Sunday, April 1, 2012

Choosing to Live Among Beasts





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Matthias Hinze has discerned ... Ephrem’s view of Paradise, or what Hinze nicely calls “its (theological) geography”, preparing the way for a comparison, soon, as to “sacred space”, between Paradise and Mount Sinai, and Paradise and the Temple of Yahweh in Jerusalem.

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The great Marian Saint and Doctor of the Church, Ephrem Syrus, has written a masterful comparison of the Fall of Adam and the madness of King Nebuchednezzar in which he also provides possible insights into the organisation of Paradise (or probably more accurately the Garden in Paradise). Much of what follows will be based upon Matthias Hinze’s account of this in his book, The Madness of King Nebuchednezzar (The Ancient Near Eastern Origins and Early History), Brill, 1999, using as his text Saint Ephrem’s hymn XIII from his cycle of Hymns on Paradise. Hinze introduces this text as follows (pp. 158-159):



In this cycle, which was most likely composed during Ephrem’s years in Edessa (363-373 [AD]), Ephrem elaborates beautifully on the biblical Paradise narrative in Gen 2-3. Rather than providing a running commentary on the Genesis account as he has done elsewhere … Ephrem chooses to meditate on various themes he deems essential for a theological understanding of Paradise, such as Paradise as sacred space (and time), Paradise and the Church, Paradise and the Spirit, etc. The entire cycle is richly embellished with biblical allusions.



Often, throughout, Ephrem refers to God as “the Good One” and “the Just One”.

Hymn XIII “is organized around a comparison of Adam’s expulsion from Paradise on the one hand and Nebuchadnezzar’s exile among the beasts of the field on the other”. In the previous hymn (XII), Ephrem had prepared the ground with his “reflection on the different nature of animals and human beings in creation”. (Hinze, P. 159):



Animals do not know guilt or shame and, having no part in the resurrection, cannot be blamed for any wrongdoing (XII.19). Adam and Eve, on the contrary, were created and bestowed with a free will, because God wanted them to win the crown of immortality. Stanza 20, the last stanza of hymn XII, articulates the moral conclusion and hence forms the transition to our hymn. “The fool, who is unwilling to realize his honorable state, prefers to become just an animal, rather than a man, so that, without incurring judgment, he may serve naught but his lust”.



This no doubt reflects the sapiential writings in the Bible which constantly contrast the wise man and the fool. The latter has allowed himself to become immersed in the lower things.

“The fool who becomes like an animal foreshadows the comparison of Adam’s and Nebuchadnezzar’s lot”, continues Hinze (pp. 159-160), “The stage is set for hymn XIII. Our reading begins with stanza 2.



....



2. In the beginning God created the creation,

the fountainhead of delights;

the house which he constructed

provisions those who live therein,

for upon His gift

innumerable created beings depend;

from a single table

does He provide

every day for each creature

all things in due measure (Ps. 145:15-16).

Grant that we may acknowledge

Your grace, O Good One.



RESPONSE: Through Your grace make me worthy

of that Garden of happiness.



3. A garden full of glory,

a chaste bridal chamber,

did he give to that king

fashioned from the dust,

sanctifying and separating him

from the abode of wild animals;

for glorious was Adam

in all things –

in where he lived and what he ate,

in his radiance and dominion.

Blessed is He who elevated him above all

so that he might give thanks to the Lord of all ….



Matthias Hinze has discerned from these two stanzas Ephrem’s view of Paradise, or what Hinze nicely calls “its (theological) geography”, preparing the way for a comparison, soon, as to “sacred space”, between Paradise and Mount Sinai, and Paradise and the Temple of Yahweh in Jerusalem. Saint Ephrem, he says:



.... conceives of Paradise as a circular mountain which circumscribes the entire world. When Cain says to Abel in the Peshitta, “Let us go the valley …” (Gen 4:8, Syriac pqatā’, the Hebrew is lacking at this point; the LXX reads εìς τò πεδíον, i.e., ‘to the field’), this implied for Ephrem that their home was on a mountain. ….

The Paradise mountain is then divided further into three concentric circles, designating three levels of sacred space. A careful reading of the Genesis narrative provides the key to understanding the distinctive qualities of these three degrees of holiness. In Gen 3:3 Eve reports to the serpent that God had commanded them not to touch the tree (Hebrew lō(̒) tigg’û bô). Hebrew nāga‘ is ambiguous and can mean either ‘to touch’, or ‘to draw near’. The ambiguity is retained in the Peshitta (Syriac lā(’) tetqarrbûn), yet the verb used in Syriac (qreb in the Ethpa.) readily lends itself to Ephrem’s interpretation, which reads the command to mean ‘to approach’, rather than ‘to touch’. The Syriac thus implies that the divine prohibition was rather strict in nature and ruled out not only the touching of, but even the drawing near to, the tree.



Hinze then reflects back to Saint Ephrem’s Commentary on Genesis, in which, he says, Ephrem offers the same interpretation (p, 161):



The tempter then turned his mind to the commandment of Him who had set down the commandment, that [Adam and Eve] were not only commanded not to eat from one single tree, but they were not even to draw near to it. The serpent then realized that God had forewarned them about even looking at it lest they become entrapped by its beauty. […]

The serpent remained silent, for it perceived immediately that Eve was about to succumb. It was not so much the serpent’s counsel that entered her ear and provoked her to eat from the tree at it was her gaze, which she directed toward the tree, that lured her to pluck and eat of its fruit…..



“The fact that Adam and Eve were forbidden even to draw near to the tree called for an explanation”, says Hinze. “In his commentary, Ephrem suggests that Eve had to be guarded from gazing at the tree simply because the tree’s beauty would have enticed her immediately into longing for the fruit – which is, after all, what happened after the serpent seduced her”. But, in his Hymns on Paradise, Ephrem provides a different explanation. And this is where the notion of “sacred space” comes in. This is in keeping with the view of some able commentators today that Genesis 1 is essentially a document of cosmic Liturgy and theophany.

