2.23.20
Dakota Fanning
Celebrate
Reverence
庆祝崇敬
Qìngzhù chóngjìng
敬意を称える
Keii o tataeru
ps92
Celebramus reverentia
It is good for the heart to give thanks
with praise for the name above all ranks.
Your steadfast love declares the dawn.
Your faithfulness at night is drawn.
The music of the instruments supports the voice
for the beauty of the divine melody in choice.
I find joy in the perception of Your employment
in the production of value with human enjoyment.
Your energy works greatness!
Your thoughts are those which make us!
The sabbath is a day to celebrate rest
and to revere natural law for what is best.
Divine energy shows mercy with grace
as we work to live for goodness in time and space.
Mt. Sinai
Moses set out with Joshua to receive the revelation to which he was called.
They left the elders with Aaron and Hur to resolve disputes that appalled.
They were drawn to commune with glory in the cloud on the mountain.
The prophet was devoured by the fire of revelation in which the law was grounded
to be counted like a fountain.
That which was wrong is left behind us
in order to find belief that binds but does not blind trust.
Though the feeling of hatred or envy has flourished,
it is doomed to failure, because It fails to nurture or nourish.
Mount Tabor
Jesus was transfigured before Peter, James and John on the height.
His face shone like the sun. His clothes became a dazzling white.
Moses and Elijah appeared before them.
They handed Jesus the prophetic diadem.
Peter said he would build three shelters, one for each.
The Father intervened to say that with his Son he was pleased.
The disciples fell to the ground overcome with fear.
Jesus told them to not be afraid. The others had disappeared.
We did not follow cleverly devised myths
to perpetuate trysts or factional conflicts.
The power of Jesus as Christ was made known by the display of his majesty.
He was the Son whom the Father had appointed to lift us out of tragedy.
We had heard his voice from heaven on the holy peak
when the prophetic message had been confirmed as the truth we seek.
The uncreated light was shone to shine
as a lamp for dark places to be divined
before the morning star aligns
with the divine heart in your mind's eye.
No prophecy of scripture is limited to individual interpretation.
The Holy Spirit who spoke from God inspires sovereignty for each nation.
The mystery about the divine essence
is a call to consider the real presence.
Substance has matter. Units are named.
Matter has patterns. Context for meaning is framed.
Ignorance about what is shown to perception
welcomes the search for what can be known to fight deception.
Facts alone don't determine value for existence.
Meaning is drawn by investigation with persistence.
Awe drawn from the wonder of deliverance
is a draw to consider the law of inference
for experience that makes a difference.
The enemies to the automation of thought for duty
will fail to see the wonders of natural beauty.
Hygiene is cleanliness for health.
It is the basis for the enjoyment of wealth.
You have exalted my love for Your energy.
You have anointed the sensory to escape from lethargy.
My eyes have seen the correction of my own error.
My ears have heard of failure for those who promoted terror.
Rightness is the essence for the goodness in order.
National sovereignty requires security for the border.
Sycamore Tree
The righteous flourish like a healthy tree
planted in the field of prosperity.
Fruit is still produced in old age.
Wisdom is the experience of the sage.
The design of nature is benign.
Faith allows for the operation of the mind.
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A Psalm.
A Song for the Sabbath Day.
1 It is good to give thanks to the Lord,
to sing praises to your name, O Most High;
2 to declare your steadfast love in the morning,
and your faithfulness by night,
3 to the music of the lute and the harp,
to the melody of the lyre.
4 For you, O Lord, have made me glad by your work;
at the works of your hands I sing for joy.
5 How great are your works, O Lord!
Your thoughts are very deep!
6 The dullard cannot know,
the stupid cannot understand this:
7 though the wicked sprout like grass
and all evildoers flourish,
they are doomed to destruction forever,
8 but you, O Lord, are on high forever.
9 For your enemies, O Lord,
for your enemies shall perish;
all evildoers shall be scattered.
10 But you have exalted my horn like that of the wild ox;
you have poured over me fresh oil.
11 My eyes have seen the downfall of my enemies;
my ears have heard the doom of my evil assailants.
12 The righteous flourish like the palm tree,
and grow like a cedar in Lebanon.
13 They are planted in the house of the Lord;
they flourish in the courts of our God.
14 In old age they still produce fruit;
they are always green and full of sap,
15 showing that the Lord is upright;
he is my rock, and there is no unrighteousness in him.
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Hygiene is good for health.
Chn. 卫生有益于健康。
Wèishēng yǒuyì yú jiànkāng.
Jpn. 衛生は健康に良いです。
Eisei wa kenkō ni yoidesu.
Krn. 위생은 건강에 좋습니다.
Wisaeng-eun geongang-e johseubnida.
Ltn. Sanitatis in bonum salutem.
Itln. L'igiene fa bene alla salute.
Spn. La higiene es buena para la salud.
Frn. L'hygiène est bonne pour la santé.
Gmn. Hygiene ist gut für die Gesundheit.
Dtch. Hygiëne is goed voor de gezondheid.
Czch. Hygiena je dobrá pro zdraví.
Hgn. A higiénia egészségre jó.
Grk. Η υγιεινή είναι καλή για την υγεία.
I ygieiní eínai kalí gia tin ygeía.
Trk. Hijyen sağlık için iyidir.
Rsn. Гигиена полезна для здоровья.
Gigiyena polezna dlya zdorov'ya.
Hygiene is good for health.
It is the basis for the enjoyment of wealth.
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Psalm 92
Psalm 92 is dedicated to the Shabbat or Rest. It is recited at least twice on the day of rest.
It is included in the introduction (Pesukei Dezimra) to the Jewish morning service (Shacharit). The community offers praise as a single supplicant prior to hearing the Shema or the declaration that God is one.
A selection from the Torah is read. Requests for divine assistance are made in last part of the service (the Amidah).
Psalm 92 is the psalm for the day on Shabbat.
The psalm was first spoken by Adam according to the Midrash or the textual interpretation of the Judaic scripture.
Man was created on Friday. He sang his praise at the onset of the Shabbat.
It is not a psalm that speaks about Rest. It was said on the day to celebrate rest from work during the week. This was the first day of existence. Marvel was expressed at the work of the Creator.
The sabbath is a day for reflection on the revelation of the divine will.
Psalm 92 was set to music by Franz Schubert for Salomon Sulzer (D 953).
The Requiem Ebraico (Hebrew Requiem) was composed in 1945 by the Austrian-American composer Eric Zeisl. The psalm was set to music in dedication to the memory of his father.
wiki Psalm 92
wiki Shabbat
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The sabbath is a day to celebrate rest
and to revere natural law for what is best.
Divine energy shows mercy with grace
as we work to live for goodness in time and space.
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Approach Glory
Exodus is the second book of the Torah. It described the birth of the Jewish people, their enslavement in Egypt, their miraculous exodus, the climatic event at Mount Sinai and the construction of the sanctuary for the wilderness.
It is known as Sefer Shemot (Book of Names) in Hebrew. It opens with the verse, "These are the names of the children of Israel..."
It opened with the names of the sons of Israel who settled in Egypt under the protection of their brother Joseph.
The book consists of two genres mainly. There are the narrative history and laws. It was written about the time period starting from 1450-1410 BCE.
The story began more than four hundred years after Joseph, his brothers and the Pharaoh he once served had died. The new leadership in Egypt felt threatened by Jacob’s descendants. They had increased in size.
The new Pharaoh embarked on a campaign to subdue the Israelites. He forced them into slavery and eventually decreed that all Hebrew boys must be killed at birth in the Nile River.
Hebrew women resisted the decree. One woman opted to save her newborn son by setting him afloat on the river in a papyrus basket. Pharaoh’s daughter discovered the abandoned child and raised him after he had been nursed. She named him Moses. He had been 'drawn from' the reeds in the water of the river.
Chapters 1-7 introduced Moses and the Israelites in bondage in Egypt. Moses killed an Egyptian whom he had seen abusing a slave. He fled to the wilderness. God called him with a revelation through a burning bush to release His people from slavery in Egypt.
Moses obeyed and with his brother Aaron, confronted Pharaoh to let the Israelites go free, but Pharaoh ignored the warning.
Moses released 10 plagues of different sorts on the land of Egypt though the power of God in chapters 7-13. Water was turned to blood. Plagues of insects, boils and hail were released to harm the food supply and health for the people of the land.
The last plague resulted in the death of every first born son. This included the Pharaoh's son who would have inherited the kingdom of Egypt otherwise. The Israelites obeyed God, followed the ordinance of the Passover and were spared.
Chapters 14-18 described the Exodus or “Exit” from Egypt. Pharaoh allowed the Israelites to leave. Moses and his people escaped. They made it to the Red Sea. Pharaoh changed his mind and pursued them. His army was destroyed by the sea.
The Laws were presented through Moses to all the people at Mt. Sinai in chapters 19-24. The following selection describes the ascent of Moses to the glory of the Lord in the cloud on the mountain to receive the law.
Exodus 24:12-17
The LORD said to Moses, 'Come up to me on the mountain and wait there. I will give you the tablets of stone with the law and the commandment which I have written for their instruction.'
Moses set out with his assistant Joshua and went up into the mountain of God. He had said to the elders, 'Wait here for us until we come to you again. Aaron and Hur are with you. Whoever has a dispute may go to them.'
Moses went up and the cloud covered the mountain. The glory of the LORD settled on Mount Sinai. The cloud covered it for 6 days. He called to Moses out of the cloud on the 7th day.
The appearance of the glory of the LORD was like a devouring fire on the top of the mountain in the sight of the people of Israel.
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Moses set out with Joshua to receive the revelation to which he was called.
They left the elders with Aaron and Hur to resolve disputes that appalled.
They were drawn to commune with glory in the cloud on the mountain.
The prophet was devoured by the fire of revelation in which the law was grounded
to be counted.
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Divine Power
The shorthand for the second epistle of the Apostle Peter is usually written as 2 Peter. The salutation to the letter identifies the author as Simon Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ (2 Peter 1:1).
2 Peter 3:1 alludes to itself as the second letter to the Christian community. The various Churches in Asia Minor are the audience for the epistle according to the introduction of the first letter. (1 Peter 1:1).
It was written prior to 68 CE when Nero had Peter executed.
The text criticized "false teachers" who distorted the authentic, apostolic tradition. Judgment was predicted for them.
The author explained that the Second Coming of Christ had not yet been brought. The Christians were called to pray and study scripture to help them to wait patiently for the parousia in order that more people will have the chance to reject evil and find salvation (3:3–9).
The first chapter of the letter stated that Christians were called by power to become participants in the divine nature. Faith was to be selected by election for goodness, knowledge, self-control, endurance, godliness and mutual affection for love.
2 Peter 1:16-21
We did not follow cleverly devised myths when we made known to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we had been eyewitnesses of his majesty.
He received honor and glory from God the Father when that voice was conveyed to him by the majestic glory that said, 'This is my Son, my beloved with whom I am well pleased.' We ourselves heard this voice come from heaven while we were with him on the holy mountain.
We have the prophetic message more fully confirmed. You will do well to be attentive to this as to a lamp shining in a dark place until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts.
First of all you must understand this. No prophecy of scripture is a matter of one's' own interpretation. No prophecy came by human will. Men or women were moved by the Holy Spirit who spoke from God.
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We did not follow cleverly devised myths
to perpetuate trysts or factional conflicts.
The power of Jesus as Christ was made known by eyewitnesses to his majesty.
He was the Son whom the Father had appointed to lift us out of tragedy.
We had heard his voice from heaven on the holy peak
when the prophetic message had been confirmed as the truth we seek.
The uncreated light was shone to shine
as a lamp for dark places to be divined
before the morning star aligns
with the divine heart in your mind's eye.
No prophecy of scripture is limited to individual interpretation.
The Holy Spirit who spoke from God inspires sovereignty for each nation.
================
Faith
The lectionary reading for Sunday February 23d skipped from the sermon on the mount in chapters 5-7 to the transfiguration in chapter 17. Much had happened in the interim.
Jesus had worked miracles in chapters 8-9. He healed a leper, a paralytic, a hemorrhaging woman, a centurion’s servant and Peter’s mother-in-law. He calmed a storm, exorcized demons, gave eyesight to the blind and brought a dead girl back to life.
He had sent out his disciples to proclaim that gospel to the Gentiles in chapter 10.
His instruction was confronted in chapters 11-12 until he withdrew. He told parables about the kingdom in chapter 13.
He was rejected in his hometown of Nazareth. His friends and neighbors derided him. He continued to perform miracles, but the people become increasingly resistant with skepticism.
Jesus multiplied loaves and fish to feed thousands on very little food. He healed the sick and continued to preach the message of spiritual righteousness. He repeatedly found that his disciples lacked faith in him. When he walked across the water to them, they assumed he must have been a ghost.
Peter expressed faith when he testified that Jesus was the Christ, the son of the living God.
Jesus renamed Simon “Peter.” The Greek form was identical to the Greek word for “rock.” Jesus announced, “You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church” (16:18). He then laid out the rules for communal relations among Christians. He emphasized forgiveness, humility and obedience to his teachings.
The synoptic gospels (Matthew 17:1–8, Mark 9:2–8, Luke 9:28–36) described the transfiguration and the Second Epistle of Peter also referred to it (2 Peter 1:16–18).
Thomas Aquinas considered the transfiguration "the greatest miracle" in that it complemented baptism and showed the perfection of life in heaven. The transfiguration was one of the five major milestones in the gospel narrative about the life of Jesus. The others were the baptism, crucifixion, resurrection and ascension.
Matthew 17:1-9
Jesus took with him Peter, James and his brother John and led them up a high mountain by themselves 6 days later. He was transfigured before them. His face shone like the sun. His clothes became dazzling white. There appeared to them Moses and Elijah talking with him.
Peter said to Jesus, 'Lord, it is good for us to be here. I will make 3 dwellings if you wish: one for you; one for Moses; and one for Elijah.'
A bright light overshadowed them while he was still speaking. A voice said from the cloud, 'This is my Son, the Beloved. I am well pleases with him. Listen to him!'
The disciples fell to the ground when they heard this. They were overcome with fear. Jesus came to them and said, 'Get up and do not be afraid.' They saw no one except Jesus alone when they looked up.
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Jesus was transfigured before Peter, James and John on the height.
His face shone like the sun. His clothes became a dazzling white.
Moses and Elijah appeared before them.
They handed Jesus the prophetic diadem.
Peter said he would build three shelters, one for each.
The Father intervened to say that with his Son he was pleased.
The disciples fell to the ground overcome with fear.
Jesus told them to be not afraid. The others had disappeared.
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Philosophy
Karl Jaspers
b. 2.23.1883 Oldenburg, German Empire
d. 2.26.1969 Basel, Switzerland
Karl Theodor Jaspers was a German-Swiss psychiatrist who had a strong influence on modern theology, psychiatry and philosophy.
He had been trained in psychiatry. He turned to philosophical inquiry after he had started his practice as a psychiatrist. He came to exercise considerable influence on epistemology, the philosophy of religion and political theory.
He reconstructed Kantian transcendentalism with his reliance on the subjective-experiential transformation. He advocated for a doctrine of particular experience and spontaneous freedom that emphasized the constitutive importance of lived existence for authentic knowledge.
He was often viewed as a major exponent of existentialism in Germany, though he did not accept the label. He emerged as a powerful spokesperson for moral-democratic education and reorientation in the Federal Republic of Germany after the collapse of the National Socialist regime.
While his socialism wasn't as aggressive or militaristic as that of the Nazi party, he helped to institute what has come to be called democratic socialism.
The difficulty with any form of socialism is that it is anti-capitalist. Capitalism is still blamed for the problems in society even when the government control of private enterprise is the deterrent to the production of a service for the public.
The explicit emphasis on a socialist economy has been shifted to populist media expression for the sake of government control of the economy. National government in the US was charged with the self-limitation of political control in order to allow trade with the development of productive organization in the private sector of society.
When politicians campaign for election in a way that anticipates their role in winning to make the government a larger employer or the answer to the problems created by capitalism, they mean that they want the public to believe that they are working for national security when they are working to increase their wealth and prestige as officials.
Knowledge of what Jaspers had to say as a philosopher gives the reader some perspective on how and why disagreement with his position is beneficial.
