Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts

Sunday, November 3, 2019

Discern

11.10.19
Radha Mitchell

Discern
Reality
辨别现实
Biànbié xiànshí
現実を識別する 
Genjitsu o shikibetsu suru
ps17
In rebus exerceant

Help me to discern the truth of statements about reality.
Listen to the innocence of objectivity as the augur for actuality.

Let vindication come from your presence
that my eyes may see justice in relation to essence. 

Summon me to weigh my heart even at night.
Let false conceptions be melted down to form assertibles as right.

Marriage is not the sole consideration in the determination of leadership seen.
The children of the resurrection are like angels in political dealership preened. 

I don't make insulting statements to attack others for their existence.
I am working to shape my thought to discourage violent resistance.

Logic points to truth.
Science is the sleuth.

Number is a concept
that describes size inside the content.

Truth defines morality
with respect for health in reality.

My footsteps hold fast to the order of design as law.
My feet will not stumble in the avoidance of flaw.

I call upon you who will answer me.
Incline your ear to consider what is or is not to be.

Show me the wonder of kindness
as deliverance from misconception as blindness.

Keep me as an object for your affection
and an emblem of your resurrection.

I would that my words were engraved in stone
to serve as testimony for those who wish to atone.


Chrysanthemums

I know my Redeemer lives though I have been gravely afflicted.
Love is the reward that is given for faith for which thought is restricted.

The second coming of Christ will not occur until after the rebellion. 
The lawless one will be revealed when Mars is in the carnelian aphelion.

Protect me from those who would attack 
with the aggression to make me break or crack.

Their mouths speak proud things.
They have closed their heart to what the heart sings. 

They press me hard to cast me to the ground
with a roar of sound that bounces all around.



They acted like a young lion greedy for prey
lurking until leaping forth to cast stealth away. 

Arise to defend and bring them down.
Turn their smile of attack into a frown.

Let deliverance from those who add strife
be rendered to those with reverence for life.

Let those who compete to provide a service
be rewarded with surplus for the observance.

I will see the face of my vindication. 
I will be satisfied with your incorporation.

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Psalm 17
Exaudi, Domine
Hear, Dominated

1 Hear my plea of innocence, O Lord;
give heed to my cry;
listen to my prayer, which does not come from lying lips.
2 Let my vindication come forth from your presence;
let your eyes be fixed on justice.
3 Weigh my heart, summon me by night,
melt me down; you will find no impurity in me.
4 I give no offense with my mouth as others do;
I have heeded the words of your lips.
5 My footsteps hold fast to the ways of your law;
in your paths my feet shall not stumble.
6 I call upon you, O God, for you will answer me;
incline your ear to me and hear my words.
7 Show me your marvelous loving-kindness,
O Savior of those who take refuge at your right hand
from those who rise up against them.
8 Keep me as the apple of your eye;
hide me under the shadow of your wings,
9 From the wicked who assault me,
from my deadly enemies who surround me.
10 They have closed their heart to pity,
and their mouth speaks proud things.
11 They press me hard,
now they surround me,
watching how they may cast me to the ground,
12 Like a lion, greedy for its prey,
and like a young lion lurking in secret places.
13 Arise, O Lord; confront them and bring them down;
deliver me from the wicked by your sword.
14 Deliver me, O Lord, by your hand
from those whose portion in life is this world;
15 Whose bellies you fill with your treasure,
who are well supplied with children
and leave their wealth to their little ones.
16 But at my vindication I shall see your face;
when I awake, I shall be satisfied, beholding
your likeness.
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=================
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My Redeemer Lives


The book of Job is set in the land of Uz (Job 1:1). Lamentations 4:21 places Edom in the land of Uz. Edom was southeast of the Dead Sea, toward the upper reaches of the Sinai Peninsula, east of Egypt and just north of the Red Sea.

Uz would most likely fall inside the current state of Jordan.

One of Job’s false comforters was named Eliphaz (Job 4:1). He was a Temanite. Teman was a city in Edom not far from the city of Petra.

Job appears in the 6th-century BCE book of Ezekiel as a man of antiquity renowned for his righteousness.

The books of Job, Ecclesiastes and Proverbs belong to the genre of wisdom literature. The genre was common in the ancient Near East. This included ancient Iran, Egypt, Asia Minor and the territory in-between. The Babylonian empire accounted for a large amount of the in-between area.

Map 6th c. Near East


The kingdom of Judah had been conquered by the Babylonians in the 6th century. The Siege of Jerusalem had been carried out by Nebuchadnezzar II, king of Babylon in 597 BCE.

Wisdom referred to a way of thinking about the knowledge gained by the thought expressed in literature. Wisdom literature from Sumeria and Babylonia can be dated to the second millennium BCE. Several texts from ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt offer parallels to Job.

The author of Job was the recipient of a long tradition of reflection on the existence of inexplicable suffering. The author was almost certainly an Israelite. He set his story outside Israel in southern Edom or northern Arabia. He made allusion to places as far apart as Mesopotamia and Egypt.

The language of Job stands out for the large number of words and forms not found elsewhere in the Bible.

Job is an investigation of divine justice. This problem is known in theology as the problem of evil. Why does God allow evil to harm the righteous? Human choices and actions have been found to be morally significant, but experience has demonstrated that suffering can be unmerited as retributive.

The Adversary raised the question of whether there is such a thing as disinterested righteousness. If righteousness is rewarded with prosperity, will people not act righteously from selfish motives? He asked God to test this by removing the prosperity of the most righteous of all, Job.

The book begins with the frame narrative. The reader is given a panopticon view that depicts Job as exemplary in piety and faith.

The 'fear of God' was a term used as a movement from the cause of piety as respect for any one of the gods and goddesses in the parthenon to the singularity of the divine nature. Faith had to reflect benefit for the world from the citizen's perspective in the state. Prosperity was viewed as a measure of success in piety in the imperial state.

Job's affliction was a description of the transition from polytheism. His piety would be rewarded by success in either the polytheistic or monotheistic cultural setting, but it was not motivated by selfishness or greed for the reward. He did not agree with the opinions expressed by his accusers. He carefully selected the best reasons for his faith to find his way back to prosperity. 

Satan took Job's family, possessions and health. Job praised God, yet lamented his suffering. His dialog with 3 associates demonstrates a shift from the objective view of consequence as accident to anger over the cruelty of the affliction as a punishment.

His associates were unyielding in the expression of the opinion that his suffering must have been retribution for offense. They berated him further for his refusal to agree with their judgement.

Job's argument against the presumption of divine retribution was expressed in angry opposition to the statements made by the associates who had become his accusers. Baldath made the statement that present adversities always arise because of past sins.

Job responded by saying that their punishment was much worse than any offense made by him. He felt that his accusers were assuming divine authority with their judgment. He wanted his words to be recorded as testimony against the ease with which his accusers shifted their perceptions to justify the cruelty of the affliction as though it were divine punishment.

Job 19:23-25

'O that my words were written down!
O that they were inscribed in a book!
O that with an iron pen and with lead
they were engraved on a rock for ever!
I know that my Redeemer lives.
At the last he will stand upon the earth.'

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

I would that my words were engraved in stone
to serve as testimony for those who wish to atone.

I know my Redeemer lives though I have been gravely afflicted.
Love is the reward that is given for faith for which thought is restricted.

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

Roman Influence in Thessalonica

Thessalonican Amphitheater


Cicero (106-43 BCE) was a Roman statesman, orator, lawyer and philosopher. He had never been friendly towards the first triumvirate. He was specifically against Julius Caesar and his social reform. Caesar had always been fairly cordial to Cicero despite this.

Cicero’s political views became more conservative in contrast to the social reforms being proposed by Julius Caesar, Gaius Antonius and Catiline between 66 and 63 BCE.

Cicero received the consulship of 63-62 BCE at the minimum age (42).  He was consul prior, the consul who had won by the most votes. He was also a novus homo or the first man in his family to be elected to the office.

A consul held the highest elected political office of the Roman Republic (509 to 27 BCE). Ancient Romans considered the consulship the highest level of the 'cursus honorum.' The 'course of honor' was an ascending sequence of public offices to which politicians aspired.

The citizens of Rome elected two consuls to serve jointly for a one-year term each year. The consuls alternated in holding imperium each day. A consul's imperium extended over Rome and all its provinces.

The consuls were not the highest office in Rome's republican heritage after the establishment of the Empire (27 BCE). The emperor was necessarily consul prior when elected to the office.

When the first triumvirate between Caesar, Pompey and Crassus was originally founded Caesar had made suggestions to Cicero with the possible view to include him in the alliance. It was Cicero’s principles regarding the constitution for the republic that averted any such eventuality.

Cicero stayed in Thessalonica during 58 BCE when he was exiled from Rome.

Thessaloniki's acropolis was built in 55 BCE for security reasons. It was situated in the northern hills following Thracian raids in the city's outskirts at the time. The 'high city' was a settlement in ancient Greece.

It was a citadel built upon an area of elevated ground. The elevation was frequently a hill with precipitous sides that was chosen for purposes of defense. An acropolis also had a function of a religious sanctuary. Sacred springs highlighted its religious significance.

The city contained a amphitheater where entertainment in the form of gladiatorial shows were held for the local citizens. A circus was also exhibited in the amphitheater for the amusement of the citizens. The games were held at the same time as the circus.

Cicero was under duty to govern the province of Cilicia from 51-50 BCE. When he arrived back at Rome the city was on the edge of civil war. When it finally toppled into that abyss Cicero left the city once more.

The Roman general Pompey the Great used Thessalonica as one of his chief bases during his civil war with Julius Caesar from 49-47 BCE. This put the city on the senatorial side of the war.

It was only in 47 BCE when Caesar and Pompey had finally settled their differences that he thought it safe to return to the city. Things did not exactly get better for him. This time it was for private, rather than public, reasons.

