3 August 14
Dear Troy & Mia; David & Marie:
Last week, I forgot to address THE LEGS as
metaphysical expression of the creation of our planet. The most relevant passage about legs that I
ever read was in the MAKING BABIES book that I cited in THE LAST DAY's prologue,
having to do with the XY chromosome or the XX chromosome (I forget which) where
-- if the balance disproportionately favoured the female, -- you ended
up with very long legs, legs which occupied a more than usual proportion of the
body's mass. So it seems to me that,
while men and women both have legs, legs are a female-natured metaphysical
expression. Which doesn't contain the
"God particle". I say that
because the thumb -- the ultimate expression of the "God particle" --
"ends" the expression that leads from body to arm to hand, whereas
there is no comparable expression which completes the leg. A big toe is not a a thumb, metaphysically
speaking.
Okay, back to the Book of Ezekiel. I'm not
going to get very far this week. Chapter 29 is pretty straightforward but
difficult to explain, so I'm only going to be able to address a few verses:
EZEKIEL 29
Chapter 29, as I read it, continues the
motif of God having given YHWH enough rope, the YHWH now finds the need to hang
his/her/its self inescapable, continuing on to Egypt and directly Ezekiel to
prophecy against Egypt in verses 1 and 2.
If I'm correct in my theories about YHWH,
Egypt is a profoundly YHWHistic expression, both "not God" and
"anti-God" and dating back prior to our own epoch.
That is, at the time that A Dam and Chauah
were created, there was already the Egyptian monarchy/nation, ruled by
Pharaohs, an expression of the as-yet-then unnamed YHWH. So, YHWH turning against Egypt -- not knowing
that the YHWH in many ways, IS Egypt -- is a remarkable opportunity for
God. Of which God attempts to take full
advantage. Although in a way that's a
little complicated to explain. When God
says in verse 3:
Speak and say, Thus saith the Lord GOD,
Behold I against thee, Pharaoh king of Egypt, the great dragon that lieth in
the midst of his rivers, which hath said, My river mine own, and I have made
for my self
He's addressing the YHWHistic
usurpation. God's medium is water and
the YHWH's medium is the earth. So what
God is saying -- as a a prompt in the hopes of getting the YHWH to reiterate
the judgement -- is that God (and YHWH? YHWH, what do you say to this?) is
opposed to Pharaoh, the great dragon…
(dragons don't exist, except
metaphorically. When God refers to a
dragon in our epoch, as I read it, what he is referring to is the "serpent
in the garden" which also didn't exist. Serpents don't talk. Chauah seduced herself into eating the fruit
as a proxy of YHWH. There may have been
a snake nearby, but voice she heard was the voice of the earth, YHWH. Once entrenched in Scripture, however, there
are only two choices: admit that serpents can't talk and find another more
accurate model of creation -- Genesis 1, as opposed to Genesis 2 and 3 -- or
face the peril of the fictitious talking snake, over the course of thousands of
years, evolving into a fictitious metaphysical dragon. It's "O what a tangled web we weave when first
we practice to deceive" but on a much higher level of expression and
metaphysics)
…that lieth in the midst of his rivers,
which hath said, My river my own and I have made for my self.
The Egyptian YHWH -- the portion of the
earth which underlies the nation-state of Egypt -- does indeed "lie in the
midst" of several rivers. Using
"midst" God allows for two different interpretations:
The accurate one is that Egypt
exists directly adjacent to and in direct proximity to the rivers
of Egypt. God is in the rivers and YHWH
is in the land. The inaccurate one -- which the YHWH favours and then chooses
-- is that Egypt exists INSIDE the rivers.
"Midst" covers both meanings. The latter is the usurpation
construct of the YHWH. What God is
saying is that the YHWH is saying, "I am the river and I made the
river". That is, you don't see
accurately. You aren't the river, you aren't IN the river and you didn't make
the river.
In answer to the prompt, the YHWH says
But I will put my hooks in thy jaws and I
will cause the fish of thy rivers to stick unto thy scales and I will bring
thee up out of the midst of thy rivers and all the fish of thy rivers shall
stick unto thy scales
The "putting my hooks in thy
jaws" recurs in the Book of Job.
