The shutdown explained

Well, that’s not how I’d put it, but … it seems apt for describing Republicans and Democrats trying to shift blame for the October 1 shutdown of the Federal Government.

Pat Buchanan, once a Republican before the party left him, lobs one at the Democrats anyway.

Spoiler: the Democrats have the mainstream media delivering muck for them. And the Republicans are recidivist obstructionists, so they’re “the usual suspects.” Round them up.

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“The remarks made in this essay do not represent scholarly research. They are intended as topical stimulations for conversation among intelligent and informed people.” (Gerhart Niemeyer)

Some succinct standing advice on recurring themes.

Just what did He say on that Road to Emmaus?

A shaggy-dog biographical note with a point at the end.

A good 20 years before I became Orthodox, I jettisoned dispensational premillennialism — the default position of Evangelicals then and now. The main argument against it was that it was a novelty, first propounded in the 19th Century. That was a deal killer for me; I was confident that “waters are purer closer to the source,” and Bible prophesy, as “literally” interpreted by freaks like Hal “Late Great Planet Earth” Lindsey, would have been total gibberish to Christians of prior centuries. Lindsey told us that locusts were Huey Helicopters, after all.

But a second argument that turned me away, and probably would have sufficed, was that the dispensationalists (as they’re also known) interpreted that Bible in a way that was quite contrary to how the authors of the New Testament themselves interpreted the Old Testament. If you look through the New Testament for occurrences of phrases like “thus was fulfilled what was written by” whoever, the “fulfillment” is seldom literal.

It remains the case today that Jews reject Jesus Christ because the ways in which He fulfilled the Old Testament were not what the Jews of His age were expecting, nor what Jews today still expect when Messiah comes.

It wasn’t even what His own disciples expected! Sunday’s Gospel reading was Luke 24: 12-35, the story of Christ’s encounter with “two of them … traveling … to a village called Emmaus, which was seven miles from Jerusalem.” It was the day of His resurrection, and rumors of it were spreading rapidly, but they were downcast: “We were hoping that it was He who was going to redeem Israel,” they told the stranger who’d joined them.

Then He said to them, “O foolish ones, and slow of heart to believe in all that the prophets have spoken! Ought not the Christ to have suffered these things and to enter into His glory?

(Well, no, actually. The Christ ought not to have suffered these things, fella. None of our teachers expect such sufferings.)

And beginning at Moses and all the Prophets, He expounded to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself.

How do you suppose Christ expounded the Old Testament that day? It turned these disciples from disconsolate to rejoicing, so it must not have been what they were used to hearing. It made simultaneous sense of His sufferings and his Messiahship. It removed the scandal of His being numbered among sinners, and crucified — a particularly scandalous way to die.

Some of His interpretation has come down even into Protestantism, or else Protestants would be unevangelized as they learned Old Testament. For instance, we Christians all understand Isaiah 53 as referring to Christ — contrary to typical Jewish understanding.

I suggest that He interpreted the Scriptures in a way that’s preserved not only in subsequent Apostolic writings called the Gospels and Epistles, but in the interpretive tradition of the Orthodox Church, including its hymns, prayers and service texts. I can’t prove it, but I think I can prove that the New Testament writers didn’t write down everything that was important.

Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and hold the traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle.

That’s why we call it “the fullness of the Christian faith.”

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“The remarks made in this essay do not represent scholarly research. They are intended as topical stimulations for conversation among intelligent and informed people.” (Gerhart Niemeyer)

Some succinct standing advice on recurring themes.

Friday, November 9, 2012

I’m very busy professionally and avocationally at present, so blogging time is precious.

I’ve found a couple of items thought-provoking. From Crisis Magazine, A Voice for the Faithful Catholic Laity, a sober assessment of where faithful Christians now stand:

And here is my point: none of this is a reason for despair. Indeed, knowledge of the dead-end that politics so obviously has become should be liberating for conservatives. It is far beyond time for conservative Americans—and Christians in particular—to put aside the distractions of mass politics for the tactile realities involved in building a decent life. We still need to vote and otherwise get involved, of course, but we need to remember what we are doing: hoping to prevent or mitigate the damage being done to us, not “taking back” a state apparatus that has long been used to reshape our society in unwholesome ways. We must come to recognize that the federal government, to its very core, has become hostile to our very way of life, not a violent oppressor, but nonetheless our adversary as we seek to raise our children, educating them in our faith, our morals, and our traditions. We must build neighborhoods, parishes and other religious and secular communities in which spiritual, intellectual and fundamentally moral lives are possible.

