Along with the distinctives in my DNA, the spiritual world stands tall

At one point spiritual matters were a function of going with the flow of my parents and the wider family, but then a conscious wave began with cultural awareness, the pull of hormones and the thirst for knowledge.

By the time of my late teen years I had begun to explore the metaphysical realm, clairvoyance telepathy and the harmony of individuals and communities. A gift for music and having a way with languages seemed to funnel my interests into sacred writings, and eventually the study of theology. So for me, spirituality is like the old grandfather clock, ticking away its steady beat about values, pleasures and responsibilities.

How important is spirituality in your life?

Spirituality is 3rd of 4 or 2nd of 3 of the well-defined areas of human experience and striving.

The Moses pedestal

We read something like the following testimony about a person and we put the person on a pedestal without much thought about ourselves.  Moses was one great man; deny it and you are playing with blinders or VR helmet.  Almost every pedestal has steps designed for our feet.  We can climb up too.  Pedestals do not just happen.  People are ambitious but the people who pole vault into public office with no intention to serve are on a Moses pedestal.  Ambition makes people clamour to be teachers with minimal effort to know the curriculum, like pastors with poor literacy, or a police officer bent on flexing law and order muscle for self-aggrandizement.  The Moses pedestal is more than a shaky and temporary seat; it allows us to see ourselves and those around us as lovely and destined for greatness.  Not even Judas could be put beyond the pale of divine affection and marked with a destiny.

It was at this time that Moses was born; and he was lovely in the sight of God, and he was nurtured three months in his father’s home.

Acts 7:20, NASB

Lovely Moses

Now I do not want to imagine that Moses was an extremely handsome individual, and he may very well have been, but God seeing Moses as someone special, someone that can be likened to Jerusalem, a beautiful city, likened to Israel, a well-furnished garden or vineyard must certainly speak to each of us. Joseph the son of Jacob and Rachel his wife and a few other individuals in the Bible are described as hunks and ravishingly pretty, but this is not the case for Moses.  The term used to describe him as lovely is not about looks;  it is not even about intelligence or resourcefulness, because we are talking about a baby, helpless and dependent on mother and father.

The complexity of the Moses experience

Moses at the head of God’s dealings with the superpower of the day is not a pretty picture.  Getting the people delivered from Egypt into the promised Land was a lovely sight for Moses , and that was literally all he got of Canaan.  Moses and all the prophets knew that Moses’ pedestal was a temporary thing, but who can deny that the man’s testimony permeates the divine revelations from cover to cover in our Bible.  Even though we know that God is done with him as an agent in the business of saving the world Moses still impresses us for his stellar courage, for his use of power and his extreme tenderness, all rolled up into one lovely bundle.  I dare to say, he was just another broken vessel, but he was a broken vessel who may not have realized how important brokenness was to God.  Moses’ temporary and complex pedestal speaks to the contradictions in the life of the One broken to give life to the world.

29)  And while He was praying, the appearance of His face became different, and His clothing became white and gleaming. 30) And behold, two men were talking with Him; and they were Moses and Elijah, 31) who, appearing in glory, were speaking of His departure which He was about to accomplish at Jerusalem.

Luke 9:29-31, NASB

Mighty down, meek up

Many nations have scads of legislation, some for millennia, others for a few centuries, but not one has had the courage to adopt the obvious and logical pattern of justice.  It was Mary, mother of the Nazarene, who saw God administering justice in the simplest terms.  The brilliant minds of Harvard and Oxford law schools are rank idiots compared to the young Jewish girl.  They cannot see judges pulling the mighty down from their seats and exalting the meek.  The truth is that they do not want to see have-nots acquire wealth and property the haves lose their edge. They and a host of political operatives are just fine with the right of ordinary citizens to gun down innocent citizens, just as it was lawful for any kind of vigilante justice to take the life of a Black person.

Mary’s justice trailer

You might think that what Mary saw and sang about is happening often in the world, but that is not the case. Judgments are not pulling down the mighty from their seats and they are not elevating the humble and the meek. Just ask yourself “Why are the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer?”. Quasi-justice is not justified.

52) He has brought down rulers from their thrones, And has exalted those who were humble. 53) He has filled the hungry with good things; And sent away the rich empty-handed.

Luke 1:52-53, NASB

Turntable avengers they are not

The institutions of justice, housing and medicine are still tainted with tribalism and racism.  Neither political slogans nor centuries of tradition have erased the social sins of Rome, the British Empire,  China or Japan.   All of these powers are tinderboxes waiting to burst into flames.  America might have wiped Japan from the map with atomic bombs, but now Japan holds a higher chunk of American debt.  China may be the worst place to live for the lack of  human freedoms and its mushrooming surveillance, but its competition with the United States is clearly not friendly. Justice across the globe is not circular and does not flow smoothly as the winds that circle the planet. Why should they not?

