Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Desire vs. Joy

After a joyless trip once more back to Nietzsche's world of Zarathrustra, he can just spring back into his godless hole as far as I'm concerned. A good beating might have helped but I'll take suggestions. Aside his insistence that truth and falsity were born on the same kithen floor another concern is that development and function within society is pointless, joyless, useless and perfunctory. Well yes, especially with man at the center of it. It is all useless pointless joyless if we try to derive pleasure from the useless pointless and joyless, which exists on depriving mans basic need for the spiritual, something that N totally excludes from the human experience or at least says we can ignore or define as something other than what it is. In this is some remote joy-searching that we believe to be our primal needs actually mistaken for the frivolous actualizing themselves into desires that need staisfying to aquire happiness/joy or something to just make life more bearable. But of course we just end up dissatisfied beacuse its an unfulfilled spirit-need. Remember happiness (mortal) and joy (immortal)are different. Similar is Hobbes' admission in Leviathan, stating that social order actually can come from the chaotic heart of man, its just gonna take a little time. He doesn't directly speak of mans desires met by way of needs satisfied but alludes to satisfaction or happiness derived from sustaining order, which is not far fetched considering N's main man Zari finds that he's pretty much the beginning and the end, the locus of truth and lies, his vigor and self-reliance the sustaining and continued success of his own (and that we all have this potential)humanity. Early Paul Simon? I am a rock! This nonsense was revisited by nutty 19th c. hippies Throeau and Emerson, Sandra Bernhardt in the late 80's and any boomer at Barnes and Noble reading Utne or Noam Chomsky while consuming a $5 coffee beverage equal to something spilled in the aisleway of a United connecting flight at 2am. Yet if man is an inherently disordered mess and spiritually depraved, how is any kind of (not only) happiness obtainable, but truth or order possible? Man's most basic needs are not food, shelter and love but some kind of order (which could translate spiritually as contentment, ceasing in desires by having all desires met in one spiritual form/person, and that spirit form/person exhibiting love by way of giving order back to an irrational disorderly creature-- an all encompassing, transcendant love, an 'un' human love)and it is entirely true that man not only needs his spirit fed with some kind of organized rational thought that makes sense of existence, but needs, thrives on order. And order comes from a design, design comes from forethought, this forethought is the telltale mark of care or concern, not something perfunctory but something deliberate, much like the origin of discipline coming from love itself. In any case, God loves us and C.S. Lewis give us some ideas on that and a few other things like life's seemingly unattainables which are really a moment away from our grubby little grasp: joy, hope, desire met, contentment found.
Excelsior!


From Surprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life (1955)
Chapter XIV

"I gave in, and admitted that God was God ... perhaps that night, the most dejected and reluctant convert in all England."
In this autobiography of his childhood, Lewis recounts the process of his own conversion as a young professor at Oxford in the 1930s.

