Friday, September 30, 2005

WCC, NCC, I'm getting dizzy...

Antioch's divorce...why?

"'We believe the impact of this loss to the council will become apparent over the coming months and years, and we implore the council leadership to take immediate steps to understand this action and reach out to leadership within the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese,' the letter (to the president of the NCC) stated."

Maybe they should reach out and search for the Truth instead of trying to keep up their appearence for ecumenisms sake?

If only the rest of the Orthodox Churches in America would follow suit with the Antiochians on this one...

Speaking of Dostoevsky

It is culture we have not got... and it is not there because of the nihilist, Peter the Great.
Dostoevsky

Now let us think...Peter the Great-the "great" Westernizer-and an association with nihilism...maybe there is something about the West and nihilism? I am thinking yes.

It seems that someone has a vendetta against lumpers...

Thursday, September 29, 2005

Something to think about

Both religion and secularism have man as the ultimate value because both derive from man and lead to man.

By making allies with the deluded and deluding, the Orthodox will only confuse and discourage those serious seekers who exist in the West.

Clean Cut

Comments?

And again that WCC just keeps turning up.

Metropolitan Nicholas of Mesogaia and Lavreotiki on the WCC conference held in Athens in May:
If... we extend an invitation to them in order to divvy up and pass around together with them the treasure of the true faith, this is impious. Unfortunately, the World Council of Churches is a syncretistic organization. It is a religious organization which struggles for the unity of Christians but with an earthly and worldly perception. The one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church does not “pray together” but does pray for the God-given and ordained union of all. It does not discuss and dialogue with the aim of reaching human agreement, but provides its obligatory witness in order to call all of us to conversion. ...the Anglicans have in the recent past proceeded with the ordination of women, while a variety of Protestant confessions have gone further and ordained homosexuals. Moves such as these are not of secondary importance, since they are quite an offense to the most holy mystery of the Priesthood. ... We will not drive anyone away. Maybe we will run into a few women who believe that they have the gift of the priesthood. Maybe people of an uncertain character will approach us and present themselves to us as priests. Maybe, furthermore, conference attendees with a worldly way of thinking and image will approach us and will appear to us as angels of the kingdom of God. We clearly contest their so-called ecclesiastical gifts, however we will not insult or offend them. We confess the delusion which exists, however the persons who express it we respect and encounter in a dignified manner. ... Perhaps these people are better than us as it concerns their character. Their faith, however, is dangerously unsound and ailing. It is so ill that we could assert that they believe in a Christ who does not exist. ...within the many opportunities presented by contemporary ideological pluralism, the blessing to submit our witness – not as intolerant persistence in crude ideas, but as magnanimous confession of personally-experienced truths, which we don’t uphold as if they are in danger, but rather confess because without them we are in danger – is exceptionally great. ... I pray that the Resurrected Lord will, on the one hand, help us to know the treasure of the one Church which we hold, and on the other hand help the conference attendees of the many “churches” to discover together with the saving faith that they ignore, the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church with which they converse.

Enough said ...for now.

Get your paper now before it's far...

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Re: Great Ideas

(This post refers, in a round about way, to Gabe's post)

So I haven't read really any of the supposed "great ideas". I've only read excerpts of Common Sense (and am currently writing an essay incorporating it). I own Meditations of Marcus Aurelius and started it once... So it seems I must know nothing of "great ideas"...

What prompted me to write anything about said post was that I've been thinking a lot about Dostoevsky lately (he's also in said essay) and reading A Writer's Diary.

Reading Dostoevsky is enlightening in many ways and I'm always impressed by how accute his mind was (in many ways, once again) and how "great" his ideas were. However, his ideas weren't "great" in the same way that one normally thinks of as "great". He shows us the "greatness" within ourselves which is the fallen human nature. He shows us the immense amount of responsibility we have with our gift of freedom. As Berdyaev said, "He was 'cruel' because he would not relieve man of his burden of freedom, he would not deliver him from suffering at the price of such a loss, he insisted that man must accept an enormous responsibility corresponding to his dignity as a free being."

