This blog begins with basic concepts, and branches out from there. Some of the posts are a continuation of an earlier post, or may somewhat modify the content of another posting through the introduction of other concepts for which the necessary groundwork is now laid. Consequently, you will comprehend best by starting with the oldest posts; for the convenience of those who have been with me from the beginning, the newest posts are listed first. Feel free, of course, to read in any manner you choose, forward, backward, or sideways!

Monday, January 28, 2008

MORAL CERTAINTY

How do we know the truth; where are the deep springs of certainty? In the depths of the heart of Man, the Apostle tells us, are things we just know, and ignore at our peril. Of course, sinful Man chooses to evade these things by obscuring their truth, arguing that we don't know these things, that they are not proven, that they are not logically necessary. The history of Modernity has been the history of the attempt to divorce Truth from its foundations planted by God deep in the heart of Man. When once Truth is located in things that Man can verify independently, then Man is the master of his own Truth, and hence of his own being. The senses having been selected early on as the location of ascertainable truth has led only to philosophical doubts of the instrument. The modern experiment should have ended there, but there came a crafty weaver into town by the name of I. Kant, who offered to clothe our noble Empiricist in a gown of superior quality, in which he has been strutting and parading the streets of Academia ever since, deaf to the cries of the children proclaiming his essential nakedness, though lately he seems to at least have developed the ability to blush.

There are currently two forms of transmission of truth from the past; Tradition and Scholarship. Originally, the two methods were one, scholarship being intensely tied to tradition, and used as a kind of filter to distinguish authentic tradition from its more spurious forms, but in modernity, the two have separated into hostile camps. The method of modern scholarship is apparently to adopt as a prejudice something immensely flattering to ourselves, and to always look at any actual evidence that may exist through the lens of our pet prejudice; Chesterton wrote of the scholarship of his time that it involved scrapping supernatural stories which have some foundation in favor of natural stories which have no foundation.

Scholarship and Tradition might be compared to two people, one who studies a rock known to have originated from a distant mountain, the other having a distant, hazy view of the mountain itself. If you study a rock intensely enough, you can probably tell a lot about the kind of soils, and therefore the kind of vegetation, which might prevail on the mountainside; of course, this involves a couple of key assumptions. One, that the data you possess is not something erratic, and therefore is truly indicative of conditions on the mountain, and Two, that it is in fact prevalent all over the mountain. The two methods should obviously be used in conjunction, but it is the one who has sight of the actual mountain who should have the controlling authority; modern scholarship is somewhat given to informing us authoritatively that there are no pine trees on the mountain, when they can be seen quite plainly standing out on the ridge.

Anyway, we live in the world of totalitarian scholarship, with its own epistemology, and a dedicated corps of amateur police tirelessly striving to enforce its decisions; but for one who heeds the voice within, these things are meaningless as the wind, which may shriek with all its voice, yet never compel one to surrender. It seems to be the role of the modern schools to create a race of individuals who simply cannot think outside the box of contemporary scholarship, baseless though its dictates may be.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

MORAL ORDER

Condolences to poor Ochlophobe for his recent illness; that's a problem I don't have, my lungs having been developed while growing up on the high Andean plateau, but I know many suffer from it tremendously.
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So; Truth being so complicated and all, is there a real, discenable right and wrong? There is a persistent tendency in Modernity to say that all values are arbitrary; at this point, all categorical imperatives and all merely pragmatic moralities are quite exploded. They were minimally functional (yet still socially corrosive, in my view) as long as there was a sufficient social memory of a more forcefully articulated, and indeed, more natural morality, but now that these things have receded into the near-legendary past, what can be said against those who choose to regard their own immediate pleasure, or even inclination, as of more value than the good of other people, or the eventual good of society? I am going to say that, if you are an atheist, or even an agnostic, there is nothing. If your neighbor decides to torture your dog, rape your daughter, or burn down your house, you can certainly say that you will do everything in your power to prevent them, including appealing to the relevant social authorities to aid you, but you cannot say he is doing wrong, in any absolute sense of the word. You may say that right is defined by what the majority of the people want, as if when the majority of the people decide that it's o.k. to rape your daughter it makes any difference in the morality of violating a young girl; it is also the case that certain peoples historically have found themselves outside the circle of concern of their community. People may be quite positive that they don't want anyone raping their daughter, or the daughters of the people they are accustomed to associating with directly, and yet be blithely unconcerned over what happens to your daughter. It seems usually to go unnoticed that the minimal protections provided by a traditional ethics for those outside of society's circle of concern have been quite eroded away by today's politically-correct ethicists; Jews, Blacks, and Homosexuals would have had no hope of a hearing, if the society of the early 20th century had been founded on the ethics of the 21st century. The politically-correct mentality has no tradition of mercy towards its opponents; for those who fall out of its circle of concern, the future is indeed bleak. Late modernity has already proven a continual holocaust for those who, through no choice of their own, occasionally invade the bodies of women, thereby threatening to impose responsibilities on them; later on, no doubt, the holocaust will extend to all those who offend against its totalitarian ethics by holding on to more traditional moralities, and have the temerity to regard them mandated by Divine authority.

