Monday, February 15, 2010

.,:':.?/!;"*"_-('_"."~!?

"I agree," said he, "that neither jot nor tittle will by no means pass away."
"Then why," asked she, "do you not accept p?"
"Because," said he, "p is neither a jot nor a tittle."

The wide and broad road is paved with the de jure/de facto distinction.

It doesn't follow, however, that the straight and narrow lacks it entirely.

My right ear scraped a buckle.

"Fathers fear that their children's
natural love may be erased. What,
then, is this nature that can be
erased?" -Pascal (S159)

"The children love to sing, but
then their voices slowly fade away."

"...how do we get clean again?"

Thursday, February 11, 2010

God doesn't care about oxen.

In an ironic twist of fate, St. Augustine takes 1 Corinthians 9:9 as an alleged proof text for Divine Indifference (viz.- Divine Indeterminism):
"...It is too little to say, thee; the sparrow,
the locust, the worm, none of these did He
not make, and He cares for them all. His care
refers not to His commandment, for this com-
mandment He gave to man alone. . . . As re-
gards then the tenor of the commandment,
"God does not take care of oxen:" as regards
His providential care of the universe,
whereby He created all things, and rules the
world, "You, Lord, shall save both man and
beast." Here perhaps someone may say to me,
"God cares not for Oxen," comes from the New
Testament; "You, Lord, shall save both man
and beast," is from the Old Testament.
There are some who find fault and say, that
these two Testaments agree not with one
another. . . Let us hear the Lord Himself,
the Chief and Master of the Apostles: "Con-
sider," says He, "the fowls ofthe air; they
sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather in
barns, and your Heavenly Father feeds them."
Therefore even besides men, these animals
are objects of care to God, to be fed, not to
receive a law. As far then as regards giving
a law, "God cares not for oxen:" as regards
creating, feeding, and governing, ruling, all
things have to do with God..."

St. Augustine, Enarr. in Psalmos 145:6
Augustine thinks that the statement "God cares not for oxen" is literally false, despite the fact that Paul's rhetorical question seems to force our affirmation. In a wholly genius interpretive move, Augustine quotes Christ, "the Chief and Master of the Apostles", against Paul (The Apostle), forcing us (rightfully so) to tinker with the jots and tittles of the latter instead of the former. I think we should follow in Augustine's hermeneutical footsteps; doing so will enable us to reject his proto-Calvinism.
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