Kingdom of Joy

I continue revising my book about the Gospels. In regards to Matthew 9, one of the things I wrote was:

Why should the Lamb of God neglect the observance of ritual fasting? The Law of Moses called for one annual fast, but the Pharisees had pressed the Talmudic tradition of fasting Mondays and Thursdays. This was probably on one of those two days. But never mind the Talmud legalism; addressing the bigger question of Mosaic Law, Jesus answered with a bit of humor, referring to this lavish occasion as a wedding feast. In a spiritual sense, it was a wedding, for this was Christ seeking His bride. For Jesus, His whole ministry was a spiritual wedding feast. It was as if to say this partying was fully appropriate, for it signaled a new beginning. As ancient Eastern royalty often did, the vestment of the royal heir took place at the prince’s wedding. Such a wedding was marked by passing the symbolic rule of some small portion of the kingdom, up to that point held by an appointed viceroy about to retire. In this case, the Law of Moses was being retired. The personal stamp of this Messiah Prince would replace the customs of the viceroy, Moses, over the Chosen Nation. Therefore, this celebration at Matthew’s home was the beginning of such changes, a new and invigorating rule marked by joy. This joy could not fit in the old forms of Mosaic rituals, which had reached retirement.

The Pharisees had perverted the Law. The Covenant of Moses was a standard suzerain-vassal treaty with God portraying Himself as an Eastern nomad sheik. Eastern feudalism was all about family; your sheikdom was your kinfolk. God adopted Israel as His own kin; this shifted the expectations dramatically from what they would be were He simply a conquering emperor. They weren’t merely a source of tax revenue, but beneficiaries of all His wealth. And when such a ruler raises up an heir whose whole life was spent under the impression these people were his very literal blood kin, you can bet his attitude toward them would be even more familial. This nation of people are His inheritance, His true wealth and power. The Pharisees forgot all of that, having pulled in the rational objectivity of Hellenism.

For them it was quite reasonable to live in terror of God, while at the same time objectifying Him. God was no longer a person for them, but some body of rational principle. You cannot play on your blood kinship with cold reason. So their legalism was dreary and devoid of life; this was entirely rational. Having a good time was inherently sinful, so everything had to be smothered in ritual — mechanical and fake — penitence. Here was this wannabe rabbi Jesus breaking all their rules and customs. He dared to claim the authority to forgive sins and then wallowed in giddy partying with sinners.

So against their stiff legalism and sending messages inside, rather like wrapping notes around a stone and tossing them through the window, Jesus responded with what must of have been a hilarious parabolic response. Why, this is a wedding party! It was about the only occasion when brooding Pharisees would relax and smile. Except, He pointedly said that His ministry was the wedding of a new heir to the Kingdom of Heaven. It wasn’t a legal confession that He was the Messiah, but it was indicative of where He was taking things. So many times during His disputes with the Pharisees, He indicated He was the Messiah without saying it in terms their legalism could seize upon. It was like a game. He dared to make Himself out to be the Son of God, and was obviously enjoying it entirely too much.

We were created to be His family. Sure, if His own kin folks have the gall to intrude on a wedding feast with some refusal to give due regard to His wishes about something, He can spare a moment to pour out some wrath and even taunt them in the process. But He won’t allow anyone to ruin the wedding day of His Son, so His face won’t be darkened very long. Meanwhile, He has a lot of patience with the little kids who just don’t quite understand everything and make bumbling mistakes.

The wedding feast is just getting started and we are the New Israel — we are the Kingdom of Heaven.

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Tech Note: Windows Patches Are Now Bundled

It’s Patch Tuesday for Windows (and Adobe Flashplayer). I recommend this rather balanced explanation. Starting this month, Microsoft releases all the patches as a single rollup bundle and you no longer get to choose. That is, you cannot choose to avoid something you don’t want. Most users don’t know enough to decide, so it may not matter. It will most certainly save Microsoft a lot of money.

Until there’s a backlash. Given the serious trouble Microsoft has with quality control on patching, particularly with Win10 lately, this may turn out to be quite a mess. The most annoying thing for users is that Microsoft always insists that there is only a relative few folks who suffer trouble with this process, but they word it in a way the hints they blame the users who are having trouble.

I’m watching to see how this works out.

Edit: I forgot to add this little tidbit

Starting in February 2017, Microsoft intends to add older fixes from before the current month to the packages. Over the course of several months, the cumulative updates will become bigger and bigger, incorporating an ever larger quantity of the available Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 fixes. The ultimate goal is that these cumulative updates will be sufficient to get a PC completely up to date.

