note the correspondence between the 15 songs and the temple's 15 steps between the Israelite's court and the women's court.
The title indicates that these psalms were sung by worshippers as they ascended the road to Jerusalem to attend the three pilgrim festivals.
The ancient Israelites living in the Kingdom of Judah would make a pilgrimage to the Temple in Jerusalem as commanded by the Torah to celebrate Pesach (Passover), Shavuot (Weeks or Pentecost) and Sukkot (Tabernacles, Tents or Booths).
They would participate in festivities and ritual worship in conjunction with the services of the kohanim ("priests").
One view says the Levites first sang the Songs at the dedication of Solomon's temple during the night of the fifteenth of Tishri 959 BCE. Another suggests that they were composed for a celebration after Nehemiah's rebuilding of Jerusalem's walls in 445 BCE.
Others think that individual poems were collected and given the title linking them to pilgrimage after the Babylonian captivity.
Actual pilgrimages were no longer obligatory and stopped taking place on a national scale after the destruction of the second Temple.
Related passages describing the holiday are read from the Torah on the 'bimah' (platform) in synagogue services in contemporary worship.
Many Jews living in or near Jerusalem make an effort to attend prayer services at the Western Wall emulating the ancient pilgrimages in some small fashion.
Samaritans make pilgrimages to Mount Gerizim three times a year to this day.
Psalm 132 has 19 verses. It was recited near the top of the steps.
It recalls the discovery and translation of the Ark of the Covenant as described in 1 Samuel 6 and 2 Samuel 6 in the Tanakh. David is remembered for his dedication to build a place of rest for the presence of the divine essence as represented by the ark.
The Ark of the Covenant holds symbolic meaning in terms of that which is learned about the Torah in the memory of the heart. This is used by some to learn scripture by memorization.
The more significant political meaning is contained in the recognition of the restoration of Israel as a state with respect for Judah as a kingdom.
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1 Samuel 16:12
The Books of Samuel form part of the narrative history of Israel in the Nevi'im or "prophets" section of the Tanakh.
Joshua, Judges, Samuel and Kings constitute a theological history of the Israelites that explain law for Israel under the guidance of the prophets.
It is known as the Deuteronomic history. The second law is concerned with history of the kingdoms of Judah and Israel.
Samuel
Samuel was called from before birth to serve as a propeht. Elkanah was an Ephraimite (1 Sam. 1:1) from the tribe of Levi (1 Chron. 6:16ff.). He was the husband of Hannah and Peninnah. Peninnah was able to have several children while Hannah was childless.
When Hannah went to the Temple to pray for a son, Eli, the high priest, saw her. He thought she was drunk. He approached her and tried to get her to leave. She said that she was not drunk and explained her predicament.
Hannah vowed that if she were to give birth to a son, she would devote him to service with Eli. She went home, bore a son by her husband who was named Samuel.
She followed through on her promise. Hannah dedicated Samuel after he was weaned at Shiloh where Eli was priest.
Samuel lived in the temple at Shiloh with Eli. Eli acted as Samuel's mentor. Then Samuel heard his call.
He was still a young boy when he heard a voice speak in the night. He thought that it was Eli. He awakened the old man to ask what it was he wanted. Eli told him that he had not called.
Samuel heard the voice again. Once more went to Eli and got the same answer. The third time he was told by Eli that it must have been the LORD. When Samuel answered with prayer, he intuited that he eventually would replace Eli.
Eli's family was headed for disaster (3:2-14). When Eli's health and power declined, Samuel was elevated to a position of moral leadership.
The rituals that were centered on the Ark of the Covenant would be properly observed. Samuel became a priest, prophet and the last of the judges.
The Philistine Crisis
The first seven chapters of 1 Samuel described Samuel's career. These chapters also painted a bleak picture of Israel's political and religious situation. It was even more desperate than that portrayed in Judges.
Eli was feeble. His sons were corrupt. The sons were named Hophni and Phineas. It was their idea to take the Ark of the Covenant into battle with the Philistines.
The Philistines defeated the Israelites, killed the two sons and took the Ark of the Covenant.
Eli died upon hearing this news. Israel's loss of its most sacred possession was a terrible blow to national prestige, but its captors receive no benefits. The Philistines were afflicted with a strange plague of tumors which they attributed to the Ark's presence among them.
A 20 year peace ensued following the Ark's return to Israel. Continued Philistine hostility denied the Israelites any real security.
Samuel and Saul
The Philistines and other aggressors pressured the Israelites to doubt their nation's continued existence.
Pragmatic tribal leaders seemed to have decided that with this uncertain future national survival required the political unity that only a king could give. (1 Sam. 8:10-20.)
Samuel warned the people that a monarchy would exploit the people. The confiscation of their best property was predicted as a consequence (1 Sam. 8:10-22).
Samuel invited Saul to eat with him. When the people insisted, Samuel privately anointed Saul from the tribe of Benjamin (1 Sam. 9:14-10:8). Saul prophesied.
When the Ammonites attacked Jabesh-gilead Saul gathered the Israelites to defeat the Ammonites. The people elected him as king at Gilgal.
This was approximately 1020 BCE. Samuel's choice of Saul was logical. He was tall, handsome and brave. He belonged to a tribe so small that his election did not arouse tribal jealousies.
Samuel told the people that they had been delivered from Egypt. They had been given the king for whom they had asked. They were told to fear the LORD and serve him.
Saul's Disfavor
The incidents over which Samuel withdrew his support illustrated the difficulty in the relationship.
When the Philistines had encamped at Michmash, Saul made offerings by himself. It appeared that Samuel would not arrive. He feared that his army would start to desert.
Just as Saul was finishing the ritual Samuel arrived and denounced Saul for usurping the priestly duty (1 Sam. 13:8-15). Samuel told Saul that his kingdom would not last.
Saul spared King Agag after he had defeated Amalek. Samuel told Saul that he had been rejected and executed Agag.
Samuel was moved to anoint a son of Jesse as king. Jesse was from the tribe of Judah.
1 Sam 16:11-13
Samuel said to Jesse, 'Are all your sons here?' He said, 'There remains yet the youngest, but he is keeping the sheep.' Samuel said, 'Send and bring him. We will not sit down until he comes here.'
He was brought to him. He was ruddy, had beautiful eyes and was handsome.
The LORD said, 'Rise and anoint him. This is the one.'
Then Samuel took the horn of oil and anointed him in the presence of his brothers. The spirit of the LORD came mightily upon David from that day forward. Samuel set out and went to Ramah.
Eli- my God; higher power
Ramah- height
Samuel- heard
Jesse- gift
David- beloved
Amalek- who lick
malek- chop off
Agag- high
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The one who had heard from the gift asked if he had seen all the sons.
He was told that the youngest was keeping the sheep for the other ones.
The beloved was called to present himself to the priest as prophet.
The beauty of duty was seen in the promise that his appearance promised
for the monarch's office.
The prophet who heard anointed him in the presence of the others.
The beloved was anointed with the spirit of love and courage before his brothers.
The priest as prophet withdrew from the family home
to retreat to a height from which he could roam.
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Eph. 5:2
The purpose of the book of Ephesians was to warn the church elders about the teachers that were teaching a false gospel.
The Father was identified as blessed for the blessings that he bestowed on the faithful. The strength of this blessedness was traced back to before the foundation of the world.
The faithful were celebrated as predestined for adoption as children with love by Jesus Christ according to the good pleasure of the divine will.
Redemption was granted through his blood for the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his grace.
It was trust in Christ that gave access to the dispensation of the fullness of time as the inheritance that was predestined by the purpose of the Father who had worked things for the counsel for his will.
The faithful had heard the gospel of salvation as the word of truth to open the eyes of understanding in the hope of the call to the riches of glory in the inheritance of the saints by the seal of the Holy Spirit.
Christ was raised from the dead and set at the right hand of the Father in power. He was the head of the Church. His body was the fullness of that which fills all that believe in him.
When the faithful had been dead in sin, they were brought to life in Christ. Gentiles were included as fellow citizens of the promise. The community was being built together as a temple.
One Church was formed out of those who had the covenant (Jews) and those who were hopeless (Gentiles). Both were reconciled through the work of the cross.
Salvation was given by grace, not by works. The mystery of Christ was made known through revelation by the Spirit. Wisdom was made known through the Church.
The believer was reborn into the faith by the cleansing of baptism. Circumcision of the flesh was to open the heart to the strength of the promise by the Spirit.
Whereas there was one body, one faith and one baptism by the power of the Spirit, the heart had to remain open to guidance to keep the unity of the faith in the bond of the gift given according to the measure of Christ.
The faithful were called to live a life worthy of the calling received in Christ Jesus. The body was reminded to put off the old self and to put on the new in the likeness of God for the good life in the rightness of faith.
Jesus had not called for rebellion against the crown or the republic. He had not organized the population to take over the government by a popular revolution against the established authority.
He had instructed his disciples to live in accord with the commandments for the benefit of the public in the transformation of the world.
He had discouraged the belief that the law was for the punishment or destruction of those who would believe but had not found their way. This was participation in the redemption of the world by faith in the one God.
Ephesians 5:8-14
Once you were darkness. Now you are light. Live as children of the light. The fruit of the light is found in all that is good, right and true. Try to find what is pleasing to the Lord. Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness. Expose them instead. It is shameful even to mention what such people do secretly. Everything exposed by the light becomes visible. Everything that becomes visible is evident in the light.
Therefore it says,
'Sleeper awake!
Rise from the dead
and Christ will shine on you.'
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Live as children of the light.
Fruit is found in what is good and right.
Take no part in the works of darkness.
Expose them as acts that harm us.
Everything exposed by the light becomes visible.
The visible becomes evident as no longer not seen or invisible.
The new self calls the old to awake from the dead
that Christ may shine as the life that lives for faith instead.
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The Light of Faith
Jesus had told the Samaritan woman at Jacob's well in Sychar that he was living water in the 4th chapter of the gospel of John. Faith in him would give her a source of eternal life within her.
He told the man paralyzed with impotence at the feast in Jerusalem to pick up his mat and walk on the sabbath in chapter 5.
The Son of man had been given the power to judge the world by the Father. The man should sin no more or a worse fate would fall on him. The Pharisees heard what he had said from the man. They judged him guilty of blasphemy and conspired to have him killed.
He fed 5,000 people with 5 barley loaves and 2 fish that he had blessed with prayer on a mountain side near the Sea of Galilee at the passover feast. The fragments of the barley loaves filled 12 baskets after the people had been fed.
He was seen as a prophet. He withdrew from the disciples and the others to the mountain to avoid being declared king. The disciples set sail on the sea without him. A storm rose.
They saw him walk to them on the sea. They were afraid. He told them to not fear. It was him. They took him in the ship and found themselves at the land to which they had traveled.
People saw that Jesus was no longer where he had been. They got in their boats and traveled to Capernaum to find him.
They addressed him as Rabbi and asked him why he had traveled there. He told them that they sought him not because they had witnessed a miracle, but because they had eaten and were filled.
They should not labor for that which perishes, but for that which endures for everlasting life.
They asked him how they should work the works of God. He told them that they should believe in whom he had sent. They said that there fathers had eaten bread in the wilderness. It was written that he had sent bread from heaven to eat.
Jesus said that it wasn't Moses who gave the bread. It was the Father who gives bread from heaven.
He was the bread of life. Those who turn to him will not hunger. Those who believe in him will not thirst. He came from heaven not to do his own will, but the will of him who had sent him.
Any who eat of the living bread of heaven will live forever. His flesh was the bread that he would give for the life of the world. Whosover would eat his flesh and drink his blood would have eternal life and be raised on the last day.
He taught these things at the synagogue in Capernaum. Many chose not to believe him. They stopped following him from that time. The 12 whom had chosen remained with him, but one of them would betray him.
When the feast of the Tabernacles had arised, he told the brethren to go to Judea to celebrate without him. His time had not yet come. They went as they were told. He followed in secret.
He went into the temple and taught. His listeners marveled at his instruction. He said that it was not his. It came from the one who had sent him.
Moses had given them circumcision to perform on the sabbath that the law should not be broken. Why were they angry that he had healed a man on the sabbath?
The chief priests and Pharisees sent out officers to have him arrested. The officers said that none had spoken like him.
Nicodemus asked if the law judged any without having heard him speak? They told him to search the scriptures. No prophet was predicted to come from Galilee.
Chapter 8 continued the debate with the Pharisees that had been started at the feast of the Tabernacles in the preceding chapter.
He was asked by them on the mount of Olives to judge the woman who had been found guilty of adultery. He challenged any among them to cast the first stone if he could find himself to be without sin.
He described himself as the 'light of the world.' (v.12) He made the well known statement, 'You will know the truth and the truth will set you free.' He claimed to have come from before Abraham. He said 'Before Abraham was, I am.'
John 9:1-7
He saw a man blind from birth as he walked along. His disciples asked him, 'Rabbi, who sinned that he was born blind? Was it this man or his parents?' Jesus answered, 'Neither this man nor his parents sinned. He was born blind so God's works might be revealed in him. We must work the works of him who sent me while it is day. Night is coming when no one can work. I am the light of the world while I am in the world.'
When he had said this, he spat on the ground and made mud with saliva and spread the mud on the man's eyes. He said to him, 'Go, wash in the pool of Siloam' (which means Sent). Then he went and washed. He came back able to see.
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Was being born blind because he or his parents had sinned?
He was born blind so the miracle of healing could be worked in him.
I am the light while I am in the world.
Sight by faith is the standard whirled.
The man washed in the pool to which he had been sent.
His sight was found in his consent.
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Ps.132:7
Let us go to God's dwelling place.
Let us bow our heads to the heart for grace
to lift our prayer to seek his face
Church Tabernacles
James DeKoven was a priest and an educator with the Episcopal Church of America. He used his instruction in Church history to issue a call for ritualism at national conventions.
James DeKoven
b. 9.19.1831 Middletown, Connecticut
d. 3.19.1879 Racine, Wisconsin
James DeKoven was born in Middletown, Connecticut on September 19, 1831.
Middletown is a little south from the middle of the state in Middlesex County on the western bank of the Connecticut River. It is 16 miles (26 kilometers) south of Hartford.
The General Court for the colony had established the town of "Mattabesett" on September 11, 1651.
Map for Middletown, CT
The settlement was renamed Middletown a couple of years later in November of 1653. It was chosen because the site was approximate halfway between Windsor and Saybrook on the Great River.
Life was not easy among the early colonial Puritans. Clearing the land, building homes and tending farms in the rocky soil of New England was a labor-intensive ordeal.
Law was often harsh among the Puritans too. Offenses legally punishable by death in the Connecticut colonies included, "witchcraft, blasphemy, cursing or smiting of parents" and the "incorrigible stubbornness of children."