Anyway, Hinze draws the comparisons between the major biblical theophanies:



The closest analogue for the divine prohibition not to draw near in the Hebrew Bible is found in passages that deal with notion of sacred space, such as the theophany at Mount Sinai, or the Divine Presence in the Temple in Jerusalem. In either case we find a tripartite structure, i.e., three concentric circles which serve as demarcations of increasing degrees of holiness organized around the divine presence in the center. God’s command to Eve not to draw near to the tree therefore had to imply that the geography of Paradise followed the same pattern. On the summit of Mount Paradise stood the Tree of Life, representing the divine presence, or the Holy of Holies, an area Adam and Eve were not allowed to enter (cf. Hymns on Paradise III.3). The Tree of Knowledge marked the demarcation line (analogous to the veil in the sanctuary; cf. III.13.17) to the next level, the slopes of the mountain. The lower slopes, finally, indicate the realm where the animals lived. Along the foothills is the fence, produced by the cherub with the revolving sword (IV.1).



Hinze now follows Adam’s progression from his initial lower place of existence unto his placement, with Eve, in what Ephrem had called in hymn XIII, the “garden full of glory, a chaste bridal chamber”, “a common epithet for Mount Paradise in Ephrem’s hymns” (pp. 161-162):



Adam, here referred to as king, was fashioned from dust, still within the lower slopes of the mountain, an area he shared with the beasts. He names the animals, as Ephrem reports in the previous hymn … and is venerated by them. Adam then discovers his need for a mate, and God creates Eve. It is at this point that Adam and Eve are separated geographically from the animals and enter the middle slopes of the garden. In the words of our hymn (XIII.3), God was “sanctifying and separating him from the abode of wild animals; for glorious was Adam in all things – in where he lived and what he ate, in his radiance and dominion”.

Ephrem is quite specific about the distinctive qualities of Adam’s and Eve’s new environ: no animals dwell here. The first human beings are thus blessed with a unique domicile, food, radiance, and dominion.



This now sets the scene for Ephrem’s comparison of Adam with another mighty king of great privileges - albeit of lesser rationality: Nebuchednezzar.

These last lines, of course, anticipate the comparison with Nebuchadnezzar, who claimed many of the same privileges.



4. The king of Babylon resembled

Adam king of the universe:

both rose up against the one Lord

and were brought low;

He made them outlaws,

casting them afar.

Who can fail to weep,

seeing that these free-born kings

preferred slavery

and servitude.

Blessed is He who releases us

so that His image might no longer be in bondage.



“At this point”, Hinze notes (p. 163), “Ephrem introduces the key hermeneutic maneuver of the entire hymn, the exegetical coordination of Adam and Nebuchadnezzar. The obvious analogies between the two kings are quickly outlined. Like Adam, Nebuchadnezzar indulged in royal splendor. Yet, both heroes proved unable to remain content with their appointed status. Becoming increasingly greedy, they grew arrogant before God. Even their swift punishments were analogous in that both were expelled into an exile among the beasts”.



[Hermeneutic. Study of the principles of interpretation]





5. David wept for Adam,

at how he fell

from that royal abode

to the abode of wild animals (Ps 49:13).

Because he went astray through a beast

he became like the beasts:

He ate, together with them

as a result of the curse,

grass and roots,

and he died, becoming their peer.

Blessed is He who set him apart

from the wild animals again.



This is so applicable to the history of humanity, and to our own time, when the majority, being too tired and apathetic to fight against the current, give up and immerse themselves completely in this world. Like so many corpses being swept along by the tsunami of modern day existence. Hinze again (P. 169). “The fate of Adam and Nebuchadnezzar directly points at, or better stated, becomes a type of our own situation. We have become so accustomed to our debased nature that God has to chastise us as well, hoping that we too repent and “beg to return to our inheritance”. Our problem, as Ephrem explains, is that we have become used to our lives “among the animals”. (XIII.10) Not only have we lost any appreciation for the glorious existence for which we were intended, we have to be redeemed against our own wills”.

[AMAIC addition]. Special Marian help is urgently needed today for that extra ‘spiritual propulsion’, to lift us up right out of the maelstrom. And Almighty God has so generously supplied such emergency assistance for us in the form of the True Devotion to Mary. And it is an easy way, so Saint Louis de Montfort tells us:



As in nature there are secrets to learn in a short time, with little trouble, and at little cost, and things that we find easy to perform; so, in the order of grace, there are secrets that can be learned without any trouble, and things that can be easily accomplished – such as emptying ourselves of self, filling ourselves with God, and becoming perfect.



Hinze continues (pp. 163-164). “The discussion returns to Adam, and a new text is introduced, Ps 49:13, “Man (Hebrew ’ādām) does not abide in (Hebrew yālîn) honor; he is like the beasts that perish.”

“Like the rabbis, Ephrem saw in the third part of the biblical canon a storehouse of interpretive tools which, once juxtaposed with a verse from the Torah, shed light on the cryptic line under consideration. Jewish exegetes read the verse from Psalm 49 as an explanation about how long Adam resided in Paradise: Adam was expelled from his elevated status in less than a day’s time. …. Ephrem chooses a different interpretation. In the Peshitta, the first half of verse 13 reads, “Man (Syriac bārnā šā’) did not take notice (Syriac ’etbayyan) … of his honor”, which Ephrem understands to imply that Adam, here understood as the individual, rather than as the collective as the Syriac would suggest, took no cognizance of his elevated status he enjoyed at the moment when God led him (and Eve) away from the animals to the next higher level on Mount Paradise. Adam was careless and forfeit his privileged status”.



“The stanza provides us with the first glimpse into the ultimate message Ephrem seeks to communicate through his comparison of Adam and Nebuchadnezzar, and to which he will return at greater length in a short moment. Like Adam, we as well are unaware of our present status. Ephrem’s goal thus is to enable us to see what we have lost, since only by discerning this loss can we appreciate what we are lacking and develop a desire to be restored.



6. In that king [i.e., Nebuchadnezzar],

did God depict Adam:

since he provoked God by his exercise of kingship,

God stripped him of that kingship.

The Just One was angry and cast him out

Into the region of wild beasts;

he dwelt there with them

in the wilderness

and only when he repented did he return

to his former abode and kingship.

Blessed is He who has thus taught us to repent

so that we too may return to Paradise.