It is also good to know something about where he was born and what the social situation was like in order to understand how he came to advocate for that which he did. The political climate informs the biographical genesis of the individual.
Oldenburg, German Empire (1833)
The Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation was a multi-ethnic complex of territories in Western and Central Europe that developed during the Early Middle Ages and continued until its dissolution in 1806 during the Napoleonic Wars.
A prospective Emperor had first to be elected King of the Romans. German kings had been elected since the 9th century.
They were chosen by the leaders of the five most important tribes at that point. The Salian Franks of Lorraine, Ripuarian Franks of Franconia, Saxons, Bavarians and Swabians were the tribes involved in the election.
The main dukes and bishops of the kingdom elected the King of the Romans in the Holy Roman Empire. It was a development of the Patrician system.
Lutheranism was officially recognized in the Peace of Augsburg of 1555. Calvinism attained recognition in the Peace of Westphalia of 1648. Those two constituted the only officially recognized Protestant denominations.
Various other Protestant confessions such as Anabaptism, Arminianism, etc. coexisted illegally within the Empire. Anabaptism was organized in a variety of denominations. Mennonites, Schwarzenau Brethren, Hutterites, the Amish and multiple other groups were included.
The official religion of a territory was determined by the principle cujus regio, ejus religio following the Peace of Augsburg. The ruler's religion determined that of his subjects.
The Peace of Westphalia abrogated that principle by stipulating that the official religion of a territory was to be what it had been on 1 January 1624. This was considered to have been a "normal year". The conversion of a ruler to another faith did not legally require the conversion of his subjects.
The concept of Germany as a distinct region in central Europe can be traced to the Roman commander Julius Caesar. He had referred to the unconquered area east of the Rhine as Germania.
This distinguished it from Gaul (France) which he had conquered.
The victory of the Germanic tribes in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest (9 CE) prevented annexation by the Roman Empire. The Roman provinces of Germania Superior and Germania Inferior were established along the Rhine.
The Franks had conquered the other West Germanic tribes following the Fall of the Western Roman Empire. When the Frankish Empire was divided among Charles the Great's heirs in 843, the eastern part became East Francia. Otto I became the first Holy Roman Emperor in 962.
Feudalism became a thing of the past after the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars that lasted from 1803-1815. Liberalism and nationalism clashed within the reaction.
The Industrial Revolution modernized the German economy. This led to the rapid growth of cities and the emergence of the socialist movement in Germany. Prussia grew in power with its capital in Berlin.
Danish kings were also counts of Oldenburg in the 17th century. The town was struck by a disastrous plague epidemic and, shortly after, a fire destroyed the buildings in 1667.
The Danes had little interest in the condition of the town and it lost most of its former importance. Danish rule ended in 1773. Only then were the destroyed buildings in the city rebuilt in a neoclassicist style.
The city is situated at the Rivers Hunte and Haaren in the northwestern region between the cities of Bremen in the east and Groningen (Netherlands) in the west. It was also known as Le Vieux-Bourg during the French annexation (1811-1813) in the wake of the Napoleonic Wars.
The city is the place of origin of the House of Oldenburg. The House of Oldenburg is a European dynasty of North German origin. It is one of Europe's most influential royal houses, with branches that rule or have ruled in Denmark, Iceland, Greece, Norway, Russia, Sweden, Schleswig, Holstein and Oldenburg.
The current Queen of Denmark, King of Norway, the former King of Greece, the consort of the monarch of the United Kingdom, as well as the first fourteen persons in the line of succession to the British throne are all patrilineal members of the Glücksburg branch of this house.
The Prussians were engaged in a significant competition with the Austrians for the control of Germany during the 19th century.
Karl Jaspers
Karl Theodor Jaspers was born on 23 February 1883 in the North German town of Oldenburg near the North Sea. His ancestors had lived there for generations.
He was the son of a banker and a representative of the parliament, Carl Wilhelm Jaspers (1850–1940) and Henriette Tantzen (1862–1941), who also came from a family that was involved in local parliament.
Jaspers’s family was strongly influenced by the political culture of North German liberalism. He often referred to the climate of early liberal democratic thought as a formative aspect for his education.
His thought was also formed by the spirit of North German Protestantism although he claimed not to have been influenced by any specifically ecclesiastical faith. His philosophical outlook can in many respects be placed in the religiously inflected tradition of Kant and Kierkegaard.
He was a pupil at the Altes Gymnasium in Oldenburg. He suffered from chronic bronchiectasis from his early childhood.
The condition impaired his physical capabilities. Awareness of his physical disabilities shaped his routine throughout his adult life and formed his sensitivity to psychological issues including human suffering.
He attributed his ability to conduct a normative routine and to devote his life to his creative work to his strict discipline regarding his health.
He married Gertrud Mayer (1879–1974) in 1910. She came from a pious German-Jewish merchant family.
She was the sister of his close friends Gustav Mayer and the philosopher Ernest Mayer. She had been working as an assistant in the sanatorium of the neurologist and psychiatrist Oskar Kohnstamms (1871–1917) at the time of their marriage.
She was able to stay in Germany during the Nazi period due to her marriage.
Jaspers earned his medical doctorate from University of Heidelberg medical school in 1908 and began work at a psychiatric hospital in Heidelberg under Franz Nissl.
Jaspers became dissatisfied with the way the medical community of the time approached the study of mental illness. He gave himself the task of improving the psychiatric approach.
His dissatisfaction with the popular understanding of mental illness led him to question both the diagnostic criteria and the methods of clinical psychiatry.
He published a paper in 1910 in which he addressed the problem of whether paranoia was an aspect of personality or the result of biological changes.
His article introduced a rather unusual method of study at least according to the norms then prevalent, but it did not broach new ideas.
Jaspers studied patients in detail. He gave biographical information about the patients as well as notes on how the patients themselves felt about their symptoms like Freud. This has become known as the biographical method. It is a standard in psychiatric and psychotherapeutic practice.
The difficulty was that the method used disagreement with democratic socialism as the diagnostic criteria for mental illness.
He habilitated at the philosophical faculty of the Heidelberg University in 1913 and gained a post as a psychology teacher there in 1914.
The post later became a permanent philosophical one. He never returned to clinical practice. He was a close friend of the Weber family during this time. Max Weber had also held a professorship at Heidelberg.
Jaspers turned from psychology to philosophy at the age of 38 in 1921. He expanded on themes he had developed in his psychiatric works. He became a leading philosopher in Germany and Europe.
Commentators associate Jaspers with the philosophy of existentialism. He draws largely upon the existentialist roots of Nietzsche and Kierkegaard. The theme of individual freedom permeates his work as well.
He gave his view of the history of philosophy in Philosophy (3 vols, 1932). He argued that as we question reality, we confront borders that an empirical (or scientific) method simply cannot transcend with modern science or empiricism.
The individual faces a choice at this point. He or she can take a leap of faith toward what Jaspers calls Transcendence. Individuals confront limitless freedom which Jaspers calls Existenz.
The term "Dasein" meant existence in its most minimal sense for him. The realm of objectivity and science existed in contrast to authentic existence according to Jaspers. Heidegger had a closer relation to the Nazi ideology.
Jaspers was considered to have a "Jewish taint" (jüdische Versippung) due to his Jewish wife after the Nazi seizure of power in 1933. He was forced to retire from teaching in 1937. He fell under a publication ban as well in 1938.
Many of his long-time friends stood by him. This enabled him to continue his studies and research without being totally isolated. He and his wife were under constant threat of removal to a concentration camp until 30 March 1945 when Heidelberg was liberated by American troops.
Jaspers moved to the University of Basel in Switzerland in 1948.
He held Kierkegaard and Nietzsche to be two of the most important figures in post-Kantian philosophy. He wrote a compilation called The Great Philosophers (Die großen Philosophen). It was published in 1955.
He felt that the presentation of Kierkegaard had to be approached with some trepidation. He was the most important philosopher prior to Nietzsche in the post-Kantian age. An epoch had reached its conclusion with Goethe and Hegel.
The prevalence of the positivistic, natural-scientific way of thought had reached a conclusion. It could not really be considered to be a philosophy. This was a dismissal for the empirical view as well.
Jaspers identified with the liberal political philosophy of Max Weber, but he rejected the nationalism of the liberal view. He valued humanism and cosmopolitanism.
This philosophy was influenced by Immanuel Kant in the advocacy for an international federation of states with shared constitutions, laws and international courts.
While he strongly expressed opposition to totalitarian despotism, his liberal view was open to continual expansion by confederated agreement. This with socialist economic theory actually made the position totalitarian.
He warned about the increasing tendency towards technocracy or a regime that regards humans as mere instruments of science or of ideological goals, but this was inconsistent with socialism as well.
He was skeptical of majoritarian democracy with J.S. Mill. He supported a form of governance that guaranteed individual freedom and limited government in terms of the face for their proposal. The anti-majority position however ruled out whatever was right about the majority representation for fear of what was wrong.
He shared Weber's belief that democracy needed to be guided by an intellectual elite. This only allowed for the revival of populism under the aegis of 'democracy.'
He was awarded the honorary citizenship of the city of Oldenburg in recognition of his outstanding scientific achievements and services to the occidental culture in 1963.
He remained prominent in the philosophical community and became a naturalized citizen of Switzerland. He lived in Basel until his death on his wife's 90th birthday in 1969.
Jaspers had presented a position that was comparable to that of Spanish and French liberals.
Capitalism was defined as the cause of social inequality and injustice. Socialism did not recognize the value of competition or opposition.
The government was the major alternative to the great rebellion by the proletariat. Government control was established as the authority that had to punish the successful in order to correct errors incurred in political support for private sector organization.
Socialism has criticized capitalism as outdated, but Marx missed the main implication of the economic theory proposed by Adam Smith. The chief principle for the organization of nations was wealth, but this was with respect for national sovereignty in political organization.
Alliance for mutual benefit in trade and defense was acceptable in international relations according to the theory, Community organization for charity was an implicit part of the British political system.
This charitable organization was often coopted by Calvinist communities as a form of appeasement for the anti-monarchical political position. This has become the standard mode of community organization for charity in the US as well.
The greatest error of the socialist theory is that socialist control over 'capitalist' business organization has blamed their error on capitalism.
This has become the giant strawman argument that has allowed socialism to grow in influence in political election. The liberal media has been used to increase the resultant influence on social relations.
Socialism is dependent on the rejection of the right for capitalism or the political represenation for the same to exist. Existentialism as a philosophy was a major crutch in an economic theory that essentially has made populist demand the organizational principle for government with the system of election.
This populism is that which threatens to turn international alliance or cooperation into a totalitarian operation. Capitalism stands as the better economic mode for organization since the arguments presented by socialist theorists have proven to be weak or false.
Karl Jaspers
S. 卡尔·贾斯珀斯
T. 卡爾·賈斯珀斯
卡 Ka card 卡 ka card Ka か- カ- Kal 칼 knife
尔 er er 爾 ji you ru る ル Jae 재 ashes
贾 Jia ja 賈 ko buy Ja じゃ ジャ seu 스 s
斯 si this 斯 shi this su す ス peo 퍼 fur
珀 po amber 珀 haku amber pa ぱ- パ-
斯 si this 斯 shi this
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Facts alone don't determine value for existence.
Meaning is drawn by investigation with persistence.
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wiki Karl Jaspers
SEP: Jaspers
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The Choice of Valentines
Thomas Nashe
Text
Dedication to the Earl of Southampton
Henry Wriothesley
Pardon me the sweet flower of matchless poetry
for the darkest hue the red rose could lay bare.
Although my Muse divorced me from deeper care
she presents you with this licentious poesy.
Don't blame the verse for terse unchastity
in the painting of the things that are hidden.
Others act in what I in speech have bidden
only induced with varied reach to apogee.
Complaints and praises every one can fight
to passion out their Pangu in stately rhyme
but of love's pleasure none did ever write
that have succeeded in these latter times.
Accept, Dear Lord, this gentle tune
and better lines before long will honor you.
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Pangu - the Creator in Chinese myth
It was the merry month of February
when young men in their happy revery
rose early in the morning before the break of day
to seek their valentines so trim and gay.
-----------------
I the poor pilgrim went to my lady's shrine
to see if she would be my valentine.
To my woe, alass, she was not to be found
for she was shifted to an upper ground.
Good Justice Dagger-handle with the crab-tree face
with bills and statutes had scared her from the place.
Now she was compelled for sanctuary
to fly to a house of vhen-ree for venery.
There went I to make bold to inquire
if they had hackneys there to hire
and what they craved by order of their trade
to let one ride a journey on a jade.
Out stepped a three chinned dame
that used to take young wenches to tame
and asked me if I meant as I professed
or only asked a question but in jest.
(Nash was bawdy.)
-------------------
Populism is not democracy.
When the problem is defined as 'all the power' to the few or the many, other deviant variants are left intact.
Dictate by the party that is dedicated to taking over by the imposition of punitive measures for disagreement is a current national issue.
Populism is not political rule by one, the few or the many. The leader is designated to state the dictate for the party.
Stories of atrocity were released to the public to deter the threat of crime, terror, rebellion, revolution or war. The system of election was supposed to alleviate these threats, but the competition to win the election was influenced by the stories of the gods in polytheistic culture, then the stories of God's punishment in monotheism.
The spoils system in victory was used to punish the opposition. The judicial system was adversely influenced by voting groups.
The right of the accused "individual" to due process in law is overridden so individual rights could be used by the party for a witchhunt against opposition in the general public. Anarchy was used as a supportive subtext to justify the party line for 'taking over.'
Demagogues lead this form of populism.
Video: Athenian Populism
Demagogic populists have an anti-professional trend. They don't want to entertain professional disagreement so they offer political positions to those who agree with the 'movement.
Locke was particularly dangerous as a populist insofar as he had worked as a doctor. He used the presumption of normality to promote the consensus of the Puritan dictate in the Whig party over the government of England.
The Whigs used selective agreement with the constitutional form of monarchy that Hobbes had used in his argument against the "Leviathan" of populist democracy.
Mill disagreed with the major tenets of the utilitarian philosophy that had been developed by Bentham in order to make individual rights the hedge against unity of agreement in the majority of the population.
His argument was essentially against anything from the majority. He wanted people to believe that human nature was so subject to corruption that there was virtually nothing that government could use to represent the majority that wouldn't offend some individual.
Bentham's argument had helped to outlaw slavery. It also gained recognition for the right to vote for women and people of color.
The anti-majority position has been used to promote the witchhunts against successful Americans for the benefit of those who support populism instead of democracy.
Showing posts with label revelation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label revelation. Show all posts
Sunday, February 16, 2020
Celebrate
Labels:
Aaron,
diadem,
Elijah,
employment,
enjoyment,
instruments,
Jesus,
Joshua,
Moses,
music,
revelation,
reverence
Sunday, December 29, 2019
Find
1.5.20
Danica Mckellar
Find
Design
寻找设计
Xúnzhǎo shèjì
デザインを見つける
Dezain o mitsukeru
ps119.1+
Find consilio
Happy are those who walk in the law
with the benign design of the natural draw.
Civility is accord with the rightness of truth for security.
Instruction in defense directs action for maturity.
The least force necessary to resolve a crisis
is economic and instructive for credible license.
Logic for the function of service to the public
is unction that serves work that is productive for uplift.
Administration for economic benefit
is the purpose that organizes action in the genesis
of value that defeats the influence of the degenerate deficit.
How is this supposed to work?
If I shake it will it go berserk?
Happy are those who walk in the way
that orders steps for goodness in the night or day.
The goal to do no wrong
is as strong as the length of long
that learns from error to sing our song.
Precepts are ordered to anticipate mastery in command
to win the struggle to overcome the dictum of detrimental demand.
The demand for radical change
is the reason that this discourse seems strange.
That which is wanted in the weight of their speech
is supplied by the aptness of the undecided to believe.
The radicals want to change everything for them.
They would overthrow the state of the union for their dictum.
Opposition to the radical insists on regression
though the need for reform stands as a profession.
Moral polity is directed to conservative reform.
Even good change is inconvenient to the status formed.
I will order my ways to be steadfast
in keeping the statutes cast
from the experience of goodness in the past
for the benefit of the future asked.