This means that the telemetry updates a great many people refused in the past will be forced on them. Those telemetry updates were designed to make Win7 and Win8 just like Win10 with its built-in snooping of keystrokes and such, sending that and so much more back to Microsoft. I guess it depends on whether you trust them, but a lot of comments on tech sites suggest users would rather risk turning off updates altogether.

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Photography: North Draper Construction

01old-n-new-aAs always, click on any image to see it full-sized. CTRL-click will open the image in a separate browser tab.

The last time I saw Draper Lake was before the collision six months ago. The first image shows the far western end of the project, with some of the old road still there, but not going very far, while this end of the new road bed is just barely landscaped. 02newroad-a The crews had just begun clearing the new roadbed through the woods the last time I was here. The roads are now about half finished. What you’ll see is the gravel underlayer and the concrete retaining rails. Eventually the asphalt will be flush with the top of the concrete. This is a way of prevent edge weathering and crumbling.

03elevatedWhat I can’t show you is the places where they dug down and planted a massive layer of boulders, the average stone just about the size of my head.06upbluff I spotted the evidence of such work along the section that used to flood every time it rained. That section is now a good bit higher, but is no longer part of the main path. It simply runs to a planned new fishing/boating point. It also runs past my old friend, the high sandstone bluff (image above left).

04bluffviewThe original road exposed the face of a massive sandstone formation, and it remains a favorite spot of mine. I love to climb up and look around. 05acrossvalleyYou can just see the lake through the trees. If you move around a bit, you can see across the steep valley from the primary water source, East Elm Creek.

07peekaboolakeJust east and down from the bluff is the lowest point of the old roadbed; the summer foliage allows a couple of peek-a-boo glimpses of the lake. The crews scraped off the old fractured asphalt layer and left the gravel. There’s a few places where the road simply lay atop bedrock; the bluff is only one, and the tallest, of several such formations.

08old-n-new-bHere’s a shot that shows that old roadbed alongside the new at the far eastern end of the construction area. No one seemed to mind my being there, though some of the workers stared, I suppose because of my reflective vest was not so different from theirs. I tend to wear that thing whenever I carry my camera.09nomoreflowers Sometimes the only place I can stand for a shot is too close to the traffic, and with the vest they always give me plenty of room. For example, I stopped to see if that wall of Black-eyed Susans (a type of sunflower around here) was still there on Post Road, but this year a completely different collection of plants grew. The only spray of bright yellow was a different kind of flower.

This was just short of a 30 mile ride for me. I didn’t circle the lake, but just having the energy to get out here and get back was a real blessing. Maybe sometime soon I can try circling the lake, but maybe avoid the construction area.

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Cycling: North Sooner Road

01morningskyAs always, click on any image to see it full-sized. CTRL-click will open the image in a separate browser tab.

It was more about riding today than shooting pictures. I was testing my wife’s camera, a new model of the little red one I carried until recently. I’m not happy with the results and half the pictures came out unworthy of sharing, but this shot of the morning sky was pretty cool. I had hard time getting that little thing to focus where I wanted it.02woodedhill For that reason, sometimes the light averaging was pretty bad. The sun was playing peek-a-boo with moderate clouds. With my eyes, I could see that this was a wooded hillside, but the camera failed to bring out the clearings in the scrub, so it looks almost like a rising forest canopy.

03grandolhouseThis lovely old house turned out quite well, though. Someone is still taking care of the yard, but the structure will probably be left to collapse, if not bulldozed to make way for some kind of McMansion like some of the others out here.

Today’s route took me west on Reno, then north on Sooner to NE 63rd. There I turned east for a couple of blocks to pick up Carol Drive. It was a one-lane drive that connected to some older streets that were poorly maintained, just about like that house. I wish I could have gotten a shot of those two pigs that followed me around their fenced enclosure, but the fence obscured them too much. Eventually this hidden neighborhood ran out and I was back on Sooner Road. North a ways past Wilshire Boulevard was this lovely sloped pasture with a pond, and I manage to hash together a so-so panorama of it with the little camera:

Projection: Cylindrical (1) FOV: 127 x 71 Ev: 11.23

Projection: Cylindrical


I think I’ll use that for a header soon.