Waiting and watching for justice

Those who are authorized avengers need to be accountable to the people and their representatives, and shown to be equitable. Vigilante justice is a plague for which there seems to be little vaccination. Village justice can be as despicable as state sanctioned executions of innocent persons. Natural justice says “Reverse”, contrived justice says “Manipulate for selective advantage”. Until jurisprudence commits to Mary’s dictum the instructions from Peter and Paul about subjection to civic powers need be taken with a grain of salt and a readiness to protest in protection of the common security.

Throw the Eli book away

Eli was a priest, equal one might argue to a high priest, who was once a sensitive man, careful to guard the sacred works where the ark of the covenant resided.  Eli also slipped and fell, to put it mildly, as age caught up with him. Having the book thrown at him with no chance of forgiveness belongs to the age of terroristic justice, and that book is one we have thrown away.

Caretaker of the ark and judge

Eli was no slouch; he had the trust of ordinary people, and the conception and early life of Samuel shows that his observations of people coming to the shrine in Shiloh were commendable.  He took the prayer of a woman seriously even when he did not know what it was, and after he suspected her of being under the influence of alcohol.

22) Now Eli was very old; and he heard all that his sons were doing to all Israel, and how they lay with the women who served at the doorway of the tent of meeting. 23) He said to them, “Why do you do such things, the evil things that I hear from all these people?” (1 Samuel 2:22-23, NASB)

But they would not listen to the voice of their father, for the Lord desired to put them to death.” (1 Samuel 2:25, NASB)

Priest meets people

“As for Hannah, she was speaking in her heart, only her lips were moving, but her voice was not heard. So Eli thought she was drunk.” (1 Samuel 1:13, NASB)

“Then Eli answered and said, “Go in peace; and may the God of Israel grant your petition that you have asked of Him.”” (1 Samuel 1:17, NASB)

Forever levitical priests are not even a dream

When a priest gets zealous there is privilege and unrelenting violence, but when a shepherd boy becomes king God’s residence in Israel goes into high gear.  Compare Phineas and Ezra with David and Abijah.  If there was a priest or king in Israel named Melchizedek one might have heard inquiries about his ancestry.  However,  long before it was popular to talk about  Israelite tentacles reaching across the planet Solomon was accepting gifts from Hiram, king of Tyre for the building of the Temple, and David had in his bodyguard people who were clearly not Israelites.  A permanent levitical priesthood was problem-ridden for Israelites.

Levites and God’s kingdom

The Melchizedekan priest-king celebrated in Psalm 110 was not going to find himself and welcome where there is a competing levitical priesthood, scribes and Pharisees and Sadducees; not in the BCE and is not welcome now in the 21st century,

Levites and judgments

A man sentenced to be beyond forgiveness is hopeless, the sentence is shocking and there is no crime beyond the pale.

No atonement forever

13) For I have told him that I am about to judge his house forever for the iniquity which he knew, because his sons brought a curse on themselves and he did not rebuke them. 14) Therefore I have sworn to the house of Eli that the iniquity of Eli’s house shall not be atoned for by sacrifice or offering forever.

1 Samuel 3:13-14, NASB

The judgement on Eli’s house comes from a time when it made perfect sense to throw the book at levitical laxness. Let’s face it: Aaron was a priest who dropped the ball at a crucial time in Israel’s journey to Canaan. It also came at a time when it made no sense to unveil the expanse of divine forbearance and the great salvation.

24) Aaron will be gathered to his people; for he shall not enter the land which I have given to the sons of Israel, because you rebelled against My command at the waters of Meribah. 25) Take Aaron and his son Eleazar and bring them up to Mount Hor; 26) and strip Aaron of his garments and put them on his son Eleazar. So Aaron will be gathered to his people, and will die there.

Numbers 20:24-26

“When all the congregation saw that Aaron had died, all the house of Israel wept for Aaron thirty days.”

Numbers 20:29, NASB

Perhaps there is a glimpse of divine generosity in the fact that Aaron, first high priest, remained a dignified and respected man well past his burial in mount Hor. So let’s not be throwing this kind of judgment around any more.

Sugar Apple: so full of sweetness

Which food, when you eat it, instantly transports you to childhood?

It has a name that describes EVERY ripe fruit.  Sugar apple is never NOT sweet.  Called sweetsop because the inside resembles soursop this fruit used to be in many gardens, front-yard and/or backyard.  If only AI would break through into taste and smell, you’d be wowing to Sugar Apple.  Only the unique friends, with whom one shares a sugar apple in part or whole, would be missing.

Legalities discombobulated and reconstituted

“Or do you not know, brethren (for I am speaking to those who know the law), that the law has jurisdiction over a person as long as he lives?”