It's the point where the "talking snake" not only evolves over
time into a dragon, it also evolves into an aquatic dragon, Leviathan. It's both literally inaccurate (there are no
literal aquatic dragons) and metaphysically accurate (by entrenching the talking
snake in YHWHistic scripture, the YHWH makes it inevitable that the fundamental
lie will enlarge itself into a metaphysical dragon and by attempting to usurp
God's place, makes it inevitable that there will need to be an invented aquatic
dragon of similarly grandiose proportions to keep the construct going).
This becomes, variously, the red dragon of
John's Apocalypse, Moby Dick, the whale that swallows Jonah, Giganto (I think
he was called) in Pinocchio, etc.
The YHWH -- as the would-be usurper
"God" -- definitely has a strong -- and reasonably accurate -- mental
image of Leviathan as very difficult to extract from the "midst of his
rivers". It's certainly one of the
problems faced by God: how to extract
YHWH from God's context and get YHWH to perceive his/her/its nature
accurately. "You aren't IN the
rivers, and you didn't MAKE the rivers. You're in the earth and the earth is
one of My, God's creations."
And I will leave thee into the wilderness
The KJV interpolates "thrown"
into the text: "And I will leave
thee THROWN into the wilderness" but I'm pretty sure that isn't what the
YHWH said in response to God's prompt.
It expresses the YHWH's confusion here at the apex of "Our Biblical
Story Thus Far".
Phonetically it sounds like "And I
will LEAD thee into the wilderness" which reads one way:
But how do you "lead" an aquatic
dragon into the wilderness? The YHWH's
visualization breaks down at the malapropism.
The "hooks in the jaws" the YHWH can "see"
mentally. It's like a combination bridle
and fish hook. Immense! Big enough to steer Leviathan! But how do you steer an immense aquatic beast
ONTO land and INTO the wilderness from "his rivers"?
With only a slight variation it also reads:
And I will leave thee in the wilderness….
(Which, it seems to me, brings it into closer
proximity to God's intention for the YHWH.
At a deep, subconscious level, the YHWH understands that he/she/it isn't
God and that the whole idea -- talking snake, Leviathan and all -- needs to be
abandoned, left in the wilderness and not retained where Egypt's
monarchy/nation has actually hatched out, incarnated as a political structure
and expression of humanity.)
…thee and all the fish of thy rivers. Thou shalt fall upon the face of the field,
thou shalt not be brought together nor gathered: I have given thee for meat to
the beasts of the field and to the fouls of the heaven.
As I
read it, the YHWH's confusion persists.
There is an urge simultaneously metaphysical, conscious, unconscious and
real towards "casting out". An
urge to be rid of Leviathan. Of course,
to the YHWH, in many ways, God is Leviathan. An immense presence that can't be dispensed
with nor gotten around. God is the usurper as the YHWH sees it. But, at one level or another, the YHWH must
be aware that there is no form or degree of leverage that makes "casting
out" God possible. And, in fact,
the actual job facing the YHWH is only slightly less daunting. The YHWH can visualize SELF-control only to
the extent of the means -- his hook in his jaws for steering (leverage)
-- and the ultimate end of seeing the YHWH's own base nature "fall
upon the face of the field" nevermore to be "brought together nor
gathered". It's the "in
between" that's problematic.
[Or, more accurately, only SEEMS
problematic. Parenthetically, I think the Synoptic Jesus addresses this very
thing at a mid-point between God and YHWH -- dealing with the perceived
impossible immensity -- in Matthew 17:17-20 when the disciples are complaining
about their inability to cast out an unclean spirit from a young boy with the
same potency which the Synoptic Jesus brings to the task. The Synoptic Jesus says (and it doesn't
explicitly exclude his disciples):
O generation faithless and having been
twisted, till when with you will I be? Till when will I put up with you? Be
bringing to me him here. And he gave
rebuke to it the Jesus and came out from him the demon; and was cured the boy
from the hour that. Then having come
toward the disciples to the Jesus according to private, Through what we not
were able to expel it? The ___ (however
____) is saying to them Through the little faith of you; truly for I am saying
to you, if ever you may have faith as grain of mustard, you will say to the
mountain this, Transfer from here there, and it will transfer, and nothing will
be impossible to you.
