Saturday, September 19, 2015

Annual Pirate's Prayer Post

For INTERNATIONAL TALK LIKE A PIRATE DAY:



Disturb us, Lord, when
We are too pleased with ourselves,
When our dreams have come true
Because we dreamed too little,
When we arrived safely
Because we sailed too close to the shore.

Disturb us, Lord, when
with the abundance of things we possess
We have lost our thirst
For the waters of life;
Having fallen in love with life,
We have ceased to dream of eternity
And in our efforts to build a new earth,
We have allowed our vision
Of the new Heaven to dim.

Disturb us, Lord, to dare more boldly,
To venture on wilder seas
Where storms will show Your mastery;
Where losing sight of land,
We shall find the stars.

We ask you to push back
The horizons of our hopes;
And to push back the future
In strength, courage, hope, and love.

This we ask in the name of our Captain,
Who is Jesus Christ.

Francis Drake,an adventurer and essentially a legal pirate (What else is a second son supposed to do to make a living?), wrote this prayer as he departed Portsmouth on the Golden Hind to raid Spanish gold on the west coast of South America. He ventured at least as far north as the non-Spanish parts of California, claiming it as "New Albion" - New England- and returned to his Queen (the long way - via circumnavigation) with loot worth over a half million pounds sterling, and received his Knighthood for it.

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

An Occasional Post- Meaning & Ethics

Saw this meme with a picture of the cosmos saying "No Life Matters" on an atheist page. The funny thing was the comments, where people stretch to try to still justify being moral. They were not impressive attempts. Look, if life doesn't matter, it doesn't matter. Emotions are judgments of VALUE. In a valueless universe, they mean nothing. Reason is SUPPOSED to keep us from acting crazy. To say on the one hand that persons are no more valuable than rocks and yet we should treat them as if they are of inestimable value is hypocrisy and counseling schizophrenia. You can't have it both ways. A consistent reason in a meaningless universe includes a practical reason based on meaninglessness. Anything else is cowardice and contradiction.

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Evidence, Religion & The Paranormal

Well, something else has crossed my desk that demanded response. It was a meme that claimed the "cure" for demonic possession is atheism, as no atheists have ever become possessed. Believing in demons is the cause of possession, according to this bumper-sticker like picture. This claim brings up some interesting theological and philosophical issues worth discussing.

Now let's put aside the question of whether there HAVE been cases of supposed demonic possession in atheists (there have) and let me establish that though I do believe in something like demons, I do not believe in demonic possession as, say, a Roman Catholic exorcist would understand the term. I will assume here there is no such thing as posession and atheists can't even experience the phenomenon others label possession. Would that be evidence against the RC's proposition that possession actually happens? No, not in the slightest.

That is because demons are assumed to be persons, and persons have motivations, motivations that can be hypothetically explored in plausible ways. It would be very easy for an RC to explain away the "fact" that atheists do not get possessed. Demons would have no reason to possess them. For demonic possession is understood to be the way in which dark powers challenge our belief that God does or even can love us. And an atheist is already lacking such a belief.

This brings up the difficulty when trying to use something like scientific evidence to study ANY religious phenomenon. For God, too, is understood to be a person, with goals and plans and the ability to act on those plans. It is possible to concieve of good reasons WHY God may not want us to be able to absolutely prove His existence, and so it may be impossible to do so. Both Immanuel Kant and Dietrich Bonhoeffer came up with such reasons.

A person can hide. A person is not predictable in the way most natural phenomenon are. Psychology is often a mess of a discipline for just this reason. Drugs that are known to be ineffective become ingrained in the treatment structure of mental disorders because of increased placebo effects. Entire fields of study remain even when they produce no discernible results because, darn it, we have to DO something to help people, and people are hard to help.

A parallel can be found in studies on ESP. I don't believe in it. But the stories and examples that prompt study in it...a mother knows her child is dying many miles away, someone dreams of impending danger, Phillip K Dick's mysterious diagnosis of his child....are examples of extreme stress situations that cannot be reproduced in a lab, not really.

The point is that the scientific method may not be equipped to evaluate these claims, at all. Evidence matters in these cases, but it is weak anecdotal evidence, not the hard knowledge-bringer of scientific study. Evidence matters to theists, too, if it didn't they wouldn't spend so much time trying to defend against the problem of evil. The problem is taken as evidence against their beliefs. But because God is conceived of personally, it is doubtful that the concept can be decided SCIENTIFICALLY.