Cicero divorced his wife Terentia in 46 BCE. He had been married to her for almost thirty years. He married Publilia, who had been his ward, shortly afterwards.

The next year grief struck Cicero when his daughter Tullia died. The lack of sympathy that his second wife showed led to her also being divorced. Matters were made worse for Cicero by the fact that it was becoming ever more apparent that Caesar was not going to reinstitute the republican constitution.

Thessalonica proved loyal to the second triumvirate between Antony, Octavian and Lepidus after Caesar was murdered in 44 BCE. It was rewarded by receiving the status and privileges of a "civitas liberas" (Pliny, NH, iv.36).

The free city was granted certain tax exemptions.  It was a self-governed city during the Hellenistic and Roman Imperial eras. The status was given by the king or emperor, who supervised the city's affairs through his epistates or curator. The prosperity of Thessalonica in this period is attested by a prolific production of coinage.

Thessalonica was important, not only as a harbor with a large import and export trade, but also as the principal station on the great Via Egnatia, the highway from the Adriatic to the Hellespont.

The Roman province of Macedonia was controlled by the empire during the time of Paul's visit to Thessalonica. Each province was ruled by a Roman who was appointed as governor. Provinces were generally governed by politicians of senatorial rank, usually former consuls or former praetors.

The Latin word provincia originally meant any task or set of responsibilities assigned by the Roman Senate to an individual who held 'imperium.' The 'right of command' was often a military authority within a specified theater of operations.

Magistrates were elected to office for a period of one year under the Roman republic. Those serving outside the city of Rome such as consuls acting as generals on a military campaign, were assigned a particular provincia, the scope of authority within which they exercised their command.

The territory of a people who were defeated in war might be brought under various forms of treaty. Complete subjection (deditio) was applied in certain cases.

The formal annexation of a territory created a province in the modern sense of an administrative unit that is geographically defined. Republican-period provinces were administered in one-year terms by the consuls and praetors who had held office the previous year and who were invested with imperium.

The terms of provincial governors often had to be extended for multiple years (prorogatio), and on occasion the senate awarded imperium even to private citizens (privati). Pompey the Great was an example.

Prorogation undermined the republican constitutional principle of annual elected magistracies. The amassing of disproportionate wealth and military power by a few men through their provincial commands was a major factor in the transition from a republic to imperial autocracy.

Thessalonica was a free city which had a cosmopolitan population with a large Jewish community that was visited by the apostle Paul about 52 CE.

Paul's Second Missionary Journey


When Paul visited Thessalonica for the first time he had recently come from Philippi. He reported that he had “already suffered and been shamefully mistreated” (1 Thess. 2:2; Philppns. 1:30). It may reasonably be assumed that he had reached Macedonia by way of a journey through Galatia during which he would have founded the churches there.

Paul’s companions were Silas and Timothy. Paul’s preaching appears to have met with good success (1 Thess. 1:6-10; 2:1, 13). His message was received in spite of persecution (1 Thess. 1:6). The gentile makeup of the congregation is made evident by Paul’s recollection that they had turned from idols to serve the living and true God (1 Thess. 1:9).

Paul’s original preaching emphasized monotheism, the death and resurrection of Christ and his imminent Parousia [or coming again]. Paul presupposed in the letter their knowledge that salvation will come “through our Lord Jesus Christ, who died for us . . . ” (1 Thess. 5:9-10). Paul had probably informed them not only of the imminence of the Parousia but also of its unexpectedness (1 Thess. 5:2).

Paul probably discussed the resurrection of believers during his first visit, but neglected to explain the connection between resurrection and Parousia. He had stated the importance of the observance of moral standards and warned of persecution. He made it clear that he had delivered their moral instruction in no fewer than four places (1 Thess. 4:1, 2, 6, 11).

Paul had instructed them to be monogamous, monotheistic and to abstain from sexual immorality (1 Thess. 4:1-6). He had also charged them to be diligent in their work and to be a model of conduct to outsiders (1 Thess. 4:11-12).

Paul became removed from Thessalonica, but Silas and Timothy stayed nearby in Berea. He tried to re-visit but was stopped (1 Thes 2:18). He sent Timothy to Thessalonica (1 Thes 3:1). Timothy reported back regarding Thessalonica church health.

He wrote 1 Thessalonians shortly after his arrival in Corinth. It was not long after he left Thessalonica.

This portion of the second letter to the Thessalonians makes a reference to the rebellion as an antecedent to the parousia.

Parousia is an ancient Greek word meaning presence, arrival, or official visit. The term was used in the East as a technical expression to denote the arrival or visit of a king or emperor from the Ptolemaic period to the second century of the Common Era.

The word is mainly used in Christian theology to refer to the second coming of Christ. It is found in the New Testament 24 times. The word held a special signficance for the Thessalonians with respect for the use of the city by Pompey to rebel against the rule of Caesar.

2 Thess. 2:1-5

As to the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our being gathered together to him, we beg you, brothers and sisters, not to be quickly shaken in mind or alarmed, either by spirit or by word or by letter as though from us, to the effect that the day of the Lord is already here. Let no one deceive you in any way; for the day will not come unless the rebellion comes first and the lawless one is revealed, the one destined for destruction. He opposes and exalts himself above every so-called god or object of worship, that he takes his seat in the temple of God, declaring himself to be God. Do you not remember that I told you these things when I was still with you?

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The second coming of Christ will not occur until after the rebellion.
The lawless one will be revealed when Mars is in the carnelian aphelion.

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

The Imperial Pontifex
of Constantine
Pontifex Maximus
The Highest Priest

The 'Pontifex Maximus' was the 'greatest priest' of the College of Pontiffs (Colleguim Pontificum) in Ancient Rome. The term in office for the priest was not for a fixed period. It was for life.

The College of Pontiffs was a body whose members were the highest-ranking priests of the state religion. The Romans thought of themselves as highly religious. They attributed their success as a world power to their collective piety (pietas) in maintaining good relations with the gods.

The presence of Greeks on the Italian peninsula from the beginning of the historical period influenced Roman culture. Some religious practices were introduced that became as fundamental as the cult of Apollo.

The Romans looked for common ground between their major gods and those of the Greeks (interpretatio graeca). They adapted Greek myths and iconography for Latin literature and Roman art.

The Etruscan religion was also a major influence, particularly on the practice of augury. Most of Rome's religious institutions could be traced to its founders according to legends. Numa Pompilius was the Sabine second king of Rome who negotiated directly with the gods.

This archaic religion was the foundation of the mos maiorum, "the way of the ancestors" or simply "tradition", viewed as central to Roman identity.

Roman religion was practical and contractual, based on the principle of do ut des, "I give that you might give". Religion depended on knowledge and the correct practice of prayer, ritual and sacrifice.

Latin literature preserves learned speculation on the nature of the divine and its relation to human affairs, but theology was limited to the explanation of natural phenomena. The rites did not entertain a place for a sermon.

The College of Pontiffs consisted of the Pontifex Maximus and the other pontifices, the Rex Sacrorum, the fifteen flamens, and the Vestals. The Rex Sacorum was a senatorial priesthood reserved for Patricians.

A flamen was a priest of the ancient Roman religion who was assigned to one of fifteen deities with official cults during the Roman Republic. The most important three were the flamines maiores (or "major priests"), who served the important Roman gods Jupiter, Mars and Quirinus.

Jupiter was the god of sky and administration. Mars was the god of war and the guardian of agriculture. He was the deity for the military.

The name Quirinus is derived from the Sabine word for 'spear.' He was most likely a Sabine god of war.

The Sabines had a settlement near the eventual site of Rome, and erected an altar to Quirinus on the Collis Quirinalis Quirinal Hill, one of the Seven hills of Rome. When the Romans settled in the area, the cult of Quirinus became part of their early belief system.

The Quirites were known as the men of the oaken spear. It is conceivable that they acted as a local militia or police force.

The Vestals were priestesses of Vesta, goddess of the hearth. The College of the Vestals and its well-being were regarded as fundamental to the continuance and security of Rome. They cultivated the sacred fire that was not allowed to go out.

The Vestals were freed of the usual social obligations to marry and bear children and took a 30-year vow of chastity in order to devote themselves to the study and correct observance of state rituals that were forbidden to the colleges of male priests

The College of Pontiffs was one of the four major priestly colleges; originally their responsibility was limited to supervising both public and private sacrifices, but as time passed their responsibilities increased.

The other colleges were the augurs (who read omens), the quindecimviri sacris faciundis ("fifteen men who carry out the rites"), and the Epulones (who set up feasts at festivals).

The title pontifex comes from the Latin for "bridge builder", a possible allusion to a very early role in placating the gods and spirits associated with the Tiber River, for instance.

The pontifex maximus was the most important member of the college. The pontifex maximus held the sole power in appointing members to the other priesthoods in the college until 104 BCE.

Religion was a part of daily life for ordinary Romans. Each home had a household shrine at which prayers and libations to the family's domestic deities were offered. Neighborhood shrines and sacred places such as springs and groves dotted the city.

The Roman calendar was structured around religious observances. Women, slaves, and children all participated in a range of religious activities. Some public rituals could be conducted only by the Vestals.

The main task of the pontifices was to maintain the pax deorum, the 'peace with the gods'. They gave advice to the magistrates, interpreted the omens, controlled the calendar and oversaw funerals for this goal.

The pontifex maximus was responsible for a large collection of omens (annales maximi). He wrote down the celestial and other signs each year and added the events that had followed the omens, so future generation would be able to better understand the divine will.

The pontifex maximus was elected by the comitia tributa or election tribute. The people were divided into voting districts. The taxes collected determined the vote. The ordinary pontifices were also elected after 104 BCE. They had been coopted until then.

Julius Caesar was elected pontifex maximus in 63 BCE. He kept the office until his death. The house where he spent the night before he was killed was the domus publica. Marcus Aemilius Lepidus became pontifex maximus (44-12 BCE) after his death.