My eyes are fixed on the commandments
for the enchantment of advancement.
I will praise you with an upright heart
when my precedents are ordered for the art
of the smart chart for profit from the mart.
I will observe the benefit of divine energy
in the reverie of synergy in the sensory.
The name Syncletica means to work with the call
that reflected the life of Adam prior to the Fall.
The ascetic life taught prayer through abstinence
for moderation in the consumption of accident
or tactlessness.
How can young people work to purify the heart?
Human nature is the garden that needs to be cultivated from the start.
Experience has a broadness that reaches beyond the personal
but consequence holds the person accountable to the endurable.
Prayer seeks an answer to the contemplation of the word
insofar as logic with reason can rule out the absurd
to find the ability to function in situations that occur.
Scripture is a word that helps to consider the past
with the appeal to relation in the community designed for the task.
Law is the template to judge the morality of behavior
with respect for good polity as a sign of divine favor.
I will not stray from the path set by the commandments
as it is a course that my heart will seek for enhancement
with respect for age in advancement.
I treasure the word with my mind
that the discovery of wisdom will find
a way that does not sin as seen or as blind
Blessed is the Creator of the seen and unseen
who provides the answer to prayer to keep the machine
clean with a functional glean.
I will declare that which warrants the statement
when my experience reveals the value of the placement.
I delight in the sight of Your revelation
as a sign of the divine delight in the celebration
of refinement in sublime insight for the striation
of the station in sensation with respect for location.
The interlocking precepts of interlocutors
will help me to see beyond the scope of the monocular.
I will meditate on the value of variant views
to fix my eyes on the best of what is true
for me in relation to You.
I will delight in the education You provide.
I will not forget Your word as my guide.
The Provider who provided providence
has also given reason for guidance
to the profit of trade alliance
with the logic of evidence for defense
without cruelty, violence
or deceptive contrivance
Open my eyes to behold
the wonder of things that unfold
as a vicarious experience told
that converts the imagination to gold
in the anticipation of actions bold.
I have lived as an alien to the grandness of the land.
Do not hide the benefits of Your providential plan.
My soul is consumed with desire
for the consumption of my spirit with fire.
I long for the ordinance of order
that will delineate the boundaries for the border.
You rebuked the insolence of the accursed
who nursed the curse of the thirst to coerce.
Send their scorn and contempt away
that their hostility may be replaced with the right way
to look at life as a functional play.
Even though elected politicians may plot against me,
I will seek the policy of good polity for responsibility
with liberty in the law You can see.
Your words provide instruction for induction.
I delight in the degrees of unction in fluxion.
The venerable old man had a good attitude.
He saw mystery as invitation to find knowledge with gratitude.
The faithful of Israel will be restored.
The blind will be able to see the glory of the Lord.
The ignorant will understand the meaning of the Word.
The lame will rejoice in the ability to get past the absurd.
Order has become the father to Israel.
Ephraim will no longer espouse vitriol.
The faithful will be respected as firstborn.
The firstborn will not lead the descent into scorn.
Cleopatra provided refuge for those who fled from Herod's Judea.
The gospel of Matthew reports that Joseph fled there with Mary and Jesus.
Out of Egypt the son was called after the death of Herod.
He was taken to the land of Israel to Mary's home inherited.
Nazareth was a town of Galilee in her hills.
Jesus grew as a Nazorean in the prophecy fulfilled.
Blessed be the Father of our beloved Jesus Christ
who has blessed us from the heavenly heights.
We were chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world
to be holy and blameless in love with wonders by the Spirit whirled.
We were destined for adoption as children through Christ
according to the praise of the glorious grace bestowed by his sacrifice.
----------------------
Aleph
1st letter
Beati inmaculati
Blessed undefiled
1 Happy are those whose way is blameless,
who walk in the law of the Lord.
2 Happy are those who keep his decrees,
who seek him with their whole heart,
3 who also do no wrong,
but walk in his ways.
4 You have commanded your precepts
to be kept diligently.
5 O that my ways may be steadfast
in keeping your statutes!
6 Then I shall not be put to shame,
having my eyes fixed on all your commandments.
7 I will praise you with an upright heart,
when I learn your righteous ordinances.
8 I will observe your statutes;
do not utterly forsake me.
Beth
2d letter
In quo corrigit
How can
9 How can young people keep their way pure?
By guarding it according to your word.
10 With my whole heart I seek you;
do not let me stray from your commandments.
11 I treasure your word in my heart,
so that I may not sin against you.
12 Blessed are you, O Lord;
teach me your statutes.
13 With my lips I declare
all the ordinances of your mouth.
14 I delight in the way of your decrees
as much as in all riches.
15 I will meditate on your precepts,
and fix my eyes on your ways.
16 I will delight in your statutes;
I will not forget your word.
Gimel
3d letter
Tribue servo tuo
Give your servant
17 Deal bountifully with your servant,
so that I may live and observe your word.
18 Open my eyes, so that I may behold
wondrous things out of your law.
19 I live as an alien in the land;
do not hide your commandments from me.
20 My soul is consumed with longing
for your ordinances at all times.
21 You rebuke the insolent, accursed ones,
who wander from your commandments;
22 take away from me their scorn and contempt,
for I have kept your decrees.
23 Even though princes sit plotting against me,
your servant will meditate on your statutes.
24 Your decrees are my delight,
they are my counselors.
----------------------
================
-----------------------
How does this work?
Chn. 这是如何运作的?
Zhè shì rúhé yùnzuò de?
Jpn. これはどのように作動しますか?
Kore wa dono yō ni sadō shimasu ka?
Krn. 이것은 어떻게 작동합니까?
igeos-eun eotteohge jagdonghabnikka?
Ltn. Quid opus est hoc?
Itn. Come funziona?
Grk. Πως λειτουργεί αυτό?
Pos leitourgeí aftó?
Spn. ¿Como funciona esto?
Frn. Comment cela marche-t-il?
Gmn. Wie funktioniert das?
Dth. Hoe werkt dit?
Hgn. Hogy működik ez?
Trk. Bu nasıl çalışıyor?
Rsn. Как это работает?
Kak eto rabotayet?
How is this supposed to work?
Will it go berserk if I give it a jerk?
---------------------------
Psalm 119
Psalm 119 has 176 verses divided into 22 stanzas. There is one stanza for each of the 22 characters that make up the Hebrew alphabet. Each of the eight verses of each stanza begins with the same letter in the Hebrew text.
This feature was not maintained in the Septuagint, but the name of the corresponding Hebrew letter was placed at the beginning of each stanza. The first has alef. The last has taw.
This psalm is one of about a dozen alphabetic acrostic poems in the Bible. The name of God (Yahweh/Jehovah) appears twenty-four times.
The acrostic form combined with the use of the Torah words constitute the framework for an elaborate prayer. The grounds for the prayer are established in the first two stanzas (alef and beth).
The Torah is held up as a source of blessing and right conduct. The psalmist pledges to dedicate himself to the law.
The prayer in the expression begins in the third stanza (gimel, v. 17). This prayer includes dramatic lament (e.g. verses 81-88), joyous praise (e.g. verses 45–48) and prayers for life, deliverance and vindication (e.g. v. 132-34). The combination of forms is like many other psalms
The uniqueness of Psalm 119 is found in the way that the requests are continually and explicitly grounded in the gift of the Torah and the psalmist's loyalty to it.
The first and fifth verses in a stanza often state the same theme followed by a statement of opposition, affliction or conflict. The final (eighth) verse tends to be a transition introducing the next stanza.
Aleph is the first letter of the Semitic abjads. It includes the Phoenician ʾālep 𐤀, Hebrew ʾālef א, Aramaic ʾālap 𐡀, Syriac ʾālap̄ ܐ and Arabic alif ا. It also appears as South Arabian 𐩱 and Ge'ez ʾنlef አ.
These letters are believed to have derived from an Egyptian hieroglyph depicting an ox's head. The Phoenician variant gave rise to the Greek alpha (ء), the Latin A and Cyrillic ہ.
The name aleph is derived from the West Semitic word for "ox". The shape of the letter derives from a Proto-Sinaitic glyph that depicts an ox's head. The glyph may have been based on an Egyptian hieroglyph.
The modern Arabic form literally means 'tamed' or 'familiar.' The same root in modern Hebrew can mean 'trained' when applied to pets or 'tamed' when referring to wild animals.
The Egyptian "vulture" hieroglyph is also referred to as aleph.
Beth is the second letter of the Semitic abjads. It includes the Phoenician Bēt, Hebrew Bēt ل, Aramaic Bēth, Syriac Bēṯ ܒ and Arabic Bāʾ.
The Phoenician letter gave rise to, among others, the Greek Beta, Latin B and Cyrillic ء, آ.
The name bet is derived from the West Semitic word for "house". The shape of the letter derives from a Proto-Sinaitic glyph which depicts a house.
Gimel is the third letter of the Semitic abjads. The variants include Phoenician Gīml, Hebrew ˈGimel ג, Aramaic Gāmal, Syriac Gāmal ܓ and Arabic ǧīm ج . The letter may have been named after a weapon that was either a staff sling or a throwing stick in the hypothetical Proto-Canaanite form.
The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek gamma ( Γ , γ), the Latin C and G and the Cyrillic (C, c pronounced s) .
-----------------------
Love
Jeremiah 1:1-3 identifies the book as "the words of Jeremiah son of Hilkiah".
The Book of Jeremiah contains a considerable amount of material of a biographical and historical nature in addition to the prophet's own words. This material is especially valuable because it reveals the personality of the prophet more clearly than any of the other prophetic books.
The period in which Jeremiah lived was one of the most critical in Hebrew history. His public ministry began during the reign of King Josiah (640-609 BCE).
The background to Jeremiah is briefly described in the introduction to the book. Jeremiah began his prophetic mission in the 13th year of king Josiah (c. 627). His work was finished in the 11th year of king Zedekiah (586) "when Jerusalem went into exile in the sixth month."
One of the important events that took place a few years after Jeremiah began his prophetic work was the discovery of the book of the law in the Temple at Jerusalem. The main part of this work is now called the Book of Deuteronomy.
It was declared to be the word of Yahweh. King Josiah made it a part of the law of the land.
Jeremiah was enthusiastic about King Josiah's decision. The law was intended to correct the social injustice that prevailed in the land. Practice associated with concession to foreign rule was seen as the cause for the injustice. Faithfulness to the law would protect the worship of Yahweh from contamination by the heartless influences from external forms.
The Deuteronomic reformation was a major change that had difficulty taking hold even according to the judgment of the kings who were being held accountable for their decisions regarding religious observance.
The good kings did not advocate participation in the rites of the longstanding polytheistic cults. They were brave in the proclamation of faith in the one God. They dedicated their service to the people of the land. They were judged to be faithful.
The bad ones saw participation in polytheistic rites as part of being vassals to the king of kings in the Middle East.
The collection of writings that make up the Book of Jeremiah includes oracles, addresses, prayers and exhortations made by the prophet.
The text is interspersed with materials that, though relevant to Jeremiah's work, were contributed by other persons. The material is arranged without strict topical or chronological order.
The authentic oracles of Jeremiah are probably to be found in the poetic sections of chapters 1-25. The book as a whole has been heavily edited. The prophet's followers including his scribe Baruch and later generations of Deuteronomists added material.
Chapters 1-10 describe how Jeremiah was called to prophesy. He warned Judah about the consequences for participation in the sin of the polytheistic religion. Judeans were criticized for their faithlessness.
Jeremiah felt that it was necessary to undermine the trust that people placed in external objects. The prophet declared that the day was coming when the Temple would be destroyed. The ark of the covenant would be taken away. The nation that called itself the chosen of Yahweh would be taken into captivity.
These statements aroused the anger of the priests and King Jehoiakim.
Jeremiah was charged with treason. He would probably have been put to death had not some of his friends succeeded in hiding him until the wrath of his enemies subsided.
Jeremiah dictated a series of oracles in which the policies of King Jehoiakim and his subordinates were severely criticized when it was no longer considered safe for him to appear in public.
Warnings were given concerning what would happen if the practices and the policy that preceded the Old Covenant were not changed.
Chapters 11-26 warned of the destruction that would be poured out on Judah. The constant worship of false idols and the sacrifices that were offered to them were cited as the cause for the anger of God.
Chapters 26-29 contain biographic material and interaction with other prophets.
Chapters 30-38 proclaim God's promise of restoration including Jeremiah's "new covenant".
The covenant has been interpreted differently from Christianity by Judaism.
The description in this section reported that the prophet had been lowered into a cistern as punishment for his prophesy regarding the fall of Jerusalem.
The prophet had also challenged the religious hypocrisy, economic dishonesty and oppressive practices of Judah’s leaders.
King Zedekiah eventually ordered him to be released from the well which the officials had placed him in as an alternative to the death penalty which they said his prophesy warranted.
Jeremiah contended that humans cannot change their nature by themselves. Such reform can occur only through cooperation with the one God.
Yahweh can act on human hearts only when humans recognize their need for it. The value for reform decreed by law had to be understood to be accepted.
Inner transformation in human nature was needed for the success of the reformative movement.
The Old Covenant was based on laws that were decreed as far back as the time of Moses. It was a contract or agreement between Yahweh and the Israelites in which the people agreed to obey all of the commandments given to them.
The Israelites did not live up to the terms of that agreement. Jeremiah believed that he knew the principal reasons why they had not done so. The wrongful motives of evil desire were ingrained as part of their human nature.
The only thing that could bring about a right relationship with Yahweh would be a change of heart. This change would create a new nature. Such a thing was unattainable except by means of the New Covenant in which Yahweh promised to do for the Israelites that which they could not do for themselves.
Chapter 31 spoke to the New Covenant.
Jeremiah 31:7-9
Thus says the LORD:
Sing aloud with gladness for Jacob
and raise shouts for the chief of the nations;
proclaim, give praise and say,
'Save, O LORD, you people,
the remnant of Israel.'
'See, I am going to bring them from the land of the north
and gather them from the farthest parts of the earth
among them the blind and the lame,
those with child and those in labor together.
'A great company shall return.
With weeping they shall come
and with consolations I will lead them back.
I will let them walk by brooks of water
in straight path in which they shall not stumble.
'I have become a father to Israel
and Ephraim is my firstborn.'
----------------------
The faithful of Israel will be restored.
The blind will be able to see the glory of the Lord.
The ignorant will understand the meaning of the Word.
The lame will rejoice in the ability to get past the absurd.
Order has become a father to Israel.
Ephraim will no longer espouse vitriol.
The faithful will be respected as my firstborn.
The firstborn will not lead the descent into scorn.
=================
Jeremiah's prophetic ministry lasted until sometime after the fall of Jerusalem and the beginning of the Babylonian captivity. He encountered strong opposition from King Jehoiakim (609-598) and King Zedekiah (597-586). His life was threatened on more than one occasion.
The Babylonians permitted him to remain in his homeland. Many of his fellow countrymen were taken into captivity. He was taken to Egypt against his will by a group of exiles who found it necessary to flee Jerusalem for their own safety.
Jeremiah died in Egypt after a long and troublesome career.
Jeremiah's teaching had a profound effect on the development of both Judaism and Christianity. Many passages in the Christian scriptures indicate that both Jesus and Paul not only accepted certain ideas from Jeremiah but gave them a central place in their own interpretations of the meaning of religion.
-----------------------------
Introductory Blessing
Ephesus
Ephesus was an ancient Greek city on the coast of Ionia. It was located 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) southwest of present-day Selחuk in İzmir Province, Turkey.
It was built by Attic and Ionian Greek colonists in the 10th century BCE on the site of the former Arzawan capital. Arzawa was the western neighbor and rival of the Middle and New Hittite Kingdoms in Anatolia from the 15th to the 13th centuries.
The capital of the Kingdom of Arzawa was Apasa, the location that would be rebuilt as Ephesus. The Achaeans of Mycenaean Greece and Arzawa formed a coalition against the Hittites in various periods.
It was one of the twelve cities of the Ionian League during the Classical Greek era (5th and 4th centuries). This period saw the annexation of much of modern-day Greece by the Persian Empire and its subsequent independence.