I passed that obscenely massive mansion on the SE corner of Britton Road, and you still can’t shot pictures of it without accessing the property itself. I took a couple more side streets in the area behind the mansion. There was a nice little miniature horse farm in there, but all the horses were too far from the road and this little camera fuzzes up the image on the slightest excuse. It cost me a nice shot of a native red hawk, as well.vacantsandplant

But the real objective was the exercise, so I headed back east to Midwest Boulevard and rolled past the Dolese Prairie Park sand plant. It’s vacant now; they’ve shut down the operation. If you could see back past the trees, you’d discover that it backs onto the Oklahoma County Sheriff Department’s training area. The Sheriff is trying to buy it so they can turn the pond into a water rescue training facility.

I suppose it turned out to be a good idea to take an extra serrapeptase in the morning before breakfast. I’ve suffered from a declining metabolism since taking that beta blocker. Today I still felt pretty strong on the ride back home.

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The Second Man

I’m sure my regular readers will understand: On the one hand, there are no words for it. On the other hand, I can try to indicate something about this so you can share in my portion of sweet shalom from the Lord.

We should not aspire to what we are not. Our society ignores the Creator and posits a completely false approach to deciding what is and is not beneficial in our world. It’s not a question what’s possible or likely, but what places us in the shadow of God’s love. One of the most dangerous moral distractions is a cultural bias in favor of things that only Satan has to offer.

A critical element in Western heritage is the Myth of the Great Man. While there are some dilettantes declaiming this thing, they aren’t really leaving behind their Western biases; they are simply switching from serving thuggish Odin to the devious Oester, as if there were no other choices. The only true escape is recognizing the moral and intellectual sewer you are in and climbing out. Western Civilization teaches us that certain things are inherently noble and that we should aspire to them, and that anything else is something less.

Don’t buy the false dichotomy. Those aspirations are not necessarily noble, and when they are, Western biases don’t understand why. Don’t allow someone else to establish an a priori standard and goad you into ambition for it. Even when they don’t define the final goal in concrete terms, these priests of heathen social religion demand that you aspire to some high place — but a high place only within the structure they promote.

First, let’s pull down this demented occupation fortress. There are all kinds of models we can use to discuss this. Such is the nature of parabolic language and the moral logic behind it. We give the brain something it can handle, a structure it recognizes, so that it can obey the divine impulses of the Holy Spirit written as conviction in the heart. It requires this approach to properly understand the thing we attack, as well as understanding what we use to build something better.

In the cultural background of the Bible, we see the ultimate symbol of manhood is the shepherd. This ancient culture recognizes that men can be lazy, but there is actually a moral blessing from a certain reluctance to take control over others. Who am I to decide things for you? Yet the same moral question learns to accept when God places that burden on your shoulders. God is your ultimate sovereign; He makes the assignments based on His own interests. But because He is Creator of all things, His interests are, by definition, always in our best interest. God appoints some men to shepherd bigger flocks than other, but the difference has nothing to do with who is greater or lesser. Some flocks require more work than others because of multiple varying contextual factors, not just numerical size.

Greatness is not in the details of the assignment, but faithfulness in any assignment. This is not a dick-waving of breast-flashing competition. Whatever God grants you is perfect for your mission, and your mission is perfect for you. Do you know your mission?

I am the Second Man.

God didn’t call me to be the leader, the front man, the focus of everyone’s attention for fame and fortune and personal fulfillment. I’m that guy’s executive officer. Or maybe I’m his butler, his driver, his personal servant, or whatever it is that makes it possible for him to do his job. It’s not that I can’t lead, but that my whole mission in life is to support someone else’s leadership. Not a mere yes-boy, but someone who also reminds the leader of the moral necessities so that no one manipulates him.

Does this explain why I’m so hands-off about your personal life? This whole ministry seeks to put you in the driver’s seat. I’ll give you my moral assessment of things structurally, but I won’t make decisions for you. I’ll help you execute your decisions. Granted, my own limitations could mean that my best support is simply staying out of the way. That’s why I keep a loose grip on the connection between you and I. If I can’t help you, I surely won’t hinder you. So it’s entirely natural that we’ve had active participants who come and go, and only a very few who remain long term.

And the last thing I want to see is some kind of goofy movement take off. Can’t you see a bunch of flyers posted at your local church? Can you envision workbooks and videos presented at “Second Man” conferences?

The whole point is that, however much we might share, no two of us are alike. And no two of us arrive as the same talent for talking about it. Sure, I need support, too. I’m blessed that some of you post “likes” and make occasional comments. I’ll accept your encouragement gladly. But my calling is to offer whatever I have to help you discover your calling. I’m your Second Man.