“The parallels between the two biblical accounts are striking indeed and invite comment” says Hinze (pp. 164-165). “Adam was cast into the lower slopes of the animals where he is made to share their life and even their diet (“But your food shall be the grasses of the field”, Gen 3:18). Nebuchadnezzar, too, was sent into the wilderness, roaming the steppe like a wild animal, eating herbs and roots, and growing out his hair and nails. The punishment is justified, as Ephrem is quick to point out by referring to God as the “Just One.” Frequently throughout the Hymns on Paradise Ephrem employs the two divine attributes of Grace and Justice, also known in rabbinic literature as middat haddîn and middat harahămîn, or in Ephrem’s terminology the “Just One” and the “Good One.” For Ephrem, this rabbinic notion of God’s justice and grace is inseparably linked with the notion of the human free will”.

….

“In XIII.4 Ephrem had already stressed that both Adam and Nebuchadnezzar acted out of their free will (“Who can fail to weep, seeing that these free-born kings preferred slavery and servitude”). Once again, the paraenetic [‘Paraenesis’ is the dissemination of advice, exhortation and/or recommendation] force behind Ephrem’s remarks is unmistakable. With the Church corresponding to Paradise, every Christian is put to the test just like Adam. The test is not about the fruit of the tree, but about obedience to Christ whose fruit we may enjoy daily. …. Christians are to respond by properly using the divine gift of free will”.

Earlier in the cycle, Ephrem expresses this crucial concept as follows:



Blessed indeed is that person on whose behalf

they [i.e., the assembly of Saints] have interceded before

the Good One,

before the Just One.

Those whom the Good One loves shall be in Eden,

those whom the Just One rejects, in Sheol. (VI.19)



“Adam’s fall is final, and his transgression does not allow for repentance. In fact, Adam returned to Paradise only with the advent of the second Adam – who is, of course, Christ. …. With Nebuchadnezzar the situation is different. The monarch finds a terminus to his penance and is immediately reinstalled into his royal splendor. This, then, is the rationale for the Nebuchadnezzar episode: it provides us with a figura of our own situation. Just as Nebuchadnezzar found release from his sin through penitence, so can we”. ....



Saturday, March 24, 2012

Pope in Mexico: Marxism No Longer Responds to Reality



By NICOLE WINFIELD,
Last Updated: Friday, March 23, 2012
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(AP) — Pope Benedict XVI began a pilgrimage to the New World on Friday, calling on Mexicans to conquer an "idolatry of money" that feeds drug violence and urging Cuba to leave behind a Marxism that "no longer responds to reality."
Benedict spoke to reporters aboard a special Alitalia flight that carried him to central Mexico, where a swelling crowd gathered to cheer him along his path from airport on his first visit to Spanish-speaking Latin America.
The pope said a lust for money was behind the drug violence that has claimed more than 47,000 lives in the country since a government crackdown began in 2006.
On Monday, Benedict will head for Cuba. He said it is "evident that Marxist ideology as it was conceived no longer responds to reality," and he urged Cubans to "find new models, with patience, and in a constructive way."
The comment about Marxism, in response to questions from a journalist, was as blunt as anything his predecessor, John Paul II, made during his groundbreaking 1998 trip to Cuba, though the earlier pope is widely credited with helping bring down socialism in eastern Europe.
Benedict cautioned that "this process requires patience and also decisiveness."
Asked about reports that dissidents in Cuba are still routinely harassed and arrested, including in the weeks leading up to his visit, Benedict said that the church wants "to help in the spirit of dialogue to avoid trauma and to help bring about a just and fraternal society, as we want in the whole world."
"We want to collaborate in this sense, and it's obvious that the church is always on the side of freedom, freedom of conscience, freedom of religion," the pope said.
Benedict said John Paul's visit to Cuba ushered in a slow process of dialogue and cooperation between church and state on the island.
During that trip, John Paul made a clear if cautious call for then-President Fidel Castro to open up Cuban society, take steady if gradual steps toward democracy and give the church a greater voice. He also called for the release of political prisoners while giving Castro what he wanted, a condemnation of the U.S. embargo.
Asked about Benedict's statement, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez said the government respects all opinions. "We consider the exchange of ideas to be useful. Our people have deep convictions developed over the course of our history," he said, adding that the Cuban system "is a democratic social project ... which is constantly perfecting itself."
In Mexico, Benedict said, violence is destroying the nation's young.
The "great responsibility of the church is to educate the conscience, teach moral responsibility and strip off the mask (from) the idolatry of money that enslaves mankind, and unmask the false promise, this lie that is behind" the drug culture, he said.
It is a message that Enrique Abundes, one of thousands lining the papal route, was waiting to hear. The 46-year-old shoe-factory worker and father of five said he believed Benedict would inspire Mexicans to keep their children away from the temptations of organized crime.
"The pope's visit to our city will call attention to the violence and, for us, to be good examples to our children," he said.
The weeklong trip to Mexico and Cuba, Benedict's first to both countries, will be a test of stamina for the pope, who turns 85 next month. At the airport on Friday in Rome, the pope used a cane, apparently for the first time in public, as he walked about 100 yards (meters) to the airliner's steps.
Papal aides, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Benedict has been using the cane in private for about two months because it makes him feel more secure, not for any medical reason. Last fall, Benedict started using a wheeled platform to navigate the vast spaces of St. Peter's Basilica during ceremonies. The Vatican has said that device was employed to help the pope save his energy.
John Paul II was just 58 when he made the first of five visits to Mexico, where he is literally venerated by many Mexican Catholics.
The pope's plane set down Friday afternoon in Guanajuato, a deeply conservative state in sun-baked central Mexico, and his route into the city of Leon was thronged with thousands of people eager to get a glimpse of the pontiff.
Maria Jesus Caudillo, a stationery story owner in Leon, found a spot early on the Popemobile route with her four nieces and nephews.
"John Paul came to Mexico but never to Leon and never this pope," she said. "It's a miracle that in all the country, he chose to come to Leon."
Volunteers led the crowds in chants of "Benedicto! Benedicto!" as passing drivers pounded their horns in encouragement. Vendors sold Benedict buttons, T-shirts, Vatican flags and key chains with the image of the pope and the Virgin of Guadalupe.
By midafternoon, many spectators sought refuge from the hot sun under trees on the roadside, fanning themselves or even falling asleep.
Vendors complained about small crowds and lack of sales.
"We thought there would be more people," said Agustin Rodriguez, a 55-year old fruit seller.
Jorge Alfredo, a 15-year-old delivery boy, rolled his bicycle down the sidewalk past drowsy spectators and said he wouldn't be waiting around to see Benedict. None of his friends would be coming either, he said.
"They prefer the other pope," he said.
Many businesses and schools had closed for the day in Leon, and thousands of people were traveling in on buses from across the country.
Still about 30 percent of the city's 6,000 hotel rooms were still empty, said Fabiola Vera, president of the Association of Hotels and Motels of Leon. She said people may have been discouraged by rumors that there weren't enough rooms.
The main campground in Leon, meant for tens of thousands of pilgrims, remained empty. The only evidence of preparations early Friday were about a dozen portable toilets, a single police patrol and a group of three men and a woman putting up a tent to sell T-shirts and photos of Benedict.
Church officials say as many as 300,000 people are expected for Sunday's Mass and Carlos Aguiar, president of the Mexican Episcopal Conference, said he expected the faithful to begin arriving later Friday.
Benedict is visiting a church battling to overcome painful setbacks that include legalized abortion and gay marriage in the capital of the most populous Catholic country in the Spanish-speaking world.
Guanajuato's constitution declares that life begins at conception and bars abortion with extremely limited exceptions. Seven women were jailed there in 2010 for the deaths of their newborns and later released. The women said they had miscarriages, not abortions.
Benedict's church is encouraging more such laws across Mexico, and a measure before Congress would strip away many of the remaining restrictions on religion that were imposed during conflicts more than a century ago.
Church leaders also are trying to overcome a scandal over the most influential Mexican figure in the church.
The Rev. Marcial Maciel founded the Legionaries of Christ order, which John Paul II praised as a model of rectitude. But a series of investigations forced the order to acknowledge in 2010 that Maciel had sexually abused seminarians and fathered three children. Church documents released in a book this week reveal the Vatican had been told of Maciel's drug abuse and pederasty decades ago.
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Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Michael Weissenstein, E. Eduardo Castillo and Dario Lopez-Mills in Leon, Mexico, and Frances D'Emilio in Rome.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Battling a Dictatorship of Relativism