Bruce Frohnen, How Little We Have Lost (H/T James Matthew Wilson)

Kelly Vlahos at the American Conservative notes that it was not a good night for Islamophobia. Some of the most virulent hate-mongers lost or barely eked out victories that should have been easy.

I have long thought, and continue to think, that the GOP has never quite recovered from the end of the Cold War. Left anti-Communism had largely disappeared, leaving the GOP to claim almost 100% credit for Communism’s collapse. They’ve been looking for a new Evil Empire ever since, by opposition to which to define themselves. They really need to figure out something helpful to support, not just enemies to demonize.

Daniel McCarthy at the American Conservative notes that Third Parties were not spoilers in this election. Obama took more than 50% in every state he won.

And I continue to reflect on a novice blogger’s second post, on the real reason Romney won the youth and minority votes. The barbarian “Movement Conservatives” may not get it at all, but there are wholesome impulses there that conservatives should understand and which might be redirected to more productive politics than Obama’s.

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Some succinct standing advice on recurring themes.

Slipping Moorings

One of my favorite expressions, when I talk to myself, is to accuse myself of “making a virtue of necessity.” From what I can tell, my use of the phrase is a little bit idiosyncratic, which is okay so long as I understand myself.

What I mean when applying that phrase to myself is roughly “C’mon, Tipsy. Don’t be so full of yourself. You can’t help doing X. Don’t assume that people who do non-X are worse than you for it.”

I’m not trying to convince myself of relativism when I say that. I’m talking about things like my not being highly motivated by money. It would be really easy to morph that into the virtue of being “spiritual,” rather than “materialistic,” and to despise those who are more motivated by money. But that would be a whole lot of people to despise.

For another instance, I’ve never flirted with, let alone slept with, any “other woman.” But let’s get real: I’ve been overweight and a little homely that whole time, and I can count on the fingers of one hand the women who’ve come on to me over four decades, including two Amarillo hookers who apparently specialized in menages a trois and who mistook me for a guy with discretionary funds to spend. So I don’t really have grounds to boast of consummate chastity, either.

Which brings me to my main topic: making a virtue of my necessary political dispassion.

Many of my Facebook friends, and friends in the more concrete world, are pretty fired up politically, to the point, with many, of Obama Derangement Syndrome. A handful are lefties, and are still recovering from Bush Derangement Syndrome.

But I really need to remember that my lack of fire in the belly politically is the result of 15 years of increasing questioning of almost every premise by which I’d lived and thought for the previous 49 years:

  • A single monograph took away my false assurance that all the important answers about my Christian cognitive base could be found in careful personal reading of the Bible. This is one of the major epiphanies of my religious life, and it has led me to a better place. But it also took away a source of false assurance about current events.
  • While I’ve found natural law an attractive way of approaching “the social issues” in our common life, I’m aware that it flowered after the Great Schism, with roots in scholasticism, so I’m a little bit guarded about it.
  • I’ve recently come to appreciate the pervasive influence of gnosticism and nominalism in culture, including some of my own ways of thinking.
  • Now the generally admirable people at Distributist Review are questioning the reliability of Lord Acton and the Institute named after him, accusing them of being gnostic and Manichean.

Maybe I’ve stumbled into a political agnosticism that’s sound and sane.

I’m sure politics and elections matter, at least a little. I’m sure it’s a privilege, in some sense, two have the chance to choose between Tweedledum and Tweedledee. But I also know that every Sunday I sing the Psalm that includes “put not your trust in Princes, in sons of men in whom there is no salvation,” and I’m fairly well convinced now that there is no correct “Orthodox political position” on more than a handful of issues.

So maybe, just maybe, my political dispassion is a virtue of sorts. When I poke fun at candidates, I’m seriously trying to spread that virtue around.