Classical Greece had a powerful influence on the Roman Empire and on the foundations of Western civilization. Modern Western politics, artistic thought in architecture and sculpture, scientific thought, theater, literature and philosophy originated during this period of Greek history.
The Temple of Artemis was completed around 550. It became one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
Artemis was the goddess of the hunt, the wilderness, wild animals, the Moon and chastity.
She was the daughter of Zeus and Leto and the twin sister of Apollo. She was the patron and protector of young girls.
She was one of the most widely venerated of the Ancient Greek deities. Her symbols were a bow and arrow, a quiver and hunting knives. The deer and the cypress were sacred to her. The goddess Diana was her Roman equivalent.
Two temples to Artemis had been destroyed on the site. One was ruined by a flood in the 7th century. The other was burned by arson in the 5th century. The greatest and last form was funded by the Ephesians.
The new temple was sponsored by Croesus, the founder of the Lydian empire and overlord of Ephesus.
It was designed and constructed from around 550 BC by the Cretan architect Chersiphron and his son Metagenes. It was 115 m (377 ft) long and 46 m (151 ft) wide, supposedly the first Greek temple built of marble.
Its peripteral columns stood some 13 m (40 ft) high, in double rows that formed a wide ceremonial passage around the cella that housed the goddess's cult image. Thirty-six of these columns were decorated by carvings in relief.
Heraclitus deposited his book "On Nature" as a dedication to Artemis in the great temple.
Among other monumental buildings were the Library of Celsus and a theater capable of holding 25,000 spectators.
Ephesos was one of the seven churches of Asia that are cited in the Book of Revelation.
The western portion of Asia Minor was known as the Roman province of Asia in the time of the apostles.
Ephesus was a great commercial center. Its harbor was crowded with ships. Its streets were thronged with people from every country. It presented a promising field for missionary effort like Corinth.
The city was a popular center for the worship of Diana. The fame of the magnificent temple of "Diana of the Ephesians" extended throughout all Asia and the world. Its splendor made it the pride of the nation.
The idol within the temple was declared by tradition to have fallen from the sky. Symbolic characters were inscribed upon it. The characters were believed to possess great power. Books had been written by the Ephesians to explain the meaning and use of these symbols.
Many magicians who wielded a powerful influence over the minds of the superstitious worshipers of the image within the temple were among those who gave close study to these costly books.
The magicians of those times have their counterpart in the spiritualistic mediums, the clairvoyants and the fortune-tellers of today. The mystic voices that spoke at Endor and at Ephesus are still misleading the superstitious.
Paul dealt with the magicians and soothsayers in Ephesus while struggling with state offices and pagans. The church was established and strengthened by his diligent labor. The city became the third important city of Christianity after Jerusalem and Antioch in a short time.
Ephesians
The letter to the Ephesians is the 10th book of the New Testament. The authorship is attributed to someone influenced by Paul's thought.
The Apostle Paul wrote the letter sometime around 62 CE while he was in prison in Rome according to tradition. This was about the same time as the epistle to the Colossians had been written. The two letters are similar in many points.
The letter's characteristically non-Pauline syntax, terminology and eschatology suggest a date about 20 years after the death of Paul.
Most English translations indicate that the letter was addressed to "the saints who are in Ephesus" (1:1). The words "in Ephesus" do not appear in the best and earliest manuscripts of the letter.
Marcion was a second-century heresiarch who created the first New Testament canon. He believed that the letter was actually addressed to the church at Laodicea.
The letter lacks personal greetings or any indication that the author has personal knowledge of his recipients. Paul had stayed in Ephesus for more than 2 years (Acts 19:1;20:1).
The introduction to the letter implies that Jesus is the Son of God, but it artfully refers to him as Christ. The implication that Christ was the Son was drawn out theologically at a later time.
Ephesians 1:3-6
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, just as he chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless before him in love. He destined us for adoption as his children through Jesus Christ according to the good pleasure of his will to the praise of his glorious grace that he freely bestowed on us in the Beloved.
----------------------
Blessed be the Father of our beloved Jesus Christ
who has blessed us from the heavenly heights.
We were chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world
to be holy and blameless in love with wonders by the Spirit whirled.
We were destined for adoption as children through Christ
according to the praise of the glorious grace bestowed by his sacrifice.
=================
Nazorean
The name Judea is the English adaptation of the Greek Ioudaia. The Latin form was Iudaea. The contemporary English form is "Judah."
Judah was the 4th son of Jacob and Leah. HIs name means "thanksgiving" or "praise."
Yehudah was the name for an Israelite tribe. David was born to the tribe. He was the first king for the kingdom of that name. Saul was the first king for Israel and Judah.
The ancient Kingdom of Judah was derived from the tribal name. The kingdom existed from 934 until 586 BCE.
The name for the region continued to be incorporated through the Babylonian conquest, Persian, Hellenistic and Roman periods. The variants were Yehud, Yehud Medinata, Hasmonean Ioudaia and Roman Iudaea.
Iudea with Herod
Herod was born around 73 BCE in Idumea, south of Judea. Herod's father, Antipater was by descent an Edomite whose ancestors had converted to Judaism. Herod was raised as a Jew.
Herod's rise to power is largely due to his father's good standing relation with Julius Caesar, who entrusted Antipater with the public affairs of Judea.
John Hyrcanus II was the Hamonean King of Judea for one year (67-66 BCE), then the ethnarch (ruler) of Judea probably from 47-40 BCE. He had once summoned Herod to stand trial for murder. Herod determined to punish him for the action.
Herod was appointed provincial governor of Galilee in ca. 47 BCE when he was about 28 years old. He farmed the taxes of that region for the Roman Senate. He met with success in ridding the area of bandits.
Antipater's elder brother, Phasael, served as governor of Jerusalem. The young Herod cultivated a good relationship with Sextus Caesar, the acting Roman governor of Syria. Sextus appointed Herod as general of Coelesyria and Samaria.
He enjoyed the backing of Rome, but the reports of his brutality were condemned by the Sanhedrin.
Herod and his brother Phasael were named as tetrarchs by the Roman leader Mark Antony in 41 BCE to support John Hyrcanus II.
Antigonus, Hyrcanus' nephew, took the throne from his uncle in alliance with the Parthians. Herod fled to Rome to consult with the Romans about the restoration of Hyrcanus II to power.
Pompey the Great had conquered Jerusalem in 63 BCE. This placed the region in the Roman sphere of influence. Herod was unexpectedly appointed King of the Jews by the Roman Senate in Rome around 40 BCE.
Herod went back to Judea to win his kingdom from Antigonus. He married the grandaughter of Hyrcanus II, Mariamne I, near the end of the campaign. Mariamne was also the niece of Antingonus.
The marriage was an attempt to win favor with the Jewish population. Herod was already married to Doris. They had a son, Antipater. Doris and her son were banished to make room for Herod's next move in his rise to power.
Herod set out with a large army to capture Jerusalem with Sosius, the governor of Syria, in 37 BCE. Antigonus was sent to Marc Antony for execution. Herod took the title of basileus (Βασιλεύς, "king") as the sole ruler of Jerusalem. He ended the Hasmonean dynasty and started the Herodian.
John Hyrcanus had conquered the region of Idumaea, the Edom of the Hebrew Bible, in a campaign that lasted from 140-130 BCE. He had required all Idumaeans to obey Jewish law or to leave. Most Idumaeans converted. A number of them intermarried with the Jews and adopted their customs. This meant that the males had to be circumcised.
It was thought that while Herod had complied with the external customs, his political actions were reckless or decadent. It was reported that he executed several members of his own family, including his wife Mariamne I.
Herod's rule marked a new beginning in the history of Judea. Judea had been ruled autonomously by the Hasmonean kings from 140 until 63 BCE.
The Hasmonean kings retained their titles, but became clients of Rome after the conquest by Pompey in 63 BCE.
Herod overthrew the Hasmonean Antigonus in the 3-year-long war between 37 and 34 BCE. He ruled under Roman overlordship until his death ca. 1 CE. When he passed on the throne to his sons it established the Herodian dynasty.
Herod was granted the title of "King of Judea" by the Roman Senate in 40 BCE. He was a vassal of the Roman Empire. He was expected to support the interests of his Roman patrons as such.
His rule faced 2 threats when he obtained leadership in Judea. The first threat came from his mother-in-law Alexandra, who sought to regain power for her family, the Hasmoneans.
Cleopatra married the Roman leader Antony in the same year. Alexandra asked Cleopatra for aid in making Aristobulus III the High Priest.
Aristobulus III might partially repair the fortunes of the Hasmoneans if made High Priest. Cleopatra presented the request to Antony but urged Alexandra to leave Judea with Aristobulus III and visit Antony.
Herod received word of this plot. He feared that if Antony met Aristobolus III in person he might name Aristobulus III King of Judea. This threat induced Herod to order the assassination of Aristobulus in 35 BCE. This ended this first threat to Herod's throne.
Antony's marriage to Cleopatra in 37 BCE also sparked a power struggle between Roman leaders Octavian, who would later be called Augustus, and Antony.
Herod owed his throne to Rome. He had to pick a side. He chose Antony.
Antony lost to Octavian at Actium in 31 BCE. This posed a second threat to Herod's rule. Herod had to regain Octavian's support if he was to keep his throne.
Herod convinced Octavian at Rhodes in 31 BCE that he would be loyal to him through his ability to keep Judea open to Rome as a link to the wealth of Syria and Egypt and his ability to defend the frontier.
Herod continued to rule his subjects as he saw fit. Restrictions were placed upon him in his relations with other kingdoms despite the autonomy afforded to Herod in his internal reign over Judea.
Herod's support from the Roman Empire was a major factor in enabling him to maintain his authority.
Josephus characterizes Herod's rule in generally favorable terms in The Jewish War. The tyrannical authority that many scholars have come to associate with Herod's reign came out more in the Jewish Antiquities.
Herod's despotic rule was demonstrated by many of his security measures. He used secret police to monitor and report the feelings of the general populace towards him. He sought to prohibit protests and had opponents removed by force.
He had a bodyguard of 2,000 soldiers. His personal guard took part in his funeral. It included the Doryphnoroi, a Thracian, Celtic (probably Gallic) and Germanic contingent.
While the term Doryphnoroi does not have an ethnic connotation, the unit was probably composed of distinguished veteran soldiers and young men from the most influential Jewish families.
Thracians had served in the Jewish armies since the Hasmonean dynasty. The Celtic contingent were former bodyguards of Cleopatra. They were given as a gift by Augustus to Herod following the Battle of Actium.
The Germanic contingent was modeled upon Augustus's personal bodyguard, the Germani Corporis Custodes. These were responsible for guarding the palace.
Cleopatra in Egypt
Roman rule had been preceded by the Ptolemaic and Persian dominions.
The groundwork for Ptolemaic rule began in 332 BCE. Alexander III of Macedon conquered Egypt with little resistance as part of his campaign to defeat the Persians.
He was welcomed by the Egyptians as a deliverer. He visited Memphis and went on pilgrimage to the oracle of Amun at the Oasis of Siwa. The oracle declared him to be the son of Amun-Re. He conciliated the Egyptians by the respect which he showed for their religion.
While Macedonians commanded military garrisons at Memphis and Pelusium, Alexander left the civil administration in local control. There were two, later one governor.
Alexander founded Alexandria to be a major commercial port. It became Egypt's commercial and administrative capital as well as its intellectual center.
Ptolemaic Egypt began when Ptolemy I Soter declared himself Pharaoh of Egypt in 305 BCE after the death of Alexander (323 BCE).
All the male rulers of the dynasty took the name Ptolemy. Ptolemaic queens regnant, some of whom were the sisters of their husbands, were usually called Cleopatra, Arsinoe or Berenice.
The Ptolemaic Kingdom was a powerful Hellenistic state. It extended from southern Syria in the east to Cyrene to the west and south to the frontier with Nubia.
The most famous member of the line was the last queen, Cleopatra VII. She was known for her role in the Roman political battles between Julius Caesar and Pompey. Later she was engaged in the dispute between Octavian and Mark Antony.
Her apparent suicide at the conquest by Rome marked the end of Ptolemaic rule in Egypt. Ptolemaic rule ended with the death of Queen Cleopatra VII and the Roman conquest in 30 BCE.
Galilee
Galilee was named by the Israelites in the Bible as the tribal region for Naphthali and Dan. The Tribe of Dan was the hereditary local law enforcement and judiciary for the whole nation. They were dispersed in the lands for all the tribes. The region is generally referred to as Naphthali as a result.
Galilee had a tradition of political autonomy. The northern traditions that go into the Hebrew Bible are informed by this political sensibility of autonomy. The tribal confederacy that had started during the period of the Judges was part of the northern Kingdom of Israel before and after the conquest by Assyria.
Upper Galilee is the more remote area to the extreme north. Lower Galilee borders the Sea of Galilee on the east and the Mediterranean Ocean on the west. People were speaking Aramaic and Hebrew in the north. They spoke Aramaic, Hebrew and Greek.
The name “Galilee” comes from the Hebrew word galil which means “circle” or “region”. The region of Galilee in the first century CE was encircled by Syro-Phoenicia stretching along the eastern Mediterranean coastline and northwards, by Gaulanitis to the north-east, by the Hellenistic settlements of Decapolis to the south-east and by Samaria to the south. Samaria separated Galilee geographically from Judea.
Most of Galilee consists of rocky terrain at heights of between 500 and 700 m (1640-2300 ft.). Several high mountains are in the region. Mount Tabor and Mount Meron are included.
The climate has relatively low temperatures and high rainfall. Flora and fauna thrive in the region as a result. Many birds annually migrate from colder climates to Africa and back through the Hula–Jordan corridor.
The streams and waterfalls, the latter mainly in Upper Galilee, along with vast fields of greenery and colorful wildflowers. The natural beauty and numerous towns of biblical importance make the region a popular tourist destination.
Much of the Galilee region was conquered and annexed by the first Hasmonean King of Judaea Aristobulus I (104 - 103 BCE) during the expansion of the Hasmonean dynasty.
The Roman emperor Augustus appointed his son Herod Antipas as tetrarch of Galilee after the death of Herod the Great. The government for the territory remained a Roman client state.
Antipas was a capable ruler. Josephus does not record any instance of him using force to put down an uprising and he had a long, prosperous reign.
Antipas rebuilt the city of Sepphoris and founded the new city of Tiberias in either 18 CE or 19 CE. These two cities became Galilee's largest cultural centers. They were the main centers of Greco-Roman influence, but were still predominantly Jewish.
A large gap existed between the rich and poor, but the lack of uprisings suggest that taxes were not exorbitantly high. Most Galileans probably did not feel their livelihoods were being threatened.
The archaeological discoveries of synagogues from the Hellenistic and Roman period in the area show strong Phoenician influences and tolerance for other cultures.
Antipas married his half-niece Herodias late in his reign. She was already married to one of her other uncles. His wife, whom he divorced, fled to her father Aretas, an Arab king, who invaded Galilee. He defeated Antipas's troops before their withdrawal.
Both Josephus and the Gospel of Mark 6:17–29 record that the itinerate preacher John the Baptist criticized Antipas over his marriage. Antipas consequently had him imprisoned and beheaded.
Antipas went to Rome around 39 CE to request that he be elevated from the status of tetrarch to the status of king at the urging of Herodias. The Romans found him guilty of storing arms. He was removed from power and exiled. This ended his forty-three-year reign.
Nazareth is currently known as "the Arab capital of Israel." The inhabitants are predominantly Arab citizens of Israel. Muslims constitute 69% of the population. Christians make up 30.9%. Old Nazareth had a Jewish population of 40,312 in 2014.
"Nazareth" is derived from one of the Hebrew words for 'branch', namely ne·ṣer, נֵ֫צֶר. The prophetic, messianic words in Book of Isaiah 11:1 stated, 'from (Jesse's) roots a Branch (netzer) will bear fruit'.
Modern-day Nazareth is nestled in a natural bowl which reaches from 320 meters (1050 ft.) above sea level to the crest of the hills about 488 meters (1600 ft.).
The presence of kochim tombs with fragments from ossuaries found by archaeologists indicates that the people living there were Jewish during the time of Jesus.
