Sunday:
5 October 14
Hi Troy & Mia; David & Marie!
Awoken this morning by the sound of
buzzing.
Hornet crawling on my drinking glass. Uh.
Okay. Hornet crawls INTO my
drinking glass. Grab my dictionary and
put it on top of the drinking glass.
Notice another hornet is crawling on the coaster under the drinking
glass (not really a coaster, actually the computer disk for THE ANIMATED
CEREBUS which I use as a coaster). Uh.
Okay. Hornet number one still working
his (or her) way to the bottom of the glass.
So I take the dictionary and carefully position it over hornet number
two and crush it. It drops onto a
newspaper lying on the floor. Put the
dictionary overtop of the glass again and carry both into the
"kitchen" alcove. Remove the
dictionary and pour tap water into the glass, drowning hornet number one. Carry glass and newspaper into the bathroom
and dump both hornets into the toilet.
Fortunately, that proved to be
"it" for Day of the Hornets.
Anyway:
A possible "other YHWHistic
layer" to the story of the man blind from his birth in John's Gospel. 9:18
says "Not believed therefore the Jews about him that he was blind and he
saw again…" "he saw
again" is single Greek term. What caught my eye was the
"again". If he was blind from
his birth, there would be no "again" to it. The same verse concludes "…until when
they sounded for the parents of him the having seen again"
("having seen again" is also a single Greek term).
9:13 says "They are leading him toward
the Pharisees the ____ sometime blind."
Here "sometime" catches my eye. "Sometime blind"? Theoretically he was always
blind. Although, as long as he was
seeing now, it would be forensically accurate to say he had been "sometime
blind".
9:27 reads "He answered to them I said
to you already and not you heard; why again are you willing to be
hearing?" If they didn't hear the
first time, here should be no "again" to it: except in the sense of "willing" themselves. They willed themselves to hear and didn't and
were now willing themselves to hear AGAIN.
Interesting.
Ezekiel 37
The hand of the YHWH was upon me, and
carried me out in the spirit of the YHWH and set me down in the midst of the
valley which full of bones,
This "conveyance" ultimately
reiterates itself in John's Apocalypse 1:9.
The reference to "bones"
continues the narrative of Ezekiel 36, hearkening back to "first
causes" in Genesis and the creation of woman, which is really a metaphor
for the creation of the YHWH. The
seminal YHWH, as I read it, bore the same relationship to God that A Dam's rib
bore to A Dam: a body part and not a
terribly significant one.
[it's worth noting that only the Johannine
Jesus account mentions the crucified Jesus' side being pierced, as I read it, a
metaphorical enactment of the creation of woman]
The
"YHWH God" infers that he/she/it accomplished the creation --
actually the "building" -- of the woman in 2:21, but I think I'm safe
in saying that the YHWH was just an observer, misconstruing what he/she/it saw.
A Dam, says in 2:23, "This is now bone
of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called woman, because she was
taken out of man." It's difficult
not to infer "Woe man" from the context. Woman is the "woeful man" or the
"woe of man".
There is a definite relationship
there: between A Dam's bone/rib and the
woman, A Dam's flesh and the woman. The
demonstrative act of "building", accomplished by God, seems to me a
very simple and lucid explanation of what a woman is: a metaphor for the YHWH and having the same
relationship to man that the YHWH has to God.
In Genesis 3:19, the YHWH pronounces
judgement upon the A Dam: "…till thou return unto the ground: for out of
it wast thou taken, for dust thou and unto dust shalt thou return."
Well, yes, but -- by God's design -- there
is an intermediary step. Before we
return to dust, we are reduced to bones.
And caused me to pass by them round about,
and behold very many in the open [valley/champian], and lo, very dry.
And he said unto me, son of man, can these
bones live? And I answered O Lord GOD,
thou knowest.
This is reiterative throughout the Torah
and John's Apocalypse and is the proper response on the part of a prophet when
queried by God about anything. God asks
a prophet a question, not to get an answer, but to get confirmation that the
prophet is aware that ONLY God knows the true answer to ANY question.
This incites the YHWH to interject with a
suggested prompt:
Again he said unto me, Prophecy upon these bones,
and say unto them: O ye dry bones, hear the word of the YHWH.