Middletown became the largest and most prosperous settlement in the state during the 18th century. It was a thriving port with one-third of its citizens involved in merchant and maritime activities by the time of the American Revolution.
Slavery was part of the early economy. African slaves were brought to the town in 1661 from Barbados. Middletown had the third largest African slave population in the state by 1756. There were 218 slaves to 5,446 whites.
Exo. 24:7
Then he took the book of the covenant and read it in the hearing of the people. They said, 'All that the LORD has spoken we will do. We will be obedient.'
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Congregational Churches had replaced the Puritan movement by the Revolutionary War.
Other denominations had set up churches for the parish. Baptist, Methodist and Presbyterian were more common than Episcopalian communities. It was common for a settlement to have more than one denomination.
The town government was supposed to be the leadership for the one parish.
Merchant traders pushed for the clearance of the Saybrook Bar at the mouth of the Connecticut River. They later sought the creation of Middlesex County in 1785.
The name 'Middlesex' was chosen because the intention was to make Middletown the head of a long river port much as London was at the head of its long river port in Middlesex County, England.
The port's decline began in the early 19th century with strained American-British relations. Trade restrictions led to the War of 1812.
The port never recovered but, the city had distinguished itself in the war effort. Middletown's Commodore Thomas Macdonough led American forces to the victory on Lake Champlain in 1814. This ended British hopes for an invasion of New York.
Middletown became a major center for firearms manufacturing during this period. Numerous gun manufacturers in the area supplied the majority of pistols to the United States government during the war.
The center for this business passed to Springfield, Massachusetts, Hartford and New Haven, Connecticut after the war had ended.
1831 saw the establishment of Wesleyan University. This was a Methodist established institution that was to become one of the United States' leading liberal arts centers.
The institution replaced Partridge's American Literary, Scientific and Military Academy. The academy had moved to Norwich, Vermont and later became Norwich University.
The two main buildings for the original campus were built by the people of Middletown with the intent of attracting academic organization to the city.
Middletown established the state's first public high school in 1841. It enrolled all students from age 9 through age 16 who had previously attended district schools at first.
It is not too difficult to imagine that some students were not admitted until their town agreed to establish an elementary school.
James DeKoven was educated at Columbia College in New York City. It was prior to the time of its incorporation as a university.
He was admitted to General Theological Seminary in 1851. He was ordained a deacon in 1854 in Middletown.
He was offered a position as a professor of Church history at Nashotah House, a seminary of the Episcopal Church in Wisconsin.
Wisconsin had been made a territorial possession of the United States in 1783 after the American Revolutionary War, but the British retained control until after the War of 1812.
The economy for the territory shifted from fur trading to mining for lead as an American possession. The prospect of easy mineral wealth drew immigrants from throughout the U.S. and Europe to the lead deposits located at a number of areas in the territory.
Some miners found shelter in the holes they had dug, and earned the nickname "badgers", leading to Wisconsin's identity as the "Badger State".
The influx of white miners prompted tension with the local Native American population. The Winnebago War of 1827 and the Black Hawk War of 1832 culminated in the forced removal of Native Americans from most parts of the state.
Wisconsin Territory was created by an act of the United States Congress on April 20, 1836 after these conflicts. The best prairie groves of the counties surrounding what is now Milwaukee were occupied by farmers from the New England states by the autumn for that year.
The Erie Canal had facilitated the travel of both Yankee settlers and European immigrants to Wisconsin Territory. Yankees from New England and upstate New York seized a dominant position in law and politics. They enacted policies that marginalized the region's earlier Native American and French-Canadian residents.
Yankees also speculated in real estate, plotted towns such as Racine, Beloit, Burlington and Janesville. Schools, civic institutions and Congregationalist churches were established. Germans, Irish, Norwegians and other immigrants also settled in towns and farms across the territory to establish Catholic and Lutheran institutions.
The growing population allowed Wisconsin to gain statehood on May 29, 1848 as the 30th state. The non-Indian population had swollen from 31,000 to 305,000 between 1840 and 1850.
More than a third of residents (110,500) were foreign born. These included 38,000 Germans, 28,000 British immigrants from England, Scotland and Wales and 21,000 Irish. Another third (103,000) were Yankees from New England and western New York state. Only about 63,000 residents in 1850 had been born in Wisconsin.
Nelson Dewey was the first governor of Wisconsin. He oversaw the transition from the territorial to the new state government.
He encouraged the development of the state's infrastructure with the construction of new roads, railroads, canals and harbors. The Fox and Wisconsin Rivers were improved to ship goods for trade.
Dewey was an abolitionist. He was the first of many Wisconsin governors to advocate against the spread of slavery into new states and territories. Politics in early Wisconsin were defined by the greater national debate over slavery. It was to become a leading center for northern abolitionism.
The debate became especially intense in 1854 after Joshua Glover, a runaway slave from Missouri, was captured in Racine. Glover was taken into custody under the Federal Fugitive Slave Law, but a mob of abolitionists stormed the prison where Glover was held and helped him escape to Canada.
Fr. DeKoven accepted the teaching position at Nashotah House in Wisconsin and became rector of the nearby St. John Chrysostom parish in Delafield. It was there that he was ordained as a priest by Bishop Jackson Kemper in 1855.
Nashotah House was from its inception dedicated to an increased emphasis on the real presence of Christ in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper. This emphasis included the use of ritual practices that recognized and honored that presence.
This met opposition from other Christians who were suspicious (1) of anything that suggested Roman Catholicism, (2) of anything that seemed fancy and pretentious as opposed to the plain, blunt, simplicity that was considered to be an American virtue of the New Testament Church and (3) of anything that varied from the practices they had become used to as children.
The Calvinist influence on Anglican worship had predominated to a large extent prior to the Oxford movement in the United Kingdom. Robes, processions, incense, the liturgical celebration of the sacraments and sermons were viewed as Roman pretensions.
Map of Racine, WI
https://www.cityofracine.org/Source/imgs/map.png
Nashotah House Seminary is near Racine
Fr. DeKoven established a school called St. John's Hall while in Delafield. He became the warden of Racine College in 1859. He continued to be at the center of that school for the rest of his life.
The school was an Episcopal preparatory school and college that operated between 1852 and 1933. The campus was located south of the city along Lake Michigan. It has become a conference center operated by the Community of St. Mary via the DeKoven foundation.
The historic buildings that make up the campus are among the few collegiate neo-Gothic buildings that survive in the Midwest. They are considered part of the East Coast College architectural tradition despite their location.
The campus has remained relatively intact since the period of its construction between 1852 and 1876. The Racine College buildings are largely composed of Cream City brick like many historic buildings in southeastern Wisconsin.
DeKoven became Racine College's most notable warden. He was a major exponent of High Church and Anglo-Catholic views in the Episcopal Church. He was one of the best-known preachers and orators of his day.
DeKoven's work at Racine was directly influenced by the Grammar School and College of Saint James in Maryland. This was in turn was part of the "church school" movement inaugurated by William Augustus Muhlenberg and his proteges in 1828.
When DeKoven began to raise money for new buildings at Racine College, he looked to England for his inspiration. Most of the campus buildings were inspired by the architecture of St. Peter's College, a high-church public school founded at Radley in 1847.
2 Timothy 2:10
I endure everything for the sake of the elect so they may obtain salvation that is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory.
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Fr. DeKoven spoke in support of the cause for ritualism at the National Conventions in 1871 and 1874. He was nominated several times and even elected as a bishop, but was never ordained to the episcopate.
He was nominated or elected as bishop of Massachusetts (1873), Wisconsin (1874), Fond du Lac (1875) and Illinois (1875). He was chosen by the clergy and the laity in the Illinois election, but a majority of the standing committee refused to endorse his election. The reason given by the standing committee was his ‘doctrine on the Holy Eucharist.’
An open letter published in the Milwaukee paper on January 14, 1874 questioned his doctrine regarding the Eucharist. The signers of this letter included three faculty members from Nashotah House.
Matt. 13:47-48
The kingdom of heaven is like a net that was thrown into the sea and caught fish of every kind. When it was full, they drew it ashore, sat down and put the good into baskets, but threw out the bad.
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A collection of nine Episcopal bishops held a meeting in 1876 where they declared Racine College a "Church University for the West and Northwest" with the encouragement of Fr. DeKoven.
They stated that it was the only church college in actual operation between Kenyon College in Ohio and the Pacific Ocean. They agreed to support the college's mission by helping it open grammar schools across the Midwest to carry on its educational philosophy.
Fr. DeKoven turned down offers to serve at some of the nation's largest and wealthiest parish churches. These included Trinity Church in New York City, Church of the Advent in Boston, and St. Mark's Church in Philadelphia.
He died on March 19, 1879 after suffering a fall on the ice. He is buried on the grounds of Racine College which is now known as the DeKoven Center.
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Tincture is recommended as safe for the liturgical celebration of communion during times when epidemic disease is reported.
Tincture is the form of reception where the body (host) is dipped in the blood (wine) and placed on the tongue of the faithful while kneeling at the altar.
Sipping from the cup with the wine blessed by prayer is not offered as an option.
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James DeKoven
S. 詹姆斯·德科文
T. 詹姆斯·德科文
詹 Zhan Jen or zhan 詹 sen verbose Je じぇ- ジェ- Je 제 my
姆 mu ummm 姆 bo wet nurse mu む ム im 임 being
斯 si this 斯 shi this su す ス seu 스 s
德 De goodness 德 toku ethics De で デ De 데 de
科 Ke branch 科 ka course Ko こ- コ- ko 코 nose
文 wen text 文 bun sentence ben べん ベン ben 벤 ben
----------------------
Communion celebrates the real presence in Church.
It is the essence of the sentence that works in the search
for goodness that works.
================
Lectionary James DeKoven
wiki J DK
wiki Middletown, Connecticut
DeKoven Archives
Links to Archives
Unspoken - Call It Grace
Music Video
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Public Credit
The correctness of the statement regarding the value of public credit suggests that Cicero repeated what he had heard from someone more credible than himself.
He was too self serving as an official to be credited with an optimal implementation of the precept.
He provided the motive force for the liberal invocation of the war on terror with his breach of due process when he had some rebels executed for treason without a trial when he was consul.
The Serbian president Milosevic was tried for genocide against Muslims in the 'court of public opinion' with media expression.
This set a precedent for the State department with HC and BO. Regime change was forced on nations without term limits for their chief elected officials with air strikes and ISIS.
Charges of sexual assault were leveled against "inactive" Americans under the presumption of sexism or racism under the direction of James Comey in the FBI.
Federalist Paper #7
Text
The seventh of The Federalist Papers was published on November 15, 1787 by Alexander Hamilton under the pseudonym Publius.
He addressed the theme begun in Federalist # 6. The danger of dissension among the states would remain intact without a strong federal government.
He supported his argument by creating a series of hypothetical situations that approximated the situation in which competing interests between the states could lead to war.
The hypotheticals were based on the political condition of the state in which he argued for the union with the US Constitution.
He introduced the idea that the defense of the confederacy as a state of union with the articles of confederation would be strengthened with a better plan for sustenance and development.
The divisions of Europe had been used in the previous paper as an example of how easily neighboring nations could be drawn into war. This paper situated the relevance of the proposal in the context of the current events for the American society of the time.
He noted that there were those who asked what inducements the states would have to go to war if disunited. The question was asked with the air of seeming triumph.
He answered that the same incitements would be in place that had been used by those nations that have gone to war with each other.
Territorial disputes have been found to have been one of the most fertile sources of hostility. It is conceivable that the greatest proportion of conflicts between nations has risen from the motivation to take disputed territory.
This cause would have existed among the disunited states in full force. There were vast tracts of unsettled territory within the boundaries of the United States. There were several unsettled disputes that existed among a number of the states.
The dissolution of the union would have laid the foundation for similar conflicting claims among them. It was well known there had been animated discussions concerning the rights to land which was ungranted prior to the time of the Revolution. These usually went under the name of crown lands.
The states within the limits of whose colonial governments they were comprised had claimed them as their property. Others contended that the rights of the crown had devolved at the union.
The western territory was of particular interest. Contractual possession by crown charters or the submission of Native American proprietors was subjected to the jurisdiction of the king of Great Britain until it was relinquished in the treaty of peace (1783).
Congress sought to appease controversy by prevailing upon the states to make cessions to the Unites States over disputed claims for the benefit of the whole.
The continuation of the union had afforded the decided prospect of an amicable termination of dispute. The states could either settle the disputes without federal mediation or the disputed territory could be ceded to the United States government.
The dismemberment of the confederacy however would have resulted in the revival of the conflicts and added others as well.
A large part of the western territory was by cession, if not by anterior right, the property of the union.
The end of the union would result in states reclaiming the lands as a reversion. Other states would insist on a portion by right of representation.
Their argument would have been that a grant once made, could not be revoked. The justice of participating in territory acquired or secured by the joint efforts of the Confederacy would remain undiminished.
If the states had admitted that each had the right to share common stock, the difficulty of the proper rule of apportionment would have remained unresolved.
Different principles would have been set up by various states for this purpose. They would have affected the divergent interests of the opposing parties. Pacific adjustment would have been unlikely.
The wide field of the western territory presented an ample theater for hostile pretension without an umpire to interpose between the contending parties. It was not difficult to infer from the past that military conflict would act as the arbiter in their differences.
Connecticut and Pennsylvania had a dispute over land in Wyoming. The articles of confederation had obliged the parties to submit the matter to the decision of a federal court.
The court decided in favor of Pennsylvania, but Connecticut indicated dissatisfaction with the determination. Something like an equivalent was obtained through negotiation and management for the loss that she had supposed that she had sustained.
States, like individuals, acquiesce with reluctance to decisions to that are not for their advantage. The court helped the state to decide on negotiation to manage the development of their future interest in accord with Pennsylvania.
There was also a controversy between New York and Vermont. New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Connecticut supported the dismemberment of Green Mountain State.
New Jersey and Rhode Island nurtured a warm zeal for her independence. Maryland entered deeply into the same views after the appearance of a connection between Canada looked beneficial.
These were smaller in size than New York. They viewed the growth of the state's greatness with an unfriendly eye. The same interactions would most likely have been embroiled in an unpropitious destiny if the states were to become disunited.
The competition of commerce would be another source of contention. Those states with less favor in circumstance would desire to escape from the disadvantage of the local situation to share in the advantage of their more fortunate neighbors.
Each separate confederacy would pursue a system of commercial policy peculiar to itself. This would incur distinctions, preferences and exclusions that would cause discontent.
The habit of intercourse on the basis of equal privilege to which the colonists had been accustomed since the earliest settlement of the country would have given a keener edge to those causes of discontent than would have occured independently of the circumstance.