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DICTATORSHIP OF RELATIVISM

Pope Benedict XVI

A conversation with Peter Seewald

In his futuristic novel Brave New World, the British author Aldous Huxley had predicted in 1932 that falsification would be the decisive element of modernity. In a false reality with its false truth – or the absence of truth altogether – nothing, in the final analysis, is important any more.There is no truth, there is no standpoint. Today, in fact, truth is regarded as far too subjective a concept for us to find therein a universally valid standard. The distinction between genuine and fake seems to have been abolished. Everything is to some extent negotiable. Is that the relativism against which you were warning so urgently?

It is obvious that the concept of truth has become suspect. Of course it is correct that it has been much abused. Intolerance and cruelty have occurred in the name of truth. To that extent people are afraid when someone says, "This is the truth", or even "I have the truth." We never have it; at best it has us. No one will dispute that one must be careful and cautious in claiming the truth. But simply to dismiss it as unattainable is really destructive.
A large proportion of contemporary philosophies, in fact, consist of saying that man is not capable of truth. But viewed in that way, man would not be capable of ethical values, either. Then he would have no standards. Then he would only have to consider how he arranged things reasonably for himself, and then at any rate the opinion of the majority would be the only criterion that counted. History, however, has sufficiently demonstrated how destructive majorities can be, for instance, in systems such as Nazism and Marxism, all of which also stood against truth in particular.
"We are building a dictatorship of relativism", you declared in your homily at the opening of the conclave [in 2005], "that does not recognize anything as definitive and whose ultimate standard consists solely of one's own ego and desires."
That is why we must have the courage to dare to say: Yes, man must seek the truth; he is capable of truth. It goes without saying that truth requires criteria for verification and falsification. It must always be accompanied by tolerance, also. But then truth also points out to us those constant values which have made mankind great. That is why the humility to recognize the truth and to accept it as a standard has to be relearned and practiced again.
The truth comes to rule, not through violence, but rather through its own power; this is the central theme of John's Gospel: When brought before Pilate, Jesus professes that he himself is The Truth and the witness to the truth. He does not defend the truth with legions but rather makes it visible through his Passion and thereby also implements it.
In a world that has become relativistic, a new paganism has gained more and more dominion over people's thoughts and actions. It has long since become clear not only that there is a blank space, a vacuum, alongside the Church, but also that something like an anti-church has been established. The Pope in Rome, one German newspaper wrote, should be condemned for the sole reason that by his positions he has "transgressed against the religion" that today "is valid in this country", namely, the "civil religion". Has a new Kulturkampf started here, as Marcello Pera has analyzed it? The former president of the Italian Senate speaks about a "large-scale battle of secularism against Christianity".
A new intolerance is spreading, that is quite obvious. There are well-established standards of thinking that are supposed to be imposed on everyone. These are then announced in terms of so-called "negative tolerance". For instance, when people say that for the sake of negative tolerance [i.e. "not offending anyone"] there must be no crucifix in public buildings. With that we are basically experiencing the abolition of tolerance, for it means, after all, that religion, that the Christian faith is no longer allowed to express itself visibly.
When, for example, in the name of non-discrimination, people try to force the Catholic Church to change her position on homosexuality or the ordination of women, then that means that she is no longer allowed to live out her own identity and that, instead, an abstract, negative religion is being made into a tyrannical standard that everyone must follow. That is then seemingly freedom – for the sole reason that it is liberation from the previous situation.
In reality, however, this development increasingly leads to an intolerant claim of a new religion, which pretends to be generally valid because it is reasonable, indeed, because it is reason itself, which knows all and, therefore, defines the frame of reference that is now supposed to apply to everyone.
In the name of tolerance, tolerance is being abolished; this is a real threat we face. The danger is that reason – so-called Western reason – claims that it has now really recognized what is right and thus makes a claim to totality that is inimical to freedom. I believe that we must very emphatically delineate this danger. No one is forced to be a Christian. But no one should be forced to live according to the "new religion" as though it alone were definitive and obligatory for all mankind.
The aggressiveness with which this new religion appears was described by the weekly news magazine Der Spiegel as a "crusade of the atheists". It is a crusade that mocks Christianity as the "God delusion" and classifies religion as a curse that is also to blame for all wars. You yourself have already spoken about a "subtle or even not so subtle aggression against the Church". Even without a totalitarian regime, you say that there is pressure today to think the way everybody thinks, that attacks against the Church show "how this conformity can really be a genuine dictatorship". Harsh words.
But the reality is in fact such that certain forms of behavior and thinking are being presented as the only reasonable ones and, therefore, as the only appropriately human ones. Christianity finds itself exposed now to an intolerant pressure that at first ridicules it – as belonging to a perverse, false way of thinking – and then tries to deprive it of breathing space in the name of an ostensible rationality.
It is very important for us to oppose such a claim of absoluteness conceived as a certain sort of "rationality". Indeed, this is not pure reason itself but rather the restriction of reason to what can be known scientifically – and at the same time the exclusion of all that goes beyond it. Of course it is true that historically there have been wars because of religion, too, that religion has also led to violence. . . .
From: Pope Benedict XVI, Light of the World: The Pope, The Church and The Signs Of The Times. A Conversation with Peter Seewald (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2010), 50-54.
....