Research indicates that the village had a population of 400 and one public bath. The mikva was important for civic and religious purposes. Bathers were cleansed for in physical and ritualistic senses.
Matt. 2:13-15; 19-23
Now after they had left an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream and said, 'Get up, take the child and his mother and flee to Egypt. Remain there until I tell you. Herod is about to search for the child to destroy him.' Then Joseph got up took the child and his mother by night and went to Egypt and remained there until the death of Herod. This was to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet, 'Out of Egypt I have called my son.'
When Herod died, an angel of the Lord suddenly appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt and said, 'Get up, take the child and his mother and go to the land of Israel for those who were seeking the child's life are dead.'
Joseph got up, took the child and his mother and went to the land of Israel. When he heard that Archelaus was ruling over Judea in place of his father Herod, he was afraid to go there. After being warned in a dream, he went away to the district of Galilee. There he made his home in a town called Nazareth so what had been spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled, 'He will be called a Nazorean.'
----------------------
Cleopatra provided refuge for those who fled from Herod's Judea.
The gospel of Matthew reports that Joseph fled there with Mary and Jesus.
Out of Egypt this son was called after the death of Herod.
He was taken to the land of Israel to Mary's home inherited.
Nazareth was a town of Galilee in her hills.
Jesus grew as a Nazorean in the prophecy fulfilled.
=================
wiki Herod the Great
wiki Herodian Kingdom of Judea
3 Client Kings of Rome
-------------------------
Monastic Life
Sarah, Theodora and Syncletica of Egypt
Lectionary
Diocletian's reign (284–305 CE) marked the transition from the Roman to the Byzantine era in Egypt. A number of the Egyptian Christians who were persecuted left civilization to find refuge in the wilderness.
The New Testament had by then been translated into Egyptian. This became the basic text that motivated the pragmatic ascetics to seek guidance from the Father in heaven.
The Desert Mothers were female Christian ascetics living in the desert of Egypt, Palestine and Syria in the 4th and 5th centuries. They typically lived in the monastic communities that began forming during that time.
Some lived as hermits. The experience of solitary existence was thought to be a conversation with the Creator. Prayer combined with fasting was the ascetic mode for communication.
Communication with the unseen Father was an exercise in looking at the design of nature for the economy of life. The discovery of wisdom in truth became the motivation to express the discovery to others.
Expressions that resonated beyond the experience of other monks was shared with those who sought wisdom that could be applied to civilization.
Egypt was the Motherland for Christian monasticism.
A distinct Egyptian Coptic Church was firmly recognized as established by the Council of Chalcedon in 451.
Coptic asceticism had formed the original foundation for Christian Monasticism. Anthony went into the wilderness of Egypt around 285. He organized a kind of monastic life for his disciples in about 305.
Abba Anthony became the first one to be called "monk" (Gr: μοναχός). He was the first to establish a Christian monastery. The Monastery of Abba Anthony in the Red Sea area is the oldest in the western world.
Anthony's way of life was focused on solidarity with those seeking wisdom in the solitary life.
Abba Pachomius the Cenobite was a Copt from Upper Egypt. He established communal monasticism in his monasteries in upper Egypt. His work laid the basic monastic structure for many of the monasteries outside of Coptic orthodoxy.
Women from that era influenced the early ascetic or monastic tradition while living outside the desert were called Desert Mothers.
Men and women leading the chaste life gained a reputation for wisdom in speech and their ascetic economy of life. Apologists pointed to them as examples of Christian conduct despite the austere conditions in which they lived.
The voluntary renunciation of worldly possessions for the experience of poverty was not only an exercise in learning how to pray while abstaining from a normal diet. The monks who led the way into a chosen way had the motivation to write about the experience in order to communicate something of the value to the broader community.
Origen, Cyprian and Pamphilus became teachers who gave instruction with their written work. Their instruction helped to form agreement in doctrine regarding the divine nature of the Son as a settlement of the Christological issue of relationship with God the Father.
The literature of the Desert Fathers is well known because most of the early lives of the saints "were written by men for a male monastic audience." Even the occasional stories about the Desert Mothers come from the early Desert Fathers and their biographers.
The desert women had an important place in the leadership role within the Christian community. There are several chapters dedicated to the Desert Mothers in the Lausiac History by Palladius. He mentioned 2,975 women living in the desert.
Other sources include the various stories told over the years about the lives of saints of that era, traditionally called vitae ("life"). The lives of twelve female desert saints are described in Book I of Vitae Patrum (Lives of the Fathers).
The Desert Mothers were known as ammas ("spiritual mothers"). They were comparable to the Desert Fathers (abbas) due to the respect they earned as spiritual teachers and directors.
One of the most well known Desert Mothers was Amma Syncletica of Alexandria, who had twenty-seven sayings attributed to her in the Apophthegmata Patrum, or Sayings of the Desert Fathers.
Two other ammas, Theodora of Alexandria and Amma Sarah of the Desert, also had sayings in that book.
Amma Syncletica was born to wealthy parents in Alexandria sometime around 270. She was said to have lived to her eighties in about 350. She was well educated. Her education included an early study of the writings of Desert Father Evagrius Ponticus.
She sold everything and gave the money to the poor after the death of her parents. She lived as a hermit among the tombs outside of Alexandria. She moved outside the city with her blind sister.
A community of women ascetics grew up around her gradually. She served as their spiritual mother. Syncletica taught that moderation was the lesson that she had drawn from her experience as an ascetic and hermit, Asceticism was not an end in itself. It was the means to attain experiential knowledge.
Theodora of Alexandria was the amma of a monastic community of women near Alexandria. She had fled to the desert disguised as a man prior to that and joined a community of monks. She was sought out by many of the Desert Fathers for advice. It was reported that Bishop Theophilus of Alexandria came to her for counsel.
The sayings of Sarah of the Desert indicate that she was a hermit living by a river for sixty years. Her sharp replies to some of the old men who challenged her show a distinctly strong personality.
Two male anchorites decided to humiliate her in the desert according to one story. They said, "Be careful not to become conceited thinking to yourself." Anchorites were required to take a vow of stability of place. They chose to live in cells often attached to a church.
She replied, "Look how anchorites are coming to see me, a mere woman." She added, "According to nature I am a woman, but not according to my thoughts."
----------------------
Sayings:
Amma Sarah said, "If I prayed God that all people should approve of my conduct, I should find myself a penitent at the door of each one, but I shall rather pray that my heart may be pure toward all."
Amma Syncletica said, "In the beginning there are a great many battles and a good deal of suffering for those who are advancing towards God and afterwards, ineffable joy. It is like those who wish to light a fire; at first they are choked by the smoke and cry, and by this means obtain what they seek ... so we must also kindle the divine fire in ourselves through tears and hard work."
Amma Syncletica said, "There are many who live in the mountains and behave as if they were in the town; they are wasting their time. It is possible to be a solitary in one's mind while living in a crowd; and it is possible for those who are solitaries to live in the crowd of their own thoughts."
----------------------
The name Syncletica means to work with the call
that reflected the life of Adam prior to the Fall.
The ascetic life teaches prayer through abstinence
for moderation in the consumption of accident
or tactlessness.
================
Amma Theodora said that neither asceticism, nor vigils, nor any kind of suffering are able to save. Only true humility can do that. There was a hermit who was able to banish the demons. And he asked them: "What makes you go away? Is it fasting?" They replied: "We do not eat or drink." "Is it vigils?"
They said: "We do not sleep." "Then what power sends you away?" They replied: "Nothing can overcome us except humility alone." Amma Theodora said: "Do you see how humility is victorious over the demons?"
-----------------------
The Church
Richard Hooker
The Church of England adopted a position that allowed for the conservative modification of public policy with respect for reason in the determination of goodness. It was allowed that the benefit of the Church was identified with the monarch who would choose to defend her from enemies foreign or domestic.
This was not to fly in the face of all that had been accomplished with Church leadership out of Rome. There was still agreement with that which was right about policy for national sovereignty by the Pope with the college of cardinals.
The build toward cultural Christian unity with the consensus of agreement between nations with different languages was cultivated with the emperor as the king of kings for the European continent.
The build towards greater unity was seen as endangered by the claim to papal supremacy as supported by the investiture of selection of clergy by the Catholic authority.
The Vatican had made itself into a state authority that was separate from and placed itself over royal leadership. It was all male and all single except for those who chose to act as aristocratic in political dominion.
These were married and acted as magistrates who had offenders punished with corporal or capital punishment. There was question as to whether their judgment wasn't for their benefit at the expanding expense of the public.
The gradual development of royal authority for European unity became questionable as an evolutionary process when colonial expansion for global domination became the basis of the competition for the domination of imperial leadership with the practice of the Inquisition, indulgences and the competition for the natural resources in lands occupied by primitive natives.
The benefit of trade with primitive people was threatened by the exploitation of their labor with slavery.
The royals in the majority of kingdoms opposed slavery as something that was antithetical to Christian society. The common people without education were encouraged to identify the royal position as corrupt.
The institution of monarchy was viewed as subject to the corruption of the benefit of the royals for their personal benefit even though the placement of the authority for the House of Commons was being placed over that for the monarchy.
The vision of Isaiah had advocated for the establishment of the royal line of succession as the means by which damage caused by the competition for the top spot could be reduced.
The promise of benefit for the people of the kingdom was indicated as a conservative and progressive value. The royal family was to act as a model for this value so they could be seen as such.
Benefit from such a vision was not accepted by polytheistic society. Stories about competition with violence or cruelty were circulated in opposition to the association of royal leadership with the absolute.
Executive authority was only a step in the direction of the cultivation of domination of political leadership by the military for trade by the patrician class. The position of consul had a one year and usually a one time tenure that could be used by the plebians to ascend to the patrician position of status in society.
Leadership at the inception of the US republic defined public safety as the basis for having a national government. Monarchy was defined as corrupt for the sake of the experiment in self-determination by selection with election to public office.
When Alexander had been asked to select a successor to his position of leadership, it is reported that he simply stated "the best."
Royal succession was established after his empire was divided between his leading officers. Leadership by occupancy in foreign lands was limited to the administration of a system of election if only because of the success of the Republic in Rome.
When the Roman republic took over in power the state still favored self-determination with election, but the line of succession for the emperor was not seen as royal because he could select a successor by adoption. The succession could be modified by the emperor's choice.
Patricians viewed this innovation to republic as the action of a dictator. The subjection of imperial authority to the will of the patricians and the plebians was dictated as necessary for the recognition of the office as for the people. The distinction for the benefit of the patricians was dropped explicitly for the sake of the association of the lower class with the people.
The existence of poor people came to be used as a proof of the corruption of executive leadership even in elected office. That poverty was increased for the benefit of the demands of dictate by the lower house of representation by the party that refuses to acknowledge republic as a democracy is denied as a plausibility.
Ecclesiastical Lawes
Text
Book 1, Ch. 1, S. 1
The Cause for Discourse
Richard Hooker has set the stage for the reasonable consideration of political government with his work on ecclesiastical law. The simple observation that there is good or bad leadership in polity allowed for self-determination by election in the framework of the success of the line of succession for executive authority with policy for the public.
Hooker expressed his distaste for demagoguery in the Ecclesiastical Lawes. He argued that those who seek to persuade a multitude that they are not as well governed as they ought to be will find those who listen.
Precedent for the Force of Law
The established government can be criticized for evident defects, but it is the proposal for replacement by untested proceedings that begs the question for improvement. The discontent simply want to replace the elect with something different, not necessarily better.
The contest for election should be determined by the consideration of what is necessarily better or the contest lacks value for the public.
The open reproval for the supposed disorders of the state are taken to be friendly to the principled benefit of all in terms of the color for the freedom of mind for what passes for good in the current criticism of disorder.
He wrote, "That which wanteth in the weight of their speech, is supplied by the aptness of men’s minds to accept and believe it."
-------------------------
The demand for radical change
is the reason that this discourse seems strange.
That which is wanted in the weight of their speech
is supplied by the aptness of the undecided to believe.
The radicals want to change everything for them.
They would overthrow the state of the union for their dictum.
Opposition to the radical insists on regression
though the need for reform stands as a profession.
Moral polity is directed to conservative reform.
Even good change is inconvient to the status formed.
===========
If that which has been established is defended as the necessary state of affairs on the other hand, then the prejudice that is rooted in the heart is allowed as preferred without argument. Long practice and usage however carry the force of law.
Conservative Reform
It seems that the redemption of reason for conservative reform is recommended as the course for manageable improvement.
C.D. Broad would eventually advise that precedent should not be replaced unless it was by something as good or better.
The chief executive official might not be re-elected to serve another term in office, but the conservative model for royal succession was an argument for conservative reform in republican government.
There were no term limits for the president of the US until the 22d amendment was ratified in 1951. It was enacted with the certainty that only the chief executive could be found guilty of corruption for his or her own benefit.
Corruption from Congressional officials was believed manageable on a case by case basis. The thought that a party could be guilty of corruption has not been viewed as plausible.
Term limits were established after FDR as a presumed benefit for the Republicans, but he enacted socialist policies for the American government.
This left the precedents established by his presidency as a benefit to the socialists in the Democrat party.
This political action took place prior to the impeachment of Nixon by a couple of decades. Nixon was actually an advocate for idealistic pragmatism. He ordered the reduction of troops from Vietnam in response to protests from the American public.
The accusation of criminal conduct by the Watergate scandal was pressed as a foregone conclusion by the leftist media. The issue of troop reduction was obscured for the sake of the call for impeachment.
The president was accused of having ordered a break-in to DNC HQ at Watergate. While he protested that he was not a crook, the media presented the impeachment by the House as proof of his guilt.
---------------------
Active Literacy
Umberto Eco
b. 1.5.1932 Alessandria, Italy
d. 2.19.2016 Milan, Italy
Umberto Eco was an Italian novelist and university professor. He was a polymath in semiotics.
He is widely known for the novel Il nome della rosa (The Name of the Rose).
The novel was published in 1980. The text was an artful reworking of Conan Doyle. Sherlock Holmes was transplanted to 14th-century Italy as a Franciscan friar. His associate in investigation was a Benedictine novice.
The work was a historical mystery that combined semiotics in fiction with biblical analysis, medieval studies and literary theory. It was translated into 30 languages, it sold more than 10m copies worldwide. A film starring Sean Connery as the monk-detective, William of Baskerville, was made.
He later wrote other novels, including Il pendolo di Foucault (Foucault's Pendulum) and L'isola del giorno prima (The Island of the Day Before). His novel Il cimitero di Praga (The Prague Cemetery) was released in 2010. It topped the bestseller charts in Italy.
Eco also wrote academic texts, children's books and essays. He edited and translated books from French into Italian. Raymond Queneau’s “Exercises in Style” (1983) was an example.
He was the founder of the Department of Media Studies at the University of the Republic of San Marino, president of the Graduate School for the Study of the Humanities at the University of Bologna, member of the Accademia dei Lincei and an honorary fellow of Kellogg College, Oxford.
Eco was honored with the Kenyon Review Award for Literary Achievement in 2005 along with Roger Angel.
Umberto Eco
S. 翁贝托生态
T. 翁貝託生態
翁 Weng old man 翁 o venerable Un うん ウン Um 움 cellar
贝 bei shellfish 貝 bai shellfish be べ ベ be 베 best
托 tuo entrust 託 taku consign ru る ル leu 르 porn
生 Sheng to be born 生 sei life to と ト to 토 sat
态 tai attitude 態 tai atttitude E え エ e 에 on
ko こ コ ko 코 nose
_______________
The venerable old man had a good attitude.
He saw mystery as an invitation to find knowledge with gratitude.
================
Danica Mckellar
Find
Design
寻找设计
Xúnzhǎo shèjì
デザインを見つける
Dezain o mitsukeru
ps119.1+
Find consilio
Happy are those who walk in the law
with the benign design of the natural draw.
Civility is accord with the rightness of truth for security.
Instruction in defense directs action for maturity.
The least force necessary to resolve a crisis
is economic and instructive for credible license.
Logic for the function of service to the public
is unction that serves work that is productive for uplift.
Administration for economic benefit
is the purpose that organizes action in the genesis
of value that defeats the influence of the degenerate deficit.
How is this supposed to work?
If I shake it will it go berserk?
