Saturday, December 25, 2021

This Is A Christmas Tradition I Can't Miss

LISTENING TO CALLIE CROSSLEY'S show when she hosts Mike Wilkins and his annual compilation of really strange Christmas pop music

It’s our annual spinning of holiday tunes with our own Mike Wilkins, radio engineer for PRX and GBH’s The World.

All this hour, GBH’s intrepid holiday music collector shares his new finds of old songs that are quirky, weird and sometimes way out there.

These are not the traditional carols you'll hear from the Mormon Tabernacle Choir or even new favorites like Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas Is You.” Nope, for his annual collection of songs you never heard, Mike has once again rescued vinyl one-hit wonders from the forgotten bins of overlooked B-sides, and highlighted a few new tunes that might become classics.

This season, for his 32nd year of jinglebell melodies, Mike’s collection goes back to basics — sort of. This is Mike’s musical holiday gift bag, “Sack O' Songs,” a Yuletopia recording.

On this one Bert and Ernie sing the Hollywood Christmas song I hate more than any other, including Rudolph.

Way back forty or more years ago one of my goals was to get through the season without hearing anything sung by Sinatra or Pressley, this year I added Santa Baby to the list I hope never to hear again.  I can't say that these will make a list I hope to avoid but it's only because I doubt I ever will hear them again.  A couple of them I don't think I'd mind hearing again, though.  It's not The Chipmunks and Canned Heat. 

Were They Considered Trailer Trash or Lower? How Hard It Must Have Been To Believe That Story, How Much Luke Would Have Known How Far He Was Asking People To Stretch Their Expectations

THE OTHER DAY RMJ posted a piece in which he said the shepherds who were the first people who the birth of Jesus as the Messiah was announced to would have been people of the lowest class, lower probably than the blue collar worker class or at the same level.  As John Dominic Crossan said, the workers like Joseph were considered about the lowest rung of society under the Roman empire, perhaps lower than the agricultural workers like the Shepherds.  No doubt if this happened today the Holy Family would be the "trailer trash" class of people, the shepherds might have been even lower than they were. 

They were almost certainly illiterate and uneducated, probably considered disposable people like the real cowboys were, probably pretty rough characters and anyone Jews as well as gentiles who first heard the outrageous claim that such uncouth people and their probably dirty, maybe diseased sheep were not only among the first but the first to whom ANGELS, FOR THE LOVE OF MIKE, told about this most significant event and who were the first to go see this baby of the lowest class born in a barn, lying in a cattle trough who they were told BY ANGELS was your Savior  . . . Christ the Lord!  

If, as I conjecture, they may have seen themselves as slightly higher in the social scale than a carpenter (or as Crossan has it, stone cutter) and if anyone is conscious of who is just below and just higher than them, it is the nearly destitute, that they would have accepted this baby as that would be miraculous, especially when they found out the mother hadn't been married long enough for the kid to not certainly not be a bastard born to a tramp.  Don't forget that Luke's description of things has given many a scoffer the chance to say that.  I'm not making it up.

The scene as described in Luke was certainly not something that would have been what they or anyone would have expected.  We're told these days that anyone who was expecting the Messiah expected him to be higher class than that, respectable at the very least, certainly not born to trailer trash and first attested to by dirty, ignorant, disreputable sheep herders.   I would bet that if you'd told any of those same shepherds they would see an angel who would talk to them they'd probably have said the equivalent of,  you're shittin' me.  Never mind that they'd be the first to be told about the birth of the Messiah.  I wouldn't be surprised if some of them were deeply impious skeptics and crude cynics.  Maybe some of them still were, thinking they'd lost their minds or that they'd all eaten some bad rye or some weed they'd mistaken for something edible.  Or that the sheep they got milk from had. 

Like so much else in old writing, in and outside of Scripture, we have to imagine it in terms of our own experience.  I could name you the foul-mouthed, disreputable farm boys I imagine in those roles - at least one or two of them relatives of mine. Maybe they were pious in their poverty, I've known some but fewer of those kind, too.  But I'll bet that most of the upper working class and middle class and affluent early converts as well as a lot of the poor ones would have imagined shepherds similarly to this.  

For that matter I'll bet that going to see if what they were told was true was a dare taken on a bet.

When the angels went away from them back into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, “Let's go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has told us.

Like the genealogy in Matthew which names some pretty dicey and unsavory characters from the Bible, at least one prostitute, Rahab, Tamar a widow who tricked her father in law to fathering another person in the line of Jesus, by dressing up as a prostitute among the women,  and including Judah the dirty old goat who had sex with her as a temple prostitute, some of the most dicey and unsavory characters who cheated and tricked and connived their way into advantage and power among the men, those characters we imagine in their cleaned up, Renaissance and Baroque painting, As Made For TV Movie figures would not have been imagined to be clean and pure when the Gospels were written.  The ones who knew the Scriptures  would have known that this was not a cast of the best and brightest, nor the nicest and most respectable.  And they were being asked to accept that out of that background God became flesh and extended The Law and the Prophets, not only to Jews but to the entirety of humanity and, on top of that, saved them and many if not all.  And that they were expected to convince other people of it.  It says that "all they told it to were amazed."   

And it still is pretty amazing. Especially among professed Christians who despise that class of people, now. 

This is an answer to a snarky comment.  Figured I'd post it today. 

Johann Pachelbel - Chorale Prelude, Wie schon leuchtet der Morgenstern

 


Direct link to video 

Jean Ferrard, organist playing on another Silbermann organ  

I agree with the organist's decision to not play the pedal trills marked in the score (if those were in the one being played on, not possible to know) because when the counterpoint is this lively and involved they'd have gotten in the way.  Here the sustained statement of the chorale melody that starts in shorter notes in the upper voices is much clearer.

It's too bad Pachelbel became known for that one, repulsively over played canon because he was a very find composer who wrote a lot of other music.

Dietrich Buxtehude, Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern, BuxWV 223

 


Direct link to video  


Apparently the organist is anonymous for this recording. The organ is the  Silbermann organ of the Stadtkirche Zöblitz

J. S. Bach - Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern


 

Direct link to video 

 Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern 

Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern voll Gnad’ und Wahrheit von dem Herrn, die süsse Wurzel Jesse; du Sohn Davids aus Jakobs Stamm mein König und mein Bräutigam, hast mir mein Herz besessen. Lieblich, freundlich, schön und herrlich, gross und ehrlich, reich von Gaben, hoch und sehr prächtig erhaben. Singet, springet, jubilieret, triumphiret, dankt dem Herren! Gross ist der König der Ehre

Madeleine Schwaighofer - Sopran
Tamara Obermayr - Alt
Konstantin Schmidbauer - Tenor
Benjamin Sattlecker - Bass

I've never once heard all of the verses of any chorale sung as a chorale but they must have been, all seven of them.   Here's the English translation.

1. How beautifully shines the morning star
full of grace and truth from the Lord,
the sweet root of Jesse!
You son of David from the line of Jacob,
my king and my bridegroom,
have taken posession of my heart,
[you who are] lovely,friendly,
beautiful and glorious, great and honourable,
rich in gifts,
lofty and exalted in splendour!


2. Ah my pearl, my precious crown,
true son of God and Mary,
a king of most noble birth!
My heart calls you a lily,
your sweet gospel
is pure milk and honey.
Ah my dear flower,
hosanna, heavenly manna,
that we eat,
I cannot forget you!

3. Pour most deeply within my heart,
you clear jasper and ruby,
the flames of your love,
and make me rejoice, so that I may remain
in your chosen body
a living rib!
Because of you,
gracious rose of heaven,
my heart is sick and smouldering,
wounded with love.
    

