Monday, July 14, 2025

The dreams of avarice, we all have them


 I often wish'd that I had clear,
For life, six hundred pounds a year.
 
-- Jonathan Swift 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Samuel Johnson, who quoted Jonathan Swift more than three thousand times in his dictionary, had himself to write for money most of his life, until he received a royal pension of £300 a year from King George III in 1762, the equivalent of about £53,400 today, or about $72,500.
 
In death, Johnson left his servant and friend Francis Barber an annuity of but £70 a year, from a fortune of just £750. This, however, turned out to be too generous an annual sum, seeing that only skilled tradesmen might make as much as £50 a year. A prudent man could have lived comfortably on less.
 
The money did run out in the hands of the spendthrift Barber. Not many years later he was forced to sell off Johnson memorabilia which he had inherited to pay debts he had incurred, and he died in poverty not seventeen years after Johnson had died.
 
This means that, for his part, Johnson himself had run through about £5,800 or so by the time he died in 1784. The servant had learned from his master. 
 
Swift, meanwhile, had died with a fortune of £12,000 in 1745. 

Sunday, July 13, 2025

Few want to consider that the impulse to genocide has deep roots in human nature, and even in Jewish religion itself


 



But of the cities of these people, which the LORD thy God doth give thee for an inheritance, thou shalt save alive nothing that breatheth.

-- Deuteronomy 20:16
 
They did not destroy the nations, concerning whom the LORD commanded them: But were mingled among the heathen, and learned their works.
 
 -- Psalm 106:34
 
 

Friday, July 11, 2025

On Repentance


 
 Repentance so altereth and changeth a man through the mercy of God,
be he never so defiled, that it maketh him pure and clear.
 
-- John Whitgift (1530?-1604), Regius Professor of Divinity at Cambridge University from 1567, tutor of Francis Bacon in the 1570s, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1583, and persecutor of the Puritans 

Thursday, July 10, 2025

Salvation for Narcissus


 
 The stream is so transparent, pure, and clear,
That, had the self-enamour'd youth gaz'd here,
He but the bottom, not his face, had seen.
 
-- John Denham 

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

'Tis better to be lowly born . . .

I would rather be a poor beggar's wife and be sure of heaven, than queen of all the world . . ..

 

Verily, I swear, ’tis better to be lowly born
And range with humble livers in content
Than to be perked up in a glist’ring grief
And wear a golden sorrow.

 
-- Anne Boleyn of Catherine, in William Shakespeare, Henry VIII, Act 2, scene 3

Monday, July 7, 2025

Hymn for a School of Biblical Studies in a Secular University

 

 Hymn for a School of Biblical Studies in a Secular University 

Come, all ye sons of Science,
   That magic name of awe,
And Medicine, and Music,
  And Arts (poor thing), and Law;
 
Here shall we speak of gospels
  That to your peace belong,
And faith that hath moved mountains
  And filled men's mouths with song.
 
Fear not ye be converted:
  The University
For truth has strictly ordered
  No bias here shall be;
 
Here shall we hold the balance
  That weighs the creeds divine
In scales that may not falter
  Nor thus, nor thus, incline:
 
That so, with faith unfaithful,
  We tread the narrow way --
Of truth (but not too much truth) --
  That lies 'twixt Yea and Nay.
 
-- P. B. R. Forbes, The University of Edinburgh, 1947, reproduced in F. F. Bruce, In Retrospect: Remembrance of Things Past (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1980), p. 141.

Friday, July 4, 2025

Donald Trump is the decay of a whole age teeming with zeroes


 
 He that plots to be the only figure among cyphers, is the decay of a whole age. 
 
-- Francis Bacon 

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

If you are wondering why Jews have always been reticent to utter the holy name of G-d, you won't learn why in this article in Christianity Today by a Texas theology professor, lol

Monday, June 30, 2025

Peter Thiel rationalizing the post-war as the Age of Antichrist is the flip side of Christians rationalizing the church age as the kingdom of God

... Douthat: ... I’m just interested in how you get to a world willing to submit to permanent authoritarian rule.
 