XIV Checkmate
The one principle of hell is "I am my own." George Macdonald

... It seemed to me self-evident that one essential property of love, hate, fear, hope, or desire was attention to their object. To cease thinking about or attending to the woman is, so far, to cease loving; to cease thinking about or attending to the dreaded thing is, so far, to cease being afraid. But to attend to your own love or fear is to cease attending to the loved or dreaded object. In other words the enjoyment and the contemplation of our inner activities are incompatible. You cannot hope and also think about hoping at the same moment; for in hope we look to hope's object and we interrupt this by (so to speak) turning round to look at the hope itself. Of course the two activities can and do alternate with great rapidity; but they are distinct and incompatible. This was not merely a logical result of Alexander's analysis, but could be verified in daily and hourly experience. The surest means of disarming an anger or a lust was to turn your attention from the girl or the insult and start examining the passion itself. The surest way of spoiling a pleasure was to start examining your satisfaction. But if so, it followed that all introspection is in one respect misleading. In introspection we try to look "inside ourselves" and see what is going on. But nearly everything that was going on a moment before is stopped by the very act of our turning to look at it. Unfortunately this does not mean that introspection finds nothing. On the contrary, it finds precisely what is left behind by the suspension of all our normal activities; and what is left behind is mainly mental images and physical sensations. The great error is to mistake this mere sediment or track or by-product for the activities themselves. That is how men may come to believe that thought is only unspoken words, or the appreciation of poetry only a collection of mental pictures, when these in reality are what the thought of the appreciation, when interrupted, leave behind — like the swell at sea, working after the wind has dropped. Not, of course, that these activities, before we stopped them by introspection, were unconscious. We do not love, fear, or think without knowing it. Instead of the twofold division into Conscious and Unconscious, the Enjoyed, and the Contemplated.
This discovery flashed a new light back on my whole life. I saw that all my waitings and watchings for Joy, all my vain hopes to find some mental content on which I could, so to speak, lay my finger and say "This is it," had been a futile attempt to contemplate the enjoyed. All that such watching and waiting ever could find would be either an image (Asgard, the Western Garden, or what not) or a quiver in the diaphragm. I should never have to bother again about these images or sensations. I knew now that they were merely the mental track left by the passage of Joy — not the wave but the wave's imprint on the sand. The inherent dialectic of desire itself had in a way already shown me this; for all images and sensations, if idolatrously mistaken for Joy itself, soon honestly confessed themselves inadequate. All said, in the last resort, "It is not I. I am only a reminder. Look! Look! What do I remind you of?"
So far, so good. But it is at the next step that awe overtakes me. There was no doubt that Joy was a desire (and, in so far as it was also simultaneously a good, it was also a kind of love). But a desire is turned not to itself but to its object. Not only that, but it owes all its character to its object. Erotic love is not like desire for food, nay, a love for one woman differs from a love for another woman in the very same way and the very same degree as the two women differ from one another. Even our desire for one wine differs in tone from our desire for another. Our intellectual desire (curiosity) to know the true answer to a question is quite different from our desire to find that one answer, rather than another, is true. The form of the desired is in the desire. It is the object which makes the desire harsh or sweet, coarse or choice, "high" or "low." It is the object that makes the desire itself desirable or hateful. I perceived (and this was a wonder of wonders) that just as I had been wrong in supposing that I really desired the Garden of the Hesperides, so also I had been equally wrong in supposing that I desired Joy itself. Joy itself, considered simply as an event in my own mind, turned out to be of no value at all. All the value lay in that of which Joy was the desiring. And that object, quite clearly, was no state of my own mind or body at all. In a way, I had proved this by elimination. I had tried everything in my own mind and body; as it were, asking myself, "Is it this you want? Is it this?" Last of all I had asked if Joy itself was what I wanted; and labeling it "aesthetic experience," had pretended I could answer Yes. But that answer too had broken down. Inexorably Joy proclaimed, "You want — I myself am your want of — something other, outside, not you nor any state of you." I did not yet ask, Who is the desired? Only What is it? But this brought me already into the region of awe, for I thus understood that in deepest solitude there is a road right out of the self, a commerce with something which, by refusing to identify itself with any object of the senses, or anything whereof we have biological or social need, or anything imagined, or any state of our own minds, proclaims itself sheerly objective. Far more objective than bodies, for it is not, like them, clothed in our senses; the naked Other, imageless (though our imagination salutes it with a hundred images), unknown, undefined, desired.