4. A joyful light from God comes to me
when with your dear eyes
you look on me as a friend.
Oh Lord Jesus, my beloved good,
your word, your spirit, your body and blood
refresh me within.
Take me like a friend
in your arms, so that I may become warm
with your grace
To your word I come invited.

5. Lord, God,Father, my mighty hero,
before the world you have
loved me in your son.
Your son has betrothed me to himself,
he is my treasure, I am his bride,
most greatly I rejoice in him.
Yes, yes.
Heavenly life he will give me
in the the world above!
My heart shall praise him for ever.


6. Pluck the strings on the harp
and let the sweet music
resound full of joy,
so that with dear Jesus,
my most beautiful bridegroom,
in constant love I may make my pilgrimage!
Sing, leap,
rejoice, triumph,
thank the Lord!
Great is the king of honour!
 

7. How full I am therefore of heartfelt joy
that my treasure is the alpha and the omega,
the beginning and the end;
To his reward he will
take me up to paradise,
and so I clap my hands
Amen! Amen!
Come, you sweet crown of joy,
do not long delay,
I wait for you with longing.

Christmas At Catholic Worker

 


Direct link to video  

A really fine example of family amateur music making.  Though I doubt most of these people are blood relations, they're a bigger family than that.  

If there's one thing American culture needs its more of this kind of non-professional level group singing.  Though it could use more of the professional kind too both have different values and nothing can replace this kind where the making is more important than the approximation of perfection. 

That's Quite A Thing To Ask For - Happy Christmas And Why It Should Be

THIS IS THE MOST ENJOYABLE Christmas I think I've ever had.  No present getting or giving, no decorating, no traveling.  I will miss our annual family party but we always had that on New Years because we had several family members who had jobs that had them on duty on the 25th.   It was easier for them to get January 1st off.  But the Covid resurgence and the certain presence of unvaccinated children under five has led to it being called off for this year.  

Speaking of presents.  I'm happy to be able to say that all of us who are eligible for full vaccination with boosters are fully boosted.   I hope by next year even the babies will be protected to the best of the medical profession's ability to do that.   They and the First Responders who have done a really wonderful job of delivering the vaccines here are a whopping huge present.  Two out of the three were given to me by  fireman-paramedics under the York County Emergency Management Agency, an entity I don't think I ever thought about for a single second in more than sixty years.  That was worth all of the Christmas presents I've ever had in my entire life, including the few useful ones for which I am still thankful.  My parents, especially my mother's gift of respecting well done medical science and making sure we were as fully immunized as possible  is as much a part of that as the actual inoculations this year.   A legacy still giving so many years after their deaths.   I don't think we're anywhere near out of this but for now, what we know now, I'm enormously grateful for all of that.

In place of the store bought presents and decoration is a concentration on why such a holiday matters and that reason is the person of Jesus and his ministry and the nature of the glad tidings his extension of the Law and Prophets both into the wider world and in expanded meaning, freeing us from the bondage to the imagined rule of blind, indifferent, fate.   There would be nothing to celebrate otherwise. 

I've mentioned that I've left behind meditating on my breath and on the physical sensation of taking footsteps for meditating on passages of Scripture, especially this year, the sentences and phrases that make up the "Lord's prayer".  I remember when I was young noticing that the prayer didn't seem to carry much in the way of the cargo cult conception of praying for stuff and the obvious request like that in it wasn't a frivolous request, "Give us this day our daily bread."   Given our abundantly fed habit of praying for loads of stuff or the money to buy it with or the ability to get it, that's a rather modest request, to us, though one which is certainly the most desperately made one, the need for food to get through the day when you don't have it. 

But I think the prayer does have some incredibly ambitious requests.  

"Your kingdom come, your will be done,"  is one which, as a life-long anti-monarchist always made me feel uneasy about asking that.  But the problem with monarchy - which, as I've noted God lays out quite well in `1 Samuel 8 - in human understanding is a problem of humans as kings.  Human governance is bound to be only as good but still highly imperfect as the ones who govern.   Having God as king would certainly not produce the same kind of government, we couldn't even begin to imagine what that would be like, all of our frame of reference being human rulers. The idea of God ruling us is thinking about something none of us has even a vaguely relevant idea of.  It is a request for perfect governance, perfect and equal justice, perfect guidance, perfect in every way.  That's quite a thing to ask for.  

Think of that two-part request again "They Kingdom come, thy will be done."  I used to think of God's will being done as if it was a passive acquiescent acceptance of whatever we got, assuming that what we got was the will of God, that it was a request for passive acceptance of that.  But that's not what I think now, I think it's a request that God's will be done by us because I don't think it makes any sense to think that would happen "on Earth as it is in heaven,"  in our frame of reference by any other means.  It's a request for the grace to do what's right strong enough to convince us or compel us or get us to do that so as to make life into a new Eden, this time us not falling into temptation and into the evil that the later theories of atonement theologically fit in with theories about the crucifixion of Jesus.  Going back to what I said above, just getting allegedly educated Americans to get vaccinated so their unvaccinated Covid-ridden selves won't destroy the medical system and get other people killed shows just how ambitious a request that is.  

The prayer that Jesus gives us in Luke and Matthew would be a great gift even if it was imperfectly realized in life.  Worth anything I've ever gotten for Christmas, worth more than all of what anyone's going to unwrap today put together.  The idea of it, the idea that it is a possibility has done a lot to make me happier even in my pessimistic expectations of what human evil and human folly and stupidity get us for governance and human behavior, now.  Even if I never see it much happen in my lifetime, the idea that it might be possible or even that the less ambitious results of the triad of fidelity that Walter Brueggemann talked about in the lecture I've been transcribing for us might be possible.   A gift card from Amazon wouldn't do for me what just thinking about that does.  

Maybe I'll write about "forgive us our wrongs as we forgive those who wrong us," during Lent.  Though, as it's tied to us forgiving those who wrong us, the size of that request should be even clearer.   But it's Christmas so for now I'll let you meditate on that as you will.

Friday, December 24, 2021

The Copper Family - Shepherds Arise

 


Direct link to video 

Gerald Finzi - In Terra Pax

 


Direct link to video  

 

Noel: Christmas Eve, 1913

Pax hominibus bonae voluntatis  By Robert Bridges

A frosty Christmas Eve
   when the stars were shining
Fared I forth alone
   where westward falls the hill,
And from many a village
   in the water'd valley
Distant music reach'd me
   peals of bells aringing:
The constellated sounds
   ran sprinkling on earth's floor
As the dark vault above
   with stars was spangled o'er.
Then sped my thoughts to keep
   that first Christmas of all
When the shepherds watching
   by their folds ere the dawn
Heard music in the fields
   and marveling could not tell
Whether it were angels
   or the bright stars singing.

Now blessed be the tow'rs
   that crown England so fair
That stand up strong in prayer
   unto God for our souls
Blessed be their founders
   (said I) an' our country folk
Who are ringing for Christ
   in the belfries to-night
With arms lifted to clutch
   the rattling ropes that race
Into the dark above
   and the mad romping din.

But to me heard afar
   it was starry music
Angels' song, comforting
   as the comfort of Christ
When he spake tenderly
   to his sorrowful flock:
The old words came to me
   by the riches of time
Mellow'd and transfigured
   as I stood on the hill
Heark'ning in the aspect
   of th' eternal silence.

Also from The Gospel of Luke 2 

And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field,
keeping watch over their flock by night. And, lo, the angel of 
the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round 
about them: and they were sore afraid. And the angel said unto 
them:

"Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, 
which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in 
the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord. And this 
shall be a sign unto you; Ye shall find the babe wrapped in 
swaddling clothes, lying in a manger."