Those things which were in reality the justifiable acts of independent sovereignties consulting a distinct interest would denominate injury. The spirit of enterprise that had characterized the commercial part of America had left no occasion to display itself as unimproved.
It was not probable that the unbridled spirit would pay much respect to those regulations of trade by which particular states might have endeavored to secure exclusive benefit for their own citizens.
Infractions of those regulations on one side and the efforts to prevent or repel them on the other, would lead to outrage or reprisal as the motivation for war.
The opportunity which some states would have had to render others tributary to them by commericial regulation would have only been impatiently rendered by the tributary states.
The relative situation in New York, Connecticut and New Jersey afforded an example. New York laid duties on her imports from the necessity of revenue. A great part of that duty to revenue was paid by the inhabitants of the other two states.
New York was not able or willing to forego that advantage. Her citizens would not consent that a duty paid by them should be remitted in favor of the citizens of her neighbors. It would not have been practicable to distinguish the customers in their own markets if that impediment were not in the way.
Would Connecticut and New Jersey have submit long to be taxed by New York for her exclusive benefit? Should the state have been permitted to remain in the possession of an advantage so odius and oppressive to her neighbors?
Should they have been able to have preserved it against the incumbent weight of Connecticut on the one side and the cooperating pressure of New Jersey on the other?
There would not have been a legally recognized calculation of the public debt for the disunited collection of states without the union. This would have been further cause for collision between the separate states or confederacies.
The apportionment of public debt without agreement and the progressive extinguishment afterward would only have produced ill-humor and animosity. How would it be possible to agree to a rule of apportionment satisfactory to all?
There was scarcely any that could have been proposed wich would be free from objections. These objections would have been exaggerated by the adverse interests of opposing parties.
There were even dissimilar views among the states as to the general principle of discharging the debt.
Some were so unimpressed by the importance of national credit or their citizens had so little interest in the question that there was only indifference, if not repugnance, to the payment of the domestic due at any rate.
The difficulties for a distribution would be magnified by these. Those whose were creditors to the national debt beyond state proportion would call for an 'equitable' provision for resolution. The procrastination of the former would incite the resentments of the latter.
The settlement of a rule would by postponed by real differences of opinion and affected delays in the meantime. Foreign powers would urge for the satisfaction of just demands, the citizens of the states would clamor and the peace of the states would be hazarded to the double contingency of external invasion against internal contention.
Suppose that the difficulties of agreement to a rule had been surmounted and the apportionment were made. There would still be room to suppose that the rule agreed upon would be found to bear harder upon some states than on others in the experiment.
Those who suffered by it would seek mitigation for the burden. The others would by disinclined to a revision to the increase of their own incumbrance.
The refusal to revise the rule would be a plausible pretext to withhold contribution. The non-compliance of these states with engagement would serve as the ground for altercation.
Even if the rule should justify the equality of its principle in practice, delinquencies in payments on the part of some of the states would result from a diversity of other causes.
The real deficiency of resources, the mismanagement of finances, accidental disorders in the management of government and the reluctance to part with money for purposes that have outlived the exigencies which produced them, interfere with the supply of immediate wants.
Delinquencies would produce complaint, recrimination and quarrel from whatever inducement.
There is nothing more likely to disturb the tranquility of natons than their being bound to mutual contributions for any common object that does not yield an equal and coincident benefit.
It is as true as it is trite that there is nothing so easily lent to disagreement as the payment of money.
Laws in violation of private contracts amounted to aggression against the rights of those states whose citizens were injured by them. This was another source of hostility.
The disposition to retaliation was excited in Connecticut in consequence to the enormities perpetuated by the legislature of Rhode Island. It was reasonable to infer that a war of military conflict would chastise such atrocious breaches of moral obligation and social justice.
The probability of incompatible alliances between different confederacies with foreign nations had been presented in preceding papers. The conclusion was drawn that the peace of the whole would be adversely impacted by foreign influence.
This paper argued that the peace of the union would be harmed by domestic contentions as well.
If America were only connected by the feeble tie of a simple league, offensive or defensive alliances would be so jarring that the separate confederacies would gradually become entangled in all the pernicious labyrinths of European politics by the destructive contentions of the parts into which she would be divided that she would likely become prey to the artifices of powers that made themselves the enemies of all.
Aggression in disagreement would be pushed or held as better than functional agreement.
Divide and command would become the motto of every nation that hates or fears the US.
Public Debt
Showing posts with label heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heart. Show all posts
Sunday, March 15, 2020
Sunday, December 15, 2019
Reach
12.22.19
Katie Holmes
Reach
Higher
达到更高
Dádào gèng gāo
より高く到達する
Yori takaku tōtatsu suru
ps61
Altius semoto
I have hiked into the highlands through rocky terrain.
I saw from a height that gave me a vision of the plains.
Sinai Wilderness
I had been lowered into the mud at the bottom of the cistern.
Deliverance from hunger was not a liberation that I could discern.
Ancient Cistern
I felt my feet slip into the deep dark waters from the mire
but I was saved with help that made me feel honored with desire.
Dark Waters
I had called for help and was delivered.
I stood on rock with a gratitude that shivered.
Listen to my prayer for salvation with insight, benign Divine Light.
I request your help as darkness increases the length of night.
I will call to you from the heaviness of my heart
from the ends of the earth with a chart for the path of my part.
You set me on a rock that was higher than me
after I cried to you whom I could not see.
You have been a strong tower against the enemy.
You have provided the remedies for adversity to my destiny.
The flag for the settlement was raised above the dust
to announce the measure of grain for exchange against the rush
for going bust.
I will dwell in your house forever.
Your help makes my burden feel as light as a feather.
I will hide beneath the cover of your wings
to rejoice in the blessed favor that sings.
How do I get there from here
if I don't offer holiday cheer?
Goodness in life has been an answer to my prayers.
The preservation of your promise has strengthened my care.
The heritage of those who revere your Name
has granted me the capacity to tame ridicule and shame.
You will be given a sign to see the word as witness.
A young woman will bear a son and call him 'God with us.'
The birth of Jesus as the Messiah took place in the conception.
Mary was found to be with child by the Holy Spirit in the creative inception.
The gospel was promised through the prophets in the scriptures done.
Grace to you and peace from the Father and Jesus Christ, the Son.
The gospel needs the Church to nurture growth.
The Church needs the gospel to grow in significance and size to show.
Science holds an elegant place in faith.
It is like a spear thrust that defines a point in space.
Add length of days to life in the line of political succession
that public policy may become an expression of progression.
Let the leadership sit enthroned by grace
to be mindful of kindness for the human race.
Bid love to watch decision with faithfulness
that others may decide to work with gratefulness.
I will sing praise with respect for your Name
that my vows may be fulfilled for success in fair games.
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61 Exaudi, Deus
Answer, Light
1 Hear my cry, O God,
and listen to my prayer.
2 I call upon you from the ends of the earth
with heaviness in my heart;
set me upon the rock that is higher than I.
3 For you have been my refuge,
a strong tower against the enemy.
4 I will dwell in your house for ever;
I will take refuge under the cover of your wings.
5 For you, O God, have heard my vows;
you have granted me the heritage of those who fear your Name.
6 Add length of days to the king's life;
let his years extend over many generations.
7 Let him sit enthroned before God for ever;
bid love and faithfulness watch over him.
8 So will I always sing the praise of your Name,
and day by day I will fulfill my vows.
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=============
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How do I get there?
Chn. 我如何到达那里?
Wǒ rúhé dàodá nàlǐ?
Jpn. どうやってそこまで行くの?
Dō yatte soko made iku no?
Krn. 내가 거기 어떻게?
Naega geogi eotteohge?
Ltn. Quomodo illuc?
Itn. Come ci arrivo?
Grk. Πως πάω εκεί?
Pos páo ekeí?
Spn. ¿Como llego hasta ahí?
Frn. Comment puis-je y arriver?
Gmn. Wie komme ich dort hin?
Hng. Hogyan jutok oda?
Trk. Oraya nasıl giderim?
Rsn. Как туда попасть?
Kak tuda popast'?
How do I get there from here
if I don't offer holiday cheer?
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Abridged Individual Lament of Jeremiah
Higher Ground
Psalm 61
The psalm is in the second of the three sections for the book.
It is addressed to the musical director of the temple. It specifies the use of a stringed instrument (Neginah). It is identified as a psalm of David, but it shares a similarity with the individual lament attributed to Jeremiah when he was thrown into the empty well.
Psalm 40:2
He lifted me up from the pit of destruction, my feet from the miry clay. He set my feet on a rock and made my footsteps firm.
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The rock was higher than the depth of the cistern. It was higher than him.
Does the designation psalm of David indicate that there were times when the monarch participated in singing the song in religious devotion in the house dedicated to worship?
There is the distinct possibility that the designation was the reminder of the king's existence, even if he was not physically present. He was present in his absence by virtue of the reference to the name for the first in the line of royal succession.
All the kings in the line were loved by God with respect for the promise of the inheritance.
The prophet Jeremiah had predicted the destruction of Jerusalem. A number of officials were offended by the prediction. They wanted to have him put to death. The king allowed him to be punished by the officials according to their choice. They cast him into an empty well. It was probably no more than 12 feet in depth, but it was higher than his ability to climb out of it.
Jeremiah 38:6
They took Jeremiah and put him into the cistern of Malkijah, the king's son. It was in the courtyard of the guard. They lowered him into the empty well by ropes. There was only mud at the bottom. Jeremiah sank into the mire.
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The king was Zedekiah. He had said, "Here he is. He is in your hands since the king can do nothing to stop you." (Jer. 38:5)
Zedekiah had been made the king of Judah by Nebuschnezzar, king of Babylon (Jer.37:1). The Babylonians were attacking Jerusalem even though their king of kings had appointed the monarch for Judah.
Their army withdrew when they heard the Pharaoh's army had set out from Egypt. Jeremiah warned that the Babylonians would return. They would not stop the attack until they had destroyed the city and taken the leadership captive. (Jer.37:10)
Jeremiah went to the land of Benjamin to tend to the collection of his inheritance. He was charged with desertion to the Babylonians and detained in a house as a prison. He was taken to the king after some time.
He asked the king what his crime was. How was it that the prediction that the Babylonians would not attack was acceptable?
He asked that he not be returned to the location where he had been detained. He felt that he would be allowed to die. The king had him kept in the courtyard of the guard with orders that he be fed. (Jer.37:21)
The officials argued that Jeremiah should be put to death for his prophesy. They said it discouraged the soldiers and the people with his predicition that Jerusalem would be destroyed. He had also predicted that those who stayed would die by the sword, famine or plague (Jer.38:2). They said that he was not for the people. He was for their ruin.
Jeremiah was put in the muddy cistern indefinitely. Ebed-Melek, an official of the palace, heard of what happened. He petitioned the king for Jeremiah's release. He argued that the prophet would be left to starve. The king sent him with 30 men to pull him out of the cistern before he died. (Jer.38:10)
The king had an honest discussion with the prophet about the predicted outcomes. Jeremiah told him that he would be spared if he surrendered. The women and children would be taken captive, but he would be killed or captured, if not. (Jer.38:23)
Jeremiah was detained in the courtyard of the guard until Jerusalem was taken. (Jer.38:28)
There are a number of references in the psalms regarding the struggle with mire. This verse appears to be a direct reference to the experience of Jeremiah as the prophet. He saw his predicament as a portend of what was to happen to Judah.
The time in captivity would be followed by deliverance. Unsure footing would be replaced with rock as the terra firma.
It was not explicitly predicted that the appointed king would be replaced by a govenor or that the kingdom would become a province in the empire.
Psalm 40:2
He lifted me up from the pit of destruction, my feet from the miry clay. He set my feet on a rock and made my footsteps firm.
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This statement was modified in another psalm to allude to the sense that the experience of the mire felt like it was coming before something even worse. The reader is asked to imagine the sensation of sinking from mud into deep water where there is no sensation of firmness beneath his feet.
Psalm 69:2
I have sunk into the miry depths where there is no footing. I have drifted into deep waters where the floods have engulfed me.
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If you can swim, the experience isn't as frightening as it would be for someone who hasn't been taught. Being able to swim could make the difference between making it to safety and drowning in the depth of water. Fear is a determinant factor.
Psalm 69:14
Rescue me from the mire and do not let me sink. Deliver me from my foes and from deep waters.
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Knowledge of how to swim allows for the confidence that solid ground will be found. Fear contributes to panic. Panic is likely to result in unconsciousness or death due to water being taken into the lungs.
The lungs aren't able to extract oxygen from the water. They can take it from the air.
Psalm 61 is short. It is not as descriptive as other laments. It anticipates deliverance efficiently. It anticipates it anywhere in the world.
The suggestion offered by the statement that he will cry from the end of the earth suggests that prayer for salvation can be offered from any location at any time that the heart feels overwhelmed.
The request to be led to the rock that is higher than I is based on the experience of standing on solid ground.
Anyone who has hiked to higher terrain can tell you that height gives you the ability to see the surrounding area. The sight of that which exists below gives perspective, provided that there is enough light to see.
The higher rock became a metaphor for defense. Build a castle on the highest ground in the area and you can visually anticipate the movement of an army.
This metaphor represented the vision of that which could be constructed, but it was based on the relation of the thought of the brain as higher than the feelings of the heart.
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Ask for a sign
The Assyrians invaded the Northern Kingdom in 737 BCE. King Menahem of Israel (743-738) became a vassal of the Assyrians.
He made two tribute payments to Assyrian King Tiglath-Pileser III according to Assyrian annals. He paid the tribute for the political support of Assyria to continue to rule with "a thousand talents of silver" (2 Kgs. 15:19-20).
Menahem was succeeded by his son Pekahiah (2 Kgs. 15:23-26). He was assassinated by Pekah son of Remaliah (737).
Pekah decided to resist the Assyrians. He made an alliance with Razon, the king of Damascus. When King Ahaz refused to join the alliance they joined forces to attack Judah. Modern historians call attack the Syro-Ephraimite War (735-734).
Judah was faced with invasion by its northern neighbors, Israel (Ephraim) and Aram-Damascus (Syria).
Isaiah took his young son with him to meet King Ahaz. Isaiah's son's name was Shear-Jashub. It meant "a remnant will return." The boy was a visual reminder of God's mercy in His promise of the preservation of a faithful remnant.
The destruction of Judah's enemies was prophesied by Isaiah prior to the conquest of Syria by Assyria in 733 BCE. (Isa. 7:1-10)
Isaiah delivered a message to Ahaz that invited him to ask for a sign to test the truth of the prophesy. (Isa. 7:11) Ahaz refused. He said that he would not test God. Isaiah replied that his sign would be the birth of a child.