Taken from: http://www.lst.edu/academics/landas-archives/373-dictatorship-of-relativism

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Pope calls for silence against Internet noise




January 25, 2012 10:53AM


People "frequently bombarded" with information on internet

Vatican's own news website receives 8-10,000 hits a day


ALSO.Google Chrome enters mobile browser war .... Catholic leader Pope Benedict XVI has called for restraint on the internet, but admitted social media can be useful. Picture: File Photo Source: AP



POPE Benedict XVI has hailed the benefits of silent reflection and encouraged people to stop being "bombarded" by information from the Internet,



But the pontiff says social networks could still be useful modes of communication.



"People today are frequently bombarded with answers to questions they have never asked and to needs of which they were unaware," the pope said in his now-traditional yearly message on the Vatican and social comunications.



"It is necessary to develop an appropriate environment, a kind of ecosystem that maintains a just equilibrium between silence, words, images and sounds," said the pope, while also defending responsible Internet communication.



"Attention should be paid to the various types of websites, applications and social networks which can help people today to find time for reflection and authentic questioning,'' the pope said.



"In concise phrases, often no longer than a verse from the Bible, profound thoughts can be communicated," the 84-year-old pope said in an apparent reference to the micro-blogging site Twitter.



But he added this was true only "as long as those taking part in the conversation do not neglect to cultivate their own inner lives."



The Pope's speech comes as the Vatican reveals its news website is getting between 8000 and 10,000 hits a day with peaks of up to 16,000 hits over Christmas.



The website, which brings together all the Vatican's official communications and news from the Catholic Church around the world, was launched in June.



The data was announced by archbishop Claudio Maria Celli, head of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications at a Vatican press conference.



Celli said the average time visitors spent on the site in English, Italian and Spanish was around two minutes, which he said showed that those consulting it were not doing so "by mistake" but were reading some of its continent.



Almost a third of visitors - 27 percent - were from the United States, followed by browsers from Italy, Germany and Spain.



There were also many visitors from Canada, Brazil, Mexico and Argentina.



Celli said most the visits to the website were through social media networks - with 65 percent from Facebook and 30 percent from Twitter.



Read more: http://www.news.com.au/technology/pope-calls-for-silence-against-internet-noise/story-e6frfro0-1226253184682#ixzz1lpnxxGz5


Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Inhuman Communist-Driven Technocracy




Technocracy can live without humanism - but we cannot


by:

Jennifer Oriel



From: The Australian January 25, 2012 12:00AM



TO write of Western civilisation in the 21st century is to invite suspicion. To write well of it is considered treason in fashionable quarters. So it is best done for good reason.


The progressive displacement of liberal democracy in Western politics and higher education with technocracy is good reason.

In November, we witnessed perhaps the most savage strike on liberal democracy ever issued from its contemporary ruling classes.

The EU responded to the economic catastrophe in Greece by effectively replacing its democratically elected leader with an EU technocrat and banker, Lucas Papademos. Their ghastly encore was to prohibit democratic elections in Greece for 100 days.

The official rationale peddled for this gross violation of a sovereign people's will was technocratic; the EU wanted to parachute in its faceless men to balance the ledger under austerity measures. But when they raised the sanctity of EU geopolitical unity as an adjunct cause for instilling totalitarian control, the philosophy and politics of technocracy coalesced into a European condition.

...Technocracy is an idea for the organisation of society based on scientific and expert knowledge. Philosophers Robert Scharff and Val Dusek have traced its origins to the Renaissance figure Francis Bacon and later luminaries of the Enlightenment such as Comte de Saint-Simon. In the early 20th century, it was revived by engineer Thorstein Veblen in the first modern attempt to mould technocracy into a political movement.





















Despite its Western origins, it is China, not the West, that is the leading technocracy of the 21st century.





















The relationship between technocracy and the decline of Western civilisation is close. Mao Zedong loathed the liberal humanism of Western civilisation and from 1966 to 1976 he enforced a series of economic and educational reforms that broke the minds and bodies of many Chinese citizens who supported the freedoms associated with Western life.





















The comparatively concealed history of communism is the technological and scientific research championed on the conviction that modernity was -- and must be -- separable from liberalism and democracy.





















Such a distinction was essential to the success of the communist project, not in the least because of the military power that was required to defend it internally and externally.





















In his book Rise of the Red Engineers, Johns Hopkins University sociologist Joel Andreas chronicles the incipient emergence of a Chinese technocratic class in the late stages of the Cultural Revolution. At universities such as Tsinghua, students were trained in engineering then educated in communist philosophy, producing perfect technocratic citizens.





















China is today emerging as a scientific superpower. In Research Trends, Andrew Plume illustrated that by measure of mass research output (a common indicator of a country's higher education prestige), China sits second to the US in scientific rank. Plume predicted that by next year, it will surpass the US in mass scientific output. The quality of the output was not considered, but the pursuit of technocracy in China has exacted a great human cost.





















In his 1957 speech "On the Correct Handling of Contradictions Among the People", Mao railed against intellectuals not committed to communism, exonerating those who put their fellow citizens to death on the charge of autonomy. Labelled counter-revolutionaries, Mao urged that these autonomous liberal intellectuals be "eliminated wherever found". University academics and students were forced to study Marxism to acquire a "correct political orientation . . . and become workers with both socialist consciousness and culture".





















From the 1980s, Deng Xiaoping instituted a new system of technocracy with explicit policies to recruit political leadership from university graduates. A new era of scientific management modelled on the Saint-Simonian ideal had arrived.





















Despite their focus on science, Chinese universities continue to mandate Marxism on the undergraduate curriculum, cognisant of the cultural power of higher education and its relationship to nation-building.





