And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the 
heavenly host praising God, and saying:

"Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace, good will 
toward [men]1. We praise thee, we bless thee, we worship thee, we 
glorify thee, we give thee thanks for thy great glory, O Lord 
God, heavenly King, God the Father Almighty."

"Let us now go even unto Bethlehem, and see this thing which 
is come to pass, which the Lord hath made known unto us."

And it came to pass, as the angels were gone away from them 
into heaven, the shepherds said one to another,
And they came with haste, and found Mary, and Joseph, and the 
babe lying in a manger. And when they had seen it, they made 
known abroad the saying which was told them concerning this child. 
And all they that heard it wondered at those things which were 
told them by the shepherds.

Composer: Gerald Raphael Finzi (July 14, 1901 – September 27, 1956) 

Orchestra: City of London Sinfonia 

conducted by Richard Hickox 

Chorus: London Symphony Chorus 

Baritone soloist: John Shirley Quirk 

Soprano soloist: Norma Burrowes

Olivier Messiaen - Visions De L'Amen - 1. Amen de la Création (Amen of Creation)

 


Direct link to video  

Olivier Messiaen &  Yvonne Loriod, pianos 

"Amen, word of Genesis, which leads to Revelation; Amen, word of Revelation, which is the consummation of Genesis"  Ernest Hello

On The Feast Day Of Creation

THE OLD FEAST DAY OF ADAM AND EVE on the 24th of December is something I think should be revived, not as the first human couple's day but as a feast day of the Creation as it is and continues to be as it is always becoming what it is and then that becomes the future.  The Christian conception of Jesus as the decisive event in not only the history of human beings but to all of the Creation, the presence of God made flesh in the various nuanced and conflicting ways that that is asserted, both God and flesh is one of the most shocking and difficult of the things which, if they wanted to make things easier on themselves, the earliest Jesus movement and the Christianity that came out of it would not have made up.  

The Virgin Birth was another of those highly disadvantageous features of Christianity that no inventive fabulists wanting to be taken as telling the truth would have likely claimed.  Up till this morning I hadn't planned on addressing it but I feel like I should now. 

I think those are such disadvantageous and difficult and scandalous features of the claims of Christianity that those who first asserted and adopted them must have really believed them to be literally true.  I don't believe that the story of the Virgin Birth was an attempt by the early Christians to comment on or hijack the story of the divine fatherhood of Augustus when his mother fell asleep in a pagan temple getting raped in her sleep by a god - as at least one influential scholar asserts - I think the sources of Luke and Matthew and each of the writers of those books actually believed that it happened pretty much the way it comes down to us.   I was, up till a few years ago, much influenced by that scholar, not so much these days on much of his "historical Jesus" research.  Though I still admire much of his historical background research and everything he claims about the authentic text is worth considering but subjecting to skeptical analysis, as all such scholarship needs.

I am agnostic on the question these days.  I don't know how anyone can come up with any more to say about it.  The brawl about the line in Isaiah that is translated as asserting a virgin will give birth taken from the Septuagint but which, in the Masoretic text of the Old Testament means a "young woman" is about as unknowable as the Christian doctrine, itself.   The scholars who translated the Hebrew text into Greek may have been making an accurate translation of the manuscripts available to them at the time, there may have been variant versions of it as, in fact, there are for a number of the books of the Hebrew Bible.  I would expect that the scholars of that time would have been at least as knowledgeable of both the Hebrew of the texts and the Greek they were translating it into as modern scholars are, certainly they would have known the Greek they spoke as their everyday language better than any modern scholar is likely to know it and they were probably among the foremost of the available scholars of the Hebrew text, too.   To assert that later scholars were better is incoherent as the texts those later scholars depended on had to have passed through the hands of the generations of scholars who produced the variant versions of the texts, the various ones in Hebrew, those the Samaritans used and, I guess, use, the ones translated into Greek and Syriac.  Their decisions couldn't be any better than those texts which were products of the earlier generations.  

Some of the online chatter about this asserts that the Masoretic Text is authoritative because some very old fragments of some of the Torah are very close to the standard text of that version.   And, who knows, if they find a complete scroll of very ancient provenance they might be able to make an overwhelming case for that.  I do, though, wonder if there are serious differences in the character of the Prophetic books, those books by the protest singers, the outlaw, uncredentialed commentators on the political-economic-religious establishment and the society that fell away from the radical egalitarian social, political and, most relevant to those who need it, economic justice that was the heart of and the decisive difference in the Hebrew identity.  

It wouldn't surprise me if those uncredentialed, unauthorized, possibly long orally transmitted Prophets survived, at times or always in alternative readings.  I'm inclined to believe that, given the radicalism of what was tamed into written form, that the original version or versions might have been far more outrageous. even if the transmission of The Law code may have been more uniform and orthodox.  I wouldn't be at all surprised if whoever wrote the imagined "original text" of Isaiah may have wanted to make it seem a bit more persuasively less outrageous at least some of the times.  I don't know the believed or documented or recorded lore as to how the Masoretic text came into being, we know that it was well into the first millennium of the Christian period when it was done.  I can well imagine the committee that made that editorial decision between a "virgin" and a "young girl" would have been inclined to choose the less "Christian" reading of the text.  And maybe they were absolutely right to do that.  Or maybe they weren't.  I can certainly sympathize with their choice given that they may have already felt themselves in danger of assimilation by the growing Christian population, including, by that time, a majority of gentiles without the connection to Judaism that the first Christians certainly had.  Even the earliest gentiles who Paul and others converted had that connection to Judaism because the earliest Christians we know of were all, also Jews with the fewest named exceptions.   

And along with that celebration of the Creation should come a celebration of diversity, diversity in life forms, in human forms, in human cultures and languages and colors and diversity in religions.  One thing which did not change in the Christian adoption of, first, the Septuagint and, in some form they had available to them, something closer to the Masoretic text* is that God declares his covenant with the Children of Israel to be eternal.  It is one of the longer enduring sins of Christians that they ignored that text even as they violated it as certainly as the Assyrians and Antiochus did.   To do that those Christians had to violate the text of the Hebrew Bible they adopted as divinely given Scripture and the Gospel of Jesus and, despite some unfortunately worded passages, the text we have of that Gospel and the some of the Epistles.  I think Abraham Joshua Heschel said one of the most sensible things about the Scriptures, the written version of it we have is not the inspired word itself but a commentary on it, just as every single modernly available text of all of it is a reflection of that original divine inspired text as the Prophets, including the great ones like Moses got when he first set up his radically egalitarian just Law, the thing that the Virgin Mary sings in the Magnificat as Luke gives it to us. 

*  I read sometime this week something I hadn't heard before, that when Jerome was translating the Scriptures into Latin, he favored the Hebrew texts he had available to him over the Greek translation.  Since he made some serious mistakes in translating the Greek of the books of the New Testament, in places, it's probably good that he may have not used them as much.  I'd like to know more about that, especially in light of the inclusion of texts present in the Septuagint but not found in the Masoretic edition of the Hebrew Scriptures.   Such a huge subject, so little time to try to figure it out.   It's one of the very few reasons I ever wish I was young again. 

Thursday, December 23, 2021

No Room At The Inn by The Staple Singers



Direct link to video

23rd Day Of December Night Radio Drama - Alf Silver - The Head Cheese - Clean Sweep

The Head Cheese 

A sort of Christmas themed radio play, one of the Clean Sweep episodes I don't think I posted before.  The cast and credits are given at the end.  It's been an on and off day for electricity here, that ice storm yesterday seems to have screwed something up or I'd have typed them out and posted them.  I like people to get credited. 

I won't post a play on Christmas day so so took the opportunity to post one today.

I'm planning on finishing the series of posts from Walter Brueggemann's excellent Slow Wisdom lecture after Christmas.   