That was the second Move; equivalent, perhaps, to the loss of one's last remaining bishop. The third Move did not seem to be dangerous at the time. It consisted merely in linking up this new éclaircissement about Joy with my idealistic philosophy. I saw that Joy, as I now understood it, would fit in. We mortals, seen as the sciences see us and as we commonly see one another, are mere "appearances." But appearances of the Absolute. In so far as we really are at all (which isn't saying much) we have, so to speak, a root in the Absolute, which is the utter reality. And that is why we experience Joy: we yearn, rightly, for that unity which we can never reach except by ceasing to be the separate phenomenal beings called "we." Joy was not a deception. Its visitations were rather the moment of clearest consciousness we had, when we became aware of our fragmentary and phantasmal nature and ached for that impossible reunion which would annihilate us or that self-contradictory waking which would reveal, not that we had had, but that we were, a dream. This seemed quite satisfactory intellectually. Even emotionally too; for it matters more that Heaven should exist that that we should ever get there. What I did not notice was that I had passed an important milestone. Up till now my thoughts had been centrifugal; now the centripetal movement had begun. Considerations arising from quite different parts of my experience were beginning to come together with a click. This new dovetailing of my desire-life with my philosophy fore-shadowed the day, now fast approaching, when I should be forced to take my "philosophy" more seriously than I ever intended. I did not foresee this. I was like a man who has lost "merely a pawn" and never dreams that this (in that state of the game) means mate in a few moves.
The fourth Move was more alarming. I was now teaching philosophy (I suspect very badly) as well as English. And my watered Hegelianism wouldn't serve for tutorial purposes. A tutor must make things clear. Now the Absolute cannot be made clear. Do you mean Nobody-knows-what, or do you mean a superhuman mind and therefore (we may as well admit) a Person? After all, did Hegel and Bradley and all the rest of them ever do more than add mystifications to the simple, workable, theistic idealism of Berkeley? I thought not. And didn't Berkeley's "God" do all the same work as the Absolute, with the added advantage that we had at least some notion of what we meant by Him? I thought He did. So I was driven back into something like Berkeleyanism; but Berkeleyanism with a few top dressings of my own. I distinguished this philosophical "God" very sharply (or so I said) from "the God of popular religion." There was, I explained, no possibility of being in a personal relation with Him. For I thought He projected us as a dramatist projects his characters, and I could no more "meet" Him, than Hamlet could meet Shakespeare. I didn't call Him "God" either; I called Him "Spirit." One fights for one's remaining comforts.
Then I read Chesterton's Everlasting Man and for the first time saw the whole Christian outline of history set out in a form that seemed to me to make sense. Somehow I contrived not to be too badly shaken. You will remember that I already thought Chesterton the most sensible man alive "apart from his Christianity." Now, I veritably believe, I thought — I didn't of course say; words would have revealed the nonsense — that Christianity itself was very sensible "apart from its Christianity." But I hardly remember, for I had not long finished The Everlasting Man when something far more alarming happened to me. Early in 1926 the hardest boiled of all the atheists I ever knew sat in my room on the other side of the fire and remarked that the evidence for the historicity of the Gospels was really surprisingly good. "Rum thing," he went on. "All that stuff of Frazer's about the Dying God. Rum thing. It almost looks as if it had really happened once." To understand the shattering impact of it, you would need to know the man (who has certainly never since shown any interest in Christianity). If he, the cynic of cynics, the toughest of the toughs, were not-as I would still have put it — "safe," where could I turn? Was there then no escape?
The odd thing was that before God closed in on me, I was in fact offered what now appears a moment of wholly free choice. In a sense. I was going up Headington Hill on the top of a bus. Without words and (I think) almost without images, a fact about myself was somehow presented to me. I became aware that I was holding something at bay, or shutting something out. Or, if you like, that I was wearing some stiff clothing, like corsets, or even a suit of armor, as if I were a lobster. I felt myself being there and then, given a free choice. I could open the door or keep it shut; I could unbuckle the armor or keep it on. Neither choice was presented as a duty; no threat or promise was attached to either, though I knew that to open the door or to take off the corslet meant the incalculable. The choice appeared to be momentous but it was also strangely unemotional. I was moved by no desires or fears. In a sense I was not moved by anything. I chose to open, to unbuckle, to loosen the rein. I say "I chose," yet it did not really seem possible to do the opposite. On the other hand, I was aware of no motives. You could argue that I was not a free agent, but I am more inclined to think that this came nearer to being a perfectly free act than most that I have ever done. Necessity may not be the opposite of freedom, and perhaps a man is most free when, instead of producing motives, he could only say, "I am what I do." Then came the repercussion on the imaginative level. I felt as if I were a man of snow at long last beginning to melt. The melting was starting in my back — drip-drip and presently trickle-trickle. I rather disliked the feeling.
The fox had been dislodged from Hegelian Wood and was now running in the open, "with all the wo in the world," bedraggled and weary, hounds barely a field behind. And nearly everyone was now (one way or another) in the pack; Plato, Dante, MacDonald, Herbert, Barfield, Tolkien, Dyson, Joy itself. Everyone and everything had joined the other side. Even my own pupil Griffiths — now Dom Bede Griffiths — though not yet himself a believer, did his share. Once, when he and Barfield were lunching in my room, I happened to refer to philosophy as "a subject." "It wasn't a subject to Plato," said Barfield, "it was a way." The quiet but fervent agreement of Griffiths, and the quick glance of understanding between these two, revealed to me my own frivolity. Enough had been thought, and said, and felt, and imagined. It was about time that something should be done.