Thiel: Well, there are these different gradations of this we can describe. But is what I’ve just told you so preposterous, as a broad account of the stagnation, that the entire world has submitted for 50 years to peace and safetyism? This is I Thessalonians 5:3 — the slogan of the Antichrist is “peace and safety.” And we’ve submitted to the F.D.A. — it regulates not just drugs in the U.S. but de facto in the whole world, because the rest of the world defers to the F.D.A. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission effectively regulates nuclear power plants all over the world. You can’t design a modular nuclear reactor and just build it in Argentina. They won’t trust the Argentinian regulators. They’re going to defer to the U.S. And so it is at least a question about why we’ve had 50 years of stagnation. And one answer is we ran out of ideas. The other answer is that something happened culturally where it wasn’t allowed. And the cultural answer can be sort of a bottom-up answer, that it was just some transformation of humanity into this more docile kind of a species. Or it can be at least partially top-down, that there is this machinery of government that got changed into this stagnationist thing. Nuclear power was supposed to be the power of the 21st century. And it somehow has gotten off-ramped all over the world, on a worldwide basis.
Douthat: So in a sense, we’re already living under a moderate rule of the Antichrist, in that telling. ...
 
Here in The New York Times. 
 
It's truly precious to see a gay man's warnings about cultural decadence, and Christianity, taken seriously by a purportedly Christian interlocutor for a purportedly serious newspaper. 
 
As Rod Dreher likes to say . . . 
 

 
 
 
 
 
  

Friday, June 27, 2025

Decadence 101


 Taught, half by reason, half by mere decay,
To welcome death, and calmly pass away.
 
-- Alexander Pope 

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Gospel claims forty years removed and more from Jesus' resurrection are not the same thing as claims which are "only a short time later"

Michael C. Legaspi  

 ... Like most New Testament scholars, she holds Mark to be the earliest Gospel (composed sometime around the year 70), with Matthew and Luke—both of whom use Mark as a source ­document—coming along a generation later. John, independent of the other three, came later still. ... 

Pagels’s own position is that the question of Jesus’s resurrection goes beyond what a historian can say: “Historical evidence can neither prove nor disprove the reality”; it can only verify that “after Jesus died many people claimed to have seen him alive.”

Pagels is not entirely wrong. The evidence that Jesus was put to death—actually killed, in public, on a cross, by the governing ­authority—and that many people claimed, only a short time later, that they saw the same Jesus alive cannot seriously be doubted. ...              

 

Nice try, but no. 

We do not know that many people claimed that they saw Jesus alive "only a short time later". 

Pagels' claim to fame has been all about making this very kind of chronological error, placing later Gnostic sources on the same level as the New Testament as evidence to argue for multiple Christianities and their legitimacy. That Legaspi shrinks from calling her out on that tells you everything you need to know about Legaspi.

The only sense in which it is true that the modern phenomenon of scholarship is "now in retreat" is in the extent to which scholars like Pagels and her reviewer Legaspi themselves retreat from the critical project.  

Meanwhile in A.D. 69, around the time of the composition of Mark, many dreamers thought Nero had come back from the dead, too, but just because they existed doesn't mean we take them seriously or believe them, any more than Tacitus did, whose case proves yet again that human nature is unchanging, a mixture of credulity and incredulity from time immemorial:

... About this time Achaia and Asia Minor were terrified by a false report that Nero was at hand. Various rumours were current about his death; and so there were many who pretended and believed that he was still alive. The adventures and enterprises of the other pretenders I shall relate in the regular course of my work. The pretender in this case was a slave from Pontus, or, according to some accounts, a freedman from Italy, a skilful harp-player and singer, accomplishments, which, added to a resemblance in the face, gave a very deceptive plausibility to his pretensions. After attaching to himself some deserters, needy vagrants whom he bribed with great offers, he put to sea. Driven by stress of weather to the island of Cythnus, he induced certain soldiers, who were on their way from the East, to join him, and ordered others, who refused, to be executed. He also robbed the traders and armed all the most able-bodied of the slaves. ... Thence the alarm spread far and wide, and many roused themselves at the well-known name, eager for change, and detesting the present state of things. The report was daily gaining credit when an accident put an end to it. ...