When he died, the emperor Augustus became responsible for the state cult. He also put an end to the election of the pontifices. A position in the college of pontifices was a sign of special imperial favor from that point.

The pontifex maximus was recognized in public affairs by the iron knife (secespita). He killed the animal that was offered in sacrifice.

The  derivative "pontiff" later became terms used for Catholic bishops including the bishop or Rome.

Kohen Gadol
The High Priest

The High Priest or Kohen Gadol in Judaism was the religious leader for the Jewish people. He stood at the top of the chain of command tasked with running the Temple’s operations.

His role extended from Aaron in ancient times until the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE.
The Torah gives a detailed account of the inauguration of the first-ever High Priest. The Israelites were gathered at the Tabernacle.

Moses acted as interim Kohen Gadol. He brought a series of sacrifices, dressed Aaron and his sons in the priestly garments, anointed them with oil and smeared blood on their ears, fingers and toes. This represented the blood that the offering of animal sacrifice included.

Aaron and his sons also brought an inaugural flour offering that was to be boiled, baked and fried before being burnt on the altar.

The only parts of the ceremony that were included in subsequent High Priest inaugurations were the anointment with special oil (shemen hamishchah), being dressed with the eight garments of the High Priest and the inaugural flour offering (minchat chinuch).

The High Priest belonged to the Jewish priestly familes that traced their paternal line back to Aaron through Zadok, a leading priest in the time of David and Solomon. This tradition came to an end in the 2nd century BCE during the rule of the Hasmoneans. The position was then occupied by priestly families unrelated to Zadok.

It was the job of the High Priest to oversee the Temple service.  His most prominent responsibility was entering the Holy of Holies on Yom Kippur.

The Yom Kippur service mirrored the typical holiday service with two sacrifices, daily incense burnt twice, special holiday offerings and the lighting of the menorah. Atonement offerings were brought for the High Priest, his family, the priests and the nation as a whole.

The High Priest was required to carry out all of the services himself on Yom Kippur. An additional incense offering was also brought. This was the unique service performed in the Holy of Holies.

The political authority of the Priest grew during the times of occupation by foreign powers. Messianic sovereignty was attributed to a member of the royal house, while religious affairs were reserved to the high-priesthood, represented in the Book of Zechariah by Joshua.

The high priest also became a political chief of the congregation as the Messianic hope or even the hope of autonomy under foreign (Persian, Greek, Egyptian or Syrian) suzerainty became weaker in the course of time.

The consideration shown him by the suzerain powers and their viceroys induced the effect of the increasingly thorough acceptance of the Levitical code by pious Judeans.

The assumption of the princely authority by the Maccabean high priests during the Hasmonean dynasty was merely the final link in this development. The ideals of the politico-Messianic and the religio-Levitical were combined in one office beginning with the death of Zerubbabel.

When the brief heyday of national independence had come to an inglorious close, the high-priesthood changed again in character insofar as it ceased to be a hereditary and a life office during the Herodian dynasty in the Roman occupation.

High priests were appointed and removed with great frequency. This may account for the otherwise strange use of the title in the plural (ἀρχιερεῖς) in the New Testament and in Josephus.

The high priest was looked upon as exercising authority in all things, political, legal, and sacerdotal in the post-Maccabean period.  The presidency of the Sanhedrin was almost certainly vested in the high priest.

The major distinction between the Pharisees and the Sadducees was belief in the Resurrection. The Pharisees were a social movement and a school of thought in the Holy Land during the time of Second Temple Judaism. They were associated with the development of synagogues in post-exilic Judean society. The Sadducees were aligned with temple worship.

Josephus (37 – c. 100 CE) is believed by many historians to be a Pharisee. He estimated the total Pharisee population before the fall of the Second Temple to be around 6,000.

Josephus claimed that Pharisees received the full support and goodwill of the common people in contrast to the Sadducees who were in the upper class.

Pharisees claimed Mosaic authority for their interpretation of Jewish Laws. Sadducees represented the authority of the priesthood established since the days of Solomon when Zadok, their ancestor, officiated as High Priest.

The phrase "common people" in Josephus' writings suggests that most Jews were distinguished from the main liturgical groups.

The letter to the Hebrews attributes the title of High Priest to Jesus, but there are gospel accounts that describe his activity as a judge who made statements about important religious controversies. The following account from the gospel of Luke relates how he made a statement about the resurrection to those who did not believe that such a thing existed.

Luke 20:27-35

Some Sadducees, those who say there is no resurrection, came to him and asked him a question, 'Teacher, Moses wrote for us that if a man's brother dies, leaving a wife but no children for his brother. Now there were seven brothers; the first married and died childless; then the second. The third married her. So it was in the same way all seven died childless. Finally the woman also died. Whose wife will the woman be in the resurrection? The seven had married her.'

Jesus said to them, 'Those who belong to this age marry and are given in marriage; but those who are considered worthy of a place in that age and in the resurrection from the dead neither marry nor are given in marriage. Indeed they cannot die any more, because they are like angels and are children of God, being children of the resurrection.'

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Marriage is not the sole consideration in the determination of leadership.
The children of the resurrection are like angels in political delearship.

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

Early analytic philosophy tended to avoid the study of philosophy of religion. It was grouped with the study of ethics by logical positivists as metaphysical and meaningless. The demise of logical positivism renewed interest in the philosophy of religion.

Philosophers like Alvin Plantinga, Richard Swinburne and Antony Flew not only introduced new topics, but returned to classical issues such as the nature of miracles, theistic arguments, the problem of evil, the rationality of faith, concepts on the nature of God and many more.

Plantinga and Flew debated the logical validity of free will to defend the choice of good despite the problem of evil. Analytic epistemology and metaphysics has formed the basis for a number of philosophically-sophisticated theistic arguments.

The philosophy of language has established the analysis of the logic of statements about reality as the objective for the discernment of meaning in communication.

This modern form for wisdom has precedents in the concepts of the Word or Logos. Reason was viewed as the way to order thought for action. Duty was ordered as automated action for happiness.

The work of Plato shows that there was a movement in philosophy to convert religion from the stories about the immorality of the gods in polytheism to the morality of the moral code in monotheism. This concern for the monad was expressed even earlier in the Eleatic school.

Nature lies within the universe. The concept of God allows for contrast with that which is within the universe and the divine being which is posited as the Creator of it.

The paradox of Zeno removed that which was pragmatic from the logical description of reality in order to demonstrate the role that language plays in the description.

Logic is the general form for reason. It has to balance the ideal with pragmatic concern in order to describe things realistically.

Logic is the general form for reason.

Chn. 逻辑是理性的一般形式.
Luójí shì lǐxìng de yībān xíngshì.

Jpn. 論理は理性のための一般的な形式です.
Ronri wa risei no tame no ippantekina keishikidesu. 

Krn. 논리는 일반적인 이유입니다.
Nonlineun ilbanjeog-in iyuibnida.

Pre-Socratic Logic

Elea, Italy
Ruins

The pre-Socratics preceded the life of Socrates (470-399 BCE). They were the forerunners of what became natural philosophy in the West. Knowledge mined from the study of nature later developed into the natural sciences (such as physics, chemistry, geology and astronomy).

Their efforts were directed to the investigation of the ultimate basis and essential nature of the external world. They sought the material principle (archê) of things and the method of their origin or disappearance.

The study of rhetoric and logic was started.

Pythagoras of Samos (an Aegean island) arrived in Croton in southern Italy in the last quarter of the 6th century. He established a community of followers who adopted his political views, which favored rule by the “better people,” and also the way of life he recommended on what seem to have been more or less philosophical bases.

There were two traditions about Pythagoras. One meshed with the traditional view and associates Pythagoras with political tyrants. Another credited him with rejecting tyrannies for aristocracies that might not have been grounded in wealth. The latter case is more likely.

The early Pythagoreans conceived of nature as a structured system ordered by number. Post-Parmenidean Pythagoreans such as Philolaus lived more than a generation after Pythagoras' death. Archytas lived in the late 5th to early 4th century.

Either held more complicated views about the relation between mathematics and cosmology than it is reasonable to suppose Pythagoras himself could have advanced.

Aristotle (384-322 BCE) attributed the discovery of the art of dialectic to Zeno the Eleatic (495-422 BCE). Dialectic is the art of discussing the truth of opinions. Zeno was third among the leaders of the Eleatic school.

The Greek colony of Elea was in southern Italy. The colony was  south of Naples. It is now known as Velia.

The Eleatics emphasized the doctrine of the One. Xenophanes (570-470 BC) declared God to be the eternal unity. The One permeated the universe and governed it by his thought.

Parmenides (510-440 BC) affirmed the one unchanging existence to be alone true and capable of being conceived. Multitude and change were defined as appearance without reality.

His investigation explored the nature of philosophical inquiry. It concentrated less on knowledge or understanding than on what can be understood with the language.

He composed a poem in Homeric hexameters that narrated the story of a young man (kouros) who was taken to a goddess who promised to teach him all things. The goddess didn't give him knowledge of the things, she gave the kouros the tools to acquire that knowledge himself. 

The goddess showed him the paths of being or opinion. The right way of thinking was to think of what-is. The wrong way was to think of both what-is and what-is-not. 

Parmenides was the inventor of metaphysics as the inquiry into the nature of being or reality. While the tenets of his thought have their home in poetry, they are expressed with the force of logic. The Parmenidean logic of being thus sparked a long lineage of inquiry into the nature of thought.

The doctrine of the One doctrine was defended by his younger countryman Zeno of Elea (490-430 BC) in a polemic against the common opinion which sees in things multitude, becoming and change.

Zeno propounded a number of celebrated paradoxes, much debated by later philosophers, which try to show that supposing that there is any change or multiplicity leads to contradictions.

Zeno paid particular attention to the contrast between the requirements of logical argument and the evidence of the senses.