Better get this posted before it flickers again. 

The Staple Singers - The Virgin Mary Had One Son


 

Direct link to the video 

Besides Story

AFTER THE EXPERIENCE OF listening to and reading many voices of many People of Color, especially in the Black Lives Matters movement and its related eye-opening and shattering effects - what Republican-fascists are harnessing and whipping up a backlash to so to keep People of Color and gulled white people under their heel - the other day I found I couldn't read Eudora Welty's Christmas story A Narrow Path.  I don't think there's anything wrong with the story, from what I can know to judge it but to have a white author, even one as masterful as Welty  creating a Black Character to be the center of a story isn't a comfortable thing in 2021.  I would wonder how Black commentators would experience reading it.    I was, of course, aware of the ambiguity of that from the first time I read the story decades ago.  Just as I was aware of the even more problematic situation of Mark Twain inventing and his use of the character Jim in Huckleberry Finn.

That's a little introduction before I answer the question of whether or not I'm going to see the Spielberg-Kuschner retread of West Side Story which I never intended to see.  The answer is no.  

I didn't like the music of the musical when it first came out on LP,  I didn't like the movie that they made of it in the 1960s.  I'm not a big fan of Bernstein's musicals, or much of any others and I pretty much am through with the movies perhaps with a few exceptions.  I certainly wouldn't pay for the experience of watching it, either in money or in two of the dwindling hours of my life.  I didn't like the story and other than Rita Moreno, I hated the performances.  Marni Nixon's dubbed in singing was great too but I'd rather hear her recording of Ives Songs or Webern any day.

I've looked at several reviews since the taunting comment showed up in my comments to be moderated file and those seem to fall into two categories, those which actually cast a critical eye on the movie and those who promote it like a press agent.

- The New Yorker slam of the movie made it seem just as I'd have feared, if I had thought to think about it, adding a layer of pop sociology and psychology and aspirational drivel  and taming the sexual drive in the original dance scenes.  I will say that of the music for the musical the dances that Bernstein turned into a little suite of sequences are the best music in it.   I have very occasionally heard the song Somethin's Coming  well sung outside of the context of the musical and kind of like it.  I gather, as I'd expect,  Spielberg is too Hollywood for the material, Kushner may have caught the syndrome from his time working on the movies.   If so I hope he recovers.  He's got too much talent to turn into another of Hollywood's causalities.  

- The New York Times gives it a plug.   Most of the big and establishment media can be counted on to do that in reviews of prestigious movies turned out by prestigious directors, especially when there's an alleged higher purpose to the lower-middle-brow project.  I think most of their reviews of commercial entertainment is written with an eye on ad revenue that should be on the thing being reviewed. 

This isn't a review because other than maybe seeing Rita Moreno in something, I couldn't care less about it.   If it turns into another brainless icon of lower-middle-brow adulation the way Hamilton has, largely through review-promotion, especially that in the NYT , wouldn't surprise me.  Musicals are as bad at presenting relatively recent or present day reality as they are honest treatment of history.  And they're dangerously bad at that.  The piety that that musical is treated with doesn't seem to me to be as sincere as the piety many a WWII veteran I knew of held South Pacific in, especially those who were in the battles of the South Pacific.   I don't know what kind of connection the, no doubt, largely white, largely middle-class and above audience for WWS finds to have a real attachment for it.   The original was a bunch of affluent gay white guys putting their fantasies about darker rough trade on the stage and making it dance and sing.  It still is that.  Maybe that's what the white, safe, affluent audience gets from it, too.  Aspirational porn.

I doubt that anyone who goes to see it will much be open to any kind of messaging that the thing is supposed to hold, I think any messages embedded by the authors and composers and directors of musicals is swamped by the characters, their sex appeal, the plots the sets and, most of all, the sex appeal of the actors.  I've read so many assertions of what plays, movies, musicals, etc. "really mean"  that they're really about "the McCarthy era" "the cold war" that they're about anything but what the story is about and what easily 95% of the audience will think it's about.   Making a hundred-million dollar movie to make a point is one of the most ridiculous extravagances in the history of the world, any of the very passionate, very articulate, often very angry  Black Lives Matter protestors I heard explain for free why they were doing what they were doing was entirely more substantial, articulate, to the point and effective if that message getting across was the point of it.   That testimony was the highest level of rhetorical art, no fictitious song and dance show can compete with that. 

As to it being important art pregnant with sociological, psychological, political and social meaning and, maybe even, most dangerously moral purpose, I'm reminded of what Paul Simon said when someone talked about the poetry of his popular songs, if you want poetry, go read Wallace Stevens.  Now, there's an artist I can respect for his honesty and integrity. 

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

About Eschaton Today - Hate Mail

I don't care. 

Update:  Nope, not about that either. 

I Can't Resist Posting This Setting - Mikolaj Zielenski - Magnificat

 

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Warsaw Philharmonic Choir
Henryk WOJNAROWSKI, conductor

 Score

At All Of Those Holding Up Passage of Build Back Better - Warren Wolf - You’re A Mean One, Mr. Grinch

 


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Warren Wolf – vibraphone, piano, Logic Pro X Timpani 

Jeff Reed – acoustic bass 

Carroll “CV” Dashiell III – drums 

Micah Smith – vocals

Second Draft In An Ice Storm - The Idea The Mean Old Christians Stole the Yule From Those Nice Nature Loving Vikings May Be Even More Crap Than I'd Thought Before

 I JUST LOST the long post I was writing updating my semi-annual poke at the accusation that those mean old Christians stole Yule from those poor, gentle, nature-loving folk, the pagans of Northern Europe.  You know, the ones who practiced human, especially, female slave sacrifice as documented in at least one eye-witness account and in excavations of chieftain burials.  I lost it in the electricity flickering during the awful ice storm we're having - thank you global warming - so I'll keep this short.

Looking for new material to add to the picture of that Osburg tapestry showing a pagan ceremonial sacrifice, including humans and animals, I found a fascinating paper by Eirik Storesund, a scholar of Old Norse and its litereature that says that the modern myth that the Norse Yule had anything to do with the winter solstice is totally unsupported in the Saga and other literature and so the whole modern conception of it - a conception shared with those big fat lovers of Norse paganism, the Nazis - is a big fat lie. 

Take a moment to take a long, hard stare at the sun (proverbially of course). Is it not radiant? The tempting assumption that the solstices (and equinoxes) formed the basis of pre-Christian Scandinavian religious feasts, is prevalent not only in modern Heathenry and Ásatrú, but is also reproduced in countless popular media articles on the ancient origins (no pun intended) of Yule in Northern Europe. This view was also widely held by scholars of the field up until the turn of the last century, and though fewer think so today, it has somehow stuck. Even if many have changed their opinion in recent years, this has hardly seeped into the public consciousness.

It doesn't seem too idiotic at face value: The Nordic area can be a dang cold and harsh place. It's not exactly the fertile crescent. We'll take all the sunshine we can have. The old idea that Viking Age Scandinavians celebrated jól on the winter solstice as a sort of solar adoration, is among the most prevalent yuletide claims you'll see presented on the internet (or wherever) this year. It would seem intuitive that Viking Age Scandinavians greatly missed the sun at winter, and if jól was celebrated around the solstice, close to Christmas, it seems to explain how Christianity could simply just walk into Scandinavia and appropriate the heck out of our gluttonous solar feast.

As you must have guessed by now, it's quite more complicated than that, and it rests on a massive jump to conclusions with no direct support in any of the primary sources. And it’s not as if Old Norse texts never said anything about exactly when the yuletide sacrifices should commence, because they totally do, and it coincides with the astronomical winter solstice in exactly no source whatsoever. But that’s good news, because if you are like me, that’s a good excuse to celebrate the season not one or two, but three times properly.