The ethical imperative of late Modernity is that all individuals are self-determinative; any factor that serves at all to impose limits on the ability of an individual to absolutely determine what kind of creature they are to be, and what kind of responsibility (if any) they have for the happiness and well-being of another, is seen as a gross imposition on the rights of the individual. I will engage in sexual activity, and I will regard the being that comes in the course of nature to be a hostile invader, to be expelled without guilt or consideration from the womb; I will jump from this high building, and I will bring a lawsuit against the ground for smiting me.

The only refuge from this lunacy that I can see is to believe in a Creator; that being given, all else proceeds rationally. Because I am not my own creator, I do not determine my own nature. Whatever rights I may have spring from this nature; that being the case, I must know my nature in order to determine what kinds of demands I may justly make on my universe. Because the Creator created me, His knowledge of me is much greater and much more intimate than my knowledge of myself. All my operations, physical and spiritual, are a mystery to me; I must appeal to my Creator for the key to the understanding of my being. If I choose to make up my own rules of conduct, it is the same as if the owner of a new automobile were to say "The manufacturer demands that I put oil in the car before driving it, but I choose not to do so". In one sense, he is free to make that decision, but obviously if he does so, he is not free to drive a smoothly functioning automobile, and very soon will be unable to drive at all. Similarly, he may choose to put the oil in the gas tank, and the windshield wiper fluid in the crankcase, but if so, he must accept the naturally occurring, deletrious results.

Obviously, any complex entity such as a man or an automobile has a vast number of processes which must be complied with to maintain functional integrity. Some have major consequences, some minor; some consequences of wrong behavior may not reveal themselves for years, or be such that they are not apparent at all until suddenly manifest in catastrophic circumstances.

Because Modernity believes in physical reality, it knows, when building towers and bridges, that there are designs which work, and those that don't, materials which will withstand particular stresses, and those which will fail to do so; because Modernity does not believe in spiritual reality, it regards Man's spiritual nature as infinitely manipulable. This is why the spiritual towers and bridges erected in early Modernity are collapsing spectacularly around us, to the ruin of families and communities, and the eventual dissolution of the social fabric itself.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

A SECOND CHILDHOOD

O.K. People, you're not doing your part on this Poetry thing; I'm not going to keep it up all by myself. So far, all we've had are a couple of poems sent in that were written by other people; I had originally hoped to have more original work sent in. Why should I be the only one to embarrass myself publicly? I had thought that everyone wrote poetry; there's no need to be shy, I've been around the block, and have already seen most of the standard varieties of ineptitude. If you don't know how to write a poem, learn! Start with rhythmic babbling, and work up from there.

This was not supposed to be the all-things-Chesterton page, but I had wanted to share my favorite Chesterton poem, then Fred Pfeil sent "The House of Christmas" as a seasonal offering, and Andrea sent Abou Ben Adhem, which I decided to pair with Chesterton's parody, and I still want to include my favorite poem by G.K. Chesterton; so here it is:
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A Second Childhood

When all my days are ending
And I have no song to sing,
I think I shall not be too old
To stare at everything;
As I stared once at a nursery door
Or a tall tree and a swing.

Wherein God's ponderous mercy hangs
On all my sins and me,
Because He does not take away
The terror from the tree
And stones still shine along the road
That are, and cannot be.

Men grow too old for love, my love,
Men grow too old for wine,
But I shall not grow too old to see
Unearthly daylight shine,
Changing my chamber's dust to snow
Till I doubt if it be mine.

Behold, the crowning mercies melt,
The first surprises stay;
And in my dross is dropped a gift
For which I dare not pray:
That a man grow used to grief and joy
But not to night and day.