Which God takes up:
Thus saith the Lord GOD unto these bones,
Behold I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live.
This is another Genesis reference, as I
read it -- 2:7 -- another misconstruction on the part of the YHWH of an Act of
God to which the YHWH had been a witness and which the YHWH inferred he/she/it
had effected: "And the YHWH God
formed man dust of the ground & breathed into his nostrils the breath of
life and man became a living soul."
Which the YHWH remembers, evidently, quite
vividly as a spectator:
And I will lay sinews upon you, and will
bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and ye
shall live, and ye shall know that I, the YHWH.
So I prophecied as I was commanded: and as
I prophecied, there was a noise, and behold a shaking, and the bones came
together, bone to his bone.
This, metaphorically, reiterates A Dam's
assertion: "This is now bone of my
bones…" and suggests a Larger Metaphorical enactment: reconnecting the metaphorical rib to A Dam,
that is, uniting God and YHWH.
And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the
flesh came up upon them, and the skin covered them above; but no breath in
them.
It's a significant point. This was the specific order of man's creation
in Genesis 2:7. The flesh and the sinews
come first. The breath -- as God, Lord
GOD, now asserts -- comes later:
Then said he unto me, Prophecie unto the [wind/breath], prophecie,
son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord GOD: come from the four
winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live.
As it says in my NEW BIBLE DICTIONARY
"The supremacy of the fourfold gospels which Tatian's work attests is
confirmed a decade or so later by Irenaeus.
To him the fourfold character of the Gospel is one of the accepted facts
of Christianity, as axiomatic as the four quarters of the world or the FOUR
WINDS of heaven." This was really,
all preordained here in Ezekiel with the reference to the four winds as that
which breathes life into the dead bones.
Everything -- besides God -- is contextually preexistent and
reiterative: it's a story that tells
itself over and over and over in the history of our world. All God need do is allow His creation to
explain itself to itself. The danger at
the end of the 1st century that John's Gospel would be excluded from the
Christian canon -- which, I infer, was seen as a real possibility with John's
exile to Patmos -- was really no danger at all:
So I prophecied as he commanded me, and the
breath came into them, and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an
exceeding great army.
Then he said unto me, son of man, these
bones are the whole house of Israel: behold they say: Our bones are dried, and
our hope is lost, we are cut off for our parts.
As we have seen, this is what concerned the
YHWH most: having enacted he/she/its
judgement upon the men of this epoch, and the Jews in particular, there seemed
to be no way forward: no way to undo
what had been done or to revive that which had been killed and was now wasted
away -- not yet to dust -- but to bones.
The Jews in Ezekiel's time were indeed "cut off for our parts"
-- those parts, like the rib "builded" into a woman, which the Jews
(and mankind generally) had allowed to lead them astray.
Therefore prophecie and say unto them, Thus
saith the Lord GOD, Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you
to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel.
This is a real jaw-dropper and game-changer
of an assertion. Nothing is dead
permanently if God wills it to be alive.
The YHWH has to opportunistically reiterate the assertion just to keep
up:
And ye shall know that I, the YHWH, when I
have opened your graves, O my people, and brought you up out of your graves,
And shall put my spirit in you, and ye
shall live, and I shall place you in your own land: then shall ye know that I
the YHWH have spoken, and performed, saith the YHWH.
And that's all, for the moment, that God
has to say about that.
[Even when it comes time to fulfill a part
of the prophecy -- the resurrection of Lazarus -- God only goes so far as,
through the Johannine Jesus, to resurrect someone who had been dead a few
days. Not nearly as ostentatious as
reviving an entire army that had decomposed into a valley of bones but
significantly more impressive than the Synoptic Jesus' resurrection of those
who had been dead -- or, rather, "dead" -- only an hour or two.]
Which the YHWH appears to mull over for a
period of time, trying to figure out Where God is going with this. And, more
important, how the YHWH is going to turn this idea to the YHWH's own advantage:
The word of the YHWH came again unto me,
saying:
Moreover, thou son of man, take thee one
stick and write upon it, for Judah and for the children of Israel his
companions: then take another stick and write upon it, For Joseph, the stick of
Ephraim, and for all the house of Israel, his companions.