Unlike Western liberalism, Marxist materialism does not provoke the clash of culture between science and the arts elucidated in CP Snow's famous essay Two Cultures. Rather, technocracy and Marxist materialism are entirely wholly compatible.





















Technocracy has bloomed in Chinese higher education and politics because it is the philosophical and material perfection of the communist principle. It thus requires the forceful suppression of liberalism, most notably embodied by Chinese artists and humanists such as Liao Yiwu and Ai Weiwei, who have been maltreated and imprisoned by their government. Technocracy is not conducive to the human freedoms for which Westerners have fought across seas and centuries and now inherit as a birthright.





















The arts and humanities remain under suspicion in China. Political scientists such as Cheng Li and Princeton University's Lynn White revealed that throughout the history of the People's Republic of China, social scientists have been ostracised and sometimes despised.





















Humanism, it seems, nestles most safely in the bosom of the West.





















The recent introduction of technocracy by EU leadership into Greece, the philosophical birthplace of Western Civilisation, is more than symbolic. As in China, a great purge of classical liberalism has been taking place in Western universities since the 1970s.





















We have a problem.





















Western civilisation has been almost eliminated as a continuous historical fact and teachable field of study in Western universities. The National Association of Scholars' recent report "The Vanishing West" surveyed the decimation of Western civilisation programs in North American public universities from 1964-2010. In 1964, 82 per cent of public universities sampled offered Western civilisation as a sequence. By 2010, it was 10 per cent.





















In part, the teaching of Western civilisation has declined because of growing multiculturalism in universities and subsequent competing demands for cultural recognition in the curriculum. However, there is no apparent reason why universities should not offer specialisation in various civilisations and cultures, including that of the West.





















Western civilisation has been -- and continues to be -- subjected to hostility in higher education. The culmination of anti-Western sentiment was the 1987 protest by Jesse Jackson at Stanford University, where he led a chant of "Hey he, ho, ho, Western's civ has got to go". Really? Then here's a taste of what's going to go: Plato, Socrates, Hypatia, Galileo, the university, underground sewage, antibiotics, soap, contraception, the Renaissance, the Reformation, the Enlightenment, Mozart, the French Revolution, the American Revolution, Shakespeare, Walt Whitman, women's liberation, de Beauvoir, democracy, freedom of thought, freedom of expression, newspapers, aeroplanes, movies, jeans. Oh, and electricity.





















An edition of The Australian could be filled only with names and historical events that have composed Western civilisation, a musical score recognised across the globe. Yet we do not teach it in our universities. It is a historical error spiralling into absurdity.





















The Enlightenment, one of the pinnacles of Western civilisation, was an extension of the earlier scientific revolution. As historian Niall Ferguson points out in his recent book Civilization, its central feature was social science; the development of reason as a key to unlocking the mysteries of humanity.





















Without the humanities and arts, technocracy can survive but Western civilisation cannot. It is the most optimistically and profoundly human of civilisations from its representative government, its exaltation of the reasoning human mind over supernatural authority, and its protection of the freedoms prerequisite to artistic expression and individual autonomy.





















The notion that Western civilisation is in decline remains as popular today as it was a century ago when Howard Spengler penned The Decline of the West. But all of the time spent defending cultural perimeters during the past three decades has been a lost opportunity to cultivate civilisation's positive values.





















Freedom, truth and beauty comprise the reason for Western civilisation and the universities that were established to grant it perpetual life. That this history has been struck off by revisionists is cause for ire.





















After the culture wars, as in all warfare, the task of reconstruction must begin. I begin as I hope to end, imagining Western civilisation in the arms of its great poet Walt Whitman: O setting sun! though the time has come/I still warble under you, if none else does, unmitigated adoration.





















Jennifer Oriel is a Melbourne-based writer and higher education analyst















Taken from: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/higher-education/opinion/technocracy-can-live-without-humanism-but-we-cannot/story-e6frgcko-1226252731104



















Sunday, January 22, 2012

Pope Benedict XVI’s “Masterpiece” Address on Logical Positivism


 
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We need no strategy, Benedict said at the Konzerthaus, to relaunch the Church. “Rather, it is a question of setting aside mere strategy and seeking total transparency, not bracketing or ignoring anything from the truth of our present situation, but living the faith fully here and now in the utterly sober light of day, appropriating it completely, and stripping away from it anything that only seems to belong to faith, but in truth is mere convention or habit”.