Romans 7:1

This question in Paul’s letter to the Roman Church is not only relevant 2000 years, as we might expect Messianic revelation to be, it is necessary to counter a kind of Jewish counter-revolution that continues in the church making appeals for the Mosaic legacy to be front and centre in the fight of faith.

What does the law demand and give?

Most people hear “keep the commandments of God” and immediately the communication between God and humans gets thrown into the ditch, struggling to breathe, with the fingers of hirelings and evicted tenants cutting off the air supply. 

“For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set you free from the law of sin and of death.”

Romans 8:2

There is nothing behind the obedience talk but self-righteousness and cheap religious piety.  Spiritual integrity is small and negligent as long as it takes its cues from the Mosaic heritage.

The people selected to be under what Paul calls the law

Paul’s readers were Christians, both Gentile and Jewish.  Both understood that the law was not an instrument of salvation.  The law kills everyone who embraces it as the guide of life.  Human need of salvation is not on account of violation of any of the Ten Commandments or the violation of any of the statutes and judgments found in Exodus to Deuteronomy.   Christ himself said that his mission targeted those who have engaged their faith in God’s Son. The cover letter for the Jewish people was perfect performance of the details of the covenant, the testimony (Decalogue), statutes and judgments.

“He who believes in Him is not judged; he who does not believe has been judged already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.”

John 3:18

John affirms that this is how the apostles perceived the issues of global guilt and the remedy.  John’s letter agrees and goes one step further by equating BELIEF and OBEDIENCE in the following statement.

“He who BELIEVES in the Son has eternal life; but he who does not OBEY the Son will not see life, but the wrath of God abides on him.”

John 3:36

God’s covering command (singular) is not that we move to embrace Moses and his writings, but that we believe in God’s Son and love people as God loves people.

Law has authority over the living

The law has authority over living people because the law only seeks to kill people.  It has no authority to command the dead to do anything, so Paul is no reasoning if we have died with Christ then the law has nothing to say to us, and any intrusion into the life of the believer amounts to adultery.  Many people are impressed with the deceptive argument that some Christians affirm that the Ten Commandments are the standard expression of divine morality.  At that level of understanding it is easy to see how people are snared by the widespread negligence over the Sabbath command, as if there was not also widespread negligence of  and resistance to the 5th, 3rd, 6th or 7th commands. But we Christians acknowledge that we are thrice dead.

  • Dead for living without faith
  • Dead for accepting the death of Christ as our own
  • Dead by the inoculation provided by the Spirit’s empowerment to do Christ’s work and desensitization to the former lifestyle

We can hardly pretend to be alive under the law’s umbrella. Christ replaces law as husband, the Jew being tempted to keep going with the Law, and the Gentile being deceived to adopt an obviously useless cover. Gentiles and Jews both come to life apart from anything the law demanded. The Law says quite clearly, “Say goodbye to me and say hello to Christ” (Deuteronomy 18:15-19). If people are truly interested in having law or regulation then they need to find that from the very words of Christ himself. We have no earthly priesthood or temple, and yet we are the chosen generation and royal priesthood, because these have been reconstituted in the Melchizedekan pattern.

“This is His commandment, that we believe in the name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another, just as He commanded us.” (1 John 3:23, NASB)

1 John 3:23

The grown man

WHEN I WAS A CHILD is not always a fond memory. Paul uses the phrase to orient himself for his readers.   When Paul was a child he was a conscientious Jew, and he lists all of the things that define him as an extraordinary Jew.  So we are confident that we have captured what Paul’s childhood is like.  First, let us see that the child stands in contrast to the wise and intelligent.  The child is expected to advance to responsible adulthood, and I say, woe to the human who does not see that being left behind by the Irresistible  flow of life in all its manifestations.  The grown person keeps up with the flow because avoiding change and growth is like  having standing in the rain and not getting wet.  That person would be an extraordinarily grown man.

When I was a child, I used to speak like a child, think like a child, reason like a child; when I became a man, I did away with childish things.

1 Corinthians 13:11

This is an all together different arrangement of children and adults from what the Lord Christ had to say about children and the wise people (typically, adults).



“At that time Jesus said, “I praise You, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that You have hidden these things from the wise and intelligent and have revealed them to infants.” (Matthew 11:25, NASB)

Paul is addressing the state of affairs between Jewish life and full blown Messianic revelation, namely, juvenile and adult.

“Now I say, as long as the heir is a child, he does not differ at all from a slave although he is owner of everything,” (Galatians 4:1, NASB)

The Man of God says good bye

The child is not equated with the mature or responsible heir; he is appropriately pictured as subjected to slaves and is comparable to the slaves. The child – nëpios – νηπιος – represents the minor,  whose destiny includes release from guardians and tutors.  For Paul the sweep is large and traumatic. He who excelled in the religion of his ancestors plungers to the very bottom in his discovery of the Lord’s Anointed.  That plunge is painted in the gripping terms of loss and gain, excellence and rubbish.  Not least in any way is the contrast of law and Christ.