None the less, you will find no shortage people who insist that the opposite is true, refusing to let the evidence speak for itself. To paraphrase the Swedish archaeologist Andreas Nordberg (cf. 2006: 102): Those who insist on refering to jól as the solstice, must be more interested in the solstice itself, than they are in sources for Norse religion
.

Do go read it and look at the higher resolution picture of the sacrifice tapestry than I've had access to post in the past.   I might write more about this later if the electricity doesn't go again. Modern life has a lot to answer for, too.

Everybody's Talking 'Bout Heaven Ain't Going To Heaven - Really Stupid Anti-Christian Hate Mail

IF MY MEMORY IS CORRECT when I heard an interview with the biologist Rupert Sheldrake a few years back, I transcribed this passage from it because it struck me as so relevant to my experience of conversion to the Hebrew based monotheistic tradition.

I then took a job in India,. In 1974 I became the principal plant physiologist at the International Crops Research Institute in Hyderabad in India.

So, I lived in India for about seven years, partly because I was so intrigued by oriental philosophy, and the last thing I expected was being drawn back towards a Christian path, I thought I’d left that far behind me. But the longer I was in India, the more I realized that a great deal about my own nature and being was shaped by my Christian background.

For example, I had a conversation with one of my Hindu colleagues, this was in the evening after work and he said, “Why do you do what you do?” and I said, “Well, I want to help poor farmers and I want to help poor people lead a better life by improving cropping systems and breeding better crops,” and I said, “What about you?” He said, “For me it’s a job, it’s a good job.” I said, “But what about helping people?” He said, “If people are poor, that is their problem, it is their karma, that is from their previous life. That is not your problem. Your problem is to look after your own spiritual development,” he said.

Then, I realized so much of Southern Buddhism, Theravada Buddhism and Hinduism is about following your spiritual path that basically leads to vertical takeoff for those who follow it. The rest of the world is a hopeless place with waves of reincarnation and samsara and karmic bondage, things are basically getting worse, according to their world view and will continue to do so, and the only thing an individual can do is get off.

Then, I realized that in the Jewish, Christian and Islamic traditions, there’s a very different dimension, it’s much more about community, about, we’re in this together, and this very strong sense of interlinking with a community, rather than just an individual quest. It made me realize I was much deeper in the Christian tradition than I’d thought
.   

For me it was arguing for the reality of justice with some online Buddhists early in my online life.  I said justice was not only real it was one of the most central moral realities with the most obviously real consequences which real People experience and can understand in real life.  They said it was a mere illusion to be left behind on their quest for personal enlightenment.  I bet them that if they were victims of serious injustice in their lives, instead of being affluent and comfortable, they would have no problem understanding injustice made very real in their own, personal experience instead of impersonal theory.

While there is much in Buddhism I respect, various moral positions, non-harming, telling the truth, etc.  their very useful and impressive study of meditation,* that lack of a teaching of the consequential moral commandment to do justice and its extension into universal love which is active and not passive, not theoretical but actively required within the teachings of the Buddha seems to me to be a seriously fatal defect.  There are Buddhists who do those things but the extent to which they have to leave the body of the doctrines of Buddhism to do it would be interesting to hear from them. 

Buddhism American Style, the kind that can contain the likes of Mark Zuckerberg, Jack Dorsey, Sheryl Sandberg, myriads of TV hucksters and online gurus, the kind that can contain the pedophile Alan Ginsberg and the scads of degenerate cult leaders in this or that North American Buddhist money making racket is as much of a scandal as the allegedly Christian, Jewish and Islamic criminal cults and gangster operations that the rest of it gets tarred with.   What you bring up.

That's, to a large extent, just another of the manifestations of the grotesquely stupid way that the slave-owner - financiers who wrote the Constitution saddled us with things like the enforced stupidity of judges and "justices" and prosecutors pretending that they couldn't tell the difference between someone trying to practice the charity to the poorest among us morally required by The Law, The Prophets, The Gospels and Epistles and, I understand, The Qu'ran and a bunch of obvious hucksters on the make.  No doubt our experience of life under the Constitution without that absurd requirement to pretend to not be able to see the difference between what saints do and what con-men and gangsters do in the name of religion would be far different than what we've got with it but I can't help but thinking it would be worth seeing what kind of injustices not playing pretend that way produces instead of the clear injustices that playing pretend like the judges and "justices" do produces.  

The Gospel of Jesus, the Epistles of Paul, James, etc. are always there with the warning of what happens if you don't feed the hungry, clothe the naked, treat the sick, treat the prisoner with loving regard instead of brutal indifference and violence, hoarding money while a poor person dies of poverty right in front of you, etc.   

Joe Manchin, if he really wants to be a Christian instead of merely professing to be one would not be able to have said the things about the poor people of his state that he did, though that kind of thing is so endemic to Christianity, especially in the most conservative regions of the United States, that it is explainable how it has gotten such a bad reputation.  Though if he is not just lying about being a Catholic, being a Christian, he has certainly heard all of that when the Gospel is read during mass.  You could say exactly the same thing about every, single member of the Republican Party who profess Christianity and, The Law containing the same teachings, those who profess Judaism.   

Krysten Sinema, as an atheist, her hypocrisy and duplicity, her grifting as she tells the poor of her state and the nation to fuck off, that's not inconsistent with atheism which rejects any metaphysical basis of morality.  

There are members of the Democratic Caucus in the Congress, House and Senate, who either profess Buddhism or who do not specify any religious belief who are better at following the Gospel of Jesus in their political careers and, I would bet, personal lives than the large majority of those who profess Christianity.   Where they get it from, I don't know but I see the presence of it in how they vote, what they do, what they say, the passion with which some of them say it and I have no doubt that they deserve to have whatever their ideological basis for it respected.   

*  I have found combining some of the Buddhist method with the substance of the monotheistic tradition was better than the typically presented practice of concentrating on some banal physical experience.   I found that as futile as merely reciting the rosary without any real thought, something I figured out when nasty old Jansenist Fr. D gave me some enormous penance for the kind of naughtiness I got up to as a young kid. 

I never say the rosary,  the command to say it given by alleged Marian apparitions is one of the things that makes my sense of a fake go up.  That and her obsession with things like the lengths of girl's skirts instead of feeding the starving and clothing and housing those without those things, the kinds of things that she sang in the Magnificat.

Considering It More

ACTUALLY, I PREFER the dynamic equivalent translation I heard in a production of Happy End sometime in the 70s or 80s,  "Knockin' over a bank's no crime compared to ownin' one."    Like Raymond Chandler,  I'll give this much to Brecht, he could write a really great line that was true, even if the total effect of his work is anything from nonsense to the equivalent of Springtime For Hitler.   

It's one of the tragedies of Marx and Marxism that they didn't stick to the part of it that was spot on accurate, his critique of capitalism and leave the really horrible part of it, his prescriptions for an alternative that he claimed was scientifically inevitable in the garbage can of history.  Marx the critic was a great man, Marx the constructor of the future was the author of something that was from as bad to far worse. 

 Update:  You know, I'm kind of disappointed that no one pointed out I mixed up the name of the somewhat obscure and forgotten American composer Theodore Chandler with the over-rated gumshoe novelist, the master of the snappy one liner and not really a master of much else, Raymond Chandler while typing.   It was the later who I would have compared to Brecht had I not made that mistake after a largely sleepless night.