And when this freedom (by our own volition) leads us in the wrong way as free beings we will face the consequences. This part is what is important to Dostoevsky-the purgatory process that our mistakes bring us to (as can be seen in Dmitri in The Brothers Karamazov) and stated directly in A Writer's Diary:
Purification through suffering is easier—easier, I say, than the lot you assign to many of them by wholesale acquittals in court. You only plant cynicism in their hearts; you leave them with a seductive question and with contempt for you yourselves. ... They have contempt for you and your courts and for the justice system of the whole country! Into their hearts you pour disbelief in the People’s truth, in God’s truth; you leave them confused...

Long before it became sheik to blame "my upbringing, my parents, my teachers, my education" etc, etc infinity... for ones crimes, Dostoevsky could see that that indeed was where the court system was heading. He makes a very interesting comparison between how the people would call criminals "unfortunates" and the perversion of that term with relation to justice:
...when they use the word ‘unfortunate,’ the People are saying to the ‘unfortunate’ more or less as follows: ‘You have sinned and are suffering, but we, too, are sinners. Had we been in your place we might have done even worse. Were we better than we are, perhaps you might not be in prison. With the retribution for your crime you have also taken on the burden for all our lawlessness. Pray for us, and we pray for you. But for now, unfortunate ones, accept these alms of ours; we give them that you might know we remember you and have not broken our ties with you as a brother.’ ... Never have the People, in calling a criminal an ‘unfortunate,’ ceased to regard him as a criminal!


Of course, all this talk of "greatness" is not to say there are is no "smallness" within us humans. To balance his "great" characters there are those such as Sofya in Crime and Punishment and of course Alyosha and Fr. Zossima in The Brothers Karamazov.

However, I think for the modern corrupted world there is probably more need for the vision of precisely this kind of "greatness".
...if we consider that we ourselves are sometimes even worse than the criminal, we thereby also acknowledge that we are half to blame for his crime. If he has transgressed the law which the nation prescribed for him, then we ourselves are to blame that he now stands before us. (on trial) If we were better, then he, too, would be better and would not now be standing here before us…. now is precisely the time we must tell the truth and call evil evil; in return, we must ourselves take on half the burden of the sentence. We will enter the courtroom with the thought that we, too, are guilty. This pain of the heart, which everyone so fears now and which we will take with us when we leave the court, will be punishment for us. If this pain is genuine and severe, then it will purge us and make us better. And when we have made ourselves better, we will also improve the environment and make it better. And this is the only way it can be made better. But to flee from our own pity and acquit everyone so as not to suffer ourselves—why, that’s too easy. Doing that we slowly and surely come to the conclusion that there are no crimes at all, and ‘the environment is to blame’ for everything. We inevitably reach the point where we consider crime even a duty, a noble protest against the environment. ‘Since society is organized in such a vile fashion, one can’t get along in it without protest and without crimes.’ … So runs the doctrine of the environment, as opposed to Christianity which, fully recognizing the pressure of the environment and having proclaimed mercy for the sinner, still places a moral duty on the individual to struggle with the environment and marks the line where the environment ends and duty begins.

A brewhaus and icehaus, boy, Jonnie's living on increasingly bigger dreams...

Tuesday, September 27, 2005


So I normally wouldn't post a picture like this as it has no comedic value but the situation which ensued after it was taken will hopefully tickle your fancy... Well, as I was taking this picture (of the gateway into the subway tracks for those who can't tell) I noticed a kid come out of a house to the left of the picture and go back inside...so I take my picture and am biking away when I hear "Hey!", "Hey!" so I looked around and there's a guy that had come out of the house with his entourage of kids and said, "What are you doing!!?" I said, "What do you mean?" He said, "What are you doing video taping the dog!!?" So I started to say that I wasn't photographing his dog when I realized how vacuous this exchange was so I simply turned around and rode off... As I'm 'making my escape' he was saying, "Why are you running away!?" ...

The evolution of dogma...