That doesn't mean atheists have no REASONS for unbelief (nor theists for belief, to my mind). But those reasons are more about interpreting facts than facts themselves. Does order (such as the order we find in nature) require an orderer? Does order imply mind? The answer to this question is intuitive, a matter of rational and internal reflection, and cannot be decided finally on the evidence itself (since evidence is just and example of what is beings studied). In the end the point all sides in these debates have to face is that science has limits. That is why we call it metaphysics...because it is beyond physics.
















Saturday, July 25, 2015

Popping In For A Post

Life has gotten busy, and so I don't really blog any more. My Facebook page really plays that role for me now. But I suspected that every once in a while something would scream for a larger treatment than I could give on Facebook, and lo and behold it has happened. I read this article today:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeff-schweitzer/earth-20-bad-news-for-god_b_7861528.html?ncid=txtlnkusaolp00000592

This is the most puerile, useless treatment of Genesis I have ever read. It completely misunderstands the nature of religious language, and the nature of the Book of Genesis in particular. First of all, the author assumes from the outset that religious language is like the language of newspaper reporting or science...that the point of religious language is 'how' questions.

Language has different uses. Nobody thinks that when a poet says a cloud is like cotton, that the poet is trying to communicate the exact chemical makeup of clouds. They understand that poetry doesn't seek to communicate a third-party perspective but a first-party perspective...that the language of poetry is the language of explaining WHAT IT IS LIKE to experience a cloud.

Religious language is born, too, out of experience, though I think that religious language serves a purpose different than every day poetry. The point is that religious language has its own purpose, uses, and questions it addresses. For a full treatment on this subject I suggest Russell Pregeant's MYSTERY WITHOUT MAGIC....it gives a devastating refutation to Schweitzer's entire approach to scripture.

But moreover, Schweitzer uses ONLY one part of Genesis to talk about the Biblical approach to cosmology. There are, in fact, not one but MANY Creation stories in the Bible, and they are often in commensurable. If we are to take the Genesis 1 account of Creation as a straightforward and all-encompassing cosmology, how do we deal with the fact that a very different cosmology is found one chapter over in Genesis 2? And similarly, how do we deal with the more expansive accounts found in Proverbs 8 and Job?

The point is that the Bible tells not one but many creation stories, some of those stories are more or less congruent with a modern scientific account, but that doesn't really matter. What really matters is that the plurality of accounts points to the fact that the language of the Bible shouldn't be taken to be some kind of scientific account of creation, but rather has some other purpose that a thinking person would be wise to discern before actually making pronouncements on Biblical teachings. It would be a practice Schweitzer would've done well to undertake if he wanted to avoid sounding like a theological ignoramus.

Monday, June 8, 2015

FINAL Wonderfalls Bible Study



Episode 13: Caged Bird
Leviticus 19:10-12
Do not go back through your vineyard to gather the grapes that were missed or to pick up the grapes that have fallen; leave them for poor people and foreigners. I am the Lord your God.
11 “Do not steal or cheat or lie. 12 Do not make a promise in my name if you do not intend to keep it; that brings disgrace on my name. I am the Lord your God.

Proverbs 6:20
People don't despise a thief if he steals food when he is hungry

Isaiah 41:10-14
Do not be afraid—I am with you!
    I am your God—let nothing terrify you!
I will make you strong and help you;
    I will protect you and save you.
11 “Those who are angry with you
    will know the shame of defeat.
Those who fight against you will die
12     and will disappear from the earth.
13 I am the Lord your God;
    I strengthen you and tell you,
    ‘Do not be afraid; I will help you.’”
14 The Lord says,
“Small and weak as you are, Israel,
    don't be afraid; I will help you.
I, the holy God of Israel, am the one who saves you.