Men grow too old for love, my love,
Men grow too old for lies;
But I shall not grow too old to see
Enormous night arise,
A cloud that is larger than the world
And a monster made of eyes.

Nor am I worthy to unloose
The latchet of my shoe;
Or shake the dust from off my feet
Or the staff that bears me through
On ground that is too good to last,
Too solid to be true.

Men grow too old to woo, my love,
Men grow too old to wed:
But I shall not grow too old to see
Hung crazily overhead
Incredible rafters when I wake
And find I am not dead.

A thrill of thunder in my hair:
Though blackening clouds be plain,
Still I am stung and startled
By the first drop of the rain:
Romance and pride and passion pass
And these are what remain.

Strange crawling carpets of the grass,
Wide windows of the sky:
So in this perilous grace of God
With all my sins go I:
And things grow new though I grow old,
Though I grow old and die.

-G.K. Chesterton


I hope no one is suffering from Chesterton overload!

Send poems to ddcomfort@gmail.com

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

TRUTH

In controversies with other people, we frequently find that a point is reached at which any further discussion is unprofitable, each party talking past the other in mutual incomprehension. On such occasions, it is tempting to regard the other as being willfully bullheaded, and sometimes it is so, (I've done it before) but more frequently, both simply lack a context which allows the other to make sense; it's like listening to someone speaking a language with which we are completely unfamiliar. The sounds are mixed up in an order that is unintelligible to us. Others who speak our language do so with such different stress and inflection that it is hard to understand. In saying this, I'm certainly not advancing a philosophy of relativism; one can be completely familiar with the philosophy of your interlocutor, spot the error without difficulty, and be completely right in doing so. Even so, you are left with the problem of how to communicate this in a way they will understand.

There is a point at which productive discourse can take place, and that is at the very point at which the two viewpoints diverge. In talking to almost anyone, there is a point up to which we agree, but after that, our ideas separate. That is the point which needs to be examined; argue very far away from that point, and you are arguing from different assumptions. What irrational prejudice, what rooted dislikes, what kind of intensely personal experiences cause one person to zig and the other to zag at the point of departure? The answers can sometimes be truly illuminating. Progress can sometimes be made by tracing the idea to see, after all, where it truly leads, or what kind of intellectual universe it springs from. Many carry ideas around in their heads that would horrify them if they knew what gave it birth. Compare the growth of ideas to the growth of a tree; branches continually spreading away from the trunk, dividing again and again; it is always possible to find one's way back to the trunk, and hence to the root, by tracing your way laboriously down the branch, exploring each intersection and mapping the complicated networks and tangles of twigs springing from different branches, perhaps originating from the other side of the tree, or even from different trees. Confusion results mainly from false congruences and false dichotomies; two leaves seen growing side by side are usually assumed to be closely related. Perhaps a trained botanist will be able to tell at a glance that these leaves seen presently in such near proximity are in fact from two different kinds of trees; others without such sensitivity have to work laboriously to the same conclusion. Other leaves positioned on opposite sides of the arboreal universe may be demonstrated to be of the same branch. Obviously, this gets complicated; it might seem that there is some justification for those who say either that there is no Truth, or that Truth must remain forever unknown to us. In ultimate things, I consider this indeed to be the case; I have long considered the most sensible thing one can say about the Universe is that, barring revelation from a higher power, man can know nothing certainly about the nature of the universe, and hence ultimately lacks the key to the understanding of his own being. The long search for Human-centered certainty which is Modern philosophy seems certainly to have foundered at this point; most have by now abandoned ship, and the few determined diehards appear more ridiculous with each passing year, but I also believe that, in Itself, Truth is simple. In the clear empyrean which is its true home, it burns as a radiant energy, flashing forth from the Throne of God on its missions of Justice and Mercy; but as it enters the phenomenal realm, its beam is somewhat diffracted, and as this pure white light enters the prism of the human mind, it is broken into all the colors of the rainbow, and then human beings seek to use Truth to promote their own interests, manufacturing truths from Truth, (Truth itself being regarded only as a source for the mining of convenient facts) suppressing some, and enhancing others. Looking for Truth in the currents of human opinion is like walking down a hall of funhouse mirrors, the twisted glass throwing back your image in every grotesque distortion imaginable. Some even become haters of Truth, seeking to uproot and destroy every evidence of it in the human heart, fabricating and disseminating false truths with which to fill the void.