"The Catholic Church this year celebrates the hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the proclamation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception."

The Immaculate Conception

Monday, September 26, 2005

My dream fulfilled!












GRYFFINDOR!

You scored 16% Slytherin, 24% Ravenclaw, 56% Gryffindor, and 28% Hufflepuff!

You might belong in Gryffindor,

Where dwell the brave at heart,

Their daring, nerve, and chivalry

Set Gryffindors apart.




Gryffindors are known for their courage, audacity, and devotion to what is good and honest.
















My test tracked 4 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 21% on Slytherin
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 32% on Ravenclaw
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 65% on Gryffindor
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 36% on Hufflepuff




Link: The Sorting Hat Test written by leeannslytherin on Ok Cupid

Get your 'How to Build a New Life' booklet now!

The tract for Katrina!

These dang tests are addictive!

I had to have something to brag about!











English Genius

You scored 100% Beginner, 100% Intermediate, 93% Advanced, and 80% Expert!

You did so extremely well, even I can't find a word to describe your excellence! You have the uncommon intelligence necessary to understand things that most people don't. You have an extensive vocabulary, and you're not afraid to use it properly! Way to go!







My test tracked 4 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 70% on Beginner
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 53% on Intermediate
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 50% on Advanced
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 61% on Expert


Link: The Commonly Confused Words Test written by shortredhead78 on Ok Cupid

Serve Somebody?

So at Gabe's instigation I took this little survey. I wasn't going to post my results as I turned out to be "centrist" but then I looked at the ideologies qualification and it turns out I was on the border of "totalitarian" so I guess I'll post it. Looking at it closer it looks like I'm more on the side of totalitarian...but whatever.

You are a

Social Conservative
(33% permissive)

and an...

Economic Moderate
(41% permissive)

You are best described as a:

Centrist




Link: The Politics Test on OkCupid Free Online Dating

This "bling" van kind of reminds me of those child molester vans...

Friday, September 23, 2005

WCC: need I say more?

... Dr Kobia declared: “Together, as people of faith, we have faith in a better world.” ... Have Faith...


What Fr. Seraphim would say about this:
All of these ideals have enlisted the enthusiasm of some modern idealist or other, but it is quite clear to the Christian that they are secularizations and so perversions of genuine Christian hopes. They can be realized only in Christ, only in His Kingdom that is not of this world; when faith in Christ and hope in His Kingdom are wanting, when the attempt is made to realize Christian "ideals" in this world—then there is idolatry, the spirit of Antichrist.

The Church is in society because men are in society, but the end of the Church is the transformation of men, not society.

Our hope as Christians cannot be reduced to the abstract, but neither can it be reduced to the concrete; we believe and hope in a Kingdom no one living has ever seen, our faith and hope are totally impossible in the eyes of the world.

The future Kingdom has not been abandoned by modern Christians, but it has been so "toned down" that one wonders how strong the faith of Christians is. Particularly all the involvement of Christians in the projects of social idealism, seems to me a way of saying: "You, the worldly, are right. Our Kingdom 'not of this world' is so distant and we can't seem to get it across to you; so we will join you in building something we can actually see, something better than Christ and His Kingdom—a reign of peace, justice, brotherhood on earth." This is a "new Christianity," a refinement, it seems to me, of the Christianity of the "Grand Inquisitor" of Dostoyevsky.

Eugene (Fr. Seraphim) Rose - Letter to Thomas Merton

Holy cities

"Like the Jews of old, we long for a return to our holy city," said the New Orleans archbishop, who has been based in Baton Rouge, La., since the hurricane and subsequent flooding made much of New Orleans uninhabitable in late August.


Holy Toledo, ok, but holy New Orleans???

refugees (to use a "loaded" word)

Rasing them right

I believe in making the world safe for our children, but not our children’s children, because I don’t think children should be having sex.
Jack Handey

Thursday, September 22, 2005

Re: In Whose Court is the ball?