The mother would call the child Immanuel, meaning "God with us." (Isa. 7:13-14) It was predicted that by the time he was eating curds with honey with the knowledge to reject the bad, Ephraim and Syria would be destroyed.
The word almah in the original Hebrew of Isaiah 7:14 meant a young woman of childbearing age who had not yet given birth, however the Greek translation in the Septuagint rendered it as parthenos.
The word means 'virgin.' Jesus was interpreted as the fulfillment of the Immanuel prophesy in the gospel of Matthew. (Matt.1:23)
Isaiah 7:14
Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Look, the young woman is with child and shall bear a son. She will name him Immanuel.
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You will be given a sign to see the word as witness.
A young woman will bear a son and call him 'God with us.'
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Grace to you
The expression "son of man" (ben-'adam) appears 107 times in the Hebrew Bible. This is the most common construction for the singular reference to human nature. It appears 93 times in the Book of Ezekiel alone. It is used only 14 times elsewhere.
The phrase appears in intermediate plural form "sons of men" in 32 cases. As generally interpreted by Jews, The title "son of man" denotes humanity in contrast to deity or godhead. There is special reference to weakness and frailty by contrast.
The title is used by "God" in reference to Ezekiel in the book that goes by the name of the prophet. Ezekiel was the prophet in the sense that he was the representative of being human.
The title takes on greater significance in the Book of Daniel. One like the son of man came to the Ancient of Days and was presented before him. He was given dominion, glory and a kingdom that the people of all nations and languages were to serve. His kingdom was indestructible.
The imperial title "son of god" wasn't regarded as acceptable to Judaic monotheism. Opposition to the concept of the god-man marks the distinction between the Judaic and Islamic religions with Christianity.
It is conceivable that the notion of the emperor as the son of heaven started with the Chinese, moved to the Middle East and was adopted by the Romans by way of the Greeks.
The expression "son of man" occurs 81 times in the Greek text of the four Canonical gospels. The Son of Man had the power to heal with the forgiveness of sin. He came to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many.
Jesus came from humble circumstance. He was like Gautama Siddhartha after he left his royal station.
The use of the definite article for the Son of man in the Koine Greeek of the Christian gospels is original. There are not records of its use in any of the surviving documents of antiquity.
The title was shortened to the Son during the time of the apostles. The development of the theology for the Son of God would not be officially developed and accepted as Christian until the Council of Nicea in 324 CE.
When Jesus used a title to describe himself, he spoke of the Son of Man. When he was called the Son of God it was ascribed to him by others. He simply said that you had so stated it.
The profession of Jesus as the Son of God has been an essential element of Christian creeds since the end of the Apostolic age when Constantine embraced the Christian faith as the official religion for the empire.
Such professions were not applied to the acceptance of Jesus as the Son of Man. The expression was taken as Jesus self-designation as a continuation of the revelation of the truth of the law and the prophets.
It is likely that the preamble to the greeting to "all God's beloved in Rome" was added after Christian scripture was officially designated as the text for the imperial religion. Religion did not present as a problem in society until the official form was treated as the only legal kind.
Such treatment was sectarian. It suggested that other forms were officially interpreted as an indication of rebellion or treason. The emphasis of the reformed epistemology is such that Christianity can be favored in debate, but the free will defense allows for other forms as legal provided they don't organize for riot, rebellion, revolution, world war or terrorism.
Romans 1:1-7
Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, set apart for the gospel of God, which was promised beforehand through his prophets in the holy scriptures, the gospel concerning his Son, who was descended from David according to the flesh and was declared to be Son of God with power according to the spirit of holiness by resurrection from the dead, Jesus Christ our Lord, through whom we have received grace and apostleship to bring about the obedience of faith among all the Gentiles for the sake of his name, including yourselves who are called to belong to Jesus Christ,
To all God's beloved in Rome, who are called to be saints:
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
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The gospel was promised through the prophets in the scriptures done.
Grace to you and peace from the Father and Jesus Christ, the Son.
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God Saves
The word almah occurs 9 times in the Hebrew Bible.
The prophesy in Isaiah 7:14 is one of those. The examples that precede that period of the timeline give an indication of the role of women in the society. They also lend meaning to the definition for almah.
Abraham had sent a servant to seek a wife in his former homeland. The servant told his master how he had prayed that should an almah provide his camel and him with water from the well, he would take that as a sign that she was to be the wife of Isaac. Rebecca was the young unmarried woman. (Gen.24:14)
The heading for Psalm 46 notes that the song is to be played on alamot. It could have been a reference to a special selection of women's voices or an instrument made in the city of "Alameth". It is likely that women in Hebrew culture celebrated life with music.
The alamot are listed in Psalm 68:25 as participants in a victory parade. They are listed after the singers and musicians. They were designated as the players with cymbals or tambourines.
A man with a young woman was described as something difficult to understand in Proverbs 30:19. The Septuagint translated the text to the way of a man in his youth. Proverbs was probably written after the time of Ahaz, but the sense of unpredictability was associated with youth and the future.
Isaiah 7:14 tells how the pregnancy of an almah will be the sign that the enemies of Judah will be destroyed before the son of the virgin grows much in age. Israel and Syria fell to Assyria within a few years.
Aram-Damascus, under Rezin, and Israel, under Pekah, attempted to depose Ahaz through an invasion in 735.
Judah was being defeated according to 2 Chronicles. Officials were killed including the king's son. Others were taken away as slaves. The Second Book of Kings states that Rezin and Pekah besieged Jerusalem but failed to capture it. (2 Kgs.16:5 )
The Assyrians defended Judah. Israel, Aram-Damascus and the Philistines were defeated in a number of years after the start of the assault (736-732). The post-war alliance brought trouble to the king of Judah.
Ahaz had to pay tribute to Tiglath-Pileser III with treasures from the Temple in Jerusalem and the royal treasury. He also built idols of Assyrian gods in Judah to find favor with his new ally.
The Northern Kingdom of Israel was conquered by the Neo-Assyrian monarchs, Tiglath-Pileser III (Pul) and Shalmaneser V. The later Assyrian rulers Sargon II and his son, Sennacherib, were responsible for finishing the 20 year demise of Israel's northern ten-tribe kingdom. These would come to be known as the Ten Lost Tribes.
Forced relocation for captivity began about 740 BCE. The ruling city of the Northern Kingdom, Samaria, was finally taken in 722 by Sargon II after a three-year siege started by Shalmaneser V.
The Fall of Assyria is conventionally dated between 613 and 611. The year in between is the most supported date. An allied army that combined the forces of Medes and the Babylonians with Scythians and Cimmerians besieged Nineveh in 612.
The fall of Nineveh led to the destruction of the Neo-Assyrian Empire over the next three years as the dominant state in the Ancient Near East.
Babylon became the imperial center of Mesopotamia for the first time in over a 1000 years. The Neo-Babylonian Empire claimed imperial continuity as a new dynasty.
The prediction that Assyria would fall as one of the enemies took place over a longer period in time. It took over a century for fulfillment. Babylon would fall to the Achaemenid empire in 539 well after the destruction of Jerusalem in 587 BCE.
The prophesy of Isaiah had relied on the predictability of success in forming alliance with the dominant power for the time.
The image of the almah had acquired a great deal of power in the time between the Assyrian and Roman dominance.
If Isaiah had meant that the young woman had not had sexual relations, the word betulah was more common. There here are two types of betulot in the Hebrew scriptures. The true virgin and the “betrothed virgin” (betulah m’orashah) are both cited.
The state of betrothal was as serious as the married state. The difference between the two in certain cases was treated as a formality.
The Greek translation of the Jewish text made in pre-Christian Alexandria took almah to mean “virgin”.
The author for the gospel of Matthew carefully explains that Mary had been engaged to Joseph before they lived together. The conception of Jesus as Christ was described as from the Holy Spirit.
This was to become the Roman theological preservation of respect for the psychological and social values associated with polytheistic mythology. Faith in one God preserves retentiveness about the historical development of society from the primitive to the civilized state.
Matt. 1:18
Now the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way. When his mother Mary had been engaged to Joseph, but before they lived together, she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit.
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The birth of Jesus as the Messiah took place in the conception.
Mary was found to be with child by the Holy Spirit in the creative inception.
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Science and Religion
Ruth Elaine Younger
b. 10.1.1897 New York City, New York
d. 12.22.1986 New York, NY
Ruth Elaine Younger was an Anglican nun, organizer and educator. Her dedication to the faith was an example to others. She searched for knowledge to overcome adversity with pleasantness. She provided instruction for the good life justified by faith with grace.
The book of Ruth provided her with a model for choice. Ruth chose to work with pleasantness despite the adversity that she experienced.
It was in the time when her life was unorganized in a society that had replaced tribalism with ethnic nationalism. She traveled to a different country to learn to cope with the life in which she had been raised.
People organized in relation to the political leader who had a plan to respond to the reported crisis.
Life in New York was ordered by ethnic dominance.
The ethnicity of the predominant political leader determined a hierarchy of favor in relation to the appearance of likeness in the social structure.
Sister Ruth used her religious discipline to consider what was best for education in religious values for the public. This was her emphasis on community organization for the benefit of the state.
She founded a school in New York before she organized a religious community. Her name was changed from Sister to Mother Ruth after she was made the Reverend Mother for the community.
Her life was dedicated to instruction in the faith with pleasantness.
New York City
When New York was named New Amsterdam it was a test case for a colony of the Dutch Republic in the new world. The monarchy had been defined as corrupt in imitation of what the Romans had done in order to promote their republic.
The 'Dutch bet' was based on the control of political administration by an organization that was designated for business.
The consequence was that the business administrator was the state official who made public decisions for the benefit of his trade. The "official" wore hats for the control of trade and municipality in the competition for dominance in the world.
The British eventually purchased the city as it was surrounded by a number of their larger territorial claims.
The British had retained a monarch, but the government decisions regarding the people were largely determined by the House of Commons and the liberal power of the Whig alliance with French and Dutch Protestants for Republic.
The population for the Protestant Republic was more largely uneducated than the Roman kind had been.
Bible study was supposed to be informed by the logic of Aristotle, but most Calvinists were not well educated. They held little interest in the cultural wealth of knowledge or higher knowledge. They had the distinct sense that Calvinism put the control of government in the hands of the local council.
Stories about witch hunts were replaced by those of the threat of savagery from the natives or a foreign power. The competition between kingdoms and republics made the threat more real than it had been. Dictatorship by the barely literate prevailed as democracy.
Politics in New York City in the 19th century was controlled by the Tammany Society. This group wasn't limited to NYC.
The defining purpose of the Tammany Societies was to delight in all things Native American. Titles, seasons, rituals, language, costumes and so forth were viewed as tribal and democratic. Those who joined the society were self-identified as pure Americans.
Fernando Wood was the son of Quakers. Quakers were usually of German descent. His father failed at business. Fernando attempted to establish a number of businesses from 13 years of age.
He became a member of the Tammany Society at the age of 24. He won an election to the US House of Representatives in 1841, but lost the next one 2 years later. He won the election for mayor in 1854.
This instituted the Hall as a dominant social force in the political order. The new mayor declared that his goal was the same as his predecessor. He wanted to fight the corruption of the police force.
Many Irish families were forced to emigrate from the country as a result of the Great Famine in Ireland (1845-1849). The famine was caused by a potato blight. Between 1.5 and 2 million Irish had left their country by 1854.
Most became city dwellers. They had little money so they often settled where the ships landed.
The Irish came to make up about a quarter of the population for the major port cities of Boston, New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore.
Boston currently has the largest percentage of Irish Americans whereas New York City has the most in raw numbers.
The popular vote in elections doesn't have a way to correct for error when it comes to lack of qualifications for office.
Tammany Hall celebrated tribal organization, but there wasn't anything to speak of with respect for educational attainment in law, political science or history.
Employment experience in relation to political office was not a consideration. Partisan party politics became the name of the game. The best candidates could be defeated by bad press, stage events and claims of corruption.
William Boss Tweed was of Scottish descent. He was most likely a Presbyterian, but he didn't have the education to prepare him to serve as a political leader. He had his participation in the Odd Fellows, the Masons and Tammany Hall and his efforts at establishing a business.
He won a 2 year term of office for the US House of Representatives in 1852. He was declared an attorney by a judge despite his lack of training in law.
He became a member of the New York State Senate (4th D.) from 1868 to 1873.
He became very wealthy after he was elected mayor for the city in 1869. He sold favor for his office while in power. Tweed's downfall became after riots broke out between Irish Catholics and Protestants over a parade that celebrated a historical victory against Catholicism.
The Irish became a dominant ethnic group in the city through the political machinery of the Democratic Party in Tammany Hall.
Two Irish born men were elected as mayor before the turn of the century. William Russell Grace was elected from 1885-1886. Thomas F. Gilroy served for a year from 1895-1894.
The Democratic machinery hired a number of Irish to work as police by way of participation in Tammany Hall.
The Irish Democrats were mainly Catholics.
Life
Mother Ruth
Ruth Elaine Younger was born on October 1, 1897 as the third child of an interracial marriage in New York City.
The influx of Irish Catholics after the potato blight may have influenced her decision to seek a life of religious devotion. She moved from New York to Canada to join a monastic order. She entered the Canadian Sisterhood of St. John the Divine in Toronto and was Life Professed on Dec. 29, 1922.
The Sisterhood was founded in Toronto on September 8th, 1884. They have been a prayer and gospel-centered monastic community that answered the call to live their baptismal covenant with the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience.
Her discipline with prayer and the life of devotion helped her to develop the discipline to enter higher education.
She chose to study science as an undergraduate in Canada. She was a graduate of St. Hilda's College, University of Toronto. She received her B.A. degree with honors in natural science.
She obtained her teaching degree at the Ontario College of Education and taught for several years at the Qu'Appelle Diocesan College of Education and at the Bishop Bethune College in Oshawa. She returned to Toronto upon her appointment as treasurer of St. John's Surgical Hospital, she returned to Toronto.
It was prior to her selection of a statement by which she could investigate relevant documents on research for her graduate investigation.
Sister Ruth and Sister Edith Margaret were granted a leave of absence by their Community to begin new work in New York in 1949. They opened St. Hilda's School on Morningside Heights with a class of eight preschool children on February 2, 1950.
The school encouraged and maintained a fully integrated faculty and student body. Sister Ruth was the Headmistress.
The school expanded grade by grade. Co-educational academic training was eventually offered from nursery through grade 12 under the name St. Hilda's and St. Hugh's School.
The Community of the Holy Spirit was formally instituted on Aug. 27, 1952, when their vows were transferred from the Sisterhood of St. John the Divine. Sister Ruth was elected the Reverend Mother of the new Community. She held the office until 1976.