-- Tacitus, Histories 2.8 

 

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Yeah, the filioque is such a novelty, it took 'em centuries to think of it lol

 

 Then said Jesus to them again, Peace be unto you: as my Father hath sent me, even so send I you. And when he had said this, he breathed on them, and saith unto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost: Whose soever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose soever sins ye retain, they are retained.

-- John 20:21ff.

Sunday, June 22, 2025

This day be bread and peace my lot . . .


 
 This day, be bread and peace my lot;
All else beneath the sun
Thou know'st if best bestow'd or not,
And let thy will be done.

-- Alexander Pope 

Saturday, June 21, 2025

When the free are slaves


 
 We are industrious to preserve our bodies from slavery,
but we make nothing of suffering our souls to be slaves to our lusts.
 
-- John Ray (1627-1705) 

Friday, June 20, 2025

Some men left us constitutional papers, others left us the trees


 
 Hence, lastly, springs care of posterities,
For things their kind would everlasting make.
Hence is it, that old men do plant young trees,
The fruit whereof another age shall take.
 
-- Sir John Davies 

Monday, June 16, 2025

Being king is not the thing


 Condition, circumstance is not the thing;
Bliss is the same in subject or in king. 
 
-- Alexander Pope 

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Sometimes the news is just too much for me


 How didst thou grieve then, Adam, to behold
The end of all thy offspring end so sad.
 
-- John Milton 
 
 

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Good riddance, phony demon UFO, Good riddance, infernal Pentagon!


 
 I felt him strike, and now I see him fly:
Curs'd demon! O for ever broken lie
Those fatal shafts, by which I inward bleed!
 
-- Matthew Prior 
 
 

Saturday, June 7, 2025

Poor Rod Dreher: Evidence is emerging that government efforts to propagate UFO mythology date back all the way to the 1950s

The Pentagon Disinformation That Fueled America’s UFO Mythology: U.S. military fabricated evidence of alien technology and allowed rumors to fester to cover up real secret-weapons programs

... At times, as with the deception around Area 51, military officers spread false documents to create a smokescreen for real secret-weapons programs. In other cases, officials allowed UFO myths to take root in the interest of national security—for instance, to prevent the Soviet Union from detecting vulnerabilities in the systems protecting nuclear installations. Stories tended to take on a life of their own, such as the three-decade journey of a purported piece of space metal that turned out to be nothing of the sort. And one long-running practice was more like a fraternity hazing ritual that spun wildly out of control. ...

The many in America who have been gulled by the disinformation should take heart. Hundreds upon hundreds of military men have been taken in by the stories too, and some of them believe them to this day.



Friday, June 6, 2025

It will die out soon enough, like the Shakers

 

Thursday, June 5, 2025

NT Wright shreds his credibility singing about evolution in Genesis to the tune of Yesterday with the already incredible former NIH Director Francis Collins

 Here.

Probably the most cringe-worthy thing you'll see today in a world absolutely teeming with cringe-worthy.

New Testament scholar NT Wrong laughably believes in the unfolding Kingdom of God through the church, so it is entirely consistent for him to believe humans evolved from the cosmic kiss of heaven and earth 14 billion years ago. 

Genesis means DNA, double helix in the Milky Way, dontchaknow.

Francis Collins, with Anthony Fauci, suppressed from the very beginning of the pandemic the belief by some of their own trusted scientists that COVID-19 escaped from a lab in Wuhan, China, a charge doggedly demonstrated with evidence over the years by none other than Richard H. Ebright, Professor of Chemistry at Rutgers.


 


 


Monday, June 2, 2025

The folly of strong drink


 
 The giant, gorg'd with flesh, and wine, and blood,
Lay stretch'd at length, and snoring in his den,
Belching raw gobbets from his maw, o'ercharg'd 
With purple wine and cruddled gore confus'd.
 
-- Joseph Addison
 
Thrice I brought and gave it him, and thrice he drained it in his folly. . . . and reeling fell upon his back, and lay there with his thick neck bent aslant, and sleep, that conquers all, laid hold on him. And from his gullet came forth wine and bits of human flesh, and he vomited in his drunken sleep.
 
-- Homer, Odyssey 9.360, 370
 
Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise. 