For of course there had long been an ethic (theoretically) attached to my Idealism. I thought the business of us finite and half-unreal souls was to multiply the consciousness of Spirit by seeing the world from different positions while yet remaining qualitatively the same Spirit; to be tied to a particular time and place and set of circumstances, yet there to will and think as Spirit itself does. This was hard; for the very act where by Spirit projected souls and a world gave those souls different and competitive interests, so that there was a temptation to selfishness. But I thought each of us had it in his power to discount the emotional perspective produced by his own particular selfhood, just as we discount the optical perspective produced by our position in space. To prefer my own happiness to my neighbor's was like thinking that the nearest telegraph post was really the largest. The way to recover, and act upon, this universal and objective vision was daily and hourly to remember our true nature, to reascend or return into that Spirit which, in so far as we really were at all, we still were. Yes; but I now felt I had better try to do it. I faced at last (in MacDonald's words) "something to be neither more nor less nor other than done." An attempt at complete virtue must be made.
Really, a young Atheist cannot guard his faith too carefully. Dangers lie in wait for him on every side. You must not do, you must not even try to do, the will of the Father unless you are prepared to "know of the doctrine." All my acts, desires, and thoughts were to be brought into harmony with universal Spirit. For the first time I examined myself with a seriously practical purpose. And there I found what appalled me; a zoo of lusts, a bedlam of ambitions, a nursery of fears, a harem of fondled hatreds. My name was legion. Of course I could do nothing — I could not last out one hour — without continual conscious recourse to what I called Spirit. But the fine, philosophical distinction between this and what ordinary people call "prayer to God" breaks down as soon as you start doing it in earnest. Idealism can be talked, and even felt; it cannot be lived. It became patently absurd to go on thinking of "Spirit" as either ignorant of, or passive to, my approaches. Even if my own philosophy were true, how could the initiative lie on my side? My own analogy, as I now first perceived, suggested the opposite: if Shakespeare and Hamlet could ever meet, it must be Shakespeare's doing. Hamlet could initiate nothing. Perhaps, even now, my Absolute Spirit still differed in some way from the God of religion. The real issue was not, or not yet, there. The real terror was that if you seriously believed in even such a "God" or "Spirit" as I admitted, a wholly new situation developed. As the dry bones shook and came together in that dreadful valley of Ezekiel's, so now a philosophical theorem, cerebrally entertained, began to stir and heave and throw off its grave cloths, and stood upright and became a living presence. I was to be allowed to play at philosophy no longer. It might, as I say, still be true that my "Spirit" differed in some way from "the God of popular religion." My Adversary waived the point. It sank into utter unimportance. He would not argue about it. He only said, "I am the Lord"; "I am that I am"; "I am."
People who are naturally religious find difficulty in understanding the horror of such a revelation. Amiable agnostics will talk cheerfully about "man's search for God." To me, as I then was, they might as well have talked about the mouse's search for the cat. The best image of my predicament is the meeting of Mime and Wotan in the first act of Siegfried; hier brauch' ich nicht Sparer noch Spaher, Einsam will ich. ... (I've no use for spies and snoopers. I would be private. ...)
Remember, I had always wanted, above all things, not to be "interfered with." I had wanted (mad wish) "to call my soul my own." I had been far more anxious to avoid suffering than to achieve delight. I had always aimed at limited liabilities. The supernatural itself had been to me, first, an illicit dram, and then, as by a drunkard's reaction, nauseous. Even my recent attempt to live my philosophy had secretly (I now knew) been hedged round by all sorts of reservations. I had pretty well known that my ideal virtue would never be allowed to lead me into anything intolerably painful; I would be "reasonable." But now what had been an ideal became a command; and what might not be expected of one? Doubtless, by definition, God was Reason itself. But would He also be "reasonable" in that other, more comfortable sense? Not the slightest assurance on that score was offered me. Total surrender, the absolute leap in the dark, were demanded. The reality with which no treaty can be made was upon me. The demand was not even "All or nothing." I think that stage had been passed, on the bus top when I unbuckled my armor and the snowman started to melt. Now, the demand was simply "All."
You must picture me alone in that room in Magdalen, night after night, feeling, whenever my mind lifted even for a second from my work, the steady, unrelenting approach of Him whom I so earnestly desired not to meet. That which I greatly feared had at last come upon me. In the Trinity Term of 1929 I gave in, and admitted that God was God, and knelt and prayed: perhaps, that night, the most dejected and reluctant convert in all England. I did not then see what is now the most shining and obvious thing; the Divine humility which will accept a convert even on such terms. The Prodigal Son at least walked home on his own feet. But who can duly adore that Love which will open the high gates to a prodigal who is brought in kicking, struggling, resentful, and darting his eyes in every direction for a chance of escape? The words compelle intrare, compel them to come in, have been so abused be wicked men that we shudder at them; but, properly understood, they plumb the depth of the Divine mercy. The hardness of God is kinder than the softness of men, and His compulsion is our liberation.
Used with permission. All rights reserved.