Isaiah 5:1-7
Listen while I sing you this song,
    a song of my friend and his vineyard:
My friend had a vineyard
    on a very fertile hill.
He dug the soil and cleared it of stones;
    he planted the finest vines.
He built a tower to guard them,
    dug a pit for treading the grapes.
He waited for the grapes to ripen,
    but every grape was sour.
So now my friend says, “You people who live in Jerusalem and Judah, judge between my vineyard and me. Is there anything I failed to do for it? Then why did it produce sour grapes and not the good grapes I expected?
“Here is what I am going to do to my vineyard: I will take away the hedge around it, break down the wall that protects it, and let wild animals eat it and trample it down. I will let it be overgrown with weeds. I will not trim the vines or hoe the ground; instead, I will let briers and thorns cover it. I will even forbid the clouds to let rain fall on it.”
Israel is the vineyard of the Lord Almighty;
    the people of Judah are the vines he planted.
He expected them to do what was good,
    but instead they committed murder.
He expected them to do what was right,
    but their victims cried out for justice.

Genesis 45:4-6
Then Joseph said to them, “Please come closer.” They did, and he said, “I am your brother Joseph, whom you sold into Egypt. Now do not be upset or blame yourselves because you sold me here. It was really God who sent me ahead of you to save people's lives. This is only the second year of famine in the land; there will be five more years in which there will be neither plowing nor reaping.


What do you think of letting the kid go for a slinky?
Is all theft the same? Why or why not?

Compare to the situation with the kid to the theft situation discussed in Proverbs.

How does the Leviticus passage bear on the Proverbs command.

What does Eric say about going back to New Jersey?

What do you think of Heidi calling Jaye unstable over what happened with the murder accusation, 
given what we know about how that turned out?

Would God ever encourage someone to lie, do you think?

Reflect on this quote: “even if you have a choice, it can and will be taken away from you.”

How do we see the issue of fate in the Isaiah 4 passage?

Why does Mahandra fear the truth regarding her relationship with Aaron? Reflect upon this.

What do you think of the way the police officer deals with the kid?

Reflect on this quote: “give him heart.”

Reflect on this quote: “who is going to strengthen my resolve?

What do you think of the scene with Sharon holding Jaye while she’s crying?

Reflect on this scene and Jaye’s desire for resolve in light of the Isaiah passage.

Reflect on this quote: “Okay, so maybe you can make me.”

Can Jaye gain any special courage or strength from her ‘gift’ in this situation with the gunman of 
the sort Isaiah promises? Why or why not?

Is it the security guard’s fault that Jaye and the others find themselves in this situation?

What do you think of the bank robber insisting he shouldn’t be guilty of murder?

Do you agree? Why or why not?

What do you think of Eric going to see Heidi? What do you think of Heidi’s reaction?

Reflect on this quote: “I’m not going to die a coward.”

Reflect on this quote: “if you kill your pet bird, it can’t sing for you any more”, in light of Isaiah 5.

Reflect on this quote: “you think you’re all alone in this.”

What is the irony in these words?

Through everything this season, how many lives has Jaye saved? How did this kind of salvation 
come about?

What did Joseph say about what his brothers did to him?

What did this ‘saving of many’ cost people?

Was it worth it? Why or why not?

Was Jaye’s heartache? Why or why not?

What do you think of what happened with Heidi, Jaye and Eric?

What does Eric say about everything that happened? What do you think of this?



Friday, June 5, 2015

More WILFRED Quotes With Comments

"The master understands that the universe is forever out of control." - Lao Tzu
[God, I love Taoism. After Christianity it is my favorite religious philosophy.]


"Our biggest problems arise from the avoidance of smaller ones." - Jeremy Caulfield
[This hits really close to home to me today. So many of my problems are from the avoidance of smaller problems.]

"The truth will set you free, but first it will make you miserable." - James A. Garfield
[The truth won't set you free until the truth is done with you. Truth upon secrecy or lie is like the cutting out of an infection. It is the only cure, but it is painful nonetheless.]

"The thing that lies at the foundation of positive change is service to a fellow human being." - Lee Iacocca
[Or, to God.]

"Honesty and transparency make you vulnerable. Be honest and transparent anyway." - Mother Teresa  
[Yep and yep.]

"If you do not ask the right questions, you do not get the right answers." - Edward Hodnett
[An often ignored truth. Asking the right question is an important skill. I often say that continental philosophy asks the right questions, whereas analytic philosophy helps us get the right answers.]

"Resentment is like taking poison and waiting for the other person to die." - Malachy McCourt
[I am so tired of resentment. I am weary of it.]