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The Pope’s Sept. 22 speech to the Bundestag, Germany’s national parliament, became the latest candidate for “best speech of his papacy.” Addressing German lawmakers, but really speaking to Western culture generally, Benedict took on logical positivism -- the view that only empirical science counts as real knowledge, and that all moral claims are subjective. Secular media outlets, even those which were otherwise critical, raved about the speech. Der Spiegel called it “courageous” and “brilliant,” while Bild quoted a prominent lawmaker hailing it as a “masterpiece.” Even Die Welt grudgingly allowed that it was “not completely without cunning.” (In a further indication that Benedict got through, the left-wing London Guardian published a lengthy commentary on the speech, encouraging secular environmentalists to see past their stereotypes of the pope as “a prissy and repressed German professor”.) Armin Schwibach gave this assessment of the Pope’s visit to Germany in: THE BENEDICT REVOLUTION http://benedettoxviforum.freeforumzone.leonardo.it/discussione.aspx?idd=8527207&p=251 ROME, Sept. 26 (kath.net/as) – There is no doubt that the German trip of Pope Benedict XVI was a historic event. What the Pope said and did is like a red-hot stone thrown into a murky pool that is incapable of heating up, of boiling, of being stirred up. But the stone is so hot that even in the scummy water it continues to burn. However, the slimy pool needs to be cleaned so that the light of the new-old glow of faith that the Pope proclaims may reach the core and work the desired renewal. Of course, the Pope’s words do not apply only to Germany. The Pope always speaks to the universal Church. But in a secularized country, his words take on a special relevance, especially when they are addressed to a Church that must internally fight its own self-inflicted secularization. Beyond the Pope’s words, inspiration and teaching which we can take away, it became clearer during the visit that there was a great distance between the truth of the faith that the Pope preached and the reality of the Church that surrounded him – like the dubious ‘democracy drill’ that preceded the Prayer Vigil with the youth in Freiburg on Saturday evening, or the way people received communion at Mass the next day. The difference between the Pope’s celebration of the Eucharist and how others do it was never so clearly demonstrated as during those four days. It also quickly became clear what Benedict XVI thinks of the so-often cited ‘dialog process’ before the visit – namely, nothing. One of the most-used words before the visit, ‘dialog’ never once came from the lips of the Pope during the visit. This in a country where the Church has programmed a ‘dialog process’ lasting till 2015, a process conceived in terms of mundane structures, following the usual worldly schemata. Instead, Benedict XVI upheld the ‘unequal exchange’ between God and man, for which the Church thanks the Lord. The emphasis was on that ‘unequal’ exchange. The Pope stressed the need for a ‘de-mundanization’ of the Church as a condition for any real ‘change’ – not just putting fresh paint on rotten wood to give the appearance of something ‘new’. In other words, change must have to do with substance, which cannot result from elaborate maneuvers, because “the fundamental motive for change is the apostolic mission of the disciples and the Church herself”. The Church, in other words, “must constantly rededicate herself to her mission”, the Pope said in his last address on Sunday at the Freiburger Konzerthaus. This message “is built, first of all, on personal experience”, “finds expression in relationships”, and spreads a universal message. But through the demands and constraints of the world, Benedict admonished, “this witness is constantly obscured, the relationships are alienated, and the message is relativised”. And that is why the Church needs urgently to set herself apart from her surroundings, to make herself ‘unworldly’. That is why one must not be so concerned with the external image of the Church but rather, to draw from the mystery of the Church, from the depths of her communion with Christ. This is not something that is readily at one’s disposal, and it can never be the subject of ‘dialog’. At Olympic Stadium, the Pope said in his homily, that if one only looks at the outward form of the Church, then the Church would “appear as merely one of the many organizations within a democratic society, whose criteria and laws are then applied to the task of evaluating and dealing with such a complex entity as the Church”. Then, “the Church is no longer a source of joy,” and “dissatisfaction and discontent begin to spread, when people’s superficial and mistaken notions of Church, their dream Church, fail to materialize”. Result: Goodbye, dialog process! In other words: To use the dialog process as the leading point to start renewing the life of the Church means placing the horse before the cart. Because Church members must first turn to God, if only to thank him for having called them to his Church. The Pope’s words in Berlin, in Freiburg to the Central Committee of German Catholics (ZDK), and finally to the entire Church, at the Konzerthaus, set a milestone: Now it will no longer be possible to hide behind commissions, committees and dialog groups. Like Christ, his Vicar poses the decisive question that cannot be answered ‘structurally”: Do you love Christ? Do you love his Church, which is his mystical Body? Benedict XVI urges that we must seriously consider the indispensable ‘scandal’ of Christianity in order to “discover the right form of detachment from the world, to move resolutely away from the Church’s worldliness”. It does not mean rejecting nor disavowing the world, but with the true freedom that Christians have, one does away with the bar of conventional ballasts in order to communicate Christian vitality and witness authentically. That does not mean withdrawing from the world, but its opposite. We need no strategy, Benedict said at the Konzerthaus, to relaunch the Church. “Rather, it is a question of setting aside mere strategy and seeking total transparency, not bracketing or ignoring anything from the truth of our present situation, but living the faith fully here and now in the utterly sober light of day, appropriating it completely, and stripping away from it anything that only seems to belong to faith, but in truth is mere convention or habit”. The Benedict Revolution has entered a new and even more expressive phase. The Pope wants radicality, passion and a return to the primordial Rock of the faith, because only from this faith can everything else follow. He demands ‘total honesty’ which exposes everything that is relative and eliminates it by kindling ‘the torch of unvarnished faith’. Only through such untarnished faith do we recover the primacy of God, which is not a result but a foundation. “It is above all the primacy of God that we must recover in our world and our life, because it is this primacy that allows us to find the truth about who we are, and it is in knowing and following the will of God that we find our true good,” Benedict XVI said in Ancona last Sept. 11. In Germany, Benedict XVI showed that he is a prophet. His admonitions and instructions immediately bring to mind his great and saintly predecessor Gregory VII, through whose reforms a once ailing Church achieved a new flowering and sanctity. One must hope that the revolutionary storm that Benedict XVI has sought to spark off will not be stifled in the banality of everyday. It would be convenient for many if they could simply check off the visit of the German Pope as nothing more than a ‘show’ that is over and done with, and that one can now go on with business as usual’. One must hope that there is some terrain which has absorbed the words of the Pope like a dry sponge so that it can become fruitful again. One must hope that this terrain will continue to be tended by the shepherd and that it will not be forgotten by the Pope. [????] At the same time, it will be more difficult for many to remain indifferent to Benedict’s words. The ‘small relative’ that is his faithful flock in Germany is called to forge ahead cum et sub Petro (with and under Peter) and to implement the teachings of the Pope in the German Church. The testament and legacy of Benedict XVI is the possibility to go forward with him on the firm foundations of faith and make him the starting point for authentic renewal. Everything else would be banal palaver in a Church that has the mission to announce ‘the scandal of the Cross’ but which has succumbed to the illusion that it is attractive to surrender to the world and to sell the truth short. One can say, “The games are over”: Either the German Church follows the Pope, or it consolidates an already existing de facto schism. The Pope’s testament is the absolute challenge that will determine the future of the German Church. ------------------------------------ Benedict XVI seeks spiritual reform in Germany by Jean-Marie Guénois Translated from Sept. 25, 2011 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- .... St. Augustine: ‘[Jesus] is closer to me than I am to myself’... He who is infinitely above me is yet so deeply within me that he is my true interiority.” ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- .... it seems to me Benedict XVI decided he would be wasting his time at their meeting trying to knock sense into the heads of obstinate bishops who very likely agree with all or most of the radical reforms urged by their ‘dialog partners’. So he would use his visit to Germany, as he did, to address the faithful directly – and show them how radically different his approach was to renewal of the Church from that which most of their bishops shared with the dissidents! This was already evident from the homily at the Mass in Olympic Stadium, and he built it up over the next three days until the climactic and truly dramatic crescendo of his exposition on the last day in Freiburg. Gentle Benedict shows how one can provide high drama when needed, even without histrionics or theatrical actions. ... in Freiburg ... Benedict XVI did not relent in criticizing harshly the functioning not just of the German Church but of the entire Catholic Church. He proposed ‘a change’ in terms of a ‘continual conversion’ because “it is time to courageously give up what is worldly in the Church”. A Church, he goes on, that settles down in the world, becomes ‘self-satisfied’ and adapts to the standards of the world, giving “greater weight to organization and institutionalization”. She must, on the contrary, “detach herself from her tendency towards worldliness’, otherwise, her witness is obscured, her relationships are alienated, and her message is relativised. Nothing to do with a fresh coat of paint – it needs a ‘correction’ so she can resume the right course. This agenda of Benedict XVI is known, but he has not made it so explicit before. Of course, ‘the decline in religious practice’ is part of it, just as ‘the distance taken by a notable part of the baptized’. But the Pope also responded to the principal protest movement within the Church, Wir sind Kirche. Very much present in Germany, it advocates reforms that are anti-dogmatic and democratic. Playing on their name and turning it around, Benedict XVI said ‘We all are the Church’. Which is to say, everyone who has been baptized ‘and’ the clergy. .... “Liberated from material and political burdens and privileges... The Church can be truly open to the world... not in order to win men for an institution with its own claims to power, but to lead them to themselves by leading them to him of whom each person can say with St. Augustine: ‘He is closer to me than I am to myself’... He who is infinitely above me is yet so deeply within me that he is my true interiority.” .... This trip was predicted to be difficult, but it was a success. The third visit of Benedict XVI to his native land was supposed to be a dialectical festival of uncommon vigor. But this Pope with his reserved demeanour deflected all arrows without difficulty, throwing critics and opponents alike off their game.