Happy are those who walk in the way
that orders steps for goodness in the night or day.
The goal to do no wrong
is as strong as the length of long
that learns from error to sing our song.
Precepts are ordered to anticipate mastery in command
to win the struggle to overcome the dictum of detrimental demand.
The demand for radical change
is the reason that this discourse seems strange.
That which is wanted in the weight of their speech
is supplied by the aptness of the undecided to believe.
The radicals want to change everything for them.
They would overthrow the state of the union for their dictum.
Opposition to the radical insists on regression
though the need for reform stands as a profession.
Moral polity is directed to conservative reform.
Even good change is inconvenient to the status formed.
I will order my ways to be steadfast
in keeping the statutes cast
from the experience of goodness in the past
for the benefit of the future asked.
My eyes are fixed on the commandments
for the enchantment of advancement.
I will praise you with an upright heart
when my precedents are ordered for the art
of the smart chart for profit from the mart.
I will observe the benefit of divine energy
in the reverie of synergy in the sensory.
The name Syncletica means to work with the call
that reflected the life of Adam prior to the Fall.
The ascetic life taught prayer through abstinence
for moderation in the consumption of accident
or tactlessness.
How can young people work to purify the heart?
Human nature is the garden that needs to be cultivated from the start.
Experience has a broadness that reaches beyond the personal
but consequence holds the person accountable to the endurable.
Prayer seeks an answer to the contemplation of the word
insofar as logic with reason can rule out the absurd
to find the ability to function in situations that occur.
Scripture is a word that helps to consider the past
with the appeal to relation in the community designed for the task.
Law is the template to judge the morality of behavior
with respect for good polity as a sign of divine favor.
I will not stray from the path set by the commandments
as it is a course that my heart will seek for enhancement
with respect for age in advancement.
I treasure the word with my mind
that the discovery of wisdom will find
a way that does not sin as seen or as blind
Blessed is the Creator of the seen and unseen
who provides the answer to prayer to keep the machine
clean with a functional glean.
I will declare that which warrants the statement
when my experience reveals the value of the placement.
I delight in the sight of Your revelation
as a sign of the divine delight in the celebration
of refinement in sublime insight for the striation
of the station in sensation with respect for location.
The interlocking precepts of interlocutors
will help me to see beyond the scope of the monocular.
I will meditate on the value of variant views
to fix my eyes on the best of what is true
for me in relation to You.
I will delight in the education You provide.
I will not forget Your word as my guide.
The Provider who provided providence
has also given reason for guidance
to the profit of trade alliance
with the logic of evidence for defense
without cruelty, violence
or deceptive contrivance
Open my eyes to behold
the wonder of things that unfold
as a vicarious experience told
that converts the imagination to gold
in the anticipation of actions bold.
I have lived as an alien to the grandness of the land.
Do not hide the benefits of Your providential plan.
My soul is consumed with desire
for the consumption of my spirit with fire.
I long for the ordinance of order
that will delineate the boundaries for the border.
You rebuked the insolence of the accursed
who nursed the curse of the thirst to coerce.
Send their scorn and contempt away
that their hostility may be replaced with the right way
to look at life as a functional play.
Even though elected politicians may plot against me,
I will seek the policy of good polity for responsibility
with liberty in the law You can see.
Your words provide instruction for induction.
I delight in the degrees of unction in fluxion.
The venerable old man had a good attitude.
He saw mystery as invitation to find knowledge with gratitude.
The faithful of Israel will be restored.
The blind will be able to see the glory of the Lord.
The ignorant will understand the meaning of the Word.
The lame will rejoice in the ability to get past the absurd.
Order has become the father to Israel.
Ephraim will no longer espouse vitriol.
The faithful will be respected as firstborn.
The firstborn will not lead the descent into scorn.
Cleopatra provided refuge for those who fled from Herod's Judea.
The gospel of Matthew reports that Joseph fled there with Mary and Jesus.
Out of Egypt the son was called after the death of Herod.
He was taken to the land of Israel to Mary's home inherited.
Nazareth was a town of Galilee in her hills.
Jesus grew as a Nazorean in the prophecy fulfilled.
Blessed be the Father of our beloved Jesus Christ
who has blessed us from the heavenly heights.
We were chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world
to be holy and blameless in love with wonders by the Spirit whirled.
We were destined for adoption as children through Christ
according to the praise of the glorious grace bestowed by his sacrifice.
----------------------
Aleph
1st letter
Beati inmaculati
Blessed undefiled
1 Happy are those whose way is blameless,
who walk in the law of the Lord.
2 Happy are those who keep his decrees,
who seek him with their whole heart,
3 who also do no wrong,
but walk in his ways.
4 You have commanded your precepts
to be kept diligently.
5 O that my ways may be steadfast
in keeping your statutes!
6 Then I shall not be put to shame,
having my eyes fixed on all your commandments.
7 I will praise you with an upright heart,
when I learn your righteous ordinances.
8 I will observe your statutes;
do not utterly forsake me.
Beth
2d letter
In quo corrigit
How can
9 How can young people keep their way pure?
By guarding it according to your word.
10 With my whole heart I seek you;
do not let me stray from your commandments.
11 I treasure your word in my heart,
so that I may not sin against you.
12 Blessed are you, O Lord;
teach me your statutes.
13 With my lips I declare
all the ordinances of your mouth.
14 I delight in the way of your decrees
as much as in all riches.
15 I will meditate on your precepts,
and fix my eyes on your ways.
16 I will delight in your statutes;
I will not forget your word.
Gimel
3d letter
Tribue servo tuo
Give your servant
17 Deal bountifully with your servant,
so that I may live and observe your word.
18 Open my eyes, so that I may behold
wondrous things out of your law.
19 I live as an alien in the land;
do not hide your commandments from me.
20 My soul is consumed with longing
for your ordinances at all times.
21 You rebuke the insolent, accursed ones,
who wander from your commandments;
22 take away from me their scorn and contempt,
for I have kept your decrees.
23 Even though princes sit plotting against me,
your servant will meditate on your statutes.
24 Your decrees are my delight,
they are my counselors.
----------------------
================
-----------------------
How does this work?
Chn. 这是如何运作的?
Zhè shì rúhé yùnzuò de?
Jpn. これはどのように作動しますか?
Kore wa dono yō ni sadō shimasu ka?
Krn. 이것은 어떻게 작동합니까?
igeos-eun eotteohge jagdonghabnikka?
Ltn. Quid opus est hoc?
Itn. Come funziona?
Grk. Πως λειτουργεί αυτό?
Pos leitourgeí aftó?
Spn. ¿Como funciona esto?
Frn. Comment cela marche-t-il?
Gmn. Wie funktioniert das?
Dth. Hoe werkt dit?
Hgn. Hogy működik ez?
Trk. Bu nasıl çalışıyor?
Rsn. Как это работает?
Kak eto rabotayet?
How is this supposed to work?
Will it go berserk if I give it a jerk?
---------------------------
Psalm 119
Psalm 119 has 176 verses divided into 22 stanzas. There is one stanza for each of the 22 characters that make up the Hebrew alphabet. Each of the eight verses of each stanza begins with the same letter in the Hebrew text.
This feature was not maintained in the Septuagint, but the name of the corresponding Hebrew letter was placed at the beginning of each stanza. The first has alef. The last has taw.
This psalm is one of about a dozen alphabetic acrostic poems in the Bible. The name of God (Yahweh/Jehovah) appears twenty-four times.
The acrostic form combined with the use of the Torah words constitute the framework for an elaborate prayer. The grounds for the prayer are established in the first two stanzas (alef and beth).
The Torah is held up as a source of blessing and right conduct. The psalmist pledges to dedicate himself to the law.
The prayer in the expression begins in the third stanza (gimel, v. 17). This prayer includes dramatic lament (e.g. verses 81-88), joyous praise (e.g. verses 45–48) and prayers for life, deliverance and vindication (e.g. v. 132-34). The combination of forms is like many other psalms
The uniqueness of Psalm 119 is found in the way that the requests are continually and explicitly grounded in the gift of the Torah and the psalmist's loyalty to it.
The first and fifth verses in a stanza often state the same theme followed by a statement of opposition, affliction or conflict. The final (eighth) verse tends to be a transition introducing the next stanza.
Aleph is the first letter of the Semitic abjads. It includes the Phoenician ʾālep 𐤀, Hebrew ʾālef א, Aramaic ʾālap 𐡀, Syriac ʾālap̄ ܐ and Arabic alif ا. It also appears as South Arabian 𐩱 and Ge'ez ʾنlef አ.
These letters are believed to have derived from an Egyptian hieroglyph depicting an ox's head. The Phoenician variant gave rise to the Greek alpha (ء), the Latin A and Cyrillic ہ.
The name aleph is derived from the West Semitic word for "ox". The shape of the letter derives from a Proto-Sinaitic glyph that depicts an ox's head. The glyph may have been based on an Egyptian hieroglyph.
The modern Arabic form literally means 'tamed' or 'familiar.' The same root in modern Hebrew can mean 'trained' when applied to pets or 'tamed' when referring to wild animals.
The Egyptian "vulture" hieroglyph is also referred to as aleph.
Beth is the second letter of the Semitic abjads. It includes the Phoenician Bēt, Hebrew Bēt ل, Aramaic Bēth, Syriac Bēṯ ܒ and Arabic Bāʾ.
The Phoenician letter gave rise to, among others, the Greek Beta, Latin B and Cyrillic ء, آ.
The name bet is derived from the West Semitic word for "house". The shape of the letter derives from a Proto-Sinaitic glyph which depicts a house.
Gimel is the third letter of the Semitic abjads. The variants include Phoenician Gīml, Hebrew ˈGimel ג, Aramaic Gāmal, Syriac Gāmal ܓ and Arabic ǧīm ج . The letter may have been named after a weapon that was either a staff sling or a throwing stick in the hypothetical Proto-Canaanite form.
The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek gamma ( Γ , γ), the Latin C and G and the Cyrillic (C, c pronounced s) .
-----------------------
Love
Jeremiah 1:1-3 identifies the book as "the words of Jeremiah son of Hilkiah".
The Book of Jeremiah contains a considerable amount of material of a biographical and historical nature in addition to the prophet's own words. This material is especially valuable because it reveals the personality of the prophet more clearly than any of the other prophetic books.
The period in which Jeremiah lived was one of the most critical in Hebrew history. His public ministry began during the reign of King Josiah (640-609 BCE).
The background to Jeremiah is briefly described in the introduction to the book. Jeremiah began his prophetic mission in the 13th year of king Josiah (c. 627). His work was finished in the 11th year of king Zedekiah (586) "when Jerusalem went into exile in the sixth month."
One of the important events that took place a few years after Jeremiah began his prophetic work was the discovery of the book of the law in the Temple at Jerusalem. The main part of this work is now called the Book of Deuteronomy.
It was declared to be the word of Yahweh. King Josiah made it a part of the law of the land.
Jeremiah was enthusiastic about King Josiah's decision. The law was intended to correct the social injustice that prevailed in the land. Practice associated with concession to foreign rule was seen as the cause for the injustice. Faithfulness to the law would protect the worship of Yahweh from contamination by the heartless influences from external forms.
The Deuteronomic reformation was a major change that had difficulty taking hold even according to the judgment of the kings who were being held accountable for their decisions regarding religious observance.
The good kings did not advocate participation in the rites of the longstanding polytheistic cults. They were brave in the proclamation of faith in the one God. They dedicated their service to the people of the land. They were judged to be faithful.
The bad ones saw participation in polytheistic rites as part of being vassals to the king of kings in the Middle East.
The collection of writings that make up the Book of Jeremiah includes oracles, addresses, prayers and exhortations made by the prophet.
The text is interspersed with materials that, though relevant to Jeremiah's work, were contributed by other persons. The material is arranged without strict topical or chronological order.
The authentic oracles of Jeremiah are probably to be found in the poetic sections of chapters 1-25. The book as a whole has been heavily edited. The prophet's followers including his scribe Baruch and later generations of Deuteronomists added material.
Chapters 1-10 describe how Jeremiah was called to prophesy. He warned Judah about the consequences for participation in the sin of the polytheistic religion. Judeans were criticized for their faithlessness.
Jeremiah felt that it was necessary to undermine the trust that people placed in external objects. The prophet declared that the day was coming when the Temple would be destroyed. The ark of the covenant would be taken away. The nation that called itself the chosen of Yahweh would be taken into captivity.
These statements aroused the anger of the priests and King Jehoiakim.
Jeremiah was charged with treason. He would probably have been put to death had not some of his friends succeeded in hiding him until the wrath of his enemies subsided.
Jeremiah dictated a series of oracles in which the policies of King Jehoiakim and his subordinates were severely criticized when it was no longer considered safe for him to appear in public.
Warnings were given concerning what would happen if the practices and the policy that preceded the Old Covenant were not changed.
Chapters 11-26 warned of the destruction that would be poured out on Judah. The constant worship of false idols and the sacrifices that were offered to them were cited as the cause for the anger of God.
Chapters 26-29 contain biographic material and interaction with other prophets.
Chapters 30-38 proclaim God's promise of restoration including Jeremiah's "new covenant".
The covenant has been interpreted differently from Christianity by Judaism.
The description in this section reported that the prophet had been lowered into a cistern as punishment for his prophesy regarding the fall of Jerusalem.
The prophet had also challenged the religious hypocrisy, economic dishonesty and oppressive practices of Judah’s leaders.
King Zedekiah eventually ordered him to be released from the well which the officials had placed him in as an alternative to the death penalty which they said his prophesy warranted.
Jeremiah contended that humans cannot change their nature by themselves. Such reform can occur only through cooperation with the one God.
Yahweh can act on human hearts only when humans recognize their need for it. The value for reform decreed by law had to be understood to be accepted.
Inner transformation in human nature was needed for the success of the reformative movement.
The Old Covenant was based on laws that were decreed as far back as the time of Moses. It was a contract or agreement between Yahweh and the Israelites in which the people agreed to obey all of the commandments given to them.
The Israelites did not live up to the terms of that agreement. Jeremiah believed that he knew the principal reasons why they had not done so. The wrongful motives of evil desire were ingrained as part of their human nature.
The only thing that could bring about a right relationship with Yahweh would be a change of heart. This change would create a new nature. Such a thing was unattainable except by means of the New Covenant in which Yahweh promised to do for the Israelites that which they could not do for themselves.
Chapter 31 spoke to the New Covenant.
Jeremiah 31:7-9
Thus says the LORD:
Sing aloud with gladness for Jacob
and raise shouts for the chief of the nations;
proclaim, give praise and say,
'Save, O LORD, you people,
the remnant of Israel.'
'See, I am going to bring them from the land of the north
and gather them from the farthest parts of the earth
among them the blind and the lame,
those with child and those in labor together.
'A great company shall return.
With weeping they shall come
and with consolations I will lead them back.
I will let them walk by brooks of water
in straight path in which they shall not stumble.
'I have become a father to Israel
and Ephraim is my firstborn.'
----------------------
The faithful of Israel will be restored.
The blind will be able to see the glory of the Lord.
The ignorant will understand the meaning of the Word.
The lame will rejoice in the ability to get past the absurd.
Order has become a father to Israel.
Ephraim will no longer espouse vitriol.
The faithful will be respected as my firstborn.
The firstborn will not lead the descent into scorn.
=================
Jeremiah's prophetic ministry lasted until sometime after the fall of Jerusalem and the beginning of the Babylonian captivity. He encountered strong opposition from King Jehoiakim (609-598) and King Zedekiah (597-586). His life was threatened on more than one occasion.
The Babylonians permitted him to remain in his homeland. Many of his fellow countrymen were taken into captivity. He was taken to Egypt against his will by a group of exiles who found it necessary to flee Jerusalem for their own safety.
Jeremiah died in Egypt after a long and troublesome career.
Jeremiah's teaching had a profound effect on the development of both Judaism and Christianity. Many passages in the Christian scriptures indicate that both Jesus and Paul not only accepted certain ideas from Jeremiah but gave them a central place in their own interpretations of the meaning of religion.
-----------------------------
Introductory Blessing
Ephesus
Ephesus was an ancient Greek city on the coast of Ionia. It was located 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) southwest of present-day Selחuk in İzmir Province, Turkey.