Monday, January 15, 2007

In Gratitude to Mitzi

Strip the willow
girls in a whirl
auburn ways
influence fate
cross that sea
at some later time
some later date
when irish eyes
will finally smile
at thee.


Fingers and twine
twist that heart and mine
perfunctory bliss
a moratorium
too taut in future knowledge
unfortunate, unwound
but best for all involved.


I wonder as I wander
down confederate ave
with someone's baby on my hip
as I walk and count the ways
you make her smile

I suppose I expect
the crisis to subside
in a token-
hold my breath
just wait
with someone's baby on my hip
crying down confederate ave
not the baby
but me.


"a shanty"
marvin get me mistletoe
marvin make it fast
marvin you're only 2' 3"
but this will make it last

step into my catapult
hold on and you will see
mistletoe down in tara land
deep fried just for me!

marvin keep your ice cream
bella keep your bone
mistletoe and a platinum ring
God ordained with tickets for a tropical zone!

Thursday, January 04, 2007

2007

Dear friends - shalom!
Grace and peace be with you from God our Father and our Lord Yeshua haMashiach!

The beginning of the New Year (even though it is not the Jewish New Year) encourages us to reflect on the past as well as to ask for God’s blessing for everything that is to come.

Knowing that the Word of God won’t return void, but shall accomplish His will and bear fruit,
we are drawn closer to Him in all the difficulties that arose in 2006 and we could experience a whole lot of joy coming in 2007 in our service to Him…

God will expect even more of us in these days to come. At the same time we have the complete assurance that He has already prepared the path before us. He is faithful and will certainly guide us in His perfect way - therefore we don’t need to be afraid!

“For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works,
which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them.” Ephesians 2,10

In the view of all the challenges of 2007, we want to thank Him, who has begun a good work in us and will complete it until the day of Christ Jesus. (according to Philippians 1,6)

“The Lord will perfect that which concerns me;
Your mercy, oh Lord, endures forever; Do not forsake the works of Your hands.” Psalm 138,8

We would like to greet you with a song of Paul Gerhardt (1607-1676) and perhaps you feel like learning the words by heart, so that the message of the song becomes one of your guiding principles you want to live by throughout the New Year.

Commit whatever grieves thee,Into the gracious hands,Of Him Who never leaves thee,Who Heav’n and earth commands.Who points the clouds their courses,Whom winds and waves obey,He will direct thy footstepsAnd find for thee a way.
On Him place Thy reliance,If thou wouldst be secure; His work thou must consider, If thine is to endure. By anxious sighs and grieving, And self tormenting care, God is not moved to giving; All must be gained by prayer.
Thy truth and grace, O Father,Most surely surely see and know, Both what is good and evil, For mortal man below. According to Thy counsel, Thou wilt Thy work pursue; And what Thy wisdom chooseth, Thy might will always do.
Thy hand is never shortened, All things must serve Thy might; Thine every act is blessing, Thy path is purest light. Thy work no man can hinder,Thy purpose none can stay, Since Thou to bless Thy children, Wilt always find a way.
Though all the powers of evil, The will of God oppose, His purpose will not falter, His pleasure onward goes. Whate’er God’s will resolveth, Whatever He intends, Will always be accomplished, True to His aims and ends.
Then hope, my feeble spirit, And be thou undismayed;God helps in every trial, And makes thee unafraid. Await His time with patience,Then shall thine eyes behold, The sun of joy and gladness, His brightest beams unfold.
Arise, my soul, and banish, Thy anguish and thy care. Away with thoughts that sadden, And heart and mind ensnare!Thou art not lord and master, Of thine own destiny; Enthroned in highest Heaven, God rules in equity.
Leave all to His direction; In wisdom He doth reign, And in a way most wondrous, His course He will maintain. Soon He, His promise keeping, With wonder-working skill, Shall put away the sorrows, That now thy spirit fill.
A while His consolation, He may to thee deny, And seem as though in trial, He far from thee would fly; A while distress and anguishMay compass thee around, Nor to thy supplicationAn answering voice be found.
But if thou perseverest,Thou shalt deliverance find. Behold, all unexpected, He will thy soul unbind, And from the heavy burden, Thy heart will soon set free; And thou wilt see the blessing, He had in mind for thee.
O faithful child of Heaven, How blessed shalt thou be! With songs of glad thanksgiving, A crown awaiteth thee. Into thy hand thy Maker, Will give the victor’s palm, And thou to thy Deliverer, Shalt sing a joyous psalm Give, Lord, this consummationTo all our heart’s distress; Our hands, our feet, e’er strengthen, In death our spirits bless.Thy truth and thy protection, Grant evermore, we pray, And in celestial glory, Shall end our destined way.

We greet you with all our hearts,
“remembering without ceasing your work of faith, labor of love, and patience of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ.”
1. Thessalonians 1,3

Credited With a lot of love and a grateful heart,
to Jacob, Elisheva and the Trumpet-team

God bless you and all you do for our Lord Jesus and Israel.

“And God is able to make all grace abound toward you,
that you, always having all sufficiency in all things,
may have an abundance for every good work.” 2. Corinthians 9,8

http://www.trumpetofsalvation.org/