Consequently, we dwell in an atmosphere of confusion; finding Truth is not hopeless, but it is complicated, and the only point at which we can truly address differing opinions is to find the point where two branches diverge; then, with labor, truth can indeed be demonstrated, falsity shown absurd in the light of its own disastrous logic, but this, of course, takes time. Modern people are typically too busy to remember, let alone think, so of course the temptation is to forgo any rigorous examination of their core assumptions, and adopt a sort of "soundbite philosophy" composed of bits and pieces (many of them contradictory) formed of the sweepings of popular culture. They typically won't take time to examine this collage, and can't defend any part of it, but they can vividly dislike those who point out their contradictions, and they do.

I am not primarily talking about uneducated people here; simple people approach truth at a much more basic level, and are often right where their more sophisticated brethern are wrong. I used to think I operated on a higher plane of truth than my parents, (one of the many things that kept me from accessing the parental wisdom) but found as I matured that many of the things I had rejected as excessively simpleminded were, quite simply, true; these truths were inarticulable by those who had my training in their hands, but true nonetheless. Had I been a less arrogant young man, I might have been able to access these silently held, but profound truths.

So the possession of truth and the articulation of truth are different things, but polemics (not a dirty word in my vocabulary) has to do with the convincing of those who have a different view, and that involves the articulation of truth, and that involves forming a fairly clear mental picture of what Truth actually is. Here I return to the analogy of the forest with intent to refine it a bit. Originally, I said that the entire forest was not rooted in anything; now I am going to say it is only our tree which is uprooted, and that it is being supported on all sides by living trees, whose branches are so intertwined with those of our tree that it is difficult to tell which leaves belong to which tree. Uprooted and malnourished as it is, our world is yet interpenetrated and upheld by truths which come from a different universe. A leaf growing right beside another may be from the other side of the spiritual and intellectual Cosmos. There is one profound difference between these leaves; one is living, and the other is dying. A little space of time will demonstrate for all to see which is which; in the meantime, all the leaves have the appearance of health, and to the undiscerning eye all appear to be of the same tree.

The pursuit of Truth involves sorting out the eternal from the transient. One adept at such things might be able to say immediately that this is an oak leaf, and the one beside it is a maple, but he will be hard-pressed to convince his less-discerning fellows of this unless they will undertake the labor of following the branches; typically, they will just stubbornly argue the point, most likely munching on acorns the entire time.

At this point, (If not long before) the insistent relativist will have broken in, saying with his usual benign smile and air of all-knowingness "Ah, but there are many paths to the top of the mountain, my child". It is a point worth considering. First of all, it may be so that there are many paths to the top of the mountain; at any rate, it certainly can be approached from many trajectories, but what an infinitude of other possible routes there are which lead away from the mountain entirely? Would it not behoove one who wished to reach the top of the mountain to at least ascertain what direction the path they are on is pointing in, and not just assume that any old path will do? Furthermore, even if it is possible that there is more than one path up the mountain, could it not be possible that there is only one safe path, and that, in the case of a peak of insurmountable difficulty, the only possible path may be the one that was blasted out of the side of the precipice in order to make the ascent at all possible. As a matter of fact, most mountains I am familiar with do have only one path to the top; it is there because thousands of people have found that this is the best route to the top of the mountain. I doubt if the person who coined the phrase had any experience with mountaineering. Years of knocking heads with these people has convinced me that relativism is the first, last, and only refuge of the intellectually lazy; it wears an appearance of wisdom, and of broad magnanimity, but is really remarkably foolish, and about the most narrow-minded thing there is going, and there's really no way to penetrate the smug superiority of those who hold this view, for it comforts them with the feeling that they are the ones who have seen through everything, when most commonly they are only the ones who have failed to look.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

PAIN

I apologise for any confusion that anyone may have encountered; the new e-mail address is ddcomfort@gmail.com. I haven't yet figured out how to make the links work (I'm not sure I ever did figure out how to make the links work).
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When I was very young, (I think about five) I saw a still younger child (unknown to me) being given an ice-cream cone; as the child reached out his small hands for the treat, he tipped the cone, and the ice cream fell off of it onto the ground, and he began to cry. At that, a pang shot through me; I can feel it to this day. It seemed it would have been better for the World never to have existed than for that one event to have occurred; of course, that was a posterior analysis, but that was the substance of the feeling at the time. It is a common enough event; I have since witnessed the very same thing many times without reaction, and had most probably seen it before, (my memories of those far-off times being rather hazy). In fact, unless I am very much mistaken, the very same thing had happened previously to me without provoking nearly as intense a reaction.