It was built by Attic and Ionian Greek colonists in the 10th century BCE on the site of the former Arzawan capital. Arzawa was the western neighbor and rival of the Middle and New Hittite Kingdoms in Anatolia from the 15th to the 13th centuries.
The capital of the Kingdom of Arzawa was Apasa, the location that would be rebuilt as Ephesus. The Achaeans of Mycenaean Greece and Arzawa formed a coalition against the Hittites in various periods.
It was one of the twelve cities of the Ionian League during the Classical Greek era (5th and 4th centuries). This period saw the annexation of much of modern-day Greece by the Persian Empire and its subsequent independence.
Classical Greece had a powerful influence on the Roman Empire and on the foundations of Western civilization. Modern Western politics, artistic thought in architecture and sculpture, scientific thought, theater, literature and philosophy originated during this period of Greek history.
The Temple of Artemis was completed around 550. It became one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
Artemis was the goddess of the hunt, the wilderness, wild animals, the Moon and chastity.
She was the daughter of Zeus and Leto and the twin sister of Apollo. She was the patron and protector of young girls.
She was one of the most widely venerated of the Ancient Greek deities. Her symbols were a bow and arrow, a quiver and hunting knives. The deer and the cypress were sacred to her. The goddess Diana was her Roman equivalent.
Two temples to Artemis had been destroyed on the site. One was ruined by a flood in the 7th century. The other was burned by arson in the 5th century. The greatest and last form was funded by the Ephesians.
The new temple was sponsored by Croesus, the founder of the Lydian empire and overlord of Ephesus.
It was designed and constructed from around 550 BC by the Cretan architect Chersiphron and his son Metagenes. It was 115 m (377 ft) long and 46 m (151 ft) wide, supposedly the first Greek temple built of marble.
Its peripteral columns stood some 13 m (40 ft) high, in double rows that formed a wide ceremonial passage around the cella that housed the goddess's cult image. Thirty-six of these columns were decorated by carvings in relief.
Heraclitus deposited his book "On Nature" as a dedication to Artemis in the great temple.
Among other monumental buildings were the Library of Celsus and a theater capable of holding 25,000 spectators.
Ephesos was one of the seven churches of Asia that are cited in the Book of Revelation.
The western portion of Asia Minor was known as the Roman province of Asia in the time of the apostles.
Ephesus was a great commercial center. Its harbor was crowded with ships. Its streets were thronged with people from every country. It presented a promising field for missionary effort like Corinth.
The city was a popular center for the worship of Diana. The fame of the magnificent temple of "Diana of the Ephesians" extended throughout all Asia and the world. Its splendor made it the pride of the nation.
The idol within the temple was declared by tradition to have fallen from the sky. Symbolic characters were inscribed upon it. The characters were believed to possess great power. Books had been written by the Ephesians to explain the meaning and use of these symbols.
Many magicians who wielded a powerful influence over the minds of the superstitious worshipers of the image within the temple were among those who gave close study to these costly books.
The magicians of those times have their counterpart in the spiritualistic mediums, the clairvoyants and the fortune-tellers of today. The mystic voices that spoke at Endor and at Ephesus are still misleading the superstitious.
Paul dealt with the magicians and soothsayers in Ephesus while struggling with state offices and pagans. The church was established and strengthened by his diligent labor. The city became the third important city of Christianity after Jerusalem and Antioch in a short time.
Ephesians
The letter to the Ephesians is the 10th book of the New Testament. The authorship is attributed to someone influenced by Paul's thought.
The Apostle Paul wrote the letter sometime around 62 CE while he was in prison in Rome according to tradition. This was about the same time as the epistle to the Colossians had been written. The two letters are similar in many points.
The letter's characteristically non-Pauline syntax, terminology and eschatology suggest a date about 20 years after the death of Paul.
Most English translations indicate that the letter was addressed to "the saints who are in Ephesus" (1:1). The words "in Ephesus" do not appear in the best and earliest manuscripts of the letter.
Marcion was a second-century heresiarch who created the first New Testament canon. He believed that the letter was actually addressed to the church at Laodicea.
The letter lacks personal greetings or any indication that the author has personal knowledge of his recipients. Paul had stayed in Ephesus for more than 2 years (Acts 19:1;20:1).
The introduction to the letter implies that Jesus is the Son of God, but it artfully refers to him as Christ. The implication that Christ was the Son was drawn out theologically at a later time.
Ephesians 1:3-6
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, just as he chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless before him in love. He destined us for adoption as his children through Jesus Christ according to the good pleasure of his will to the praise of his glorious grace that he freely bestowed on us in the Beloved.
----------------------
Blessed be the Father of our beloved Jesus Christ
who has blessed us from the heavenly heights.
We were chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world
to be holy and blameless in love with wonders by the Spirit whirled.
We were destined for adoption as children through Christ
according to the praise of the glorious grace bestowed by his sacrifice.
=================
Nazorean
The name Judea is the English adaptation of the Greek Ioudaia. The Latin form was Iudaea. The contemporary English form is "Judah."
Judah was the 4th son of Jacob and Leah. HIs name means "thanksgiving" or "praise."
Yehudah was the name for an Israelite tribe. David was born to the tribe. He was the first king for the kingdom of that name. Saul was the first king for Israel and Judah.
The ancient Kingdom of Judah was derived from the tribal name. The kingdom existed from 934 until 586 BCE.
The name for the region continued to be incorporated through the Babylonian conquest, Persian, Hellenistic and Roman periods. The variants were Yehud, Yehud Medinata, Hasmonean Ioudaia and Roman Iudaea.
Iudea with Herod
Herod was born around 73 BCE in Idumea, south of Judea. Herod's father, Antipater was by descent an Edomite whose ancestors had converted to Judaism. Herod was raised as a Jew.
Herod's rise to power is largely due to his father's good standing relation with Julius Caesar, who entrusted Antipater with the public affairs of Judea.
John Hyrcanus II was the Hamonean King of Judea for one year (67-66 BCE), then the ethnarch (ruler) of Judea probably from 47-40 BCE. He had once summoned Herod to stand trial for murder. Herod determined to punish him for the action.
Herod was appointed provincial governor of Galilee in ca. 47 BCE when he was about 28 years old. He farmed the taxes of that region for the Roman Senate. He met with success in ridding the area of bandits.
Antipater's elder brother, Phasael, served as governor of Jerusalem. The young Herod cultivated a good relationship with Sextus Caesar, the acting Roman governor of Syria. Sextus appointed Herod as general of Coelesyria and Samaria.
He enjoyed the backing of Rome, but the reports of his brutality were condemned by the Sanhedrin.
Herod and his brother Phasael were named as tetrarchs by the Roman leader Mark Antony in 41 BCE to support John Hyrcanus II.
Antigonus, Hyrcanus' nephew, took the throne from his uncle in alliance with the Parthians. Herod fled to Rome to consult with the Romans about the restoration of Hyrcanus II to power.
Pompey the Great had conquered Jerusalem in 63 BCE. This placed the region in the Roman sphere of influence. Herod was unexpectedly appointed King of the Jews by the Roman Senate in Rome around 40 BCE.
Herod went back to Judea to win his kingdom from Antigonus. He married the grandaughter of Hyrcanus II, Mariamne I, near the end of the campaign. Mariamne was also the niece of Antingonus.
The marriage was an attempt to win favor with the Jewish population. Herod was already married to Doris. They had a son, Antipater. Doris and her son were banished to make room for Herod's next move in his rise to power.
Herod set out with a large army to capture Jerusalem with Sosius, the governor of Syria, in 37 BCE. Antigonus was sent to Marc Antony for execution. Herod took the title of basileus (Βασιλεύς, "king") as the sole ruler of Jerusalem. He ended the Hasmonean dynasty and started the Herodian.
John Hyrcanus had conquered the region of Idumaea, the Edom of the Hebrew Bible, in a campaign that lasted from 140-130 BCE. He had required all Idumaeans to obey Jewish law or to leave. Most Idumaeans converted. A number of them intermarried with the Jews and adopted their customs. This meant that the males had to be circumcised.
It was thought that while Herod had complied with the external customs, his political actions were reckless or decadent. It was reported that he executed several members of his own family, including his wife Mariamne I.
Herod's rule marked a new beginning in the history of Judea. Judea had been ruled autonomously by the Hasmonean kings from 140 until 63 BCE.
The Hasmonean kings retained their titles, but became clients of Rome after the conquest by Pompey in 63 BCE.
Herod overthrew the Hasmonean Antigonus in the 3-year-long war between 37 and 34 BCE. He ruled under Roman overlordship until his death ca. 1 CE. When he passed on the throne to his sons it established the Herodian dynasty.
Herod was granted the title of "King of Judea" by the Roman Senate in 40 BCE. He was a vassal of the Roman Empire. He was expected to support the interests of his Roman patrons as such.
His rule faced 2 threats when he obtained leadership in Judea. The first threat came from his mother-in-law Alexandra, who sought to regain power for her family, the Hasmoneans.
Cleopatra married the Roman leader Antony in the same year. Alexandra asked Cleopatra for aid in making Aristobulus III the High Priest.
Aristobulus III might partially repair the fortunes of the Hasmoneans if made High Priest. Cleopatra presented the request to Antony but urged Alexandra to leave Judea with Aristobulus III and visit Antony.
Herod received word of this plot. He feared that if Antony met Aristobolus III in person he might name Aristobulus III King of Judea. This threat induced Herod to order the assassination of Aristobulus in 35 BCE. This ended this first threat to Herod's throne.
Antony's marriage to Cleopatra in 37 BCE also sparked a power struggle between Roman leaders Octavian, who would later be called Augustus, and Antony.
Herod owed his throne to Rome. He had to pick a side. He chose Antony.
Antony lost to Octavian at Actium in 31 BCE. This posed a second threat to Herod's rule. Herod had to regain Octavian's support if he was to keep his throne.
Herod convinced Octavian at Rhodes in 31 BCE that he would be loyal to him through his ability to keep Judea open to Rome as a link to the wealth of Syria and Egypt and his ability to defend the frontier.
Herod continued to rule his subjects as he saw fit. Restrictions were placed upon him in his relations with other kingdoms despite the autonomy afforded to Herod in his internal reign over Judea.
Herod's support from the Roman Empire was a major factor in enabling him to maintain his authority.
Josephus characterizes Herod's rule in generally favorable terms in The Jewish War. The tyrannical authority that many scholars have come to associate with Herod's reign came out more in the Jewish Antiquities.
Herod's despotic rule was demonstrated by many of his security measures. He used secret police to monitor and report the feelings of the general populace towards him. He sought to prohibit protests and had opponents removed by force.
He had a bodyguard of 2,000 soldiers. His personal guard took part in his funeral. It included the Doryphnoroi, a Thracian, Celtic (probably Gallic) and Germanic contingent.
While the term Doryphnoroi does not have an ethnic connotation, the unit was probably composed of distinguished veteran soldiers and young men from the most influential Jewish families.
Thracians had served in the Jewish armies since the Hasmonean dynasty. The Celtic contingent were former bodyguards of Cleopatra. They were given as a gift by Augustus to Herod following the Battle of Actium.
The Germanic contingent was modeled upon Augustus's personal bodyguard, the Germani Corporis Custodes. These were responsible for guarding the palace.
Cleopatra in Egypt
Roman rule had been preceded by the Ptolemaic and Persian dominions.
The groundwork for Ptolemaic rule began in 332 BCE. Alexander III of Macedon conquered Egypt with little resistance as part of his campaign to defeat the Persians.
He was welcomed by the Egyptians as a deliverer. He visited Memphis and went on pilgrimage to the oracle of Amun at the Oasis of Siwa. The oracle declared him to be the son of Amun-Re. He conciliated the Egyptians by the respect which he showed for their religion.
While Macedonians commanded military garrisons at Memphis and Pelusium, Alexander left the civil administration in local control. There were two, later one governor.
Alexander founded Alexandria to be a major commercial port. It became Egypt's commercial and administrative capital as well as its intellectual center.
Ptolemaic Egypt began when Ptolemy I Soter declared himself Pharaoh of Egypt in 305 BCE after the death of Alexander (323 BCE).
All the male rulers of the dynasty took the name Ptolemy. Ptolemaic queens regnant, some of whom were the sisters of their husbands, were usually called Cleopatra, Arsinoe or Berenice.
The Ptolemaic Kingdom was a powerful Hellenistic state. It extended from southern Syria in the east to Cyrene to the west and south to the frontier with Nubia.
The most famous member of the line was the last queen, Cleopatra VII. She was known for her role in the Roman political battles between Julius Caesar and Pompey. Later she was engaged in the dispute between Octavian and Mark Antony.
Her apparent suicide at the conquest by Rome marked the end of Ptolemaic rule in Egypt. Ptolemaic rule ended with the death of Queen Cleopatra VII and the Roman conquest in 30 BCE.
Galilee
Galilee was named by the Israelites in the Bible as the tribal region for Naphthali and Dan. The Tribe of Dan was the hereditary local law enforcement and judiciary for the whole nation. They were dispersed in the lands for all the tribes. The region is generally referred to as Naphthali as a result.
Galilee had a tradition of political autonomy. The northern traditions that go into the Hebrew Bible are informed by this political sensibility of autonomy. The tribal confederacy that had started during the period of the Judges was part of the northern Kingdom of Israel before and after the conquest by Assyria.
Upper Galilee is the more remote area to the extreme north. Lower Galilee borders the Sea of Galilee on the east and the Mediterranean Ocean on the west. People were speaking Aramaic and Hebrew in the north. They spoke Aramaic, Hebrew and Greek.
The name “Galilee” comes from the Hebrew word galil which means “circle” or “region”. The region of Galilee in the first century CE was encircled by Syro-Phoenicia stretching along the eastern Mediterranean coastline and northwards, by Gaulanitis to the north-east, by the Hellenistic settlements of Decapolis to the south-east and by Samaria to the south. Samaria separated Galilee geographically from Judea.
Most of Galilee consists of rocky terrain at heights of between 500 and 700 m (1640-2300 ft.). Several high mountains are in the region. Mount Tabor and Mount Meron are included.
The climate has relatively low temperatures and high rainfall. Flora and fauna thrive in the region as a result. Many birds annually migrate from colder climates to Africa and back through the Hula–Jordan corridor.
The streams and waterfalls, the latter mainly in Upper Galilee, along with vast fields of greenery and colorful wildflowers. The natural beauty and numerous towns of biblical importance make the region a popular tourist destination.
Much of the Galilee region was conquered and annexed by the first Hasmonean King of Judaea Aristobulus I (104 - 103 BCE) during the expansion of the Hasmonean dynasty.
The Roman emperor Augustus appointed his son Herod Antipas as tetrarch of Galilee after the death of Herod the Great. The government for the territory remained a Roman client state.
Antipas was a capable ruler. Josephus does not record any instance of him using force to put down an uprising and he had a long, prosperous reign.
Antipas rebuilt the city of Sepphoris and founded the new city of Tiberias in either 18 CE or 19 CE. These two cities became Galilee's largest cultural centers. They were the main centers of Greco-Roman influence, but were still predominantly Jewish.
A large gap existed between the rich and poor, but the lack of uprisings suggest that taxes were not exorbitantly high. Most Galileans probably did not feel their livelihoods were being threatened.
The archaeological discoveries of synagogues from the Hellenistic and Roman period in the area show strong Phoenician influences and tolerance for other cultures.
Antipas married his half-niece Herodias late in his reign. She was already married to one of her other uncles. His wife, whom he divorced, fled to her father Aretas, an Arab king, who invaded Galilee. He defeated Antipas's troops before their withdrawal.
Both Josephus and the Gospel of Mark 6:17–29 record that the itinerate preacher John the Baptist criticized Antipas over his marriage. Antipas consequently had him imprisoned and beheaded.
Antipas went to Rome around 39 CE to request that he be elevated from the status of tetrarch to the status of king at the urging of Herodias. The Romans found him guilty of storing arms. He was removed from power and exiled. This ended his forty-three-year reign.