The Community of the Holy Spirit also founded the Melrose School, a country-day school near Brewster, N.Y. and St. Cuthbert's Retreat House also in Brewster. Mother Ruth's direction was necessary for the foundation.
Mother Ruth pursued a course of studies in education at the graduate level at Columbia University in New York. She was awarded Masters and Doctorate degrees.
A life dedicated to investigation is characterized by vision and revision. Assimilation and accommodation to new information contributes to the modification of acquired knowledge.
Mother Ruth applied her knowledge to the administration of her organizational duties. She served as Headmistress of St. Hilda's and St. Hugh's School until her retirement in 1985.
A critical question in the application of scientific inquiry to a life of faith includes the limitation of the investigation to the search for material cause as an expression of the Creator. Theism allows for the contrast of the immaterial with the material universe.
Prayer and faith factor into the search for truth, but it is not generally regarded as an area for evangelical expression.
It is taken as a matter of faith that the investigator is dedicated to finding the truth as an expression of the divine will for how things work in the natural world. Practical value in social or personal dimensions was treated as a goal for the search for objectivity in judgement.
The language used in science is dedicated to the exposition of the state of nature. What is true irrespective of the social or political conditions in the world?
A hypothesis is formed to test the general state of things for a specific outcome. The explanation of determination from the study can be so technical that the meaning defies ordinary levels of comprehension.
A more practical level of application may require tests for personal cognition in an ordinary place like a household.
There is an advantage to the scientific method in the step that is taken outside of partial judgment, but there is a consequence in the level of abstraction for practical benefit.
The study of education includes a survey of literature. The assessment of what others have found with respect for research is helpful in the determination of practical value.
An individual's quest for knowledge can serve as a source of information that can be shared in the context of community life.
Ruth Elaine Younger was dedicated to helping her students grow into responsible adults as faithful citizens in Christ.
Mother Ruth died on Dec. 22, 1986, after a two-month illness.
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Ruth Younger
S. 露丝·雅戈尔
T. 露絲·雅戈爾
露 Lu expose 露 ro dew Ru る- ル- Lu 루 sack
丝 si thread 絲 shi thread su す ス seu 스 s
雅 Ya elegant 雅 ga gracious Yan やん ヤン Yeong 영 spirit
戈 ge spear 戈 ka battleaxe w spear gu ぐ グ
尔 er you 爾 ji you
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Science holds an elegant place in faith.
It is like a spear thrust that defines a point in space.
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Lectionary: Ruth Younger
Episcopal Archives
NY Times Obit.: Mother Ruth
Cliff Notes: Raisin in the Sun, Ruth Younger?
Schmoop: Raisin in the Sun: Ruth Younger
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The debate between Brunner and Barth defined the direction for the Church in the 20th century.
Brunner was neo-orthodox. Barth was liberal. They both had a strong influence on German theology.
Barth was more popular. Brunner was better for the Church with respect for participation in the nation state.
The Gospel needs the Church to nurture growth.
The Church needs the Gospel to grow in enough significance to show.
Inspiration
Brunner is significant as a Reform theologian because his neo-Orthodoxy was drawn from the gospel. It was presented with respect for the return of Republic as a form for government.
He wasn't just concerned with the authority of local councils. His respect for statecraft and citizenship extended into international relations through the federal level.
The Protestant Reformation had suggested a movement towards science as the means to clarify reconstruction for public benefit.
Calvin's reform movement was bible-based in science for democracy in local councils, but it was antiquated with respect for the political norms documented by the bible. It entertained sectarian and partisan superstition as a means to make decisions.
Brunner was part of the Swiss Reformed Church started by Zwingli. Zwingli allowed for federation in his political organization. His reform was republican as well as democratic in this sense. It also allowed for monarchy as a form.
The movement towards science as a means for making decisions in the public realm became so pronounced that it facilitated the growth of socialism towards communism.
Science-speak used Greek levels of specificity for the public. Scientific communication could become too obscure for general comprehension or retention.
Government officials came to develop a method of communication that suggested that their responsibilities were too complicated for the public to understand.
Expertise in knowledge of the language regarding particulars was so pronounced that the general public was used to reject concern for the religious population of the nation state.
Political causes were used to divide the general public into factions that could not lay claim to the representation of the constituency.
The extent of the extension of science in the Church denied Christ as God. This was true with respect for Counter-Reformation politics in society as well. The concern for the population outside the Church became so pronounced that the title Son of God was just used to promote secular socialism or populism. Jesus was defined as just a man.
The theology that supported this movement toward communism came to be called liberal by leading Lutherans.
Reason and Revelation
Ch.VII Gifford Lectures Reason and Belief
"Brunner was more interested than Barth in ethics and social movements. Brunner was a steadfast opponent of communism, while Barth, to the indignation of political thinkers like Reinhold Niebuhr, was strangely complaisant toward it."
The debate presented a strange contrast in neo-Lutheran Orthodoxy.
Communism was an atheist state. It was the Marxist extension of liberal Protestant or Counter Reformation theology. The communists sought to replace religion with science. There was an unexpected benefit in the application of dialectic in a scientific and conservative way in order to promote responsible statecraft and citizenship with reasonable political theory.
Winterthur
Winterthur reached 100,000 residents in 2008. It is located near Zurich. It is considered to be a satellite within the municipality. It is about 20 kilometres (12 mi) to northeast of downtown Zürich. It is the sixth largest population in the country.
The population is currently estimated to be over 108,000. The economy is oriented to service and high tech industrial products.
The official language is the Swiss variety of standard German. The main spoken language is a variant of the Alemannic Swiss German dialect.
Napoleonic troops liberated the city from the control of Zurich in 1798. Winterthur lies at the junction of seven cross-roads near Zürich. The army that held the town held the access to most of Switzerland and points crossing the Rhine into southern Germany.
The forces involved were small, but the ability of the Austrians to sustain an 11-hour assault against the French line on the plateau north of Zürich resulted in the consolidation of three Austrian forces. This led to the French defeat a few days later.
The area became an industrial town when companies like Sulzer, Rieter and SLM built large industrial plants in the 19th century.
The town suffered from investments and loans to the National Railway as a private enterprise. A guarantee for the loan of nine million francs was made in 1874 with three other towns. The co-guarantor towns were unable to pay their share.
The entire burden fell on Winterthur. It had to sell its shares in the line in 1878. There were difficulties from 1881 to 1885 as the town struggled to meet its liabilities. It was helped by loans from the cantonal and federal governments.
The City Council (Stadtrat) constitutes the executive government of the City of Winterthur and operates as a collegiate authority. It is composed of seven councilors. Each presides over a department.
Emil Brunner
Emil Brunner was born in Winterthur in 1889.
He studied at the universities of Zurich and Berlin. He received his doctorate in theology from Zurich in 1913. His dissertation was on The Symbolic Element in Religious Knowledge.
Brunner served as pastor from 1916 to 1924 in the mountain village of Obstalden in the Swiss Canton of Glarus. In 1919–1920 he spent a year in the United States studying at Union Theological Seminary in New York.
He studied at the universities of Zurich and Berlin, receiving his doctorate in theology from Zurich in 1913, with a dissertation on The Symbolic Element in Religious Knowledge.
He served as pastor from 1916 to 1924 in the mountain village of Obstalden in the Swiss Canton of Glarus. He spent a year in the United States studying at Union Theological Seminary in New York in 1919–1920.
Brunner published his Habilitationsschrift in 1921. This was a post-doctoral dissertation traditionally required in many countries in order to attain the position of a fully tenured professor. His paper was on Experience, Knowledge and Faith. He was appointed a Privatdozent at the University of Zurich in 1922.
Another book followed soon after. Mysticism and the Word (1924) was a critique of the liberal theology of Friedrich Schleiermacher. Brunner was appointed Professor of Systematic and Practical Theology at the University of Zurich in 1924.
He held the post until his retirement in 1953. He published The Philosophy of Religion from the Standpoint of Protestant Theology and The Mediator in 1927.
Brunner published God and Man in 1930 after accepting various invitations to deliver lectures across Europe and the United States. The Divine Imperative was published in 1932. Brunner continued his theological output with Man in Revolt and Truth as Encounter in 1937.
He was a substantial contributor to the World Conference on Church, Community, and State in Oxford in the same year. This position reflected his continued involvement in the ecumenical movement. He returned to the United States for a year as a visiting professor at Princeton Theological Seminary in 1937–1938.
Brunner's ecclesiastical positions varied at differing points in his career. He returned to Europe before the outbreak of the war with the young Scottish theologian Thomas F. Torrance. Torrance had studied under Karl Barth in Basel. He had been teaching at Auburn Theological Seminary, New York.
He would subsequently go on to distinguish himself as a professor at the University of Edinburgh.
Brunner delivered the prestigious Gifford Lectures at the University of St Andrews, Scotland in 1946–1947 on Christianity and Civilisation following the war.
He retired from his post at the University of Zurich in 1953. He was invited to take a position as a Visiting Professor at the recently founded International Christian University in Tokyo, Japan (1953–1955).
The first two of his three volume magnum opus Dogmatics were published before he accepted the position. Volume one was The Christian Doctrine of God (1946). Volume two was The Christian Doctrine of Creation and Redemption (1950). Volume three was published in 1960 as The Christian Doctrine of the Church, Faith, and Consummation.
Brunner suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and was physically impaired while returning to Europe. It weakened his ability to work. There were times when his condition would improve, but he suffered further strokes. He finally died in 1966.
Heinrich Emil Brunner was a Swiss Protestant (Reformed) theologian. He is commonly associated with neo-orthodoxy or the dialectical theology movement with Karl Barth.
Brunner holds a place of prominence in Protestant theology in the 20th century. He was one of the four or five leading systematicians. He rejected liberal theology's portrait of Jesus as merely a highly respected human being. He insisted that Jesus was God incarnate and central to salvation.
Brunner and his compatriots in the neo-orthodox movement rejected in toto Pelagian concepts of human cooperation with God in the act of salvation. Pelagian concepts had an association with slavery in republic.
These kind of concepts were prominent in other humanist conceptions of Christianity in the late 19th century. Brunner and associates embraced Augustine's views, especially as refracted through Martin Luther.
Brunner re-emphasized the centrality of Christ. Evangelical and fundamentalist theologians mainly from America and Great Britain have usually rejected Brunner's dismissal of certain miraculous elements within the Scriptures.
Arch-conservatives afforded others in the neo-orthodox movement such as Barth and Paul Tillich a similar treatment. Some conservatives have viewed neo-orthodox theology as simply a more moderate form of liberalism. They rejected its claims as a legitimate expression of the Protestant tradition.
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Emil Brunner
S. 埃米尔·布鲁纳
T. 埃米爾·布魯納
埃 Ai dust 埃 ai dust E エ え E 에 on
米 mi rice 米 bei meter mi ミ み mil 밀 wheat
尔 er you 爾 ji you ru ル る Beu 브 bro
布 Bu to announce 布 fu cloth Bu ブ ぶ lu 루 sack
鲁 lu stupid 魯 ro foolish ru ル る neo 너 you
纳 na admit 納 no settlement na ナ- な-
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The flag for the settlement was raised above the dust
to announce the measure of grain for exchange against the rush
for going bust.
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Josiah Royce
Idealistic Pragmatism
for
Conservative Policy
Josiah Royce was the only major American philosopher who spent a significant period of his life studying and writing history. He taught a course on the history of German thought at John Hopkins after he had studied with Herman Lotze in Germany.
The concept of God lends itself to the interpretation of meaning in time. The analysis of this concept allows for credence in the value of the consideration of the reality of the divine existence.
He offered a lecture on The Conception of God to the Philosophical Union at Berkeley in 1897. He chose to define the concept with respect to the attribute of omniscience. It was knowledge that was presented as a derivative of the predication.
He said, "An Omniscient Being would be one who simply found presented to him, not by virtue of fragmentary and gradually completed processes of inquiry, but by virtue of an all-embracing, direct, and transparent insight into his own truth, — who found thus presented to him, I say, the complete, the fulfilled answer to every genuinely rational question."
(wiki: The Conception of God, Ch.1 text)
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Omniscience is not the knowledge of all that will happen before it does.
Free will allows for change in the variable range with respect for what was.
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This provides a Being who can answer any question offered for investigation. This was not only Aristotle's favorite attribute. It lent itself to consideration of Christ as the Logos or more abstractly, reason. This was the basis for what Royce called the "religion of loyalty" and any individual's search for knowledge with wisdom.
The will for this paradigm was the inner dynamism that reached beyond itself into a possible future and acted upon an acknowledged past. Space and the abstract descriptions that are appropriate to it are a falsification of the materialistic description of the universe proposed by the Stoics.
Metaphysical error proceeded from taking the abstraction of the material universe literally. The Stoic realism that was later adopted by Locke and the liberal Whigs who represented the Puritans in particular and Calvinists in general served as the motive force for the deception of the public into the support of excessive force in colonialism for slavery with the threat of genocide.
Idealism without the criticism of this deceptive or fictional story line for dominance held a supporting role in the perpetuation.
The will to act for a practically realistic and possible future based on the acknowledge past was compromised in the process. The demotic populism promoted by liberal power was the greater tyrant who blamed some foreign agent as the greater threat.
The Democrats demonstrated that their majority rule of both the executive branch and Congress defined success in terms of opposition of conservative management policy. Overtures were made toward the elimination of opposition via association with socialist principles derived from the Marxist economic position.
Oops!
The criticism of writing wasn't the only gaffe in the Phaedrus. Plato set up a false dichotomy behind the main topic of the discourse.
Socrates and Phaedrus spoke about whether or not passionate love was best, but the subtext was about democracy.
Pericles and Protagoras had increased the emphasis on the vote in Athenian society. This was countered by the Spartans with the emphasis on the Persian threat. This was the position that Plato supported.
His argument set up the reader to think that the choice of passion or dispassion in individual feeling regarding partnership defaulted to the choice of dictatorship.
Passionate love supported hormonal consent whereas dispassion resulted in cognitive concession to dependency on the economic providence of the dominant partner.
All men had the right to vote. That which was presented for the measure of the will of the constituency by election was chosen by the leadership.
The leadership had the advantage of experience in administration, military organization and education.
The problem with this paradigm as Plato described it was that the women chose to associate and agree with women, because they weren't given authority in the decision making process. Men chose to get intimate with other men in order to defend their power.
Octavian chose to place an emphasis on the family when he attained to the august position as the Caesar. This position was added to the republic. The republic was more developed in terms of how citizens could rise to the power of a patrician in Roman society. .