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

How A NYTimes Reporter Collects Royalties From Hundreds of Musicians

IT PISSES ME OFF to find someone scamming low income and even fairly successful artists, appropriating their work through a scam and getting away with it.  I'll point out looking up the NYT reporter Ian Urbina, yep, he's a prep-Ivy product, in his case the ultra prestigious vehicle for getting rich boys into Ivy league schools and right into the upper levels of the establishment, St. Albans and then to the first or second most prestigious Jesuit school in the country, Georgetown, where you can get credentials that will fulfill the purpose of St. Albans, putting you into the 1% or their higher level hirelings but your chances of coming out a decent person of high morals are probably far less than average.   Prep-ivy probably puts out a higher percentage of crooks, swindlers, cheats and murderers than the juvenile prisons in the country do.  Only they're in a position to get away with it because our "justice system" is staffed by the parents, grandparents, brothers and sisters and cousins and buddies of the crooks.  They are really good at making their crimes unillegal.

Here, listen to this. 


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Magnificat (Znamenny Chant)

 


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St. Symeon Orthodox Church Choir, Birmingham, Alabama

Aside from the surprise to me that shouldn't be surprising at all, is this choir from this Orthodox Church from Birmingham, Alabama.  I don't know why it should be anymore surprising to me to find out there are Orthodox Christians in Alabama anymore than it is to find them in New England.  

I looked at their website and especially liked this answer in their F.A.Q.s page

The Orthodox Church in America, or OCA, is the successor of the first mission to North America begun by St. Herman and other Russian monks in Alaska in 1794. The Church has been in America since that time and was granted autocephalous (self-governing) status by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1970. At the time we took the name “Orthodox Church in America,” because our mission is to be a Church for all peoples in America, and not to any particular ethnic group. We are in full communion with the Greek Orthodox Church and the other Orthodox Churches throughout the whole world.

I like catholicity in Christian Churches.  It's so much friendlier than nationalism.  Come to think of it, I like it in governments, too.

Magnificat (Serbian Melody, Tone 2)


 

Direct link to video 

Chanted by the choir of St. Mary's Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis

Explanatory education always reads backward about how it was but imaginative education reads toward unthought possibility, irrefutable surging of newness that is inherent in God's ordering of Creation

 Sixth.  The triad of fidelity majors in imagination whereas the triad of control specializes in explanation.  Of course we need both as we learn from Humboldt and Diltaie (?) [I am unfamiliar with this name, if someone thinks they know who the far more erudite than I  WB means, please tell me].  But in a world of technological reductionism, positive reason explanation comes to contain everything and education consists of mastering the rules and procedures for linear clarity in order to get ahead in the current system. Explanation is a strategy for accumulation of what the system offers.

And imagination is the contrast, is the capacity to host a contrast world.  So, in my discipline of Old Testament Studies historical criticism has been a long-term German enterprise to fit The Bible to the present age. But now we are being led to this post-critical move to discover that the text is so subversive in its imagination. It turns out, as Michael Walzer has shown that the Exodus narrative is not a report on some ancient happening and it does not really matter if Pharaoh is Ramses or Merneptah, as we bicker about, because Pharaoh is whoever sits on top of the pyramid. It turns out that the Exodus event was a divine stirring in South Africa with Egyptian names like Nelson and Desmond.  

It turns out that the script of steadfast love justice and righteousness eventuates in freedom, dignity and equity and continues its transformative work.  It turns out that the manna story is not simply an ancient story about bread in the wilderness but it is an act of recognition that all bread is not the property of the cartel who own the granaries and the bakeries.  

Explanatory education always reads backward about how it was but imaginative education reads toward unthought possibility, irrefutable surging of newness that is inherent in God's ordering of Creation.

So our contemporary marching, as they did in Exodus has run from the Freedom Rides to the Velvet Revolution to Yeltsin on top of the tank to the march in Selma to hope-filled Cairo and now to the 99 Percent, we are marching, we are marching we are marching in the light of God.  And the narrative is not only performed in the streets, it is performed wherever decision makers gather.

But what a vocation for the university to be a school of imagination. To nurture imagination out beyond the blueprints and the programs to new ways of being in the world together.  

In the past two decades, since I went online a lot, several things have changed drastically about the way I think.  One of those I can directly attribute to reading the 4th century theologian Gregory of Nyssa and, through him, a deeper reading of scripture in regard to The Creation and how time and history work, that God created the Creation to change and never to go back, to move toward whatever God's future is to be, taking us and our contrary and evil actions and the results of those into that future but always having the upper hand, God's results not deterred by us though the history before that future culmination or culminations are to be.  

Nostalgia as a plan,  as well as being futile because the remembered or imagined past cannot be brought back in our future, it is wrong, both in its imperfect and incomplete memory and in its total effect.  We can't know the past comprehensively, we can only imagine that we do.  

If, as Brueggeman probably correctly says, "Explanatory education always reads backward about how it was . . . "  unless it is admitted that the how it was is only a model and not how it really was, that education produces a lying fiction and not accurate information that is any kind of a reliable means of planning the future.   Though he concentrates on the kind of explanatory education that is provided by universities, colleges, high schools, etc. the most potent and powerful and dangerous explanatory education is provided by movies and TV and Broadway rap and boogy shows and "historical" novels and on down.  

Those account for the difference between the education that produces Black Lives Matter and the program of marching, marching, marching Walter Brueggemann cites and the opposing movements of the billionaire AstroTurf Tea Party, white supremacist, Republican-fascist, Trump rally, Gadsden Flag carrying, anti-mask-anti-vaxx alternative which is rather completely a product of the explanations of Hollywood, Broadway, TV, Facebook, etc.   The entertainment media is our most ubiquitous educational institution swamping the universities on down.  It inevitably educates in the explanatory mode that Brueggmann warns of, even it's ersatz imagination is planned to have an effect to support the program of the triad of control.

The use of the term "imagination" in the excellent way Walter Brueggemann does here is imperfect because every single thing we do with our minds is totally, entirely, always dependent on our imagining the things we think about, the images we have in even rigorous scientific imagination, those we depend on to produce the most accurate information we can have  is entirely dependent on our acts of imagination.  That is another thing I have learned, especially from my brawls with "skeptics" and materialists and atheists who, their explanatory educations being so total,  can't imagine that what they do is a product of their imaginations.

In our idiotically psychology and positivist imaginings, the act of imagination is generally relegated to the willful delusion of whoever we want to designate as deluded and so to dismiss. That is probably what any scientistic atheist materialist who heard this passage from Brueggemann's talk would have as their first resort to make the God talk go away.  But the idea that they have access to information of complete reliability about anything, that their planning and modeling is totally objective and an act of rigorous objective science and mathematics is only their denial of what they are doing.  It is one of the most common acts of imagination by those with university and college granted credentialed that they have achieved some kind of independence from the basic methods of babies and toddlers and children understanding their raw experience and their remembered experience of the days or months or few years they have to build on and explain their experience.   

They may as well imagine that their most sophisticated acts of science, technology, engineering and mathematics is free of the first five numbers they learned to count on their fingers because those had to be imagined to be relevant to anything, the abstraction of counting and set making as much an act of imagination as the imagined jillions of universes that some of the most arrogant and ideological of scientists do along with the merely imagined mechanisms of natural selection in the life sciences in their colleagues in another department of their school, as well.  

Especially timely to right now, it is true of those economists and MDs who imagine that masks are not necessary and horse wormer is a miracle cure and even As Seen On TV MDs asserting it would be acceptable for 2 or 3 percent of children in our public schools are a reasonable price to pay for pretending that Covid-19 isn't a world changing event on the basis of their imaginary "herd immunity" which doesn't seem to be in evidence as omicron takes hold. 

My imagination tells me this is a permanent thing and experience of it tells me worse than even this is possible unless we change human culture, politics, the law, drastically and fast.   Freedom that doesn't face that reality isn't freeing, it's homicidal fantasy with college credentials. 