This requires explaining what I see as the
YHWH's model of reality: the
"perceived" younger has been ill-used by the "perceived"
elder (YHWH by God). So that story
enacted itself, by God's permission: Jacob (the younger) usurped Esau's (the
elder's) birthright and blessing. And then further enacted itself with the
twelve sons of Jacob. Six sons by his
wife, Leah and two sons each in Jacob's adulterous relationships with Bilhah,
Zilpah and Rachel (he, she, it). Basically, God saying, okay the younger has
replaced the elder, Jacob has replaced Esau. Not really, but for the sake of
argument, let's go with that.
Now Jacob has twelve sons. Which son does the YHWH see this enactment
continuing through? And, for a variety of reasons, the YHWH most identifies
with Judah and with Joseph just about equally.
[the actual construct of using a stick to
establish preeminence is actually Levitical in nature, a reference both to
Moshe's staff which took the form of a serpent -- in its turn a metaphor for
the YHWH and devoured the illusions of the Egyptian magicians -- and to Aaron's
Rod (Hebrew: Matteh) which was put with the rods of the other 11 tribes
after Korah's rebellion and, the next morning, Aaron's rod had put forth buds,
blossoms and ripe almonds]
Judah, I suspect, because he was forced to
admit that a harlot was more righteous than he was (a Patriarch and a harlot
being a more accurate version of God and YHWH than any of the other
relationships between Jacob's sons and the outside world chronicled in Genesis)
and Joseph -- well, I always have a question about that.
The obvious answer is that he was the
youngest son of the twelve. But he
wasn't actually the youngest. Benjamin,
his younger brother, was the youngest.
But Benjamin came late in the proceedings, I suspect, when the die had
already been cast with Joseph (who, you will recall, saw in a dream that his
brothers would all bow down to him -- definitely a YHWH fantasy fulfillment
both literal and metaphorical). The YHWH
doesn't want to "let go" of either Judah or Joseph. Judah produced King David -- the youngest of
seven brothers, it's worth noting -- which is the YHWH's ideal among what the
YHWH sees as irredeemable mankind. That
adherence ultimately caused the primary Judaic schism, between Judah and
Israel, an irresolvable (as the YHWH would have seen it in Ezekiel's time)
schism.
And Jacob blessed the younger of Joseph's
sons -- Ephraim -- at the expense of his elder brother, Manasseh. So, you basically have these two YHWHistic
"fulfillments" one in Judah and one in Israel. So, it's no big surprise that the YHWH infers
from "join bone to his bone" that this is what is needed: uniting Judah and Ephraim into one, thereby
uniting Judah and Israel and thereby establishing the YHWH's preeminence:
And join them one to another into one
stick, and they shall become one in thine hand.
[in it's Largest Metaphorical Construct, as
I read it, it's impossible. You can't
make one thing into another thing that it isn't by joining them. You don't, as an example, make a half man
half woman by sticking A Dam's rib back inside of him. Which is basically what the YHWH is proposing
to do here.]
[In the same sense, the ultimate nadir of
the Christian Revelation, I read as the crucifixion which attempts to unite A
Dam and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. You can nail the man to the tree, but that
doesn't actually join them. It just
means that you've misconstrued what they actually are as metaphors]
[I infer that this process hasn't come to
an end. In our own world, two of the
Largest Constructs are also from the Garden of Eden -- Apple and (the nature of
womankind after the expulsion of A Dam) (your own employer, David!) Amazon]
And when the children of thy people shall
speak unto thee, saying, Wilt thou not show us what thou by these?
"Meanest" is interpolated into
the KJV text: "Wilt thou not show
us what thou MEANEST by these?", but that, it seems to me, misses the full
poison of the intended question.
"What thou by these?"
Given Judah (and the fulfillment through King David) and given Joseph
(and his fulfillment at the apex of political power in Egypt which, presumably,
he passed on to his son, Ephraim), "What thou?" is the nature of what
is being asked by the YHWH of God (and not in a good way).
To the YHWH it establishes the YHWH AS
God, if both fulfillments exist and have happened and they are (SOMEhow)
united. So, given that, what does that make God?
And the YHWH leaves off with the prompt of
that question dangling, assuming (as I read it) that God won't dare unite Judah
and Ephraim or even answer the question of what their uniting would mean. It would just be too potent a YHWHistic
incarnation, leaving God no role in the Larger Construct of Reality.