.... For more, see:


Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Pseudo-Intellectual, Christopher Hitchens. True Humanitarian, Vaclav Havel


An intellectual to learn from and a fraud to recoil from

 
OVER the past fortnight two famous men died. One was a true intellectual, but above all a great and good man, who suffered persecution and imprisonment for the sake of the freedom of his people. The other, though an accomplished verbal conjurer and master of invective, was an intellectual dilettante much mistaken for the real thing by his media groupies.

The first was, of course, Vaclav Havel; the second was the journalist Christopher Hitchens. The reaction to Hitchens's demise tells us a lot about the modern media - none of it particularly good. In The Australian last week Tony Jones fulsomely lamented that the void left by Hitchens's death was " immense and unfillable ... because he was one of the great public intellectuals of modern times". Actually, he wasn't. Hitchens was just a journalistic commentator, and a professional contrarian who had some lucky breaks. I would describe him with the same scornful words he used to describe Malcolm Muggeridge, (a really good journalist whom, naturally, he hated) "a fraud and a mountebank".
 
It is an English thing, the Oxbridge talent for shock, fury and fulmination all delivered in the closed-mouthed plummy accent. On paper, Hitchens had a talent for insult: liars, cretins, hypocrites, despots, idiots looking for a village; and for festooning these entertainments with history and literature. To the dead earnestness of US public debates, where epigrams and puns are darkly suspected of betraying moral frivolity, he brought the exhilaration of wicked puns, the volcanic eruption of invectives, the excoriating similes, the savage reductio ad absurdum, the dismissive sneer. He was an entertaining writer, whose schtick was shock - and meanness. His campaign against Mother Teresa was the absolute epitome of that. It was not just Hitchens's proselytising atheism that infuriated his critics, but the sheer pointless nastiness of it. He called this woman, whose personal possessions amounted to a spare habit and pair of sandals, "a demagogue, an obscurantist and a servant of earthly powers". No one is above criticism, including Mother Teresa, but the documentary Hell's Angel was almost deranged; a bizarrely gothic concoction - complete with a backdrop caricature that looked like something our own Bill Leak would have thought up. It was character assassination of a good and simple person, who like St Francis took Our Lord's injunction to treat your neighbour as yourself literally. Tied as this is to the concept of grace and true Christian charity, Hitchens was defeated. In the words of Cristina Odone, he was spiritually illiterate. And he didn't want to know. There was irrationality in this rage, this fundamentalist atheism. To read the gush over Hitchens in the same week as the death of one of the truly great intellectual leaders of modern times is at one level absurd; on another, deeply depressing. Havel was someone who, though not a practising Christian (although he will be given a Catholic burial), would have understood Mother Teresa. Havel understood that, without the personal virtues we cannot have a virtuous society. He understood, and was deeply respectful of, the spiritual dimension of life, as he warned after the "velvet revolution" against one materialist fallacy being replaced by another. In his lecture at the Prague forum last year, he lamented "the swollen self-consciousness of this civilisation, whose basic attributes include the supercilious idea that we know everything and what we don't yet know we'll soon find out, because we know how to go about it. We are convinced this supposed omniscience of ours, which proclaims the staggering progress of science and technology and rational knowledge in general, permits us to serve anything that is demonstrably useful. With the cult of measurable profit, proven progress and visible usefulness, there disappears respect for mystery, and along with it humble reverence for everything we shall never measure and know, not to mention the vexed question of the infinite and eternal, which were until recently the most important horizons of our actions." In a recent article, online editor Michael Cook (of BioEdge and MercatorNet) said that although Havel, like Hitchens, was not a Christian, "he defended the achievements of Christendom because it appreciated that man is a mystery and because it had preserved a commitment to transcendent values. He had suffered under communism and he knew what the alternative was. Unlike Hitchens, he knew that without God, anything is possible. Anything terrible and depraved." So let Havel have the last word. "In today's multicultural world, the truly reliable path to co-existence, to peaceful co-existence and creative co-operation, must start from what is at the root of all cultures and what lies infinitely deeper in human hearts and minds than political opinion, convictions, antipathies, or sympathies - it must be rooted in self-transcendence. "Transcendence as a hand reached out to those close to us, to foreigners, to the human community, to all living creatures, to nature, to the universe. Transcendence as a deeply and joyously experienced need to be in harmony even with what we ourselves are not, what we do not understand, what seems distant from us in time and space, but with which we are nevertheless mysteriously linked because, together with us, all this constitutes a single world. Transcendence as the only real alternative to extinction. "The (American) Declaration of Independence states that the Creator gave man the right to liberty. It seems man can realise that liberty only if he does not forget the one who endowed him with it." 

Taken from: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/opinion/an-intellectual-to-learn-from-and-a-fraud-to-recoil-from/story-fn562txd-1226229597433