"If we knew each other's secrets, what comfort should we find." - John Churton Collins
[That is the freedom that truth brings.]

"The mistake is thinking that there can be an antidote to the uncertainty." - David Levithan
[Indeed.]


"Cure sometimes, treat often, comfort always." - Hippocrates
[I'm trying.] 

"Suspicion is a heavy armor and with its weight it impedes more than it protects." - Robert Burns

"Sincerity, even if it speaks with a stutter, will sound eloquent when inspired." - Eiji Yoshikawa
[We live in a world steeped in insincerity. I can barely stand it. It chokes me. I have to swim in the genuine to feel clean.]

"I have little shame, no dignity - all in the name of a better cause." - A.J. Jacobs
[Every person involved in the human condition who is trying to any good will feel this way some of the time.]

"Truth may sometimes hurt, but delusion harms." - Vanna Bonta
[I love this saying.]

"Intuition is more important to discovery than logic." - Henri Poincaré
[I have learned to trust my intuition. The consistency of success doing this is astounding to me.]

"How weird was it to drive streets I knew so well. What a different perspective." - Suzanne Vega

"There can be no progress without head-on confrontation." - Christopher Hitchens
[This one is hard for me. But I succeed at it sometimes.]

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Quotables From WILFRED

I've been watching the show WILFRED. I like it a lot. It is dark and raunchy at points but ultimately it is about one man's struggle with the meaning of experiences that are almost too much for him to bear. The infinite manifests itself as various visions. He cannot tell whether these visions correspond to anything outside of his head or not, though. Is he crazy? Or is he connected to something Deeper? Is this mystical experience? Or schizophrenia? These questions resonate with me. Each episode begins with a quote. Here is a collection of them. They are excellent. Some are followed by commentary.

"Sanity and happiness are an impossible combination."- Mark Twain
 [I've always found this to be true.]

"Trust thyself only, and another shall not betray thee." - Thomas Fuller
[Oh if it were only that easy. The hardest part of life is that you are forced to trust those you are inclined not to. Trusting others is non-optional. But how is one to be comfortable with that, knowing human nature to be what it is?]

"Fear has its uses but cowardice has none." - Mahatma Ghandi 
[To understand this quote, one must remember that Aristotle taught us that bravery is not the absence of fear, but the willingness to act in the face of fear.]

"Happiness can exist only in acceptance." - George Orwell 
[The Serenity Prayer, anyone?]

"Seek respect mainly from thyself, for it comes first from within." - Steven H. Coogler
[But to respect oneself, one must first respect others. Even with self-respect...you have to give respect to get respect.]

"Conscience is the dog that can't bite, but never stops barking." - Proverb
[Indeed]

"In general, pride is at the bottom of all great mistakes." - Steven H. Coogler


"Anger as soon as fed is dead -- tis starving makes it fat." - Emily Dickinson
[Recent studies have shown this may not be true. "Healthy outlets" for aggression may not relieve it.]

"Make no judgements where you have no compassion." - Anne McCaffrey
[There is no justice without mercy.]

"Isolation is a self-defeating dream." - Carlos Salinas de Gortari
[Any thoughts on this one? I got nothing]

"Doubt must be no more than vigilance, otherwise it can become dangerous." - George C. Lichtenberg 
[This may be one of the greatest reflections on doubt I've ever read. Yes, this is what doubt is about, really. It is not about a stultifying skepticism that prevents creative belief or action, but about a certain type of mindfulness...mindfulness of what one does not know.]

"Love is a willingness to sacrifice." - Michael Novak 
[I believe Novak is a Christian, and so the wisdom here is not surprising.]

"The value of identity is that so often with it comes purpose." - Richard R. Grant 
[But can one have purpose without identity?]

"Discontent is the first necessity of progress." - Thomas Edison 
[Oh, absolutely. This is a major line of criticism of Buddhism, for me.]

"Some of us think holding on makes us strong, but sometimes it is letting go." - Herman Hesse 

"Let not a man guard his dignity but let his dignity guard him." - Ralph Waldo Emerson
[I got nothing.] 

"Guilt: the gift that keeps on giving." - Erma Bombeck
[Guilt is not in and of itself bad. Guilt that has no end is. We must have someone who can both judge and forgive. Without that we are lost.]

"Be here now." - Ram Dass 
[I'm trying]