At this point, you are all probably looking at me as a complete lunatic, and I don't blame you. What was it that provoked such an intense reaction, making that simple event one of the formational forces in my life? I think it was the combination of the childish intensity of delighted anticipation of enjoyment, the abrupt taking away of the promised pleasure, and the broken-hearted wailing that resulted. For that child at that moment, that ice cream was his heaven, and suddenly, the door was slammed shut; more ice cream may be procured, and the child comforted, but still that bereaved wailing echoes down the corridors of time and space. Of course I know it is silly to place such importance on ice cream, but it is exactly the silliness and childishness of it that gives it such poignancy; I don't at all think that the reaction would have been nearly as strong had it been a reasoned and measured response to some great crisis. The disjuncture between the triviality of the incident and the intensity of the response gives it its pathetic quality, and it is one of the things that in adolescence had me shaking my fist at God, and saying, "You Tormentor! Stop it!!". It didn't mean anything in itself, but a tiny paradise was shattered, and my heart broke; I didn't so much care if a rational creature suffered the torments of Hell, but for a child to shed such tears made the Universe seem like a cruel joke.

The reason I introduce this post with this rather unimportant piece of autobiography is because I have come to suspect that similar reactions lie behind many of the core perceptions of modernity; as modern people, we worship Pain, that dark Taboo before which we make such extravagant obeisances, and perform endless sacrifice of infants and other helpless creatures, and really, is there that much of a difference between my reaction to the child's spoiled ice cream, and the reactions of many to such things as Hiroshima? A difference in scale, to be sure, but at its root, the common perception that pain is intolerable, and that we must remake the world, and if necessary human nature, in striving to rid the world of pain. I cannot concede to the Anonymous One that pain is the most important thing there is; he believes that he has upset everyone else's applecart just by quoting some grim statistics, but I keep my apples in an entirely different conveyance, thank you!

Later on, I began to see pain as a gift of God, warning us of wrongness and danger, and really, a great confirmation of the truth of the Christian Faith; only in the knowledge of fallenness and separation from God does pain make sense. Deep in our hearts, we sense the brokenness of the world, and our souls explore the fracture like someone endlessly running their tongue over the rough edges of a broken tooth. In any other system, pain is an absurdity; we don't know what to do with it. When my wife was seeing a counselor, I was speaking with her of the necessity of making some hard choices, and saying that though they would be painful, it might in the end be a good thing; she immediately snapped "Anyone who thinks of pain as good is a masochist". So much for "Christian" counseling! Not until I became Orthodox did I find a complete theology of Pain, and learn to experience pain as sanctifying, and cleansing; after a night spent in tears of repentance, the sun shines with extraordinary brightness through windows of the soul washed clean of years of accumulated grime. Indeed, it comes to mind that this is an important difference between ecstatic religion, the condition of seeking spiritual experiences and consolations, with the attending auto-erotic characteristics that Ochlophobe has so well outlined on his blog, and religion that seeks only repentance and self-mortification; the latter is clean, but the former is completely tied up in the passions of human eros.

Pain is not the soul of the Cosmos; at the heart of the Cosmos beats a heart of radiant Joy. In that light, all pain is seen to be illusory, as insubstantial as a morning mist which vanishes instantly at the rising of the Sun. To the modern mind, the fact that Pain exists is the center of the universe, and proves God to be either cruel or nonexistent, and misery blots out the sun. In every soul either Love triumphs over Pain, or Pain triumphs over Love; on this depends whether our life is heaven or hell.

Saturday, January 5, 2008

ABOU BEN ADHEM

Andrea Rovney has sent in the much-anthologised "Abou Ben Adhem"; here it is.

Abou Ben Adhem

Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe increase!)
Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace,
And saw, within the moonlight in his room,
Making it rich, and like a lily in bloom,
An Angel writing in a book of gold:

Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold,
And to the Presence in the room he said,
"What writest thou?" The Vision raised its head,
And with a look made of all sweet accord
Answered, "The names of those who love the Lord."

"And is mine one?" said Abou. "Nay, not so,"
Replied the Angel. Abou spoke more low,
But cheerily still; and said, "I pray thee, then,
Write me as one who loves his fellow men."