It's basically the same narrative: with the
Synoptic Jesus taking the role of God, the disciples facing the same
problematic "casting out" of self that the YHWH is facing only in
this case, the insurmountable weight isn't YHWH-as-Leviathan, it's
YHWH-as-mountain. Leviathan and the
mountain are both metaphysical, representational constructs. Immense, yes, but only in the human
imagination. Nothing physical actually
exists in the sense that we think it does.
It isn't an engineering job. You don't have to visualize the MEANS by
which you move the entrenched aquatic behemoth from its domain to "the
face of the field" in the wilderness and then build the machinery with
which you accomplish it. The MEANS and
the END are the same: faith. Whether you're YHWH or a human being, if you
Increase your faith in God sufficiently the thing is already
accomplished. Get your mind OFF the
imaginary thing that appears real: the mountain or Leviathin…and ONTO the real
thing you aren't adequately and realistically imagining: your own faith.]
And all the inhabitants of Egypt shall know
that I, the YHWH, because they have been a staff of reed to the house of
Israel.
It was worth a try to get the YHWH to go
along with the "Leviathan construct" but -- whether consciously or
unconsciously (my guess would be both) -- the YHWH switches metaphorical
constructs abruptly.
The inhabitants of Egypt -- as opposed to
Egypt itself -- are now the "broken reed" and are only being dealt with relative to those inhabitants' own
-- then current -- relationship to Israel as an unreliable Israeli ally. The "broken reed" refers to Egypt's
inadequacy as a staff. You can't lean on
it because it will break and is -- in fact -- already broken.
It's actually a suitable metaphor for the
YHWH, as well.
The
YHWH is an inadequate ally of Israel, Judah, God, human beings -- you name
it. A broken reed. And plants are a creation of the YHWH so by
switching to a reed as the metaphor for Egypt, the YHWH, to a degree, escapes
self-indictment. The reed is in the
midst of the waters and, in fact, is endemic to the transition area between
earth and water: the shoreline. But the reed doesn't pretend it IS the rivers
or that it MADE the rivers.
(The Synoptic Jesus ventures near this as
well when he addresses the crowds, asking them what they expected to see when
they went out into the wilderness looking for John the Baptist as John's fame
spread. Basically, what did you expect to see? A broken reed? It's a good
metaphorical point. John was baptizing
in the wilderness of Bethany where the water meets the earth. He wasn't accepted by Israel. He certainly wasn't seen -- as Egypt in
Ezekiel's time wasn't seen -- as a reliable ally of the Jewish authorities. But
did that make him -- a great prophet -- a broken reed?)
I told you this chapter gets complicated.
I'll pick it up from there next week.
Best,
Dave
Next Time: Cerebus in Matt's Life? ("past" Matt Rocks!)
3 comments:
Geneticists looking for insight, look no futher: that Klinefelter syndrome (where an individual has two or more X chromosomes (contrary to Dave's implication that there are XY chromosomes and XX chromosomes, in humans there are X chromosomes and there are Y chromosomes [citation for Jeff S.: any high school human physiology class])) gives afflicted individuals longer legs is due to legs being a female-natured metaphysical expression which doesn't include the Higgs Boson. Legs don't include the Higgs Boson because the ultimate expression of the Higgs Boson is the thumb, you see, which is above the legs.
We know this because it was said by someone who strives to be reasonable and logical in all things.
Alright,
Grady.
Dave's sure closing in on that "describing reality as accurately as I can" thing, isn't he?
-- Damian
Don't forget kids, this is more of "The Unified Theory which Einstein spent his intellectual life pursuing." If we accept that and we accept that Dave is very, very good at describing reality accurately, then we can only conclude that he is, in fact, a very stable genius.
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