I don't think God hesitated a moment before
answering the challenge:
Say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD,
Behold I will take the stick of Joseph which in the hand of Ephraim, and the
tribes of Israel his fellows and will put them with him, with the stick of
Judah, and make them one stick, and they shall be one in my hand.
And then addressed the YHWH directly
And the sticks whereon thou writest, shall
be in thy hand before their eyes.
God has no problem taking up the YHWH's
poisonous challenge and dispensing with it just that easily. But the larger point God is making with the
resurrection of the dry bones (and the problem with the YHWH, always, is the
YHWH endeavouring to change the subject), needs to be established:
And say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD,
Behold I will take the children of Israel from among the heathen whither they
be gone, and will gather them on every side, and bring them into their own
land.
And I will make them one nation in the land
upon the mountains of Israel and one King shall be king to them all: and they
shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms
any more at all.
I infer from this, personally, that God is
asserting His own preeminence. God is
the one King of Israel. It seems to me
also worth noting that God's metaphor with the bones is to create a powerful
army out of Israel.
The compelled inference, however, -- which I see is foundational to the
Christian Revelation -- is that Jesus is the King referred to. This is why the
incarnation of the Synoptic Jesus and the Johannine Jesus was so
significant. They both fulfilled the
promise of the tribe of Judah, and Judah as a man, a further escalation of the
lofty plateau to which King David had attained and which (I would gather -- until the coming of both
Jesus) a lofty stature upon which the YHWH couldn't imagine there being any
possible improvement.
Basically, God saying to YHWH, "You
hang onto those two sticks with the names of Judah and Ephraim and see if I
don't fulfill all that you imagined they could effect in tandem -- and
more."
Which is, I'm sure, what happened. Just read the Gospels.
The unanimity continues for some length of
time after the incarnations -- essentially the YHWH seeing his/her/its self
validated in all particulars and watching that Revelation sweep across the
world. Missing the point that God had
essentially turned the poisonous question back against the YHWH: "What THOU by these?"
In a world being transformed by the
Synoptic Jesus and the Johannine Jesus, both being proclaimed as God's son --
and their two sticks, ultimately, so firmly united that every Christian
believes them to be one individual -- what does that leave for the YHWH? Not very much. The Name of Jesus usurps the YHWH's place,
the YHWH's self-perceived context and the YHWH's differentiation as an
entity. The YHWH is pretty much
universally believed just to be another name for God. A complete loss of unique identity.
It's God's point, as I read it, but it
isn't God's Larger Point, here at the apex of the Judaic Revelation which,
naturally enough, concerns the Jews themselves.
The "sticks" will be united, the YHWH's imagined fulfillment
will take place -- but in such a way that the YHWH won't recognize -- literally
for centuries -- how detrimental it is to the YHWH's self-perceived
stature. But God's Larger Point is the
disposition of the long-suffering Jews:
Neither shall they defile themselves any
more with their idols, nor with their detestable things, nor with any of their
transgressions: but I will save them out of all their dwelling places, wherein
they have sinned, and will cleanse them: so shall they be my people, and I will
be their God.
The YHWH, deeply suspicious of all this,
attempts to cross all the t's and dot all the i's:
And David, my servant, King over them, and
they all shall have one shepherd: they shall also walk in my judgements, and
observe my statutes and do them.
Which, God is perfectly amenable to
including. With a couple of
qualifications, the significance of which the YHWH won't realize for
centuries. The Synoptic Jesus and
Johannine Jesus both, in different ways, fulfill the Davidic promise. David is the servant of the YHWH but David is
also the servant of God. In the sense that an incarnation of David, a
reiteration of David, a metaphor for David just as David is a metaphor for God,
yes, David will be King over them (Jews and Christians -- metaphorically, the
literal King David for Jews and Jesus-as-the-incarnation-of-King-David for the
Christians: God as Ultimate King).
Definitely one shepherd: God
(with the Johannine Jesus as the metaphorically preeminent earthly incarnation
shepherd: see last week's commentary).