Monarchy had been demonized in the process of making the republic look more desirable than monarchical democracy. Even the executive leadership of the emperor was highly conditioned upon the will of the patricians with significant concession to the demands of the plebians.
The emperor had to rise through the ranks of the patricians, the military or the plebians in the effort to satisfy the public as a constituent body.
One was drawn to lead out of the many. That one had the power to promote a line of succession by adoption as Julius Caesar had done or by family succession. This was the case after Octavian.
While the emperor wasn't elected by the vote of the Senate, he still had to represent the interests of the patricians and plebians or he would suffer assassination or defeat in battle with organizational support from other patricians.
\
There was high risk in volatility that duty tempered by religious devotion to the gods helped to manage.
The Pax Romana offered to assimilate the worship of other gods, but the volatility of the system led to reports of sectarian judgment against monotheistic religion.
The power of the emperor was already thought to be an offense to the authority of the Senate by traditional republicans, but the position was tolerated insofar as it was necessary for competition.
Empire in the Middle East had made more progress in the movement towards adopting monotheism as the form for the official religion. It was the form for the official religion that didn't outlaw other legal types.
Progress in this development could not be successfully dictated by imperial or legislative decree. The primitive tribes in Europe were polytheistic. They were developed into monarchies, because it was regarded as the next stage in organizational development.
This political evolution managed to be successful in the prevention of legislation for the slave trade or slavery. The institution was regarded as an offense to the liberation of the captives as a political achievement by Cyrus as the Christ or Messiah.
Rebellion and revolution were used to re-institute slavery and republic. This was a major regression for European society, but the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people principle for legislation or judgment helped to outlaw slavery and legislate the right to vote for people of color and women.
Constitutional monarchy still represents a more conservative form in terms of cost for executive leadership to the public. Republican leadership has to keep an eye on this form of government in order to stay competitive in the world.
Democrats are currently stuck in Plato's Athenian model for democracy as dictatorship. Organization for the winning the vote is constrained to setting different factions of the public against each other. The only way that they felt that they could win public support was to agree to impeach the president.
They have been operating under the delusion that this action will help them to win executive authority based on concession to the House of Representatives. It has been a developmental delay in the evolution of republic.
The Democrats need to admit that the public is the constituent body for national security. Their staged events for media attacks for the impeachment of the president only factionalizes representation.
Katie Holmes
Reach
Higher
达到更高
Dádào gèng gāo
より高く到達する
Yori takaku tōtatsu suru
ps61
Altius semoto
I have hiked into the highlands through rocky terrain.
I saw from a height that gave me a vision of the plains.
I had been lowered into the mud at the bottom of the cistern.
Deliverance from hunger was not a liberation that I could discern.
Ancient Cistern
I felt my feet slip into the deep dark waters from the mire
but I was saved with help that made me feel honored with desire.
Dark Waters
I had called for help and was delivered.
I stood on rock with a gratitude that shivered.
Listen to my prayer for salvation with insight, benign Divine Light.
I request your help as darkness increases the length of night.
I will call to you from the heaviness of my heart
from the ends of the earth with a chart for the path of my part.
You set me on a rock that was higher than me
after I cried to you whom I could not see.
You have been a strong tower against the enemy.
You have provided the remedies for adversity to my destiny.
The flag for the settlement was raised above the dust
to announce the measure of grain for exchange against the rush
for going bust.
I will dwell in your house forever.
Your help makes my burden feel as light as a feather.
I will hide beneath the cover of your wings
to rejoice in the blessed favor that sings.
How do I get there from here
if I don't offer holiday cheer?
Goodness in life has been an answer to my prayers.
The preservation of your promise has strengthened my care.
The heritage of those who revere your Name
has granted me the capacity to tame ridicule and shame.
You will be given a sign to see the word as witness.
A young woman will bear a son and call him 'God with us.'
The birth of Jesus as the Messiah took place in the conception.
Mary was found to be with child by the Holy Spirit in the creative inception.
The gospel was promised through the prophets in the scriptures done.
Grace to you and peace from the Father and Jesus Christ, the Son.
The gospel needs the Church to nurture growth.
The Church needs the gospel to grow in significance and size to show.
Science holds an elegant place in faith.
It is like a spear thrust that defines a point in space.
Add length of days to life in the line of political succession
that public policy may become an expression of progression.
Let the leadership sit enthroned by grace
to be mindful of kindness for the human race.
Bid love to watch decision with faithfulness
that others may decide to work with gratefulness.
I will sing praise with respect for your Name
that my vows may be fulfilled for success in fair games.
-------------------------
61 Exaudi, Deus
Answer, Light
1 Hear my cry, O God,
and listen to my prayer.
2 I call upon you from the ends of the earth
with heaviness in my heart;
set me upon the rock that is higher than I.
3 For you have been my refuge,
a strong tower against the enemy.
4 I will dwell in your house for ever;
I will take refuge under the cover of your wings.
5 For you, O God, have heard my vows;
you have granted me the heritage of those who fear your Name.
6 Add length of days to the king's life;
let his years extend over many generations.
7 Let him sit enthroned before God for ever;
bid love and faithfulness watch over him.
8 So will I always sing the praise of your Name,
and day by day I will fulfill my vows.
----------------------
=============
----------------------
How do I get there?
Chn. 我如何到达那里?
Wǒ rúhé dàodá nàlǐ?
Jpn. どうやってそこまで行くの?
Dō yatte soko made iku no?
Krn. 내가 거기 어떻게?
Naega geogi eotteohge?
Ltn. Quomodo illuc?
Itn. Come ci arrivo?
Grk. Πως πάω εκεί?
Pos páo ekeí?
Spn. ¿Como llego hasta ahí?
Frn. Comment puis-je y arriver?
Gmn. Wie komme ich dort hin?
Hng. Hogyan jutok oda?
Trk. Oraya nasıl giderim?
Rsn. Как туда попасть?
Kak tuda popast'?
How do I get there from here
if I don't offer holiday cheer?
-------------------------
Abridged Individual Lament of Jeremiah
Higher Ground
Psalm 61
The psalm is in the second of the three sections for the book.
It is addressed to the musical director of the temple. It specifies the use of a stringed instrument (Neginah). It is identified as a psalm of David, but it shares a similarity with the individual lament attributed to Jeremiah when he was thrown into the empty well.
Psalm 40:2
He lifted me up from the pit of destruction, my feet from the miry clay. He set my feet on a rock and made my footsteps firm.
-------------------------
The rock was higher than the depth of the cistern. It was higher than him.
Does the designation psalm of David indicate that there were times when the monarch participated in singing the song in religious devotion in the house dedicated to worship?
There is the distinct possibility that the designation was the reminder of the king's existence, even if he was not physically present. He was present in his absence by virtue of the reference to the name for the first in the line of royal succession.
All the kings in the line were loved by God with respect for the promise of the inheritance.
The prophet Jeremiah had predicted the destruction of Jerusalem. A number of officials were offended by the prediction. They wanted to have him put to death. The king allowed him to be punished by the officials according to their choice. They cast him into an empty well. It was probably no more than 12 feet in depth, but it was higher than his ability to climb out of it.
Jeremiah 38:6
They took Jeremiah and put him into the cistern of Malkijah, the king's son. It was in the courtyard of the guard. They lowered him into the empty well by ropes. There was only mud at the bottom. Jeremiah sank into the mire.
----------------------
The king was Zedekiah. He had said, "Here he is. He is in your hands since the king can do nothing to stop you." (Jer. 38:5)
Zedekiah had been made the king of Judah by Nebuschnezzar, king of Babylon (Jer.37:1). The Babylonians were attacking Jerusalem even though their king of kings had appointed the monarch for Judah.
Their army withdrew when they heard the Pharaoh's army had set out from Egypt. Jeremiah warned that the Babylonians would return. They would not stop the attack until they had destroyed the city and taken the leadership captive. (Jer.37:10)
Jeremiah went to the land of Benjamin to tend to the collection of his inheritance. He was charged with desertion to the Babylonians and detained in a house as a prison. He was taken to the king after some time.
He asked the king what his crime was. How was it that the prediction that the Babylonians would not attack was acceptable?
He asked that he not be returned to the location where he had been detained. He felt that he would be allowed to die. The king had him kept in the courtyard of the guard with orders that he be fed. (Jer.37:21)
The officials argued that Jeremiah should be put to death for his prophesy. They said it discouraged the soldiers and the people with his predicition that Jerusalem would be destroyed. He had also predicted that those who stayed would die by the sword, famine or plague (Jer.38:2). They said that he was not for the people. He was for their ruin.
Jeremiah was put in the muddy cistern indefinitely. Ebed-Melek, an official of the palace, heard of what happened. He petitioned the king for Jeremiah's release. He argued that the prophet would be left to starve. The king sent him with 30 men to pull him out of the cistern before he died. (Jer.38:10)
The king had an honest discussion with the prophet about the predicted outcomes. Jeremiah told him that he would be spared if he surrendered. The women and children would be taken captive, but he would be killed or captured, if not. (Jer.38:23)
Jeremiah was detained in the courtyard of the guard until Jerusalem was taken. (Jer.38:28)
There are a number of references in the psalms regarding the struggle with mire. This verse appears to be a direct reference to the experience of Jeremiah as the prophet. He saw his predicament as a portend of what was to happen to Judah.
The time in captivity would be followed by deliverance. Unsure footing would be replaced with rock as the terra firma.
It was not explicitly predicted that the appointed king would be replaced by a govenor or that the kingdom would become a province in the empire.
Psalm 40:2
He lifted me up from the pit of destruction, my feet from the miry clay. He set my feet on a rock and made my footsteps firm.
----------------------
This statement was modified in another psalm to allude to the sense that the experience of the mire felt like it was coming before something even worse. The reader is asked to imagine the sensation of sinking from mud into deep water where there is no sensation of firmness beneath his feet.
Psalm 69:2
I have sunk into the miry depths where there is no footing. I have drifted into deep waters where the floods have engulfed me.
----------------------
If you can swim, the experience isn't as frightening as it would be for someone who hasn't been taught. Being able to swim could make the difference between making it to safety and drowning in the depth of water. Fear is a determinant factor.
Psalm 69:14
Rescue me from the mire and do not let me sink. Deliver me from my foes and from deep waters.
----------------------
Knowledge of how to swim allows for the confidence that solid ground will be found. Fear contributes to panic. Panic is likely to result in unconsciousness or death due to water being taken into the lungs.
The lungs aren't able to extract oxygen from the water. They can take it from the air.
Psalm 61 is short. It is not as descriptive as other laments. It anticipates deliverance efficiently. It anticipates it anywhere in the world.
The suggestion offered by the statement that he will cry from the end of the earth suggests that prayer for salvation can be offered from any location at any time that the heart feels overwhelmed.
The request to be led to the rock that is higher than I is based on the experience of standing on solid ground.
Anyone who has hiked to higher terrain can tell you that height gives you the ability to see the surrounding area. The sight of that which exists below gives perspective, provided that there is enough light to see.
The higher rock became a metaphor for defense. Build a castle on the highest ground in the area and you can visually anticipate the movement of an army.
This metaphor represented the vision of that which could be constructed, but it was based on the relation of the thought of the brain as higher than the feelings of the heart.
--------------------
Ask for a sign
The Assyrians invaded the Northern Kingdom in 737 BCE. King Menahem of Israel (743-738) became a vassal of the Assyrians.
He made two tribute payments to Assyrian King Tiglath-Pileser III according to Assyrian annals. He paid the tribute for the political support of Assyria to continue to rule with "a thousand talents of silver" (2 Kgs. 15:19-20).
Menahem was succeeded by his son Pekahiah (2 Kgs. 15:23-26). He was assassinated by Pekah son of Remaliah (737).
Pekah decided to resist the Assyrians. He made an alliance with Razon, the king of Damascus. When King Ahaz refused to join the alliance they joined forces to attack Judah. Modern historians call attack the Syro-Ephraimite War (735-734).
Judah was faced with invasion by its northern neighbors, Israel (Ephraim) and Aram-Damascus (Syria).
Isaiah took his young son with him to meet King Ahaz. Isaiah's son's name was Shear-Jashub. It meant "a remnant will return." The boy was a visual reminder of God's mercy in His promise of the preservation of a faithful remnant.
The destruction of Judah's enemies was prophesied by Isaiah prior to the conquest of Syria by Assyria in 733 BCE. (Isa. 7:1-10)
Isaiah delivered a message to Ahaz that invited him to ask for a sign to test the truth of the prophesy. (Isa. 7:11) Ahaz refused. He said that he would not test God. Isaiah replied that his sign would be the birth of a child.
The mother would call the child Immanuel, meaning "God with us." (Isa. 7:13-14) It was predicted that by the time he was eating curds with honey with the knowledge to reject the bad, Ephraim and Syria would be destroyed.
The word almah in the original Hebrew of Isaiah 7:14 meant a young woman of childbearing age who had not yet given birth, however the Greek translation in the Septuagint rendered it as parthenos.
The word means 'virgin.' Jesus was interpreted as the fulfillment of the Immanuel prophesy in the gospel of Matthew. (Matt.1:23)
Isaiah 7:14
Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Look, the young woman is with child and shall bear a son. She will name him Immanuel.
-----------------------
You will be given a sign to see the word as witness.
A young woman will bear a son and call him 'God with us.'
=================
Grace to you
The expression "son of man" (ben-'adam) appears 107 times in the Hebrew Bible. This is the most common construction for the singular reference to human nature. It appears 93 times in the Book of Ezekiel alone. It is used only 14 times elsewhere.
The phrase appears in intermediate plural form "sons of men" in 32 cases. As generally interpreted by Jews, The title "son of man" denotes humanity in contrast to deity or godhead. There is special reference to weakness and frailty by contrast.
The title is used by "God" in reference to Ezekiel in the book that goes by the name of the prophet. Ezekiel was the prophet in the sense that he was the representative of being human.
The title takes on greater significance in the Book of Daniel. One like the son of man came to the Ancient of Days and was presented before him. He was given dominion, glory and a kingdom that the people of all nations and languages were to serve. His kingdom was indestructible.
The imperial title "son of god" wasn't regarded as acceptable to Judaic monotheism. Opposition to the concept of the god-man marks the distinction between the Judaic and Islamic religions with Christianity.
It is conceivable that the notion of the emperor as the son of heaven started with the Chinese, moved to the Middle East and was adopted by the Romans by way of the Greeks.
The expression "son of man" occurs 81 times in the Greek text of the four Canonical gospels. The Son of Man had the power to heal with the forgiveness of sin. He came to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many.
Jesus came from humble circumstance. He was like Gautama Siddhartha after he left his royal station.
The use of the definite article for the Son of man in the Koine Greeek of the Christian gospels is original. There are not records of its use in any of the surviving documents of antiquity.