He is now and in antiquity best known for the four famous paradoxes of motion. He purported to show that despite the evidence all around us the ordinary motion of everyday experience is impossible.

The paradoxes claim that motions can never be begun (the Achilles), be completed (the Dichotomy), entail contradictions (the Moving Blocks) or are altogether impossible (the Arrow). Logical argument is explicated in the description of the paradoxes.

Socrates

Socrates was a stonemason who had served as a Hoplite in the Peloponnesian War. The conflict between Athens and Sparta stretched intermittently over a period spanning 431 to 404 BCE.

Socrates was active for Athens in the battles of Amphipolis (422), Delium (424) and Potidaea (432) according to his testimony in the Apology.

Athens was a democracy whereas Sparta had two monarchs who ruled as a military dictatorship. The more aristocratic Athenian families tended to favor the rigid and restricted hierarchy of power in Sparta instead of the more widespread democratic distribution of power with free speech for the citizens in Athens.

Plato placed praise for Sparta in the mouth of his character Socrates more than once. Such praise was expressed in Protagoras, Crito and Republic.

Sparta finally defeated Athens in 404 BCE. It was just five years before Socrates’ trial and execution. They installed as rulers a small group of Athenians who were loyal to Spartan interests.

These were called "The Thirty." It was reported that they executed a number of wealthy Athenians and confiscated their property. Others were arrested or exiled for democratic sympathies.

The Thirty were led by Critias, a known associate of Socrates and a member of his circle. The Thirty were overthrown in 403 BCE by a group of democratic exiles returning to the city. It was reported that Critias was killed. The Spartans brokered an accord and installed a different government.

Plato's Meno is set in 402 BCE. It imagines a dialog between Socrates and Anytus. Anytus argues that instruction in virtue is not limited to the elite or privileged few. Socrates argued that one should consult an expert in virtue to learn about it.

The Socrates portrayed in Apology, Crito, Phaedo and Symposium concurs with description provided in other sources. The Platonic Socrates as demonstrated in these dialogs is a representation of the actual Socrates as he lived in history.

Xenophon is more reliable as a source of historical information insofar as he wrote as a historian. Plato wrote as a dramatist. He was prone to use the character Socrates as a vehicle for his ideas.

Xenophon reports that because youths were not allowed to enter the Agora, the central open space for a Greek city state, they used to gather in workshops surrounding it. Socrates frequented these shops in order to converse with the merchants.

Socrates and his contemporaries lived in a polytheistic society. The stories of the gods recounted in Hesiod, Homer and the like describe a world that was not created by the gods. They themselves were created and intervened in the affairs of humans.

Aphrodite saving Paris from death at the hands of Menelaus in the Iliad. Zeus sent Apollo to rescue the corpse of Sarpedon after his death in battle in the same epic.

They were not defined as omniscient, omnibenevolent or eternal. They were constrained to respond to what they witnessed or reports about what had been witnessed.

The story about the experience of the oracle at Delphi is well known, but there are variants with an important distinction. Whereas in Plato’s Apology the oracle tells Chaerephon that no one is wiser than Socrates, in Xenophon’s Apology Socrates claims that the oracle stated that no one was more free, just or moderate than him.

Socrates was reputed to have said, "I know that I don't know." He used this statement to question the definitions of concepts presented by those who claimed certain knowledge about something.

Certainty in the claim to knowledge was diminished, but the essential definition of key terms was analyzed and clarified. Even when it seemed that certainty regarding a definition was destroyed, logical clarity was refined with proximity to the conception of definition.

The theology expressed by Plato's Socrates was more Eleatic than conventional. The blind acceptance of dictates from the gods was not promoted. Monotheism was posited as the basis for questioning cultural conventions regarding the perception of nature. Belief in the One was the reason for analytical philosophy.

Aristotle (384-322 BCE)

Aristotle made it evident in his Organon (343) that the demand for a regulative art of scientific discourse was created by the logic of debate as influenced by the Eleatic school. The case paralleled the rise of the art of rhetoric.

Aristotle regarded Empedocles (495-435 BCE) as the originator of that art as he had referred the beginnings of dialectic to Zeno (495-425). The essential principles of logic and rhetoric were operative and effective in practice in lawsuits before Aristotle gave them their abstract formulation. The formulation of both arts in well-rounded systems came much later.

While the Pre-Socratics did not document a formal system of logic even in the Eleatic school, it is more significant that they either received from their predecessors or themselves developed the conceptions and the presuppositions on which Aristotelian logic is founded.

Bertrand Russell called Aristotle's principles of logic laws in 1912.

The identity principle is drawn from the verb 'to be'. When something exists, it is. This is expressed symbolically as p = p. If rain is heard, seen or felt, it means that it is raining. If a person exists, he or she is alive.

The non-contradiction principle says that logic can be used to distinguish one thing from another. Being alive is distinguished from not being alive. This is expressed as ~(p and ~p) where ~ means 'not.' It is not the case that a person is alive and not alive.

The principle of the excluded middle asserts that everything must either be or not be. This principle is particularly significant in that implies the logical abstraction of truth. To say that what is, is not, is false. It is also false to say that what is not, is. The truth then is p or ~p.

Some one or some thing is alive or it is not. These principles are logical operations of thought for a personal perspective, yet the principles propose there is a reality that is true. I think that is the reason the Russell called them laws of logic. The principles point to something larger in truth with respect for law.

Stoic Propositions

Stoic logic is the system of propositional logic developed by the Stoic philosophers in ancient Greece. The Stoic school was centered in Athens.

A stoa was a classical portico or roofed colonnade. It is conceivable that instruction was given in the public space under the protection of the roof over the corridor. The Athenian Agora had four, possibly five, stoas that lined the southern, western and northern sides of the public area.

The "Painted Stoa" was a building in Athens where Zeno of Citium met his followers and taught. Later adherents of this philosophical tradition were given the name "Stoic" from their association with this place.

Stoic logic was one of the two great systems that analyzed language in the classical world. It was largely built and shaped by Chrysippus (c.279-206 BCE), the third head of the Stoic school in the 3rd-century BCE.

Chrysippus's logic differed from Aristotle's  because it was based on the analysis of propositions rather than terms. The smallest unit in Stoic logic is an assertible. This was the Stoic equivalent for a proposition.

The assertible is the content of a statement such as "it is day". An assertible is “that which subsists in accordance with a rational impression.” Rational impressions are those alterations of the commanding faculty whose content can be exhibited in language.

The Stoics held that being (ὄντα) is material. Not all things (τινά) are. They accepted the distinction between abstract and concrete bodies, but rejected Aristotle's belief that purely incorporeal being exists as the Unmoved Mover.

The Stoics defined the Universe as a material, reasoning substance, known as God or Nature. This was divided into the active and passive classes.

They accepted the idea that if an object is hot, it is because some part of a universal heat body had entered the object.

Assertibles have a truth-value such that at any moment of time is either true or false. This looks like modern proposition theory, but propositions (axiômata) are one subspecies of Stoic assertibles.

It would be a mistake to assimilate this sub-class too closely to modern theories of propositions. Modern theories tend to treat propositions as untensed and time-indexed.

The statement “It’s warm  today” expresses the proposition that it is warm in a particular location at the time the statement is made. That’s different from the same statement with the use of those same words tomorrow.

If it is cold tomorrow and what is said by means of the words “It is warm today” is false, then the meaning of the proposition changed, not the truth content.

The sub-text that there is a temperature that indicates how warm or cold it is retains a constant relative value to the observation. The tenseless and time-indexed propositions allow variability in the measure of the truth value.

The modern proposition entertains the question, 'How warm is it?' or 'What is the temperature?' within the context of the statement.

Stoic axiômata are crucially different in this respect. The Stoic theory holds invariant the identity of the assertible corresponding to an utterance on different occasions, but allows its truth value to change.

Compound assertibles can be built up from simple ones through the use of logical connectives. The resulting syllogistic was grounded on five basic indemonstrable arguments to which all other syllogisms were claimed to be reducible.

Stoics outlined what we have control over categories of our own action, thoughts and reaction. The Enchiridion states that opinion, pursuit, desire, aversion and actions are under our control. Body, property, reputation, command and those actions that are not ours are not in our control.

The Stoics are especially known for teaching that "virtue is the only good" for human being. External things such as health, wealth and pleasure are not good or bad in themselves (adiaphora), but have value as "material for virtue to act upon".

Stoics such as Seneca and Epictetus emphasized that because "virtue is sufficient for happiness", a sage would be emotionally resilient to misfortune in a manner comparable to Job.

The belief that health and happiness were subordinate to virtue left the door open for excess in ascetic imposition. Seneca went so far as to recommend that parents cheer their children on for bravery when they were being beaten.

Seneca's position in the administration of Nero was suspect for the tolerance of the reports of assassination, violence and cruelty as something outside of our control even in terms of opinion.

Stoicism was esteemed more than the philosophy of Aristotle or Epicurus throughout the Roman world until the 3rd century CE. Emperor Marcus Aurelius was among its adherents. It experienced a decline after Christianity became the state religion in the 4th century. 

The Logic of Gottlob Frege

Gottlob Frege (1848—1925) played a crucial role in the emergence of modern logic and analytic philosophy. He was born on November 8, 1848 in the coastal city of Wismar in Northern Germany.

His father, Karl Alexander Frege, and his mother, Auguste (Bialloblotzsky) Frege, both worked at a girl's private school founded in part by Karl. Karl held the position until his death 1866, when Auguste took over until her death in 1878.

Gottlob studied at the Gymnasium in Wismar from 1864-1869.  He began studies at the University of Jena in the Spring of 1869. He studied chemistry, philosophy and mathematics. He transferred to the University of Göttingen after 4 semesters. He studied mathematics and physics, as well as philosophy of religion under Hermann Lotze.