Some of my faithful readers may remember a post on blogodoxy with the current title. For those unfamiliar here is the story:

From DNN (Duke News Network): April 1, 2005 - Relations between the Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church were put on a precarious footing after an incident at Archbishop Quigley Preparatory Seminary in Chicago. The incident in question transpired when a Catholic representative spitefully placed the Orthodox representative's soccer ball out of reach and refused to retrieve the ball.

This incident comes at a time when many hoped an increased dialogue between the churches would soon be underway. Recently the Pope had returned to Patriarch Bartolomew the bones of two prominent early saints, St. John Chrysostom and St. Gregory the Theologian.

The Catholic Church slowly broke off from the Orthodox Church beginning in the 7th century, with the schism being consummated in 1054 with excommunications on both sides.


I have just been informed that now the Orthodox soccer ball has been put directly into the hands of Pope Benedict XVI. This does indeed effect future relations between the Frankish church and the Orthodox Church. The Pope is slated for a visit to Constantinople for next spring and this issue should definately be discussed.

Orthodox Soccer Ball Given to Pope

My problem

If there has been a consistent “theme” or “interest” to my extracurricular reading in the last couple of years, it has been between the tension of reason and revelation. The 20th Century Jewish thinker Leo Strauss perhaps did more than any other modern mind to identify this tension and cogently argue that both, by being in tension, became the twin pillars of Western society. Though Strauss’ disciples, students, and critics have differed as to whether or not Strauss thought one ought to win out over the other or if a synthesis between the two could ever be accomplished, it seems clear to me that Strauss was extremely wary of one becoming subordinate to the other. Even if Strauss may have chosen “Athens over Jerusalem” in his own life, it remains unclear to me whether or not that is the desirable choice.

It is important to note that the tension of reason and revelation was for Strauss a phenomena best exemplified by the Jews, though I see no evidence why it ought to be limited to the Jews. Still, for Strauss the tension became strikingly apparent in the “Jewish problem” of modernity. In the wake of the Enlightenment, Jews were finally extended the chance for equal citizenship in civil society; and yet the “price” of that citizenship was that Jews could no longer be, well, Jews. Liberal democracy with its mind oriented ever towards pluralism could not accept the exclusive truth claims of Judaism. Instead, it offered the Jews new claims that oftentimes failed to square with identity of Jews as the chosen people of God in possession of the Law. Strauss thought that there could be no satisfactory answer to the “Jewish problem” or, at least, none that liberal democracy was capable of providing.

What has come to strike my interest now more specifically is whether or not there is a “Christian problem” developing in Western society today. Perhaps that problem ought to be narrowed down more to an “Orthodox Christian problem” as history has provided ample evidence of Protestantism’s assimilationist tendencies along with the Catholic Church’s proclivity for synthesis, even when it means its own weakening. Now, even with that being said I do have to admit that unlike the wider whole of Christendom or Judaism, Orthodoxy only occasionally blips on the sociopolitical radar; it is not a present force pluralism feels it must contend with directly nor does it, by and large, concern itself with a full fledged dialogue with the rest of the world. Orthodoxy is insular in many ways, though it seems inevitable that it will stop being so in the years to come.

My concern for the moment then revolves more around how Orthodox Christians individually ought to relate to liberal democracy and the claims of pluralism. It is true that liberal democracy has given the Orthodox Christian the right to be Orthodox, but surely not the means to be Orthodox. To be Orthodox in the truest sense seems to me to be nearly impossible if one expects to live their faith honestly. The claim to Truth in Orthodoxy is one that supercedes any claims liberal democracy could make, even those grounded in natural human reason. And while I am hesitant to say there is something fundamentally anti-intellectual or anti-reason in Orthodox Christianity, there exists little doubt in my mind that the claims of Orthodoxy, rooted in revelation, cannot be explained by reason nor find support from it. There is simply an arena too exclusive and pure to allow anything else in it. To do so would be to blacken that purity to the end result of no longer having Orthodox Christianity at all.