Monday, December 20, 2021

Read RMJ's Latest Advent Post, It's A Really Fine One

RMJ's post today is a (Long) Meditation For The Fourth Week Of Advent.  Here's just a little of it from his section on the Luke narrative.

We hasten Mary's pregnancy the better to heighten the narrative tension and prove the world a cruel and harsh place, inimical to the savior; and ignore our role in making the world that way.  It doesn't happen that Mary is forced to a stable to give birth while animals look on, and it doesn't happen that she is in labor even as Joseph tries in vain to find a place to stay.  We invented that part to make their plight worse than even Luke says it is, to overlook the power of the government in forcing the family on this journey, to overlook a system that makes Mary and Joseph poor ("Carpenter" meant one step up from beggar, not a journeyman tradesman with a union card.  Jesus' father is no better off than the fishermen he will recruit later; he recruits them because he's one of them, he grew up as poor as they live.).  We want the story to be a bit crueler so we can tell ourselves we'd have taken better care of them if we'd been there; but we don't now.   Brueghel and Auden are our corrective. An anonymous poet is our corrective. Luke sets up the obstacles to our comfort; over the centuries we've done our best to flatten them out.

Joseph appears for the first time in this narrative, and he has no role in it except "husband."  His role here is social:  to make Mary and Jesus legitimate.  Mary still takes center stage; where she is silent in Matthew's telling, she is the actor in Luke's.  More reversals, because the angels never speak to Joseph, but they go out to the hills where the shepherds are awake (!) and sing to them.

The thing about shepherds is, they aren't the pale and idyllic figures of later Romantic literature (some 1800 years later!).  They are outlaws, bikers, people on the fringe of a society that has a very large and broad fringe (imagine a funnel with a point at the top for the Emperor, a very attenuated reach up to the Emperor, and a very, very broad base out of all proportion to the peak.  It's a system of patronage, where wealth concentrates at the top and trickles down to the bottom, a bottom where the majority live, and where very little wealth trickles down.  On the far edge of that bottom, you find the shepherds.).  They stink, and they steal.  You can't brand sheep, and if a few more come home with you than you left with, that's to your benefit.  They live outside town, they aren't welcome among polite company, they have their own rules of behavior and they scare most people, the way working class workers do to this day.  If such a thing were known then, they would be migrant immigrant labor.  This is who the angels sing to; this is who comes to see Mary's baby. The people we want doing our lawns, building our buildings, cleaning our offices; but never, ever crossing our border. . . 

You should read the whole thing, I've read it twice so far.

They are powered by a holy resolve that is incessantly subversive

Getting back to Slow Wisdom As A Subversion of Reality by Walter Brueggemann

Fifth. The triad of fidelity specializes in dreams that are not held back by circumstance whereas the triad of control takes life as a present possession to be kept the way it is to perpetuity. The totalizing system of those who make the rules, manage the money and administer the power and mobilize their wisdom is every day everywhere evident among us.  That totalizing system aims to maintain  advantage.  The capacity to control and own to perpetuity is evident through deregulation and the stacking of cards by law and by predatory management that finally ends in a society that is short on social possibility.  


So Pharaoh, in his totalizing sovereignty could finally state in his illusion about himself, "The Nile is my own, I made it."  He forgot that the Nile was a gift.  

And so Jezebel can say to her pouting, husband king, "Do you not now govern? Get up and be cheerful and I will give you his vinyard.  Are you not a king, are you not entitled, do you not possess the leverage to have what you want?"  She imagines that the land is hers to give Ahab. And when she has done her nefarious manipulation, she says to her wimpish husband-king, "Go take possession of the vinyard of Naboth for he is not alive but dead."  And the narrator says as soon as Ahab heard that Naboth was dead he went and took possession.  It's all about realized eschatology, that what we have is permanent, to be secured and protected through entitlement.  

And from below comes the cadence of the dream.  Dream is always subversive of present arrangement, the dream always intruded into the sleep of Pharaoh who thought he had everything.  And then he dreamed seven lean cows and seven blighted shocks of wheat.  

And Nebuchadnezzar, who had it all dreamed of a tree being cut down, driven from his power to insanity. The Prophets or voices of God's dream, they say, all the time, "In that day, in that day, the days are coming, the day to come, is a day of disarmament when swords into plowshares and spears into pruning hooks, the day is coming when the Lord will act against all heapers," - this is the text I was reading in class on 9-11, Isaiah 2 "For the Lord has a day against all that is proud and lofty, against all that's lifted up against all the cedars of Lebanon and against all the oaks of Bashan, against all the high mountains, against the lofty places, against every high hill, against every fortified wall.  The days are  coming and they cannot be stopped."  

They are powered by a holy resolve that is incessantly subversive.  

And if we trace the dream of subversion we can follow it from Martin at the Lincoln Monument where he said repeatedly, "I have a dream." And the reason we follow his cadences is that we know that is dream is the dream of our society writ deep.  It is the dream of God for justice, righteousness and steadfast love. And like all such dreamers, Martin had no clue about how to get from here to there.  He only knew that the dream had substance and force and could not be stopped. The trajectory of the poets imagined that the dream is still underway, still overcoming apartheid, still working dignity for the weak, still demanding equity for the poor, still ensuring an end to the of the systemic violence that we choose to call "policy."  

The university is always deciding how it will serve the forces of possession.  In the real world it must be so but it must also do other than that and more than that because the world is not closed into present power arrangements.  The world does not stand still simply because we arrive at our preferred arrangements.  And so the dreamers finally were able to say, "Go tell John that the blind see and the lame walk or the lepers are cleansed or the deaf hear and the dead are raised and the poor have good news because the world is always breaking open beyond possession to dream. And the dream continually bites us. 

Who do you imagine is more likely to work for equality, economic justice, all of the things that The Reverend MLK jr. abbreviated into that Beloved Community I mentioned the other day, someone who believes we are material objects or someone who believes what Walter Brueggemann presents as the alternative to the triad of control?   

I think, in the end, the failure of the secularist, materialist mind even retaining those minimal habits of feeling good will that can be found among them to actually achieve anything is the force that MLK thought bent the arc of the universe toward justice, the kind that might show up better in a dream than in any scientific measurement because science isn't made to measure that kind of thing.  It is measured in considered, shared, observed and lived human experience and human history.  

The dream certainly bites those big and little would be Pharaohs and Nebuchadnezzars among us, the investors, the fund managers, the billionaires and millionaires but it bits us would be alternative in another way, we have to be the conscious, actual producers of that dream in life.   It is one of the tragedies of MLK that that one speech was coopted and distorted into a pantomime to be delivered once a year on a Monday holiday of depleted meaning.  It might have gotten more to the point if he'd said, "I have a demand," or "I have a warning"  though it probably wouldn't have gotten as far as it did if he put it in those terms.   You've got to be really careful what words you choose and often even then they'll steal it and use it against your intentions.   The holy resolve that is incessantly subversive is what the dream really is and the belief that it is possible and will come but only if we make it come.

the economy is to be engaged according to neighborly justice, that the political culture is to be shaped by righteousness that is the work of the common good - More On The Manchin Betrayal And The Secular Left Likely Making Things Worse

IN THE PART of Walter Brueggemann's Slow Wisdom As A Sub-version of Reality I posted the other day, there is this passage which I put a paragraph break in for some reason I don't recall: 

The force of Torah aims to resist autonomy wherein one imagines unfettered freedom without responsibility.  Freedom to seize what belongs to another because of more power or freedom to exploit the vulnerable neighbor.

In the end Torah is Israel's testimony  to the covenantal shape of social existence. That the world is organized according to steadfast love, that the economy is to be engaged according to neighborly justice, that the political culture is to be shaped by righteousness that is the work of the common good.