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Psalm 119: Gimel 17-24

The psalmist rejoices in his past experiences that confirmed the revelation of God. As one who has experienced it aplenty in the past, he calls on God to deal with him in such a way that he can thrive and devote himself to establishing the truth of God’s Word. He wants to continue in the divine enlightenment that allows him to discern the immense value and power of what lies behind the words of the Covenant.

He admits that he is little more than a visitor, a sojourner in God’s domain, begging the merciful handling God had commanded in His Laws for strangers passing through. But instead of mere life support on his journey, he wants to find the moral sustenance of revelation. He confesses that his soul is crushed by longing for a word from Jehovah that would disclose His divine moral character.

Surely God as rebuked the arrogant souls who felt competent to judge right and wrong from their own reasoning. He begs that the Lord not let him fall into their contemptible errors. He has done his level best to give the Word precedence in his thinking.

People who gain political power tend to talk a lot, but the psalmist would rather keep his mouth shut and devote his attention to what God revealed as the way to live. Human wisdom is hardly on a par with the delight of examining what God says is true.

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Different Oven, Same Poisonous Bread

Beware the leaven of the neocons (Matthew 16:5-12).

If there is any discernible human agency that concretely manifests The Cult: It’s the neocons in the US. You can learn the philosophical background by researching Leo Strauss. You’ll notice right away it’s secular, yet aims for the quasi-religious goal of Zionism. I note in passing that Strauss’s theory about reading history is a perversion of what Jesus said about parables. In his thinking, the greatest historians were hiding their editorial assessments in plain sight using literary masking. It requires an equally perverted mind to grasp that secret stuff and keep the riffraff from seeing how they are manipulated. Strauss applauded the manipulative herding of sheeple. Of course, it’s for their own good.

In other words, it’s not that the sheeple wouldn’t understand, but that should not be allowed to understand. With neocons, the means of distinction is the requirement of a devious mind, not at all like Jesus whose teaching required the dominance of the heart over the intellect. This neocon perversion leads to deeply perverted actions. We see a lot of it in how the CIA acts, but those actions are manifested most strongly in the Pentagon, because the military is largely under neocon control.

So we should hardly be surprised that they would like to provoke that endless nagging terrorism our troops faced in Vietnam, by keeping things stirred up in Syria. Here’s the worst part of it: The neocons aren’t talented enough to pull it off. They will most certainly make everything far worse than it is, and far worse than it has to be. But this will come back to bite them in the ass, and they won’t learn from their mistakes. It’s takes a certain level of psychopathy to be a neocon, and a primary symptom of psychopaths is learning nothing from the pain of failure.

This evil-wicked-mean-and-nasty character is just what we see in the Pharisees who confronted Jesus.

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Law versus Law

We operate in a context of human laws that are founded on flouting God’s Law.

The Law Covenants reflect the nature of Creation itself. They reveal the moral character of the Creator, and we should hardly be surprised that His Creation is designed to operate consistently with His character. There is really no practical way to separate between a distinct “act of God” versus something entirely natural in that sense. Nature itself is an act of God. We can discuss it academically, but there is no real basis for trying to draw distinctions. It’s all a matter of perspective.

Where we do make an obvious distinction is between the common assumptions of our world about what is “natural” versus what God says is natural. Here at the Kiln of the Soul parish, we make much of the vast gulf between the culture of our Western world and that of folks in the Bible. Our culture includes a presumptive arrogance that it’s own morals are God’s, and He damned sure better stick with the program. But it’s seldom a conscious decision in any way; the whole thing is almost entirely a priori. Anything from a different cultural background is, by definition, barbaric and primitive. That’s what we inherited from the Anglo Saxons and their gloomy, depressing and grouchy approach to morality. And it takes only a few active brain cells to grasp how utterly different it is from the way folks in Jesus’ world looked at things.

So we should hardly be surprised to discover that our Western society is under God’s wrath. The Bible shows us that God takes His patient time responding to the vast pile of offenses. Part of that is His sense of justice, making sure there is no excuse for ignoring His revelation. He made sure that accurate knowledge of the cultural context of revelation was available. It may take a little time to absorb the learning, but the academic material is widely available for free on the Internet. And even with the broad variety of presentations, things are still consistent enough for a sincere mind to make sense of it.

But let’s see if we can boil down some of the most obvious and flagrant violations of God’s moral code.