For my part, I wonder how far I can take my faith into the wider society and what I could ever bring back from it that would not poison my faith. I must live “in the world” but can I allow my thought to be “of the world”? More confusing to me is what “the world” even is. Is it the thought of this world—that is, the modern world—which I must throw off, or the thought of the world as it has always existed? Should I simply live a sham social existence as a good citizen of an arbitrarily drawn nation despite the fact nothing it says can be anything but superfluous at best or complete lies at worst? Perhaps there are important distinctions I haven’t even considered yet. I worry, however, that this problem will remain the problem of my life and one I have not a single hope of resolving.

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

The Bible: your key to millions!

Let the Oil flow!

May I remind you of some pertinent quotes:
In the hands of neurologically sick people the Bible becomes a source of «uncontrollable fantasies.» And indeed religion is one of the most dangerous. Instead of being a manuel for the cure of the sickness of religion the Bible becomes a book for the propagation of the sickness of religion.
Fr. John Romanides

...the expressions about God in the Bible are not intended to convey concepts about God. They act only as means to guide one to the purification and illumination of the heart and finally to glorification by the Pre-Incarnate and Incarnate Lord (Yaweh) of Glory...
Fr. John Romanides

How 'bout a taste of your own medicine ol' Benny?

Rome should not require anything more on this point than was found in the formularies and practice of the first millennium. When, during the Pope’s visit to St. George’s Cathedral in Phanar, on July 25, 1967, Patriarch Athenagoras spoke of the Pope as “the successor of Peter, the first in honor among us, the one who presides over the community of love", “the words of this great Church leader conveyed the substance of what had been said about the primacy during the first millenium, and Rome should not ask for anything more.”

Cardinal Ratzinger

Fanclub

Update: So I saw the guy that drives this hunk of junk and he definitely had at least one too many super sizers...

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

Band of Enemies

The one aim of the whole band of these enemies of sound doctrine is to shake the faith of Christ down to its foundations, by utterly levelling apostolic tradition to the ground. They clamor for written proofs and reject the unwritten testimony of the Fathers as worthless, proving themselves worse than debtors who refuse to pay what they owe when there is no written evidence of the loan.

St. Basil the Great

So I was just walking through the park and I see these girls treating our exquisite Chicago public art like a mechanical bull. So I said, "What do you think that is? A mechanical bull?" And they said, "No, it appears to be a giant Jack and I have no idea why some 'artist' would design such a thing and why some city would actually pay them for it and display it as public 'art'."

Monday, September 19, 2005


Continuing the tradition of absurd names for suburbs/subdivisions/buildings and etc. in Chicago...

Friday, September 16, 2005


I always just referred to them as gastroenterologists but hey, if that's their marketing plan so be it.

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Tuesday, September 13, 2005


The end of an era...

worldlings- a rodent similar to an R.O.U.S.

...it is those never content with accepted ways who despise the old as being stale, constantly welcoming innovation, like worldlings who are always chasing after the latest fashion.

St. Basil the Great

Duke Victorious


After weeks of intensive battle The Grand Duke's tactics won out over Goldstein the Rodent. (note: I judged that a clearer picture would be even too incendiary for this blog, however, if you want more evidence [of Goldstein and her troops demise] send me an email.)

Monday, September 12, 2005


I think we all could do with more children's literature like this...

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

Nutcracker Sweet

‘Good God!’ cried Mr. Pocket, in an outburst of desolate desperation. ‘Are infants to be nutcracked into their tombs, and is nobody to save them?’

Mr. Pocket. Great Expectations

So the dumpster company was like, "They'll think we're really patriotic if we paint a flag on our dumpster and they'll rent our dumpsters!"

The most beautiful shopping mall church I've seen...

My attempt to capture the guy on the bike with the flag.

Monday, September 05, 2005


I sure would like to hear about this "positive, practical spirituality"...

Fear Factor has a new contender.


Kathleen say, "I'll give you a dolla if you eat this goo on a wheat thin." I says, "It's gonna take more than a dolla sucka!" She say, "Ok, five big ones." I think to myself... Lynn say, "I'll pitch in a dolla." I say, "Ok, you womens is on."