Nazareth is currently known as "the Arab capital of Israel." The inhabitants are predominantly Arab citizens of Israel. Muslims constitute 69% of the population. Christians make up 30.9%. Old Nazareth had a Jewish population of 40,312 in 2014.
"Nazareth" is derived from one of the Hebrew words for 'branch', namely ne·ṣer, נֵ֫צֶר. The prophetic, messianic words in Book of Isaiah 11:1 stated, 'from (Jesse's) roots a Branch (netzer) will bear fruit'.
Modern-day Nazareth is nestled in a natural bowl which reaches from 320 meters (1050 ft.) above sea level to the crest of the hills about 488 meters (1600 ft.).
The presence of kochim tombs with fragments from ossuaries found by archaeologists indicates that the people living there were Jewish during the time of Jesus.
Research indicates that the village had a population of 400 and one public bath. The mikva was important for civic and religious purposes. Bathers were cleansed for in physical and ritualistic senses.
Matt. 2:13-15; 19-23
Now after they had left an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream and said, 'Get up, take the child and his mother and flee to Egypt. Remain there until I tell you. Herod is about to search for the child to destroy him.' Then Joseph got up took the child and his mother by night and went to Egypt and remained there until the death of Herod. This was to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet, 'Out of Egypt I have called my son.'
When Herod died, an angel of the Lord suddenly appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt and said, 'Get up, take the child and his mother and go to the land of Israel for those who were seeking the child's life are dead.'
Joseph got up, took the child and his mother and went to the land of Israel. When he heard that Archelaus was ruling over Judea in place of his father Herod, he was afraid to go there. After being warned in a dream, he went away to the district of Galilee. There he made his home in a town called Nazareth so what had been spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled, 'He will be called a Nazorean.'
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Cleopatra provided refuge for those who fled from Herod's Judea.
The gospel of Matthew reports that Joseph fled there with Mary and Jesus.
Out of Egypt this son was called after the death of Herod.
He was taken to the land of Israel to Mary's home inherited.
Nazareth was a town of Galilee in her hills.
Jesus grew as a Nazorean in the prophecy fulfilled.
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wiki Herod the Great
wiki Herodian Kingdom of Judea
3 Client Kings of Rome
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Monastic Life
Sarah, Theodora and Syncletica of Egypt
Lectionary
Diocletian's reign (284–305 CE) marked the transition from the Roman to the Byzantine era in Egypt. A number of the Egyptian Christians who were persecuted left civilization to find refuge in the wilderness.
The New Testament had by then been translated into Egyptian. This became the basic text that motivated the pragmatic ascetics to seek guidance from the Father in heaven.
The Desert Mothers were female Christian ascetics living in the desert of Egypt, Palestine and Syria in the 4th and 5th centuries. They typically lived in the monastic communities that began forming during that time.
Some lived as hermits. The experience of solitary existence was thought to be a conversation with the Creator. Prayer combined with fasting was the ascetic mode for communication.
Communication with the unseen Father was an exercise in looking at the design of nature for the economy of life. The discovery of wisdom in truth became the motivation to express the discovery to others.
Expressions that resonated beyond the experience of other monks was shared with those who sought wisdom that could be applied to civilization.
Egypt was the Motherland for Christian monasticism.
A distinct Egyptian Coptic Church was firmly recognized as established by the Council of Chalcedon in 451.
Coptic asceticism had formed the original foundation for Christian Monasticism. Anthony went into the wilderness of Egypt around 285. He organized a kind of monastic life for his disciples in about 305.
Abba Anthony became the first one to be called "monk" (Gr: μοναχός). He was the first to establish a Christian monastery. The Monastery of Abba Anthony in the Red Sea area is the oldest in the western world.
Anthony's way of life was focused on solidarity with those seeking wisdom in the solitary life.
Abba Pachomius the Cenobite was a Copt from Upper Egypt. He established communal monasticism in his monasteries in upper Egypt. His work laid the basic monastic structure for many of the monasteries outside of Coptic orthodoxy.
Women from that era influenced the early ascetic or monastic tradition while living outside the desert were called Desert Mothers.
Men and women leading the chaste life gained a reputation for wisdom in speech and their ascetic economy of life. Apologists pointed to them as examples of Christian conduct despite the austere conditions in which they lived.
The voluntary renunciation of worldly possessions for the experience of poverty was not only an exercise in learning how to pray while abstaining from a normal diet. The monks who led the way into a chosen way had the motivation to write about the experience in order to communicate something of the value to the broader community.
Origen, Cyprian and Pamphilus became teachers who gave instruction with their written work. Their instruction helped to form agreement in doctrine regarding the divine nature of the Son as a settlement of the Christological issue of relationship with God the Father.
The literature of the Desert Fathers is well known because most of the early lives of the saints "were written by men for a male monastic audience." Even the occasional stories about the Desert Mothers come from the early Desert Fathers and their biographers.
The desert women had an important place in the leadership role within the Christian community. There are several chapters dedicated to the Desert Mothers in the Lausiac History by Palladius. He mentioned 2,975 women living in the desert.
Other sources include the various stories told over the years about the lives of saints of that era, traditionally called vitae ("life"). The lives of twelve female desert saints are described in Book I of Vitae Patrum (Lives of the Fathers).
The Desert Mothers were known as ammas ("spiritual mothers"). They were comparable to the Desert Fathers (abbas) due to the respect they earned as spiritual teachers and directors.
One of the most well known Desert Mothers was Amma Syncletica of Alexandria, who had twenty-seven sayings attributed to her in the Apophthegmata Patrum, or Sayings of the Desert Fathers.
Two other ammas, Theodora of Alexandria and Amma Sarah of the Desert, also had sayings in that book.
Amma Syncletica was born to wealthy parents in Alexandria sometime around 270. She was said to have lived to her eighties in about 350. She was well educated. Her education included an early study of the writings of Desert Father Evagrius Ponticus.
She sold everything and gave the money to the poor after the death of her parents. She lived as a hermit among the tombs outside of Alexandria. She moved outside the city with her blind sister.
A community of women ascetics grew up around her gradually. She served as their spiritual mother. Syncletica taught that moderation was the lesson that she had drawn from her experience as an ascetic and hermit, Asceticism was not an end in itself. It was the means to attain experiential knowledge.
Theodora of Alexandria was the amma of a monastic community of women near Alexandria. She had fled to the desert disguised as a man prior to that and joined a community of monks. She was sought out by many of the Desert Fathers for advice. It was reported that Bishop Theophilus of Alexandria came to her for counsel.
The sayings of Sarah of the Desert indicate that she was a hermit living by a river for sixty years. Her sharp replies to some of the old men who challenged her show a distinctly strong personality.
Two male anchorites decided to humiliate her in the desert according to one story. They said, "Be careful not to become conceited thinking to yourself." Anchorites were required to take a vow of stability of place. They chose to live in cells often attached to a church.
She replied, "Look how anchorites are coming to see me, a mere woman." She added, "According to nature I am a woman, but not according to my thoughts."
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Sayings:
Amma Sarah said, "If I prayed God that all people should approve of my conduct, I should find myself a penitent at the door of each one, but I shall rather pray that my heart may be pure toward all."
Amma Syncletica said, "In the beginning there are a great many battles and a good deal of suffering for those who are advancing towards God and afterwards, ineffable joy. It is like those who wish to light a fire; at first they are choked by the smoke and cry, and by this means obtain what they seek ... so we must also kindle the divine fire in ourselves through tears and hard work."
Amma Syncletica said, "There are many who live in the mountains and behave as if they were in the town; they are wasting their time. It is possible to be a solitary in one's mind while living in a crowd; and it is possible for those who are solitaries to live in the crowd of their own thoughts."
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The name Syncletica means to work with the call
that reflected the life of Adam prior to the Fall.
The ascetic life teaches prayer through abstinence
for moderation in the consumption of accident
or tactlessness.
================
Amma Theodora said that neither asceticism, nor vigils, nor any kind of suffering are able to save. Only true humility can do that. There was a hermit who was able to banish the demons. And he asked them: "What makes you go away? Is it fasting?" They replied: "We do not eat or drink." "Is it vigils?"
They said: "We do not sleep." "Then what power sends you away?" They replied: "Nothing can overcome us except humility alone." Amma Theodora said: "Do you see how humility is victorious over the demons?"
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The Church
Richard Hooker
The Church of England adopted a position that allowed for the conservative modification of public policy with respect for reason in the determination of goodness. It was allowed that the benefit of the Church was identified with the monarch who would choose to defend her from enemies foreign or domestic.
This was not to fly in the face of all that had been accomplished with Church leadership out of Rome. There was still agreement with that which was right about policy for national sovereignty by the Pope with the college of cardinals.
The build toward cultural Christian unity with the consensus of agreement between nations with different languages was cultivated with the emperor as the king of kings for the European continent.
The build towards greater unity was seen as endangered by the claim to papal supremacy as supported by the investiture of selection of clergy by the Catholic authority.
The Vatican had made itself into a state authority that was separate from and placed itself over royal leadership. It was all male and all single except for those who chose to act as aristocratic in political dominion.
These were married and acted as magistrates who had offenders punished with corporal or capital punishment. There was question as to whether their judgment wasn't for their benefit at the expanding expense of the public.
The gradual development of royal authority for European unity became questionable as an evolutionary process when colonial expansion for global domination became the basis of the competition for the domination of imperial leadership with the practice of the Inquisition, indulgences and the competition for the natural resources in lands occupied by primitive natives.
The benefit of trade with primitive people was threatened by the exploitation of their labor with slavery.
The royals in the majority of kingdoms opposed slavery as something that was antithetical to Christian society. The common people without education were encouraged to identify the royal position as corrupt.
The institution of monarchy was viewed as subject to the corruption of the benefit of the royals for their personal benefit even though the placement of the authority for the House of Commons was being placed over that for the monarchy.
The vision of Isaiah had advocated for the establishment of the royal line of succession as the means by which damage caused by the competition for the top spot could be reduced.
The promise of benefit for the people of the kingdom was indicated as a conservative and progressive value. The royal family was to act as a model for this value so they could be seen as such.
Benefit from such a vision was not accepted by polytheistic society. Stories about competition with violence or cruelty were circulated in opposition to the association of royal leadership with the absolute.
Executive authority was only a step in the direction of the cultivation of domination of political leadership by the military for trade by the patrician class. The position of consul had a one year and usually a one time tenure that could be used by the plebians to ascend to the patrician position of status in society.
Leadership at the inception of the US republic defined public safety as the basis for having a national government. Monarchy was defined as corrupt for the sake of the experiment in self-determination by selection with election to public office.
When Alexander had been asked to select a successor to his position of leadership, it is reported that he simply stated "the best."
Royal succession was established after his empire was divided between his leading officers. Leadership by occupancy in foreign lands was limited to the administration of a system of election if only because of the success of the Republic in Rome.
When the Roman republic took over in power the state still favored self-determination with election, but the line of succession for the emperor was not seen as royal because he could select a successor by adoption. The succession could be modified by the emperor's choice.
Patricians viewed this innovation to republic as the action of a dictator. The subjection of imperial authority to the will of the patricians and the plebians was dictated as necessary for the recognition of the office as for the people. The distinction for the benefit of the patricians was dropped explicitly for the sake of the association of the lower class with the people.
The existence of poor people came to be used as a proof of the corruption of executive leadership even in elected office. That poverty was increased for the benefit of the demands of dictate by the lower house of representation by the party that refuses to acknowledge republic as a democracy is denied as a plausibility.
Ecclesiastical Lawes
Text
Book 1, Ch. 1, S. 1
The Cause for Discourse
Richard Hooker has set the stage for the reasonable consideration of political government with his work on ecclesiastical law. The simple observation that there is good or bad leadership in polity allowed for self-determination by election in the framework of the success of the line of succession for executive authority with policy for the public.
Hooker expressed his distaste for demagoguery in the Ecclesiastical Lawes. He argued that those who seek to persuade a multitude that they are not as well governed as they ought to be will find those who listen.
Precedent for the Force of Law
The established government can be criticized for evident defects, but it is the proposal for replacement by untested proceedings that begs the question for improvement. The discontent simply want to replace the elect with something different, not necessarily better.
The contest for election should be determined by the consideration of what is necessarily better or the contest lacks value for the public.
The open reproval for the supposed disorders of the state are taken to be friendly to the principled benefit of all in terms of the color for the freedom of mind for what passes for good in the current criticism of disorder.
He wrote, "That which wanteth in the weight of their speech, is supplied by the aptness of men’s minds to accept and believe it."
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The demand for radical change
is the reason that this discourse seems strange.
That which is wanted in the weight of their speech
is supplied by the aptness of the undecided to believe.
The radicals want to change everything for them.
They would overthrow the state of the union for their dictum.
Opposition to the radical insists on regression
though the need for reform stands as a profession.
Moral polity is directed to conservative reform.
Even good change is inconvient to the status formed.
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If that which has been established is defended as the necessary state of affairs on the other hand, then the prejudice that is rooted in the heart is allowed as preferred without argument. Long practice and usage however carry the force of law.
Conservative Reform
It seems that the redemption of reason for conservative reform is recommended as the course for manageable improvement.
C.D. Broad would eventually advise that precedent should not be replaced unless it was by something as good or better.
The chief executive official might not be re-elected to serve another term in office, but the conservative model for royal succession was an argument for conservative reform in republican government.
There were no term limits for the president of the US until the 22d amendment was ratified in 1951. It was enacted with the certainty that only the chief executive could be found guilty of corruption for his or her own benefit.
Corruption from Congressional officials was believed manageable on a case by case basis. The thought that a party could be guilty of corruption has not been viewed as plausible.
Term limits were established after FDR as a presumed benefit for the Republicans, but he enacted socialist policies for the American government.
This left the precedents established by his presidency as a benefit to the socialists in the Democrat party.
This political action took place prior to the impeachment of Nixon by a couple of decades. Nixon was actually an advocate for idealistic pragmatism. He ordered the reduction of troops from Vietnam in response to protests from the American public.
The accusation of criminal conduct by the Watergate scandal was pressed as a foregone conclusion by the leftist media. The issue of troop reduction was obscured for the sake of the call for impeachment.
The president was accused of having ordered a break-in to DNC HQ at Watergate. While he protested that he was not a crook, the media presented the impeachment by the House as proof of his guilt.
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Active Literacy
Umberto Eco
b. 1.5.1932 Alessandria, Italy
d. 2.19.2016 Milan, Italy
Umberto Eco was an Italian novelist and university professor. He was a polymath in semiotics.
He is widely known for the novel Il nome della rosa (The Name of the Rose).
The novel was published in 1980. The text was an artful reworking of Conan Doyle. Sherlock Holmes was transplanted to 14th-century Italy as a Franciscan friar. His associate in investigation was a Benedictine novice.
The work was a historical mystery that combined semiotics in fiction with biblical analysis, medieval studies and literary theory. It was translated into 30 languages, it sold more than 10m copies worldwide. A film starring Sean Connery as the monk-detective, William of Baskerville, was made.
He later wrote other novels, including Il pendolo di Foucault (Foucault's Pendulum) and L'isola del giorno prima (The Island of the Day Before). His novel Il cimitero di Praga (The Prague Cemetery) was released in 2010. It topped the bestseller charts in Italy.
Eco also wrote academic texts, children's books and essays. He edited and translated books from French into Italian. Raymond Queneau’s “Exercises in Style” (1983) was an example.
He was the founder of the Department of Media Studies at the University of the Republic of San Marino, president of the Graduate School for the Study of the Humanities at the University of Bologna, member of the Accademia dei Lincei and an honorary fellow of Kellogg College, Oxford.
Eco was honored with the Kenyon Review Award for Literary Achievement in 2005 along with Roger Angel.
Umberto Eco
S. 翁贝托生态
T. 翁貝託生態
翁 Weng old man 翁 o venerable Un うん ウン Um 움 cellar
贝 bei shellfish 貝 bai shellfish be べ ベ be 베 best
托 tuo entrust 託 taku consign ru る ル leu 르 porn
生 Sheng to be born 生 sei life to と ト to 토 sat
态 tai attitude 態 tai atttitude E え エ e 에 on
ko こ コ ko 코 nose
_______________
The venerable old man had a good attitude.
He saw mystery as an invitation to find knowledge with gratitude.
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