The title was shortened to the Son during the time of the apostles. The development of the theology for the Son of God would not be officially developed and accepted as Christian until the Council of Nicea in 324 CE.
When Jesus used a title to describe himself, he spoke of the Son of Man. When he was called the Son of God it was ascribed to him by others. He simply said that you had so stated it.
The profession of Jesus as the Son of God has been an essential element of Christian creeds since the end of the Apostolic age when Constantine embraced the Christian faith as the official religion for the empire.
Such professions were not applied to the acceptance of Jesus as the Son of Man. The expression was taken as Jesus self-designation as a continuation of the revelation of the truth of the law and the prophets.
It is likely that the preamble to the greeting to "all God's beloved in Rome" was added after Christian scripture was officially designated as the text for the imperial religion. Religion did not present as a problem in society until the official form was treated as the only legal kind.
Such treatment was sectarian. It suggested that other forms were officially interpreted as an indication of rebellion or treason. The emphasis of the reformed epistemology is such that Christianity can be favored in debate, but the free will defense allows for other forms as legal provided they don't organize for riot, rebellion, revolution, world war or terrorism.
Romans 1:1-7
Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, set apart for the gospel of God, which was promised beforehand through his prophets in the holy scriptures, the gospel concerning his Son, who was descended from David according to the flesh and was declared to be Son of God with power according to the spirit of holiness by resurrection from the dead, Jesus Christ our Lord, through whom we have received grace and apostleship to bring about the obedience of faith among all the Gentiles for the sake of his name, including yourselves who are called to belong to Jesus Christ,
To all God's beloved in Rome, who are called to be saints:
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
-----------------------
The gospel was promised through the prophets in the scriptures done.
Grace to you and peace from the Father and Jesus Christ, the Son.
==============
God Saves
The word almah occurs 9 times in the Hebrew Bible.
The prophesy in Isaiah 7:14 is one of those. The examples that precede that period of the timeline give an indication of the role of women in the society. They also lend meaning to the definition for almah.
Abraham had sent a servant to seek a wife in his former homeland. The servant told his master how he had prayed that should an almah provide his camel and him with water from the well, he would take that as a sign that she was to be the wife of Isaac. Rebecca was the young unmarried woman. (Gen.24:14)
The heading for Psalm 46 notes that the song is to be played on alamot. It could have been a reference to a special selection of women's voices or an instrument made in the city of "Alameth". It is likely that women in Hebrew culture celebrated life with music.
The alamot are listed in Psalm 68:25 as participants in a victory parade. They are listed after the singers and musicians. They were designated as the players with cymbals or tambourines.
A man with a young woman was described as something difficult to understand in Proverbs 30:19. The Septuagint translated the text to the way of a man in his youth. Proverbs was probably written after the time of Ahaz, but the sense of unpredictability was associated with youth and the future.
Isaiah 7:14 tells how the pregnancy of an almah will be the sign that the enemies of Judah will be destroyed before the son of the virgin grows much in age. Israel and Syria fell to Assyria within a few years.
Aram-Damascus, under Rezin, and Israel, under Pekah, attempted to depose Ahaz through an invasion in 735.
Judah was being defeated according to 2 Chronicles. Officials were killed including the king's son. Others were taken away as slaves. The Second Book of Kings states that Rezin and Pekah besieged Jerusalem but failed to capture it. (2 Kgs.16:5 )
The Assyrians defended Judah. Israel, Aram-Damascus and the Philistines were defeated in a number of years after the start of the assault (736-732). The post-war alliance brought trouble to the king of Judah.
Ahaz had to pay tribute to Tiglath-Pileser III with treasures from the Temple in Jerusalem and the royal treasury. He also built idols of Assyrian gods in Judah to find favor with his new ally.
The Northern Kingdom of Israel was conquered by the Neo-Assyrian monarchs, Tiglath-Pileser III (Pul) and Shalmaneser V. The later Assyrian rulers Sargon II and his son, Sennacherib, were responsible for finishing the 20 year demise of Israel's northern ten-tribe kingdom. These would come to be known as the Ten Lost Tribes.
Forced relocation for captivity began about 740 BCE. The ruling city of the Northern Kingdom, Samaria, was finally taken in 722 by Sargon II after a three-year siege started by Shalmaneser V.
The Fall of Assyria is conventionally dated between 613 and 611. The year in between is the most supported date. An allied army that combined the forces of Medes and the Babylonians with Scythians and Cimmerians besieged Nineveh in 612.
The fall of Nineveh led to the destruction of the Neo-Assyrian Empire over the next three years as the dominant state in the Ancient Near East.
Babylon became the imperial center of Mesopotamia for the first time in over a 1000 years. The Neo-Babylonian Empire claimed imperial continuity as a new dynasty.
The prediction that Assyria would fall as one of the enemies took place over a longer period in time. It took over a century for fulfillment. Babylon would fall to the Achaemenid empire in 539 well after the destruction of Jerusalem in 587 BCE.
The prophesy of Isaiah had relied on the predictability of success in forming alliance with the dominant power for the time.
The image of the almah had acquired a great deal of power in the time between the Assyrian and Roman dominance.
If Isaiah had meant that the young woman had not had sexual relations, the word betulah was more common. There here are two types of betulot in the Hebrew scriptures. The true virgin and the “betrothed virgin” (betulah m’orashah) are both cited.
The state of betrothal was as serious as the married state. The difference between the two in certain cases was treated as a formality.
The Greek translation of the Jewish text made in pre-Christian Alexandria took almah to mean “virgin”.
The author for the gospel of Matthew carefully explains that Mary had been engaged to Joseph before they lived together. The conception of Jesus as Christ was described as from the Holy Spirit.
This was to become the Roman theological preservation of respect for the psychological and social values associated with polytheistic mythology. Faith in one God preserves retentiveness about the historical development of society from the primitive to the civilized state.
Matt. 1:18
Now the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way. When his mother Mary had been engaged to Joseph, but before they lived together, she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit.
-----------------------
The birth of Jesus as the Messiah took place in the conception.
Mary was found to be with child by the Holy Spirit in the creative inception.
===============
Science and Religion
Ruth Elaine Younger
b. 10.1.1897 New York City, New York
d. 12.22.1986 New York, NY
Ruth Elaine Younger was an Anglican nun, organizer and educator. Her dedication to the faith was an example to others. She searched for knowledge to overcome adversity with pleasantness. She provided instruction for the good life justified by faith with grace.
The book of Ruth provided her with a model for choice. Ruth chose to work with pleasantness despite the adversity that she experienced.
It was in the time when her life was unorganized in a society that had replaced tribalism with ethnic nationalism. She traveled to a different country to learn to cope with the life in which she had been raised.
People organized in relation to the political leader who had a plan to respond to the reported crisis.
Life in New York was ordered by ethnic dominance.
The ethnicity of the predominant political leader determined a hierarchy of favor in relation to the appearance of likeness in the social structure.
Sister Ruth used her religious discipline to consider what was best for education in religious values for the public. This was her emphasis on community organization for the benefit of the state.
She founded a school in New York before she organized a religious community. Her name was changed from Sister to Mother Ruth after she was made the Reverend Mother for the community.
Her life was dedicated to instruction in the faith with pleasantness.
New York City
When New York was named New Amsterdam it was a test case for a colony of the Dutch Republic in the new world. The monarchy had been defined as corrupt in imitation of what the Romans had done in order to promote their republic.
The 'Dutch bet' was based on the control of political administration by an organization that was designated for business.
The consequence was that the business administrator was the state official who made public decisions for the benefit of his trade. The "official" wore hats for the control of trade and municipality in the competition for dominance in the world.
The British eventually purchased the city as it was surrounded by a number of their larger territorial claims.
The British had retained a monarch, but the government decisions regarding the people were largely determined by the House of Commons and the liberal power of the Whig alliance with French and Dutch Protestants for Republic.
The population for the Protestant Republic was more largely uneducated than the Roman kind had been.
Bible study was supposed to be informed by the logic of Aristotle, but most Calvinists were not well educated. They held little interest in the cultural wealth of knowledge or higher knowledge. They had the distinct sense that Calvinism put the control of government in the hands of the local council.
Stories about witch hunts were replaced by those of the threat of savagery from the natives or a foreign power. The competition between kingdoms and republics made the threat more real than it had been. Dictatorship by the barely literate prevailed as democracy.
Politics in New York City in the 19th century was controlled by the Tammany Society. This group wasn't limited to NYC.
The defining purpose of the Tammany Societies was to delight in all things Native American. Titles, seasons, rituals, language, costumes and so forth were viewed as tribal and democratic. Those who joined the society were self-identified as pure Americans.
Fernando Wood was the son of Quakers. Quakers were usually of German descent. His father failed at business. Fernando attempted to establish a number of businesses from 13 years of age.
He became a member of the Tammany Society at the age of 24. He won an election to the US House of Representatives in 1841, but lost the next one 2 years later. He won the election for mayor in 1854.
This instituted the Hall as a dominant social force in the political order. The new mayor declared that his goal was the same as his predecessor. He wanted to fight the corruption of the police force.
Many Irish families were forced to emigrate from the country as a result of the Great Famine in Ireland (1845-1849). The famine was caused by a potato blight. Between 1.5 and 2 million Irish had left their country by 1854.
Most became city dwellers. They had little money so they often settled where the ships landed.
The Irish came to make up about a quarter of the population for the major port cities of Boston, New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore.
Boston currently has the largest percentage of Irish Americans whereas New York City has the most in raw numbers.
The popular vote in elections doesn't have a way to correct for error when it comes to lack of qualifications for office.
Tammany Hall celebrated tribal organization, but there wasn't anything to speak of with respect for educational attainment in law, political science or history.
Employment experience in relation to political office was not a consideration. Partisan party politics became the name of the game. The best candidates could be defeated by bad press, stage events and claims of corruption.
William Boss Tweed was of Scottish descent. He was most likely a Presbyterian, but he didn't have the education to prepare him to serve as a political leader. He had his participation in the Odd Fellows, the Masons and Tammany Hall and his efforts at establishing a business.
He won a 2 year term of office for the US House of Representatives in 1852. He was declared an attorney by a judge despite his lack of training in law.
He became a member of the New York State Senate (4th D.) from 1868 to 1873.
He became very wealthy after he was elected mayor for the city in 1869. He sold favor for his office while in power. Tweed's downfall became after riots broke out between Irish Catholics and Protestants over a parade that celebrated a historical victory against Catholicism.
The Irish became a dominant ethnic group in the city through the political machinery of the Democratic Party in Tammany Hall.
Two Irish born men were elected as mayor before the turn of the century. William Russell Grace was elected from 1885-1886. Thomas F. Gilroy served for a year from 1895-1894.
The Democratic machinery hired a number of Irish to work as police by way of participation in Tammany Hall.
The Irish Democrats were mainly Catholics.
Life
Mother Ruth
Ruth Elaine Younger was born on October 1, 1897 as the third child of an interracial marriage in New York City.
The influx of Irish Catholics after the potato blight may have influenced her decision to seek a life of religious devotion. She moved from New York to Canada to join a monastic order. She entered the Canadian Sisterhood of St. John the Divine in Toronto and was Life Professed on Dec. 29, 1922.
The Sisterhood was founded in Toronto on September 8th, 1884. They have been a prayer and gospel-centered monastic community that answered the call to live their baptismal covenant with the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience.
Her discipline with prayer and the life of devotion helped her to develop the discipline to enter higher education.
She chose to study science as an undergraduate in Canada. She was a graduate of St. Hilda's College, University of Toronto. She received her B.A. degree with honors in natural science.
She obtained her teaching degree at the Ontario College of Education and taught for several years at the Qu'Appelle Diocesan College of Education and at the Bishop Bethune College in Oshawa. She returned to Toronto upon her appointment as treasurer of St. John's Surgical Hospital, she returned to Toronto.
It was prior to her selection of a statement by which she could investigate relevant documents on research for her graduate investigation.
Sister Ruth and Sister Edith Margaret were granted a leave of absence by their Community to begin new work in New York in 1949. They opened St. Hilda's School on Morningside Heights with a class of eight preschool children on February 2, 1950.
The school encouraged and maintained a fully integrated faculty and student body. Sister Ruth was the Headmistress.
The school expanded grade by grade. Co-educational academic training was eventually offered from nursery through grade 12 under the name St. Hilda's and St. Hugh's School.
The Community of the Holy Spirit was formally instituted on Aug. 27, 1952, when their vows were transferred from the Sisterhood of St. John the Divine. Sister Ruth was elected the Reverend Mother of the new Community. She held the office until 1976.
The Community of the Holy Spirit also founded the Melrose School, a country-day school near Brewster, N.Y. and St. Cuthbert's Retreat House also in Brewster. Mother Ruth's direction was necessary for the foundation.
Mother Ruth pursued a course of studies in education at the graduate level at Columbia University in New York. She was awarded Masters and Doctorate degrees.
A life dedicated to investigation is characterized by vision and revision. Assimilation and accommodation to new information contributes to the modification of acquired knowledge.
Mother Ruth applied her knowledge to the administration of her organizational duties. She served as Headmistress of St. Hilda's and St. Hugh's School until her retirement in 1985.
A critical question in the application of scientific inquiry to a life of faith includes the limitation of the investigation to the search for material cause as an expression of the Creator. Theism allows for the contrast of the immaterial with the material universe.
Prayer and faith factor into the search for truth, but it is not generally regarded as an area for evangelical expression.
It is taken as a matter of faith that the investigator is dedicated to finding the truth as an expression of the divine will for how things work in the natural world. Practical value in social or personal dimensions was treated as a goal for the search for objectivity in judgement.
The language used in science is dedicated to the exposition of the state of nature. What is true irrespective of the social or political conditions in the world?
A hypothesis is formed to test the general state of things for a specific outcome. The explanation of determination from the study can be so technical that the meaning defies ordinary levels of comprehension.
A more practical level of application may require tests for personal cognition in an ordinary place like a household.
There is an advantage to the scientific method in the step that is taken outside of partial judgment, but there is a consequence in the level of abstraction for practical benefit.
The study of education includes a survey of literature. The assessment of what others have found with respect for research is helpful in the determination of practical value.
An individual's quest for knowledge can serve as a source of information that can be shared in the context of community life.
Ruth Elaine Younger was dedicated to helping her students grow into responsible adults as faithful citizens in Christ.
Mother Ruth died on Dec. 22, 1986, after a two-month illness.
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Ruth Younger
S. 露丝·雅戈尔
T. 露絲·雅戈爾
露 Lu expose 露 ro dew Ru る- ル- Lu 루 sack
丝 si thread 絲 shi thread su す ス seu 스 s
雅 Ya elegant 雅 ga gracious Yan やん ヤン Yeong 영 spirit
戈 ge spear 戈 ka battleaxe w spear gu ぐ グ
尔 er you 爾 ji you
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Science holds an elegant place in faith.