And, yes, the Jews will continue to walk in
the YHWH's judgements and observe the YHWH's statutes and do them. In a far more observant way than they were
doing in the time of Ezekiel. The notion
that Jesus was the meschiach will be so abhorrent to observant Jews that
it will serve as a great cleansing of Judaism itself, Christianity (quite
understandably) being seen by the Jews as a judgement upon them that they,
indeed, have to "walk in" and to suffer the consequences of for
thousands of years. For the Jews,
Christianity is one of the ultimate forms of suffering to which they are
continually subjected (although that certainly isn't the Christian conscious
intention) -- which has a way of "getting your mind right" (apologies
to Strother Martin) with God. And making you more observant as a people.
And they shall dwell in the land that I
have given unto Jacob my servant, wherein your fathers have dwelt, and they
shall dwell therein, they and their children, and their children's children
forever, and my servant David their prince forever.
Note that the YHWH refers to "David,
my servant, King over them" while God refers to "my servant
David, their prince forever".
God doesn't want to detract from the royalist perception of David, which
is central -- and remains central -- to the Judaic faith. But there is only one King over Jews and
Christians: God.
The YHWH rejoins (still crossing t's and
dotting i's but now more fully acquiescent in the prophecy enunciated):
Moreover, I will make a covenant of peace
with them, and I will place them and multiply them, and will set my Sanctuary
in the midst of them for evermore.
Well, THAT wasn't going to happen in the
sense that the YHWH meant it: that there
would always be a Jewish Temple with ritual blood sacrifices feeding the YHWH
in Israel. God sidesteps the issue:
My Tabernacle also shall be with them: yea,
I will be their God, and they shall be my people.
In the time of Ezekiel, the original
Tabernacle was a thing of the past, replaced by the One Temple. So, God can be reassuring and forensically
accurate at the same time: in the same
sense that God's Tabernacle still existed (even though it no longer existed
physically), so would the YHWH's Sanctuary exist in their own most meaningful
respective senses: as inward constructs,
the idea of the human body itself as a Temple of God.
And the heathen shall know that I, the
YHWH, do sanctify Israel, when my Sanctuary shall be in the midst of them for
evermore.
The heathen AND the devout, will be far
more aware of God than they will be of the YHWH and not much concerned with the
YHWH's Sanctuary, per se, as the Larger Enactment unfolds. But God can afford to just let the
misapprehension go: the Sanctuary won't
be in the midst of Israel, it will be within each individual Jew to the extent
that he or she chooses to grant God sanctuary within him or her and to nurture
their own awareness of God. Strict
observance of the YHWH's statutes and adhered to find favour in the sight of
God, I infer, being as good as any other form of God worship. The key is motivation and self-sacrifice:
choosing Good as one infers Good and eschewing Evil as one infers Evil.
And then waiting to find out on Judgement
Day how you did in the "inferences, choices and actions
sweepstakes".
Next week: God willing, Ezekiel 38.
Best,
Dave
Next Time: Well, it's Kevin's birthday, so if he's doing "Reading Cerebus", "Happy Birthday!" and if not, "Burn in Hell Clerk!" Paaaaaassssssssttt Maaaaaatttttt!!!!!!!!!!!!!
5 comments:
The message conveyed... the fractal-like picture painted... the densely layered revelation... of that page... hit me ten times harder today than it did when I initially encountered it during the original run.
"Christianity (quite understandably) being seen by the Jews as a judgement upon them that they, indeed, have to "walk in" and to suffer the consequences of for thousands of years. For the Jews, Christianity is one of the ultimate forms of suffering to which they are continually subjected".
Here we go again with Sim's prattling about Jews being the recipients of a biblically ordained, thousands-of-years long punishment for their lack of faith. Disgusting.
It is rich that Sim has for years bemoaned people's judgments of him (for his real and contemptible actions) and yet sees fit to wax philosophical about a nonsense biblical punishment meted out arbitrarily on an entire group for some ancient alleged sin. Add "pathetic" to disgusting.
- Anonymous Dude
Even Dave thought Mike B. was possessed by demons, so how much can we trust Michael's thoughts here?
-- Damian
These are the mental gymnastics that fundamentalists like Dave have to go through in order to adhere to the idea that everything is part of god's perfect plan. To these people, the Holocaust was simply another part of god's perfect plan and that cannot be questioned. Pathetic and disgusting indeed.
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