The Angel wrote, and vanished. The next night
It came again with a great wakening light,
And showed the names whom love of God had blessed,
And, lo! Ben Adhem's name led all the rest!

-James Leigh Hunt

I can't resist pairing it with this one of Chesterton's:

THE PHILANTHROPIST
(With Apologies to a Beautiful Poem)

Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe decrease
By cautious birth-control and die in peace)
Mellow with learning lightly took the word
That marked him not with them that love the Lord,
And told the angel of the book and pen
"Write me as one that loves his fellow-men:
For them alone I labour; to reclaim
The ragged roaming Bedouin and to tame
To ordered service; to uproot their vine
Who mock the Prophet, being mad with wine;
Let daylight through their tents and through their lives
Number their camels, even count their wives;
Plot out the desert into streets and squares,
And count it a more fruitful work than theirs
Who lift a vain and visionary love
To your vague Allah in the skies above."

Gently replied the angel of the pen:
"Labour in peace and love your fellow-men:
And love not God, since men alone are dear,
Only fear God; for you have cause to fear."

-G.K. Chesterton

Send Poems to ddcomfort@gmail.com

Thursday, January 3, 2008

BEAUTY

On one level, Beauty seems to be nothing but order, and variations of order. This is why trees are beautiful; every tree has a different growth pattern, but each tree is substantially the same as other trees of its kind, has the same geometry, repeats the same angles, and trees of a different kind have an entirely different geometry of growth. Absolute chaos has no beauty; neither does a total stasis. Then there are things which just seem to have a deeper meaning, and speak to the soul of things beyond its vision; mountains, the sky, the sea, fields of flowers, etc. Beauty is an introduction to the being of God, the great symphony in Three movements, of which all the created order is but grace notes. We know the Creator through his creation, and know that He is good. No matter what pains we may have suffered, on bright days, or even grey days, with their very different kind of somber beauty, or in the still heart of the night, we may enter into a kind of deep mystical gladness, and know in our hearts that there is meaning in all this, and that Pain is not the soul of the Universe. All created things spring from this deep fountain of essential being; Beauty flows out from the Throne of the All-Holy Trinity, the Godhead dwells resplendent in Love, the rejoicing of Pure Being.

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

CHRISTMAS MEMORIES

Andrea Elizabeth tagged me to share some Christmas memories awhile ago; since it is almost Old-Calendar Christmas, I'll give it a go. I'm not quite sure what I was intended to do, but this post is my attempt to respond to that request.

  1. The Christmases I spent in Peru were very special to me; I remember primarily the deep sense of mystery as the holiday approached, and decorations began to go up. Mystery, and anticipation, as if something too good for words were approaching. These were not our most affluent Christmases, there were no white Christmases, as it was the beginning of summer (or "rainy season, as it was known in that locality). This is something I have often noticed about holidays and vacations generally; the ones I appreciate most in retrospect are not the ones filled with activity, but the ones where there is stillness. Also, the occasions when I had most fun as a child were not when we were going out doing fun things, but when I was able to interact naturally with other children (and, occasionally adults), which is only possible in an unpressured environment. This is the problem with people going bananas trying to make Christmas nice for their kids; people living harassed and frenzied existences increasing the frenzy for the holidays. I suppose in many cases, they are literally destroying peace in a vain attempt to recreate the peace they remember from Christmases in childhood. I'm not saying that if you polled the youngsters, they would give the thumbs up to singing Hymns in lieu of getting their favorite toy or a trip to the ski lodge; I do know that I don't remember many of the toys I got for Christmas as a kid, but I do remember sitting around a lighted Christmas tree in the evening with family and close friends, the house lights off, softly singing carols on Christmas Eve.
  2. I remember driving up into the mountains of Oregon to cut our own Christmas tree; we kind of made a day of it. Fun and fellowship, snow, a nice hike through the woods, and the piney smell in the car on the way home. Somehow, using a farmed tree for Christmas always seemed a little sacrilegious to me; I won't even mention the supreme blasphemy of an artificial one.
  3. The one Christmas I spent in New England was interesting; for one thing, it was the only time I have had really serious snow over Christmas. That, and having churches with tall steeples with clocks in them all over the place made it feel kind of like living inside the stereotypical Christmas card.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

LOVE

I would define Love as "The Affirmation of Being". If that seems absurd (and it does, a little, to me), it is probably because in ourselves we do not fully realize the true nature of Being.