Consider the second part of that.  The Torah, The Law, The Mishpat asserts that social existence has a covenantal shape, that our socieities are based on mutually agreed to promises and obligations to each other welfare, not on rugged individualism and illusions of independent, autonomous units of self-interest.   

Consider even more how Breuggemann, rightly and, given his life's work of studying Torah, identifies what freedom apart from those mutually agreed to promises and obligations to each other's welfare leads to, those with more power getting the freedom for themselves to exploit the vulnerable Neighbor.  That is what happens, that is like a capsule history of the political history of humanity and our economics in easily almost all of it.  And the results are nothing that the largest majority of People have any stake in pretending it's going to come out with them being the ones on top.

It is why the Jewish tradition, the tradition that starts with the story of slaves held in bondage, facing genocide through Pharaoh's fiat that all of the boys born to the Hebrews should be killed,* extending through their long journey to the promised land and their further trials and blessings, falling back, failing and trying again comes to make the most audacious claims in the history of human politics and economics, the world is organized according to steadfast love, that the economy is to be engaged according to neighborly justice, that the political culture is to be shaped by righteousness that is the work of the common good. 

That is more radical than any secular social reform movement has ever asserted, it is more radical than what loves to consider itself the leftiest of the lefty left.  Those anti-democratic systems  fail to even start to get there for similar and opposite reasons that the anarchists (who love to believe they are the quintessence of leftiness) do.  Anarchists are too focused on autonomy and unfettered freedom and are generally hostile to the possibility that laws higher than human choice are at all important in any of this.  They imagine that things are just going to happen for the better as if there is anything in human history or the natural world that would lead someone to rationally believe that that is going to happen without human planning and intention on the basis of good will and a kind of disinterested universal love that is most certainly not what I've read expressed in much, if any political anarchist literature.  Other than, maybe Tolstoy and Dorothy Day, anarchists lean far more to the love of violence and dependence on anger and hatred and, in the case of that poster-icon saint, Emma Goldman, the violent elitist gansterism that her hero, the proto-Nazi Nietzsche favored.  When I see the black block anarchists of the Pacific North West, I certainly don't see anything that will ever be anything else except what they will mostly be, a tool of Republican-fascism.  The most ineffective worker at a Catholic Worker house of hospitality is more radical than they are. 

Human intention, human thought, human empathy, sympathy and love are certainly part of the Creation just as much as physical forces and those pretty pictures that the space telescopes catch.  But it only happens, it only becomes real as it is chosen to happen by human intent.  That is our place in the progress of Creation and it exists due to our choice to make it happen.  Anyone who believes that conscious, free choice is an illusion will wait and wait and wait for it to happen, like some theorized rare event of physical causation and it will never happen.  Which is one of the reasons that secular leftism can so much be counted on to be not only ineffective but counter-productive.   If you expect it to happen as an external natural event of unthinking causation, you're better off waiting for pie in the sky. 

* Which would be genocide in a patriarchal society, I wonder if that's got something to do with Jewish identity being dependent on matrilineal heritage.   I think there is probably a somewhat more modestly sized truth behind the Exodus narrative, they couldn't have gotten so much right by imagination alone, it had to have grown out of a real human experience of real human events.  It was the literary style of the ancient and classical world to exaggerate to make a point, but the point would never have occurred to them except as a product of their lived experience.

On Manchin's Impending Walk Across The Asile

MANCHIN IS GOING TO CROSS THE AISLE and make official what's been obvious for a while.  The Senate is not actually in Democratic control and it hasn't really been in Democratic control since the first two years of Obama's first term.  Even if he doesn't take the walk, he's already there.

Where we go from here I don't know.  If what Jen Psaki said is accurate, and I trust her as I don't trust him, the man is a bald-faced liar who knows he's in the Senate for the rest of his term and his state being what it is, probably as long as he wants to hold it.   And our political system and, especially, the law of the land since the Supreme Court orders that the corruption endemic to it continues till all hell breaks loose and a Democratic tide sweeps through change - if that change is ever to come - happens.  The "Democratic tide" that swept Obama into office had nominal control of a filibuster proof majority.  It also had the decided disability of having an Ivy-League-golden-boy of the the establishment in Obama who wasn't really going to change anything.   He wouldn't even put pressure on the then scumbag traitor Joe Lieberman or right-wing Democrats in the House to pass a really great Affordable Care Act, he gave away huge opportunities to have a really great stimulus bill to get over the Bush II economic crisis on the deluded dream of getting Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe to vote for it so he could claim he was a hero of bi-partisanship.  And he never really stopped that bullshit even after the Queens of Maine disappointed his dream over and over again.

Joe Biden and the the large majority of Democrats who would have given us a great revival of egalitarian democracy will, of course, take the hit, in the media, among the voters when it was ALL OF THE REPUBLICANS AND TWO REPUBLICANS WHO RAN AS DEMOCRATS WHO DENIED THEM THAT DESPERATELY NEEDED REVIVAL OF IT.   

The Supreme Court which is the actual author of today's political corruption, such as Manchin, Sinema and every Republican practice with their "free speech" "money equals speech" rulings will not take their share of the blame.  Which is too bad because if those campaign financing laws that were genuine bi-partisan responses to the crimes of Richard Nixon and his ilk had stood, we probably wouldn't be here today.   Things certainly didn't get more free and democratic with those expansions of "free speech" now, did they.  That corruption started even before the Court was in control of the far right, even before Louis Powell wrote his roadmap for millionaire and billionaire control of the government by anti-democratic means, the ACLU and the "civil liberties" industry had a lot to do with it too. 

That campaign money is given for the purposes of buying ad time and mail outs and advisors and operatives to lie crooks and criminals into office.  That is the "free speech" the Supreme Court privilege given to lies over the truth which is what "free speech" has come to mean under the corrupt wisdom of the Supreme Court and the most highly regarded legal minds of our time.  

But such a corrupt political system relies on corrupt individuals and in that Joe Manchin, Krysten Sinema AND EVERY REPUBLICAN INCLUDING LIZ CHENEY are the actual kind of governing majority that such a system can depend on.  The voters duped and made cynical by the media are the source of this, in the end, though as Republicans corrupt the machinery of elections, even when they are not so duped and cynical, it won't matter. 

We have probably lost our chance to save American democracy.  If Joe Biden and the real Democrats in the House and Senate can save this it will take a miracle.  I'm not expecting one to come to us anymore than it came to the kingdom of Judea.   I think the Brueggemann lecture which I will keep posting makes it clear that Jeremiah is more relevant than what you're going to get on NPR or CNN, maybe even MSNBC during the liberal ghetto hours. 

I am thinking that if I were in my twenties or thrities, even in my forties, I'd start pushing for secession of the Democratic states because as Louis Powell advocated, the corporate gangsters have successfully found out how to game the Constitution and the Bill of Rights to put them in permanent control and under the corruptions intentionally built into it, the very mechanisms Powell advocated using to produce a corrupt government, the corrupting of the Court, the Senate, through their gutting of campaign finance controls, controlling money going to politicians and buying seats,  and those he didn't include in his blue print for billionaire rule, the Electoral College, there is no hope of regaining even the patched up approximation of egalitarian democracy Lyndon Johnson achieved.   I don't want my nieces and nephews, their children to have to live under the rule of gangsters and thugs, fascists and neo-Nazis.  I care more about that than I do the United States staying together under gangster rule.  It is insane to not consider it in face of that.  The whole thing is going to go rotten, as rotten as Joe Manchin's following his dirty coal wealth and his families financial interest from boosting the price of epi-pens instead of what all of the least among us would have gotten from the Build Back Better Act.  As rotten as Kyrsten Sinema and EVERY REPUBLICAN IN THE HOUSE AND SENATE.