1. Idolatry of heathen deities — The first and most fundamental principle of Western thought is that this universe is all there is. It is a flat out denial of eternity as a separate realm of existence. Most Westerners argue with this, but when you examine all their assumptions, you find it lies behind everything. This was something that arises from Aristotle’s long considerations, a conscious choice. In his teachings, if there are any demons, angelic beings or deities, they must of necessity exist in this universe regardless whether they are visible. When you examine the whole range of Western traditional mythology about the afterlife, it is always somewhere inside this universe, somewhere accessible from here without necessarily having to die to visit the dead. Furthermore, precious little keeps them from coming back to bother us. This relentless focus on the material realm is behind Jesus’ warnings about worshiping Mammon.

But this was entirely acceptable to the Anglo Saxons and their Germanic mythology as reflected in Beowulf. As Western Civilization is broadly nothing more than Anglo Saxon mythology (as a part of the broader Germanic culture) and Greco-Roman intellectual traditions stirred into a single pot, everything Western is inherently materialistic. When you become aware of it, you see it in the full range of Western Christianity, as well. Mainstream churches come far closer in moral thinking to Beowulf than to the Hebrew Jesus. Jehovah has been re-imaged as Odin, and Satan is portrayed as Loki. And instead of feminine nature being an integral part of culture, it becomes an entirely separate realm under the cult of Oester, which is the actual primordial source of virtually everything in Germanic mythology. So on top of Mammon, most of Western culture reveres Oester. That this is largely unwitting makes it all the more insidious.

2. We are way past due for a jubilee — Study the Old Testament concept of jubilee — the primary text is Leviticus 25. Yes, it’s a very complicated study because, as is often noted here, the legalistic wrangling of Judaism obscures the ancient Hebrew mysticism inherent in the Covenant of Moses. We need not wade through all the nitpicking details of that legalism. The whole thing rests on the moral limits of human acquisitiveness. The desire for stuff is not inherently evil, but it has safe boundaries. Jubilee is an extension of the idea behind the Sabbath Rest and sabbatical years; jubilee is a seven-fold sabbatical. The idea is to disentangle from the current established practices and take time to reconsider whether your path is consistent with your calling. Human behavior drifts quickly past the safe boundaries without this periodic reset; it’s built into our human nature.

A critical element in that time of reconsideration is letting stuff go. The idea is stop worrying about this life and all its necessities and reset our focus back to a fundamental trust in God as Provider. On the Sabbath, you stop doing work that distracts, so that includes shutting down human commerce. You plan ahead and take care of the minimum requirements to stay alive before the Sabbath comes. In a sabbatical year you don’t plow and plant crops, and you end any contracts or bonds that oblige people to other people. In a jubilee you restore alienated real estate (means of production) to the original owners or next of kin — of course, that sits in a tribal social setting and feudal government, but it’s not hard to grasp the moral element in our day. The idea was to prevent any one tribe, clan or family gaining excessive wealth and power through material means. If God wants you in charge, you have to get there on the basis of moral purity and moral influence, not under some threat against people’s livelihood.

And if this big reset of the system reduces the aggregate wealth, so be it. The moral value trumps all material values. If you don’t see how America has wallowed ever deeper into the sewer pit of materialism, then you cannot see anything that matters. Everything our government does raises material property to the godhead. America worships Mammon and that’s what prevents a proper jubilee of debt release that should come at least once in the lifespan of average folks.

3. Covetousness — Have we forgotten that nations can covet? The problem is not wanting stuff, nor even someone else’s stuff. The problem is wanting for yourself something God gave them instead of gratefully rejoicing in what He gave you. America in particular seems to believe that she alone knows the best way to develop and use the resources of every other country. Inevitably that means America getting the lion’s share of whatever production takes place.

Never mind what the policy statements say; this is why we have the likes of the CIA stirring up revolts in any county that won’t serve our comfort. It doesn’t matter what you imagine is our government and how much we allow greedy corporations to drive our policies; it’s all our government by default. God didn’t give our nation the vast oil reserves of the Middle East, so we have no business making any effort to control the extraction and marketing of that oil. And all the wars that we have provoked using espionage under the thinnest of pretexts about imaginary democracy are equivalent to the most desecrating murder of everyone who dies in those wars. The whole earth cries out with the blood of those America has slaughtered, whether directly or through proxies.