Lotze’s main philosophical significance was as a contributor to an anti-Hegelian objectivist movement in German-speaking Europe. The publication of the first editions of his Metaphysics (1841) and Logic (1843) constituted the third wave of this movement.

Lotze advanced an objectivist philosophy that did not start from the subject-object opposition. He insisted that this opposition  is based on a metaphysical relation that is more fundamental. He promoted the “universal inner connection of all reality” by uniting all objects and terms in a comprehensive, ordered arrangement.

Humanity was the microcosm to the universe as the macrocosm. The fundamental metaphysical and logical problems of philosophy are to be discussed and answered through the lens of the microcosm. The specific perceptual and rational characteristics of human beings are the lens for wisdom.

Frege finished his doctoral dissertation, under the guidance of Ernst Schering in late 1873.  He received a lectureship at the University of Jena in 1874. He stayed there the rest of his intellectual life.

Concept Script (Begriffsschrift) was published as his first major work in logic in 1879. He presented his invention of a new method for the construction of a logical language.

The book was not well received. His contemporaries found its two-dimensional logical notation difficult to comprehend. They failed to see its advantages over previous approaches such as that of Boole.

The Foundations of Arithmetic was published in 1884. Frege refuted other theories of number and developed his own.


He wanted to show that all of the basic truths of arithmetic could be derived from purely logical axioms. He decided to describe his logicist views informally in ordinary language in argument against rival views on the advice of his colleague Carl Stumpf.

Frege objected to any account of mathematics based on psychologism. Math and numbers are not strictly relative to the subjective thoughts of the people who think of them. Psychological accounts appeal to what is subjective, while mathematics is objective.

Mathematical entities have objective properties regardless of whether or not they are recognized as such. He draws a fundamental distinction between logic and psychology. Logic explains things as they are. Psychology studies certain thought processes in individual minds.

He criticized Kant mainly on the grounds that numerical statements are not synthetic-a priori, but rather analytic. Kant claimed  that 7 + 5 = 12 is an unprovable synthetic statement. No matter how much the idea of 7 + 5 is analyzed, the idea of 12 will not be found. The idea of 12 is derived by application to objects in the intuition.

Frege argued that the truth of the equation can be derived without intuition. When 7 objects are added to 5, the total is 12. Mathematical calculation is consistent between smaller and larger numbers by way of analysis. Smaller sums are demonstrated with objects, until the pattern for addition is determined as a process that adds the numbers to obtain the sum.

The abstraction of addition moves from objects to units. A number line assists in the demonstration of the consistency between the two. Add 5 units to 7 on the number line and the addition results in 12. The capacity for mental math moves the abstraction further into the concept of numbers.

When this process is expressed in the general form, it means that any number of units added to a number of units results in the sum for the two numbers. That is to say a + b = c.

The truth of the equation 654,768 + 436,382 = 1,091,150 can be affirmed without the intuition of the numbers or the counting of objects.  Particular numerical statements such as 1 + 2 = 3 are distinct from general statements such as a + b = b + a, but the latter are as true as the former. The equation is the object for analysis in either case.

Frege criticized J. S. Mill's theory of number as too empirical. Mill's idea that numbers correspond to the various ways of splitting collections of objects into subcollections is inconsistent with confidence in calculations involving large numbers.

The operation of addition cannot be limited to physical quantities for the simple reason that large quantities won't be calculated if they can't be counted as physical objects. 

Frege agreed that geometry is synthetic a priori, but argued that arithmetic must be analytic. It is objective in between intuition and sense perception.

He argued that numbers are objects that assert something about a concept. Numbers are also the extensions of concepts. The number of F's' is defined as the extension of the concept G as a concept that is equinumerous to F. The concept in question leads to an equivalence class of all concepts that have the number F (including F).

The book can be considered the starting point in analytic philosophy, since it revolves mainly around the analysis of language with the goal of clarifying the concept of number.

Frege developed new and interesting theories regarding the nature of language, functions, concepts and philosophical logic in the late 1880's and early 1890's.  His views were published in influential articles such as "Funktion und Begriff" ("Function and Concept", 1891), "Über Sinn und Bedeutung" ("On Sense and Reference", 1892) and "Über Begriff und Gegenstand" ("On Concept and Object", 1892). 

Frege's logical ideas spread through the writings of his student Rudolf Carnap (1891–1970) and other admirers, particularly Bertrand Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889–1951).
He died on July 26, 1925 in Bad Kleinen, Germany.

Gottlob Frege
S. 哥德叶弗雷加
T. 哥德葉弗雷加

哥 Ge    older brother             哥 ka          big brother          Go   ごっ  ゴッ       Go 고 go                 
德 de    morality                     德 toku      morality                to     と      ト          teu 트 t                   
叶 xie   in harmony                葉  yo         leaf                       ro    ろ-   ロ-            lo  로 in               
弗 Fu    not                             弗  futsu     dollar                    bu    ぶ     ブ           beu브 bro       
雷 lei   terrific                        雷  rai         thunder                  Fu    ふ     フ           Peu프 f       
加 jia    add                             加  ka         add                        re     れ      レ           le  레  re
                                                                                                ga     が     ガ            ga 가   end

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

Logic points to truth.
Science is the sleuth.

Number is a concept
that describes size inside the content.

Truth defines morality
with respect for health in reality.

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


Peirce made extensive contributions to mathematical logic. He was an innovator in mathematics, statistics, philosophy, research methodology and various sciences, but he defined himself as a logician. He saw logic as the formal branch of semiotics or the study of signs.

The general study of signs that began in Latin with Augustine culminated with the 1632 Tractatus de Signis of John Poinsot. Peirce drew up a "new list of categories" in 1867. He aimed to base his list directly upon experience as constituted by the action of signs.

His list contrasted with the one in Aristotle's categories. Aristotle aimed to articulate within experience the dimension of being that is independent of experience and knowable as such through human comprehension. Peirce included animal life.

The estimative powers of animals interpret the environment as sensed to form a "meaningful world" of objects. The objects of this world are logically reduced to desirable (+), undesirable (--) or safe to ignore (0).

Peirce distinguished between the interpretant and the interpreter. The interpretant is the internal, mental representation that mediates between the object and its sign. The interpreter is the human who creates the interpretant.

The "interpretant" notion opened the way to understanding an action of signs beyond the realm of animal life. This was an advance over Latin Age semiotics.

The process of communication relies on the use of codes. A code may be the individual sounds or letters used to form words. Body movements are codified to show attitude or emotion. Clothing is also used to make a statement.

The community must agree on a simple meaning within the language. The word has to convey meaning within the grammatical structures and codes of the language. These codes regarding syntax in grammar, order in reason and the truth of opinion represent the values of the culture. They can add shades of connotation to any aspect of life.

Peirce wrote his paper "How to Make Our Ideas Clear" in 1878. The distinction between clear and obscure ideas is regarded as a property of modern logic.

"A clear idea is defined as one which is so apprehended that it will be recognized wherever it is met with, and so that no other will be mistaken for it. If it fails of this clearness, it is said to be obscure." (Text: How to Make Our Ideas Clear)

Clearness is qualifed as familiarity with an idea. A distinct idea is defined as one which contains nothing which is not clear. An idea is distinctly apprehended when a precise definition of it is applied in abstract terms.

Descartes challenged the practice of looking to established authority as the ultimate source of truth. The goddess had provided the young man with logic as the way to discern truth with the use of language in the poem of Parmenides of Elea. The young man had to explore things for himself.

Logic was a tool for investigation. The young man was given the ability to look at reality with his reason. He was not directed to form dependence upon the claims to authority in the statements that had been made by others.

Descartes made an error in the rejection of all that had been discovered by others. The test of dialectical examination allows for agreement with statements made by the authority of investigation.

He made the effort nonetheless to express agreement with the propositions made by others in terms of his personal expression.

Leibniz was more abstract in his logical reason. The clearness of his exposition lost something in general discerment of proximity to the personal perspective.

C.S. Peirce (1839-1914)
Popular Science: Logic

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Have

7.28.19
Lori Loughlin

Have
Faith
有信心 
Yǒu xìnxīn
信仰を持っている
Shinkō o motte iru
ps85
Credunt

The waning crescent retreats.
Courage it will seek.

Leadership will find
the beauty that binds.

The word will be heard
in the course of time for sure.

The hunter seeks his prey
in fields of green with sage.

His truck waits to take the game away.
Heaven had been set ablaze.

The elements blended in colors that amazed
with each passing phase.

One more powerful is coming after me
to build upon what has passed through the storm for you to see
and believe in what has been tested by natural elementality.


The fan with the weather vane turns forever.
It wanes with the whirl on the rod that holds it together.

It spins and whirls when it wins with the wind
over the dust that blows against the grainage bin.

The dark hours for being
deepen my mind for seeing.

You, dear darkness.
You are above and all around us.
You provide cover from that which could cause a fuss,
but it is hard to see that which alarms because it can harm us.

The light that shines is reflected
to show that which can be detected.

Light from the waning moon is barely seen through the trees.
The empty field wants to believe that the dark heat can be relieved with a sneeze.

The stars twinkle when clouds do not obscure.
The viewing of the viewer is more certainly secure in the unsure
than the view of what's sure about what endures.

That which endures is there.
The vision of it is spare even when you stare.

I just don't care about finding the bear's lair.
I want to find the square corner of the stair
to my cubic welfare.

The power of less is more
when you're ruling out that which is not the door
you hope to procure.

Where is the emblem of my safety?
It is not so close that it will chafe me.

Let me hear that which will be spoken
about the hope that my work won't be stolen by the shogun.

There have been times when leadership was good.
Executive authority put the body on track towards what could
be done for the should of what we could do if only we would.

There was an override for policies headed for destruction.
Profit was limited to legal means for production
and construction.

Investment in employment
was used to cap spending for weapon deployment.

There was a context to balance the budget.
Responsibility produced integrity. Fate couldn't budge it.