-- Proverbs 20:1
 

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Infant woe awaits us all


 There oft are heard the notes of infant woe,
The short thick sob, loud scream, and shriller squall.
 
-- Alexander Pope

Saturday, May 31, 2025

The dog must learn it, when he is a whelp, or else it will not be . . .

 


 . . . for it is hard to make an old dog to stoop [submit]

-- Anthony Fitzherbert, The Book of Husbandry (1523/1534), paragraph 41:

 


 

 

Friday, May 30, 2025

Beware of sadness

 

 Such a wantwit sadness makes of me,
That I have much ado to know myself.
 
-- William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, Act I, Scene 1

Thursday, May 29, 2025

They need to think bigger at Big Think lol


 

 Why historians can only give Jesus a one-sentence biography

 ... In the ancient world, gods, heroes, and even Caesars were resurrected with fair regularity. ...

Right, right, that's why the Athenians laughed out loud at the idea.

And when they heard of the resurrection of the dead, some mocked . . ..

-- Acts 17:32 

 

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

A certain diseased beggar named Lazarus was laid at the rich man's gate, but never once was he fed from his sumptuous table


 Nothing is so hard for those who abound in riches, as to conceive how others can be in want.
 
-- Jonathan Swift

Sunday, May 25, 2025

What in the world is the heart of Islam coming to?


 First we have MBS shaking hands publicly with the openly homosexual US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and now we get this headline:

Saudi Arabia to lift booze ban at 600 tourist locations ...
 

... Spirits and hard liquor above 20% ABV will remain banned, with no sign of shops, takeaways or home brewing being permitted. ...


O believers! Intoxicants, gambling, idols, and drawing lots for decisions are all evil of Satan’s handiwork. So shun them so you may be successful.
 
-- Qur'an, Sura 5:90 

And ˹remember˺ when Lot scolded ˹the men of˺ his people, ˹saying,˺ “Do you commit a shameful deed that no man has ever done before?
 
You lust after men instead of women! You are certainly transgressors.”
 
But his people’s only response was to say, “Expel them from your land! They are a people who wish to remain chaste!”
 
-- Qur'an, Sura 7:80-82
 
 



Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Look thou be true


 
 Look thou be true: do not give dalliance
Too much the rein; the strongest oaths are straw
To th' fire i' th' blood.
 
-- William Shakespeare, The Tempest, Act IV, Scene 1

Monday, May 19, 2025

Today shalt thou be with me in paradise, not tomorrow, nor on the third day, but truly, today


 

And Jesus said unto him, Verily I say unto thee, To day shalt thou be with me in paradise. 

καὶ εἶπεν αὐτῷ ὁ Ἰησοῦς, Ἀμήν λέγω σοι σήμερον μετ᾽ ἐμοῦ ἔσῃ ἐν τῷ παραδείσῳ.
 
-- Luke 23:43 

σήμερον is obviously in emphatic position. The promise to the penitent thief is that there will be no lingering death, and the conviction of Jesus is firm belief in immediate immortality for both himself and this thief, not in future resurrection.

Sunday, May 18, 2025

She dallies with the wind, and scorns the sun



 
 She her airie buildeth in the cedar's top,
And dallies with the wind, and scorns the sun.
 
-- William Shakespeare, Richard III, Act I, Scene 3 (the reading is Samuel Johnson's)

Friday, May 16, 2025

Time is an ocean


 
 
 I consider time as an immense ocean, into which many noble authors are entirely swallowed up, many very much shattered and damaged, some quite disjointed and broken into pieces.
 
-- Joseph Addison

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Pope Leo graduated in 1973 from Saint Augustine Seminary High School in Allegan County, Michigan, which closed in 1977


 

... The estate was built by inventor Dorr Felt in 1925 and bought by the Augustinian order in 1949 for use as a school, with the goal of educating between 50 and 60 students at a time who were interested in becoming priests. The mansion included the dorm and chapel and a garage was converted to host classes and include a library. By 1965, the Felt Estate said, the school was serving 180 students and had a waiting list of 400. But interest later waned and enrollment was below 70 by the mid-1970s. The school closed in 1977. The state bought the land and Laketown Township bought it for $1 in 1996. The mansion is now a venue and museum. ...

More.