So now we sit here and the warmongers are now calling for more blood, seeking to provoke open warfare with Russia, starting with the battlefield in Syria. God hasn’t revealed much about how that might turn out, but He has surely told us all that there is simply no excuse for it. My heart is full of dread about this prospect. Not in the human fear that we might get our arrogant national butt handed to us, but that it’s just more blood crying from the ground, condemning America all the more.

Nothing about the activist impulse fits in here, either. If you live here in the US, you’ll have to obey your own calling and conscience, but don’t ever presume to know what’s the right moral action for everyone serving the Lord. We don’t confine our moral considerations to this material level, operating under mere human reason. What I’m calling for is a time of prayer during this period before any such battle is joined. Mostly you should pray to know your calling and duty in light of the changing context. I don’t condemn those in uniform already committed to fighting such a dirty war, nor those who might feel led to desert that uniform. Those issues are always in the hands of those who face God with their own convictions. Pray that you know your mission from God.

That remains always the very foundation of heart-led faith. Know your mission and your mission field; be there and do it. Nothing else we teach here can help you without that foundation.

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These Dreams

Just a short note for your instruction: Scripture takes seriously the business of dreams. It’s a critical element in heart-led living. While I can probably do some dream analysis for you, it works far better if it’s face to face. Your heart will speak to mine and I’ll know more about what you are facing in your dreams. Still, if you get too puzzled about something, all you have to do is ask and I’ll try my best.

Lately I’ve had a very active dream life. No nightmares, just long narrative dreams that serve to tell me something about myself and my mission. In fact, the past few teaching posts here and at Kiln blog (edit: now closed) arise partly from this dream activity. Something in the dreams will prompt me to consider something and, at the very least, it plows the field for a response to something I encounter while awake. This is a primary function of dreams when you stand fast in your faith and walk by your convictions.

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More on Heart Logic

What happens when you have a vested interest in the outcome of a study or experiment? Perhaps you’ve heard that a lot published science turns out bogus. The explanation includes an awfully large burden on academic researchers to publish. Even if we remove the threat of employment sanctions, there remains a very large burden of peer pressure to make a name for yourself.

Do we not see a similar pressure in other lines of work? I can assure you I saw it in the military with the quarterly reviews by those in your chain of command. I cared, yet there were plenty of folks in the same position as I who didn’t care at all, but simply gamed the system to get the same rewards. It seemed there was a predatory instinct in leadership, a wacko reversal so that, if you really cared, you received a lot more pressure to conform to the mandatory ambition. If you didn’t really care, they left you alone and promoted you on an entirely different basis.

The question is not whether you care, but how you care.

Take a moment to reflect. We who seek the heart-led life are aware of life on multiple levels. We know that the world around us, the world that isn’t heart-led, cares about things on one level. We have to understand that materialistic level. We can’t defend against temptation to sin unless we understand what sin is, and it begins in the Garden of Eden with placing your reason on the throne of decision. So while we should understand Aristotelian logic somewhat better than most of the people we encounter, it’s only because we cannot otherwise properly handle the problems people make for themselves on just that level alone. We cannot avoid making the same mistakes on that level if we don’t understand that level.

Yet, as I’ve said many times before, when you live heart-led, you discover that Aristotle is no real challenge. Your heart already knows and can make pure logic seem elementary. Yes, heart-led means stuff like science and math tend to be easier if you need them. God handles that stuff through your heart guiding your intellect. It’s not magic; it’s the common miracles of walking in God’s calling for your life.

But because we are ruled by a higher level of heart-logic, we have little vested interest in the material existence that dominates the souls of most humans. We can afford to back off and seem truly objective as they think of it, even as we deny it’s possible for humans to be genuinely objective. That’s because the intellect is unable to be objective on its own; it needs help from a higher faculty. When we deny the importance of being objective, we can let things go and seem far more objective. We lose that vested interest only to better qualify in some ways to keep the job, or meet the systemic demands. We don’t take it seriously and can relax and find God’s power to perform for His glory, even if that means walking away from something everyone else is dying to obtain.

So you can go and get any job you feel called to do, and not find your soul running through a meat grinder. You are objective enough to see what is necessary and know whether you can participate on whatever terms it takes, because your sole objective is the glory of God. Whether it means acclaim or a glorious failure, it is His divine moral character that we show to the world, and it is winsome even when folks don’t understand what they are seeing. We know what they are looking for, but we also know what they actually need.

Feel free to infiltrate any human system to which your heart calls you. It’s your mission field. You will bring Him glory regardless how it turns out, just keep your heart-mind ascendant and don’t get bogged down in mere human cares.

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