There were times when lower legislation had placed itself over the law.
Liberal consensus sought to exploit the flaw.

Greed had been put over power.
Authority was aimed to make dissent cower.

It overrode anything for any reason
without accountability for the season.

Profit from destruction had been made absolute
It was the route for the suit to loot.

The official story was propaganda.
It sold terror by memoranda.

The report of war was not for winning.
The tale was told for the trill of spinning.

Exploitation was the name of the game.
People were sold by the flame of shame.

Official facts were organized around profit for personal gain.
The reign in Spain stayed mainly above the plain.

Liberal banks supported oil for the deployment of weapons.
Even the ozone was threatened as the essence of heaven.

Taking taxes by controlling government as a spoil of war
must have seemed easier than competition. It was the market's back door.

Favor for the objective goodness of provision
was subjected to the greatest derision.

The need to feed need instead of greed
became the commodity to seed with speed
so it wouldn't recede.

We must proceed
with the precision of the decision to lead.

Restoration will be achieved by faith.
Faith will make the tenacity of love our eighth wraith.
The wrath of this wraith will make us great.

Love will spring up from the ground.
Justice will ring as the sound
all around.

Where it had been said, 'You people are too odd'
they will be called 'Children of the living God.'

Providence will increase its yield.
Grain will grow in the field.

Goodness will shine from inside.
Purpose will act as our guide
to make the path to liberty
the probability of prosperity
for posterity with clarity
as our temerity.

Integrity in finding truth
will  define purpose for the voting booth.

Faith will restore us to power with integrity
to make equity the solidarity for our identity
in the density of necessity.

Peace is the reward for the faithful.
Happiness avoids pain and disdains the wasteful.

Have faith despite evidence to the contrary.
Knowledge in the library is a repository
to overcome the adversarial adversity
of the arbitrary.

You have been gracious to your land.
You have restored good fortune by your hand.

You have forgiven our iniquity.
You blotted out our errors from antiquity.

There is ubiquity in the sight of light.
We have been turned from the plight of blight
caused by the lack of insight.

What are the elemental spirits according to Christ?
What is benign about the design that partiality sacrificed?

Restore us to your favor
O God our Savior.

Let your admonishment
help us to learn with astonishment
that joy itself is an intoxicant.

Divine pleasure has been the treasure
that said your anger would not last forever.

Let us see your joy in our life again
that your people may rejoice as we ascend
to amend the error that condemned a friend
when a better way did contend
to lie ahead or descend.

Show us as your nation
the way to your salvation.

Music shapes feeling with sound
to make it easier to understand the meaning found.

I will listen to what the Lord God has said
when he spoke of peace as our daily bread
to those who turned their hearts to him to wed.

Honor the Father's name as holy
that the Son may govern his realm boldly.
Give us our daily bread in time
that we may avoid causing the damage identified as crime.
Forgive us our sins to help us find our way past error
that each in our way may be a Christ bearer.
Do not bring us to the time of trial
that we may learn to appeal to the rival
to derive benign survival without reprisal.

Have faith.
Peace is the reward for the grateful way. ;)

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

85 Benedixisti, Domine
Kindness in your land, Dominated

1 You have been gracious to your land, O Lord,
you have restored the good fortune of Jacob.
2 You have forgiven the iniquity of your people
and blotted out all their sins.
3 You have withdrawn all your fury
and turned yourself from your wrathful indignation.
4 Restore us then, O God our Savior;
let your anger depart from us.
5 Will you be displeased with us for ever?
will you prolong your anger from age to age?
6 Will you not give us life again,
that your people may rejoice in you?
7 Show us your mercy, O Lord,
and grant us your salvation.
8 I will listen to what the Lord God is saying,
for he is speaking peace to his faithful people
and to those who turn their hearts to him.
9 Truly, his salvation is very near to those who fear him,
that his glory may dwell in our land.
10 Mercy and truth have met together;
righteousness and peace have kissed each other.
11 Truth shall spring up from the earth,
and righteousness shall look down from heaven.
12 The Lord will indeed grant prosperity,
and our land will yield its increase.
13 Righteousness shall go before him,
and peace shall be a pathway for his feet.

---------------------------
Hosea 1:10

Yet the number of the people of Israel shall be like the sand of the sea, which can be neither measured nor numbered; and in the place where it was said to them, 'You are not my people' it will be said to them 'Children of the living God.'

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

Where it had been said, 'You people are too odd'
they will be callled 'Children of the living God.'

===================
Colossians 2:8

See to it that no one takes you captive through philosophy and empty deceit according to human tradition on the elemental spirits of the universe, not according to Christ.

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

What are the elemental spirits according to Christ?
What is benign about the design that partiality sacrificed?

===================
Luke 11:2-4

He said to them, 'When you pray, say:
Father, hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come.
Give us each day our daily bread
and forgive us our sins
for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us.
Do not bring us to the time of trial.

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

Honor the Father's name as holy
that the Son may govern his realm boldly.
Give us our daily bread in time
that we may avoid causing the damage identified as crime.
Forgive us our sins to help us find our way past error
that each in our way may be a Christ bearer.
Do not bring us to the time of trial
that we may learn to appeal to the rival
to derive benign survival without reprisal.

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

Music

Johann Sebastian Bach
b. 3.21.1685 Eisenach
d. 7.28.1750 Leipzig

J.S. Bach was a German composer and musician of the Baroque period. He is known for instrumental compositions such as the Art of Fugue, the Brandenburg Concertos and the Goldberg Variations.

His vocal music includes the St Matthew Passion and the Mass in B minor. He has been generally regarded as one of the greatest composers of the Western musical canon since the 19th century Bach Revival.

Bach enriched established German styles through his mastery of counterpoint, harmonic and motivic organisation. He adapted rhythms, forms and textures from abroad, particularly from Italy and France.

His compositions include hundreds of cantatas, both sacred and secular. He composed Latin church music, Passions, oratorios and motets. He often adopted Lutheran hymns in his four-part chorales and sacred songs as well as his larger vocal works.

He wrote extensively for organ and for other keyboard instruments. He composed concertos for the violin and harpsichord. His suites were written for chamber music as well as for orchestra. Many of his works employ contrapuntal genres such as fugue.

He was born in Eisenach, Germany in the 17th century.

Eisenach

Eisenach is situated on the Hörsel river, a tributary of the Werra between the Thuringian Forest in the south, the Hainich mountains in the north-east and the East Hesse Highlands in the north-west. It is the main urban center of western Thuringia. It borders the northeastern Hessian regions near the former Inner German border. A major attraction is the Wartburg castle.

The young Martin Luther attended St. George's Latin school in Eisenach between 1498 and 1501 in preparation for his following studies at the University of Erfurt.

He was hidden by Frederick the Wise at Wartburg castle to protect him from the Imperial ban in 1521. He translated the New Testament from Greek into German at that time.

The translation was an important step both for the German Reformation and the development of a consistent German standard language.

Luther referred to Eisenach as ein Pfaffennest ("a clerical backwater"). There were 300 monks and nuns per 1,000 inhabitants during his time.

There was heavy fighting in the area during the Bauernkrieg in 1525. The Bauernkrieg was the German Peasants' War.

The war consisted, like the preceding Bundschuh movement and the Hussite Wars, of a series of both economic and religious revolts in which peasants and farmers supported by Anabaptist clergy took the lead.

The Lutheran Reformation was implemented in Eisenach in 1528.

It became a ducal residence for the house of Saxe-Eisenach in 1596.

Johann Ambrosius Bach (1645-95) worked there as a musician in the 17th century.  He was employed as a court trumpeter and director of the town musicians.

Johann Christoph Bach (1645-93) was his twin brother. Johann Pachelbel (1653-1706) and Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767) were other composers associated with the location during the same period.

Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian was born in Eisenach on March 31, 1685. He was the son of Johann Ambrosius Bach and Maria Elisabeth Lämmerhirt. He was the eighth and youngest child.

His father probably taught him basic music theory and how to play the violin and harpsichord. His uncles were professional musicians. His brother Johann Christoph Bach taught him the clavichord and exposed him to much of the contemporary music.

Bach's mother died in 1694. His father died eight months later. The 10-year-old Johann Sebastian moved in with his eldest brother, Johann Christoph (1671–1721). He was the organist at St. Michael's Church in Ohrdruf, Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg.

He studied, performed and copied music there. He copied his own brother's music despite being forbidden to do so. Scores were valuable and private. Blank ledger paper of that type was costly.

He received valuable instruction. His brother taught him to play the clavichord. He was exposed to the works of great composers of the day including South German composers such as Johann Pachelbel. Johann Christoph had been taught by Pachelbel.

He studied North German composers; Frenchmen; and the Italian clavierist Girolamo Frescobaldi. He was taught theology, Latin, Greek, French and Italian at the local gymnasium during this time.

Johann Sebastian enrolled in St. Michael's School in Luneberg by 3 April 1700. George Erdmann was his elder by 2 years. They traveled on foot for 2 weeks until they arrived north of Ohrdruf.

Johann Sebastian spent 2 years there. He was exposed to a wider range of European culture. He played the school's three-manual organ and harpsichords in addition to singing in the choir.

He came into contact with sons of aristocrats from northern Germany who were sent to the highly selective school to prepare for careers in other disciplines. He had access to  St. John's Church.

He used the church's famous organ from 1553. The instrument was known to have been played by his organ teacher Georg Böhm.  Bach had significant contact with Böhm.

He also took trips to nearby Hamburg where he observed the North German organist Johann Adam Reincken. Organ tabulatures that Bach wrote were discovered in 2005. They showed the disciplined and methodical work of a well trained teenager who was committed to his craft.

He married his cousin, Maria Barbara Bach, in 1708. When he became court organist to the Duke of Weimar he wrote his principal compositions for the organ. He became music director (Kapellmeister) to Prince Leopold of Coethen in 1717. His wife died in 1720.