“and may be found in Him, not having a righteousness of my own derived from the Law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which comes from God on the basis of faith,” (Philippians 3:9, NASB)

DISCOVERING PAUL’S CHILDHOOD

You will see there is no God, Yahweh, or Christ, or even Moses in Paul’s childhood.  This is because there was not, at least, no dynamic relationship with a person.  Paul can sincerely list his Jewishness.

  • FLESH.  circumcised the eighth day,
  • NATIONALITY.  of the nation of Israel,
  • TRIBAL PRIDE.  of the tribe of Benjamin,
  • ETHNICITY.  a Hebrew of Hebrews;
  • RELIGIOUS AFFILIATION.  as to the Law, a Pharisee;
  • PROGRESS and ACHIEVEMENTS. as to zeal, a persecutor of the church;
  • RIGHT STANDING. as to the righteousness which is in the Law, found blameless.

But whatever things were gain to me, those things I have counted as loss for the sake of Christ.”

Philippians 3:5-7

When grown up time arrives

The rite of passage sees an end to childish things, dim views, and partial knowledge.  Instead of the large number of instructions in the law the heir who comes into his own has three pillars of success; faith, hope, and love.

Stop being kids

Verse 20 of 1 Corinthians 14 cautions Paul’s readers in tender terms.  “Brethren, do not be children in your thinking; yet in evil be infants, but in your thinking be mature”.  We need therefore to ask ourselves about the things we have put away as we mature from law to faith, from juvenile to mature.  We are in laughingstock territory when we boldly assert that we have converted from child to adult with our fingers wrapped tightly around days, months, years and seasons, touch not commands, taste not commands, and handle not commands. There is no adult dimension to being subject to elementary or “kindergarten” principles governing this age.  Growing up or ending one’s childhood is not a willpower thing, because you do not initiate growth.  It happens to us, so growing up is not entirely in our control; it flows from both outside influences and mysterious inside help.  We stop being children with a conscientious choice in three critical areas.

Speak, think, reason

Here is a good example of how the sentence structure or word order in particular does not necessarily tell the truth contained in the context.  The exhortation for speech, thought, and reason do not necessarily happen in that order.   Speaking should not happen in a vacuum.  Thinking and evaluation are likely to happen in the light of what Christ has accomplished or be categorized as noisy gong. 

If you have died with Christ to the elementary principles of the world, why, as if you were living in the world, do you submit yourself to decrees, such as, “Do not handle, do not taste, do not touch!” (which all refer to things destined to perish with use)–in accordance with the commandments and teachings of men?

Colossians 2:20-22

To answer Paul’s question directly we turn to the well-known obsession of people with things that require no personal responsibility or intellectually mature sacrifice. I make no apology for my observation that the many proud cultural traditions are not much more than humanity’s kindergarten, and packages of elementary principles of the world we know. Man, would it not be something if they all began to dream of those matters that are sustaining to both the next generation and our ancestors?

Stop sending representatives with no sense of the times

Americans keep sending people to Congress who have nothing on their mind but personal power and prestige, and in the grandest tradition of racist supremacy and capitalism, the alliance between fascist causes and religion continues to intensify.  If we thought that representation makes its mark by means of winning partisan conflicts then there is no viable house to defend, the division of people by politics lends itself to shallow morons making themselves the heroes of movements that are divorced from the progress of the last century.

Bondage still stalks the land of the free two centuries after independence

You cannot send people like waffly L. Graham, toothless Quasi-speaker K. McC, seditionist M.T. Greene, J. Kennedy, T. Cruz, Gosar, Hawley to Congress and expect honourable defense of the constitution. These people think the truly wise will use the courts – all the way to the Supreme Court – to make the law not apply to them and whomever they choose to bless. These guys and gals are a curse on patriotism, and with religious guides like Jim Jordan, and whoever else is pushing Jesus into government, Catholicism and Protestantism are in the bed of promiscuous love. The papacy holds the aces and the enslavement of people is still a priority.

For the people is a lost number

America and many other nations are like a child who while learning to count to 10 was told that 7 is a bad luck number. That knowledge acts as a base for never completing the count. “For the people” is not a cute slogan, it actually means the due respect for all of the people’s needs, rights, and aspirations. Two hundred years after independence, let’s face it, some people are not people in America. “For the people” can be a good Gospel song, but the music stars are not catching the gleam. “For the people” is a convenient talking point to get a person elected, but, apparently, the people who matter are one’s siblings and relatives. The current conversations and behaviours are dead-raising horrors.