It is like a spear thrust that defines a point in space.
================
Lectionary: Ruth Younger
Episcopal Archives
NY Times Obit.: Mother Ruth
Cliff Notes: Raisin in the Sun, Ruth Younger?
Schmoop: Raisin in the Sun: Ruth Younger
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The debate between Brunner and Barth defined the direction for the Church in the 20th century.
Brunner was neo-orthodox. Barth was liberal. They both had a strong influence on German theology.
Barth was more popular. Brunner was better for the Church with respect for participation in the nation state.
The Gospel needs the Church to nurture growth.
The Church needs the Gospel to grow in enough significance to show.
Inspiration
Brunner is significant as a Reform theologian because his neo-Orthodoxy was drawn from the gospel. It was presented with respect for the return of Republic as a form for government.
He wasn't just concerned with the authority of local councils. His respect for statecraft and citizenship extended into international relations through the federal level.
The Protestant Reformation had suggested a movement towards science as the means to clarify reconstruction for public benefit.
Calvin's reform movement was bible-based in science for democracy in local councils, but it was antiquated with respect for the political norms documented by the bible. It entertained sectarian and partisan superstition as a means to make decisions.
Brunner was part of the Swiss Reformed Church started by Zwingli. Zwingli allowed for federation in his political organization. His reform was republican as well as democratic in this sense. It also allowed for monarchy as a form.
The movement towards science as a means for making decisions in the public realm became so pronounced that it facilitated the growth of socialism towards communism.
Science-speak used Greek levels of specificity for the public. Scientific communication could become too obscure for general comprehension or retention.
Government officials came to develop a method of communication that suggested that their responsibilities were too complicated for the public to understand.
Expertise in knowledge of the language regarding particulars was so pronounced that the general public was used to reject concern for the religious population of the nation state.
Political causes were used to divide the general public into factions that could not lay claim to the representation of the constituency.
The extent of the extension of science in the Church denied Christ as God. This was true with respect for Counter-Reformation politics in society as well. The concern for the population outside the Church became so pronounced that the title Son of God was just used to promote secular socialism or populism. Jesus was defined as just a man.
The theology that supported this movement toward communism came to be called liberal by leading Lutherans.
Reason and Revelation
Ch.VII Gifford Lectures Reason and Belief
"Brunner was more interested than Barth in ethics and social movements. Brunner was a steadfast opponent of communism, while Barth, to the indignation of political thinkers like Reinhold Niebuhr, was strangely complaisant toward it."
The debate presented a strange contrast in neo-Lutheran Orthodoxy.
Communism was an atheist state. It was the Marxist extension of liberal Protestant or Counter Reformation theology. The communists sought to replace religion with science. There was an unexpected benefit in the application of dialectic in a scientific and conservative way in order to promote responsible statecraft and citizenship with reasonable political theory.
Winterthur
Winterthur reached 100,000 residents in 2008. It is located near Zurich. It is considered to be a satellite within the municipality. It is about 20 kilometres (12 mi) to northeast of downtown Zürich. It is the sixth largest population in the country.
The population is currently estimated to be over 108,000. The economy is oriented to service and high tech industrial products.
The official language is the Swiss variety of standard German. The main spoken language is a variant of the Alemannic Swiss German dialect.
Napoleonic troops liberated the city from the control of Zurich in 1798. Winterthur lies at the junction of seven cross-roads near Zürich. The army that held the town held the access to most of Switzerland and points crossing the Rhine into southern Germany.
The forces involved were small, but the ability of the Austrians to sustain an 11-hour assault against the French line on the plateau north of Zürich resulted in the consolidation of three Austrian forces. This led to the French defeat a few days later.
The area became an industrial town when companies like Sulzer, Rieter and SLM built large industrial plants in the 19th century.
The town suffered from investments and loans to the National Railway as a private enterprise. A guarantee for the loan of nine million francs was made in 1874 with three other towns. The co-guarantor towns were unable to pay their share.
The entire burden fell on Winterthur. It had to sell its shares in the line in 1878. There were difficulties from 1881 to 1885 as the town struggled to meet its liabilities. It was helped by loans from the cantonal and federal governments.
The City Council (Stadtrat) constitutes the executive government of the City of Winterthur and operates as a collegiate authority. It is composed of seven councilors. Each presides over a department.
Emil Brunner
Emil Brunner was born in Winterthur in 1889.
He studied at the universities of Zurich and Berlin. He received his doctorate in theology from Zurich in 1913. His dissertation was on The Symbolic Element in Religious Knowledge.
Brunner served as pastor from 1916 to 1924 in the mountain village of Obstalden in the Swiss Canton of Glarus. In 1919–1920 he spent a year in the United States studying at Union Theological Seminary in New York.
He studied at the universities of Zurich and Berlin, receiving his doctorate in theology from Zurich in 1913, with a dissertation on The Symbolic Element in Religious Knowledge.
He served as pastor from 1916 to 1924 in the mountain village of Obstalden in the Swiss Canton of Glarus. He spent a year in the United States studying at Union Theological Seminary in New York in 1919–1920.
Brunner published his Habilitationsschrift in 1921. This was a post-doctoral dissertation traditionally required in many countries in order to attain the position of a fully tenured professor. His paper was on Experience, Knowledge and Faith. He was appointed a Privatdozent at the University of Zurich in 1922.
Another book followed soon after. Mysticism and the Word (1924) was a critique of the liberal theology of Friedrich Schleiermacher. Brunner was appointed Professor of Systematic and Practical Theology at the University of Zurich in 1924.
He held the post until his retirement in 1953. He published The Philosophy of Religion from the Standpoint of Protestant Theology and The Mediator in 1927.
Brunner published God and Man in 1930 after accepting various invitations to deliver lectures across Europe and the United States. The Divine Imperative was published in 1932. Brunner continued his theological output with Man in Revolt and Truth as Encounter in 1937.
He was a substantial contributor to the World Conference on Church, Community, and State in Oxford in the same year. This position reflected his continued involvement in the ecumenical movement. He returned to the United States for a year as a visiting professor at Princeton Theological Seminary in 1937–1938.
Brunner's ecclesiastical positions varied at differing points in his career. He returned to Europe before the outbreak of the war with the young Scottish theologian Thomas F. Torrance. Torrance had studied under Karl Barth in Basel. He had been teaching at Auburn Theological Seminary, New York.
He would subsequently go on to distinguish himself as a professor at the University of Edinburgh.
Brunner delivered the prestigious Gifford Lectures at the University of St Andrews, Scotland in 1946–1947 on Christianity and Civilisation following the war.
He retired from his post at the University of Zurich in 1953. He was invited to take a position as a Visiting Professor at the recently founded International Christian University in Tokyo, Japan (1953–1955).
The first two of his three volume magnum opus Dogmatics were published before he accepted the position. Volume one was The Christian Doctrine of God (1946). Volume two was The Christian Doctrine of Creation and Redemption (1950). Volume three was published in 1960 as The Christian Doctrine of the Church, Faith, and Consummation.
Brunner suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and was physically impaired while returning to Europe. It weakened his ability to work. There were times when his condition would improve, but he suffered further strokes. He finally died in 1966.
Heinrich Emil Brunner was a Swiss Protestant (Reformed) theologian. He is commonly associated with neo-orthodoxy or the dialectical theology movement with Karl Barth.
Brunner holds a place of prominence in Protestant theology in the 20th century. He was one of the four or five leading systematicians. He rejected liberal theology's portrait of Jesus as merely a highly respected human being. He insisted that Jesus was God incarnate and central to salvation.
Brunner and his compatriots in the neo-orthodox movement rejected in toto Pelagian concepts of human cooperation with God in the act of salvation. Pelagian concepts had an association with slavery in republic.
These kind of concepts were prominent in other humanist conceptions of Christianity in the late 19th century. Brunner and associates embraced Augustine's views, especially as refracted through Martin Luther.
Brunner re-emphasized the centrality of Christ. Evangelical and fundamentalist theologians mainly from America and Great Britain have usually rejected Brunner's dismissal of certain miraculous elements within the Scriptures.
Arch-conservatives afforded others in the neo-orthodox movement such as Barth and Paul Tillich a similar treatment. Some conservatives have viewed neo-orthodox theology as simply a more moderate form of liberalism. They rejected its claims as a legitimate expression of the Protestant tradition.
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Emil Brunner
S. 埃米尔·布鲁纳
T. 埃米爾·布魯納
埃 Ai dust 埃 ai dust E エ え E 에 on
米 mi rice 米 bei meter mi ミ み mil 밀 wheat
尔 er you 爾 ji you ru ル る Beu 브 bro
布 Bu to announce 布 fu cloth Bu ブ ぶ lu 루 sack
鲁 lu stupid 魯 ro foolish ru ル る neo 너 you
纳 na admit 納 no settlement na ナ- な-
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The flag for the settlement was raised above the dust
to announce the measure of grain for exchange against the rush
for going bust.
================
Josiah Royce
Idealistic Pragmatism
for
Conservative Policy
Josiah Royce was the only major American philosopher who spent a significant period of his life studying and writing history. He taught a course on the history of German thought at John Hopkins after he had studied with Herman Lotze in Germany.
The concept of God lends itself to the interpretation of meaning in time. The analysis of this concept allows for credence in the value of the consideration of the reality of the divine existence.
He offered a lecture on The Conception of God to the Philosophical Union at Berkeley in 1897. He chose to define the concept with respect to the attribute of omniscience. It was knowledge that was presented as a derivative of the predication.
He said, "An Omniscient Being would be one who simply found presented to him, not by virtue of fragmentary and gradually completed processes of inquiry, but by virtue of an all-embracing, direct, and transparent insight into his own truth, — who found thus presented to him, I say, the complete, the fulfilled answer to every genuinely rational question."
(wiki: The Conception of God, Ch.1 text)
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Omniscience is not the knowledge of all that will happen before it does.
Free will allows for change in the variable range with respect for what was.
=================
This provides a Being who can answer any question offered for investigation. This was not only Aristotle's favorite attribute. It lent itself to consideration of Christ as the Logos or more abstractly, reason. This was the basis for what Royce called the "religion of loyalty" and any individual's search for knowledge with wisdom.
The will for this paradigm was the inner dynamism that reached beyond itself into a possible future and acted upon an acknowledged past. Space and the abstract descriptions that are appropriate to it are a falsification of the materialistic description of the universe proposed by the Stoics.
Metaphysical error proceeded from taking the abstraction of the material universe literally. The Stoic realism that was later adopted by Locke and the liberal Whigs who represented the Puritans in particular and Calvinists in general served as the motive force for the deception of the public into the support of excessive force in colonialism for slavery with the threat of genocide.
Idealism without the criticism of this deceptive or fictional story line for dominance held a supporting role in the perpetuation.
The will to act for a practically realistic and possible future based on the acknowledge past was compromised in the process. The demotic populism promoted by liberal power was the greater tyrant who blamed some foreign agent as the greater threat.
The Democrats demonstrated that their majority rule of both the executive branch and Congress defined success in terms of opposition of conservative management policy. Overtures were made toward the elimination of opposition via association with socialist principles derived from the Marxist economic position.
Oops!
The criticism of writing wasn't the only gaffe in the Phaedrus. Plato set up a false dichotomy behind the main topic of the discourse.
Socrates and Phaedrus spoke about whether or not passionate love was best, but the subtext was about democracy.
Pericles and Protagoras had increased the emphasis on the vote in Athenian society. This was countered by the Spartans with the emphasis on the Persian threat. This was the position that Plato supported.
His argument set up the reader to think that the choice of passion or dispassion in individual feeling regarding partnership defaulted to the choice of dictatorship.
Passionate love supported hormonal consent whereas dispassion resulted in cognitive concession to dependency on the economic providence of the dominant partner.
All men had the right to vote. That which was presented for the measure of the will of the constituency by election was chosen by the leadership.
The leadership had the advantage of experience in administration, military organization and education.
The problem with this paradigm as Plato described it was that the women chose to associate and agree with women, because they weren't given authority in the decision making process. Men chose to get intimate with other men in order to defend their power.
Octavian chose to place an emphasis on the family when he attained to the august position as the Caesar. This position was added to the republic. The republic was more developed in terms of how citizens could rise to the power of a patrician in Roman society. .
Monarchy had been demonized in the process of making the republic look more desirable than monarchical democracy. Even the executive leadership of the emperor was highly conditioned upon the will of the patricians with significant concession to the demands of the plebians.
The emperor had to rise through the ranks of the patricians, the military or the plebians in the effort to satisfy the public as a constituent body.
One was drawn to lead out of the many. That one had the power to promote a line of succession by adoption as Julius Caesar had done or by family succession. This was the case after Octavian.
While the emperor wasn't elected by the vote of the Senate, he still had to represent the interests of the patricians and plebians or he would suffer assassination or defeat in battle with organizational support from other patricians.
\
There was high risk in volatility that duty tempered by religious devotion to the gods helped to manage.
The Pax Romana offered to assimilate the worship of other gods, but the volatility of the system led to reports of sectarian judgment against monotheistic religion.
The power of the emperor was already thought to be an offense to the authority of the Senate by traditional republicans, but the position was tolerated insofar as it was necessary for competition.
Empire in the Middle East had made more progress in the movement towards adopting monotheism as the form for the official religion. It was the form for the official religion that didn't outlaw other legal types.
Progress in this development could not be successfully dictated by imperial or legislative decree. The primitive tribes in Europe were polytheistic. They were developed into monarchies, because it was regarded as the next stage in organizational development.
This political evolution managed to be successful in the prevention of legislation for the slave trade or slavery. The institution was regarded as an offense to the liberation of the captives as a political achievement by Cyrus as the Christ or Messiah.
Rebellion and revolution were used to re-institute slavery and republic. This was a major regression for European society, but the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people principle for legislation or judgment helped to outlaw slavery and legislate the right to vote for people of color and women.
Constitutional monarchy still represents a more conservative form in terms of cost for executive leadership to the public. Republican leadership has to keep an eye on this form of government in order to stay competitive in the world.
Democrats are currently stuck in Plato's Athenian model for democracy as dictatorship. Organization for the winning the vote is constrained to setting different factions of the public against each other. The only way that they felt that they could win public support was to agree to impeach the president.
They have been operating under the delusion that this action will help them to win executive authority based on concession to the House of Representatives. It has been a developmental delay in the evolution of republic.
The Democrats need to admit that the public is the constituent body for national security. Their staged events for media attacks for the impeachment of the president only factionalizes representation.
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