He married Anna Magdalena Wuelcken in 1721. He composed a famous set of keyboard pieces for her.  He was at Leipzig from 1723 until his death in 1750. He taught, conducted, sang, played and composed. He had 20 children. Only 9 survived him. Four of these are also remembered as composers.

Bach wrote a considerable amount of music for worship in addition to his secular music. He drew on the German tradition of hymn-tunes and arranged many of them as cantatas with elaborate choir settings for most stanzas. A plain four-part setting for the final stanza was to be sung by the congregation with the choir.

Each stanza normally used the melody traditional for that hymn with variations, particularly in the harmony, that reinforced the meaning of the words of that stanza. He wrote nearly two hundred cantatas altogether.

There were at least two for each Sunday and holy day in the Lutheran church year. The subject of the cantata was matched with that of the Scripture readings prescribed for that day.

Two of the better known are "Christ lag in Todesbanden" (Christ lay in the bonds of death"), based on an Easter hymn by Martin Luther; and "Jesu, meine Freude" (Jesus, all my gladness).

Accounts of the suffering and death of Jesus Christ are called the Passion. It is an ancient custom of the Church that during Holy Week the Gospel readings shall be from the accounts of the Passion.

When possible, these accounts are to be read, not by a single reader, but with the speeches of different persons read by different readers. Statements from the crowd are read by the choir or the congregation. These parts may be spoken or chanted to a simple tune.

Bach wrote an elaborate musical setting for the St Matthew Passion, and again for the St John Passion. The Gospel narrative is sung by a soloist with the dialog by other singers. Commentary by the choir is expressed in the form of hymns and more elaborate pieces.

He also wrote a setting for the traditional Latin Liturgy. This is his famous B Minor Mass. The Liturgy is the Order for the Celebration of the Lord's Supper and the Administration of Holy Communion. It is commonly called the Mass. It is divided into the Ordinary which is the same every time and the Propers that vary each day such as the Bible readings.

The choral parts of the Ordinary include the Kyrie ("Lord, have mercy"), the Gloria ("Glory to God in the highest"), the Credo ("I believe in one God, the Father Almighty..."), the Sanctus-benedictus ("Holy, Holy, Holy" and "Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord") and the Agnus Dei ("O Lamb of God...").

Bach wrote choir settings for these. Luther did not reject the Mass. It is not surprising that a devout Lutheran would write choir settings for the celebration of the Eucharist. The language of the Liturgy is ancient. It contains the Apostolic logic taught by Anglican, Lutheran, Methodist and Presbyterian churches.

Four-part harmonies predate Bach, but he lived during a time when modal music in Western tradition was largely supplanted in favor of the tonal system. A piece of music progresses in this system from one chord to the next according to certain rules. Each chord is characterized by four notes.

The principles of harmony are found not only in Bach's four-part choral music. He also prescribes it for instance for the figured bass accompaniment.

The new system was at the core of his style. His compositions are to a large extent considered as laying down the rules for the evolving scheme that would dominate musical expression in the next centuries.

Another characteristic of Bach's style is his extensive use of counterpoint. This was different from the homophony used in his four-part Chorale settings. His canons, and especially his fugues, are most characteristic of this style.

He did not invent the form but contributed so fundamentally that he defined it to a large extent. Fugues are as characteristic to his style as the Sonata form represents the composers of the Classical period.

Bach's work is not simply a matter of supplying pleasant-sounding melody and chords. There occurs the line in the Creed for example, "And I believe one holy catholic and apostolic Church."

There are two melodies sung by the choir in Bach's setting of this line,  simultaneously. One is a traditional plainchant melody, most frequently sung by Roman Catholics. The other is a Lutheran chorale melody. The two melodies are interwoven and they harmonize perfectly.

Bach was not just a musical composer. He was a Christian and a preacher of the Gospel.

Johann Bach
S. 约翰巴赫
T. 約翰巴赫

约  Yue      treaty                     約  yaku    promise                 Yo      よ     ヨ         Yo    요 yo     
翰  han      writing                   翰  kan      letter                      han  はん ハン        han  한 one         
巴  Ba         to hope                 巴   ha     comma-design         Ba     ばっ  バッ     Ba    바  bar              赫  he         bright                     赫  kaku    suddenly               ha      は     ハ          heu  흐  ch                 

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

Music shapes feeling with sound
to make it easier to understand the meaning found.

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

Lectionary Bach, Handel, Purcell
wiki Johann Sebastian Bach

Sunday, July 7, 2019

Shine

7.14.19
Diane Kruger

Shine
as Divine
闪耀着神圣的光芒 
Shǎnyàozhe shénshèng de guāngmáng
神として輝く
Kami to shite kagayaku
ps25
Ut lucere divinum

Hear this teaching from life.
An open heart reduces stress from strife.

This truth from ancient times will be declared.
Your family and you will be spared with care.

That which has been heard and shown
has been revealed to us as known.

The deeds of power known under heaven
will be recounted to act as leaven.

Generations will know your praise.
Your work is shown with the sun's rays.

Violence was the wilderness of former times.
Civilization must construct for production's rise.

You split the waters to let us pass.
The sea was weaned of water and left with grass.

You led us with a cloud by day.
The fire by night let us find our way.

You split a rock in the rugged terrain.
You gave us drink without the rain.

A stream flowed from out of the cliff.
The river gushed without the fish.

We, the people had said,
"This way is harsh.  We will end up dead.

"Will we be killed by this cure?
We just don't know. We can't be sure."

Hear now, you house of conflict,
"You say my way does most restrict?

"Your way was terribly unfair.
You'd take a life without a care."

"When righteousness had left the pious,
iniquity had found his likeness."

"When inequity defined the lawful
the people were left to defend the awful."

"The righteous were left to stay the course
with diminishing returns for remorse."

"You were judged, you house of disdain.
You have been turned away from causing pain."

"Repent from your transgression.
Confession destroys the affect of oppression.
Get a new heart and spirit. 
Turn from iniquity. Don't go near it.
I find no pleasure in the death of righteousness.
Refuse cruelty. Let conscience guide your light to bliss."

Let the people say,
"I lift my soul to you, Y-hw-h.
Let me avoid humiliation.
Let me make the situation 
the path to salvation
not my condemnation.
Do not let my enemy
triumph over me.
I put my trust in you.
You will guide me in what to say or do."

Let none who seek your face be ashamed.
Let the treacherous be trained to refrain from causing pain.

Show me your ways.
Lead me with strength through the length of days.

Lead me in your truth.
Teach me how to calm and sooth.

You are the author of my salvation.
I trust that you will help me build my station.

Remember not the sins of my youth.
Keep me from the serpent's tooth.

An arch of many colors has been set beneath the clouds.
The covenant has been endowed.

The rainbow shows promise after the storm
that delight in the light of life may be your norm. 

Juno Beach, Florida

Leadership weighs justice with the scales
of experience to use reason to help benefit prevail.

Being washed from sin is not an ordeal.
It is a trial to help you heal.

The good news is like a friend
that shares your promise beyond your end.

Your action defines you more than your social role.
Show mercy as needed for redemption to grow.

You are the Lord of life,
the precious Christ.

You teach the humble to do what's right.
The lowly delight in your insight.

Let the same mind be found as with Jesus.
Claiming equality with God was not a reason
for being, believing or promoting treason. 

He emptied himself of the claim to deity
to leave himself with that which was divine about decency.

He humbled himself with human likeness
that human kind may shine with  brightness.

Turn to the LORD your God with your heart and soul
that you may prosper as your ancestors in achieving your goals.

School is the tool of the Word for the Church.
Perspective on perception takes hold of hope in the search.

The good news has come to you with hope in the word of truth.
Grace bears fruit in comprehension in redemption from the errors of youth.

-------------------------- 

25 Ad te, Domine, levavi
I to, the Dominated, lift

1 To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul;
my God, I put my trust in you;
let me not be humiliated,
nor let my enemies triumph over me.
2 Let none who look to you be put to shame;
let the treacherous be disappointed in their schemes.
3 Show me your ways, O Lord,
and teach me your paths.
4 Lead me in your truth and teach me,
for you are the God of my salvation;
in you have I trusted all the day long.
5 Remember, O Lord, your compassion and love,
for they are from everlasting.
6 Remember not the sins of my youth and my transgressions;
remember me according to your love
and for the sake of your goodness, O Lord.
7 Gracious and upright is the Lord;
therefore he teaches sinners in his way.
8 He guides the humble in doing right
and teaches his way to the lowly.
9 All the paths of the Lord are love and faithfulness
to those who keep his covenant and his testimonies.
10 For your Name's sake, O Lord,
forgive my sin, for it is great.
11 Who are they who fear the Lord?
he will teach them the way that they should choose.
12 They shall dwell in prosperity,
and their offspring shall inherit the land.
13 The Lord is a friend to those who fear him
and will show them his covenant.
14 My eyes are ever looking to the Lord,
for he shall pluck my feet out of the net.
15 Turn to me and have pity on me,
for I am left alone and in misery.
16 The sorrows of my heart have increased;
bring me out of my troubles.
17 Look upon my adversity and misery
and forgive me all my sin.
18 Look upon my enemies, for they are many,
and they bear a violent hatred against me.
19 Protect my life and deliver me;
let me not be put to shame, for I have trusted in you.
20 Let integrity and uprightness preserve me,
for my hope has been in you.
21 Deliver Israel, O God,
out of all his troubles.

---------------------------
Deut. 30:10

The LORD will take delight in prospering you, just as he delighted in prospering your ancestors when you turn to the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul.

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

Turn to the LORD your God with your heart and soul
that you may prosper as your ancestors in achieving your goals.

====================
Colossians 1:6

You have heard of this hope in the word of truth, the gospel that has come to you. Just as it is bearing fruit among yourselves from the day you heard it and truly comprehended the grace of God.

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

The good news has come to you with hope in the word of truth.
Grace bears fruit in comprehension in redemption from the errors of youth.

====================
Luke 10:36-37

Which of these three, do you think, was a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of the robbers? The lawyer said, 'The one who showed mercy.' Jesus said to him 'Go and do likewise.'

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

Your action defines you more than your social role.
Show mercy as needed for redemption to grow.

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

Out from Polytheism

Argula von Grumbach
b. 1492 Regensburg, Bavaria
d. 7.14.1554 Regensburg, Bavaria

Argula von Grumbach was a Bavarian writer and noblewoman. She became involved in the Protestant Reformation debates going on in Germany starting in the 1520's.

She was the first Protestant woman writer. Her letters and poems defended Martin Luther, his co-worker Philip Melanchthon and her reputation. She gained notoriety when she wrote to the University of Ingolstadt's faculty to protest the arrest of a Lutheran student.

She was born in Bavaria in the latter part of the 15th century.

Regensburg

Regensburg is a city in southeast Germany. It was built at the confluence of the Danube, Naab and Regen rivers. It is the 4th largest city in the state of Bavaria after Munich, Nuremberg and Augsburg.

Regensburg became a Free Imperial City in 1245. It was an active center for trade before the routes were shifted in the late Middle Ages. It became part of the Duchy of Bavaria in 1486. Independence was restored by the Holy Roman Emperor ten years later.

The city adopted the Protestant Reformation in 1542. The town council remained entirely Lutheran.

Argula von Grumbach

She was born as Argula von Stauff near Regensburg, Bavaria in 1492. Her family lived in their baronial seat at Ehrenfel's castle.

The von Stauff family were Freiherren.  They were lords with independent jurisdiction only accountable to the Emperor. They were among the pre-eminent leaders of Bavarian nobility.

Argula's upbringing was in a political and deeply religious household. Education and attendance at university was highly valued. Argula is thought to have learned to read fluently at a very young age.

Her father gave her an expensive and beautifully crafted Koberger Bible in German when she was 10. Franciscan preachers had discouraged it. They said it would only confuse her.

Those who received formal instruction were instructed in the classics of Roman civilization. She became an avid student of the Bible and memorized much of its contents.

Argula joined the court in Munich at the age of 16. She became a lady-in-waiting to duchess Kunigunde, daughter of the Emperor Frederick III. The duchess was said to have a strong personality herself. She was passionate about politics and religion.

The court as a whole was interested in spiritual matters. It is there that Argula's studies of the Bible could have become serious as a social activity.

Her young adult life was marked by tragedy. Both her parents became ill from plague and died in 1509. Her father's brother, Hieronymus, became her guardian. He was a leading figure at court but ended up disgraced in a political scandal that led to his execution in 1516.

Her outrage at his death most likely prompted her persistent loathing for violence and coercion throughout her life.

Argula married Friedrich von Grumbach in the same year as her uncle's execution. The von Grumbach family was not as prestigious as the von Stauffs, but they were still known in German history.

Friedrich himself had been appointed to an honorary administrator post in Dietfurt. He also had several other landholdings throughout Bavaria. He is also thought to have had ill health. He died in 1530.

Argula had four children with Friedrich. George, Hans Georg, Gottfried and Apollonia. The only child to survive his parents was Gottfried. Argula made all the arrangements for her children's Protestant educations.

Records indicated that Argula took care of many of the financial and business matters of her family even before her husband's death.

She wrote a poem in 1524 that stated, ‘May God teach me to understand/ How I should act towards my man.’ Friedrich was not a Reformer. He remained in the old church. He was put under pressure to ‘bring her into line’ when she was writing her letters to challenge the judgment of authorities.

Argula married again to Count von Schlick in 1533, 3 years after Friedrich's death. The count died within 2 years.

Martin Luther published his first treatises in 1520. Philipp Melancthon laid out Luther's teachings in a book. Luther had finished his translation of the New Testament in German by 1522. Argula von Grumbach read his work. She became a follower in that year and started a correspondence with him. She would meet Luther face to face in 1530.

Bavarian authorities had forbidden reception of Lutheran ideas at the time. The city of Ingolstadt enforced that mandate.

Arsacius Seehofer, a young teacher and former student at the University of Ingolstadt, was arrested for Protestant views in 1523. He was forced to recant his position with the threat of imprisonment and the stake.

A young woman challenged the Catholic establishment to a public debate in one of the most daring and remarkable events in the history of the Reformation.

She was a 31-year old mother of four. She listened to the news with apprehension and outrage. How could they even call it a trial? On what did they base their accusations? She wondered why no one had come to the student’s defense.

If the men were silent, she had to speak out. Argula wrote a letter to the faculty of the university objecting to Seehofer's arrest and exile. The letter urged the university to follow Scripture, not Roman traditions.

She wrote that Christ, the apostles and the prophets did not imprison, burn or murder anyone in the Bible. The  pope, the Kaiser and princes did not have authority over the Word of God. She criticized the pope for the use of Aristotle in the formation of papal decrees.

She argued that the 18 year old man would learn from his youthful indiscretion. She wrote as a member of the Church of Christ as set forth in the Word of God.

Her letter was turned into a booklet. It provoked a huge reaction. It angered Roman theologians, yet it was a popular sensation.  It went through fourteen editions in two months and became a bestseller.
She wrote 7 more pamphlets on similar pressing issues. About 29,000 copies of her writings were distributed in Germany between 1523 and 1524.

The printing press was a new technology in the early 16th century. It was not yet controlled by the State. It played a lead role in the reformation of information. Printers spread ideas that were disturbing to the establishment. The movement for the Christian transformation of classical political structure was faster than could be controlled.

Something similar was happening with science. Niccolo Copernicus' book on a sun-centered model of the universe was an example (1543). Comparable upheavals had occurred after the return of literacy and literature from the Latin translations of the 12th century.

The translation of classical texts had kicked off the Renaissance. It was the dawn of literacy in Classical Greece. The Romans had used Greek work to form their culture. The information boom in the Reformation was the 16th century predecessor to the modern internet.

Theologians wanted Argula punished. Her husband lost his position at Dietfurt over the controversy. Offensive epithets were used by her critics.  The sermons of Professor Hauer described her as a “shameless whore” and a “female desperado.”

Argula was controversial. She was shunned by some of her own family, but she also had admirers. The reformer Balthasar Hubmaier described her as a "pious woman" who was like "Deborah and Hulda" in the Old Testament and the "daughters of Philip" in the New.

Her challenge to the University did not overturn their judgment.  Her effort to promote Protestant belief for Bavaria didn't result in immediate success, but Regensburg adopted Reformation principles in 1542.

Argula continued to write. She also traveled alone to Nuremburg to talk to German princes about the Reformation. Such travel by a woman was not common at the time.

Argula von Grumbach was reported in a local chronicle to have died in 1554. There was some evidence however from correspondence of the Munich City Council that indicated that she could have been alive as late as 1563.

She was a model for the defense of nobility in the German Reformation. She used the principles that Martin Luther and Philip Melancthon had derived from John Huss.

The Bible was the authoritative source for the conversion of classical culture to Christian morality. The shift was significant in terms of personal perspective.

Polytheism was aggressively ardent in the at least metaphorically violent advocacy for individual perception regarding right and wrong with respect for the stories about the gods in mythology.

Christian monotheism according to the Anglican and Lutheran models was a unificatory perspective insofar as it was against both rebellion by the people and cruel punishment by government officials.

Argula von Grumbach
S.  阿鲁拉冯格鲁姆巴哈
T.  阿魯拉馮格魯姆巴哈

阿  A         ah                          阿   a     flatter                      A     あ-          ア-         A     아   ah   
鲁  lu        rude                       魯   ro    foolish                    ru    る            ル          leu  르    le     
拉  la        hold                       拉   ra    kidnap                     gu   ぐる       グル       gul   굴   oyster 
冯  feng   gallop                     馮   fu    displeasure              ra     ら           ラ          la      라  la       
格  Ge       rule                       格   go    status                      fon  ふぉん  フォン    pon  폰   pawn   
鲁  lu         rude                      魯    ro    foolish                  Guro  ぐろ      グロ       Gu    구 phrase
姆  mu      governess              姆   mo   wet nurse               mu     む          ム           leom 럼 rum       
巴  ba        to hope                  巴   ha    hope                      ba      ばっ      バッ        ba     바  bar   
哈  ha        yawn                     哈   ha    school of fish         ha     は          ハ            heu   흐  chu

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

School was the tool of the Word for the Church.
Perspective on perception took hold of hope in the search.

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

http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/Argula_von_Grumbach.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argula_von_Grumbach
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regensburg

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

Augustine had proposed the possibility of a 'just war' in the 5th century. It was written after Rome had been invaded by Alaric and the Visigoths in 410. The context suggested that defense was that which qualified that which could be called 'just' about war. The concept was used to call for the Crusades that started near the end of the 11th century.

Thomas Hobbes would eventually write for defense from attack as a prime directive for the state in the 17th century, but the long standing precedent for the House of Commons to use war to increase taxes was invoked by Locke's advocacy for a doctrine of destruction later in the same century.

Liberal politicians have used the claim of human rights violation as a pretense for military invasion in global expansion since that time. Primitive society itself was seen alternately as a violation of rights or the threat of destruction to civilized life.

The social climate In the west after WWII held that invasion was not a just political principle. This was maintained as the legal norm until after the destruction of the World Trade Center towers in New York City in 2001. 

The Chinese socialist republic was modeled in part on the Russian, but China has a very long history of instruction in administration. While the goal of world domination was stated as a socialist objective, the conservative principles of administration in China rejected military invasion followed by long term occupation for any foreign nation.

Russia had been more aggressive in military action after WWII, but they were less aggressive than their western counterparts. When the US and European powers were taking military action to the borders of China, Russia got involved in the defense. 

http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/samson_occum.htm