Make Love and War

The first verses of Song of Songs 2 repeatedly return to military imagery.  The fact that there is a “battle standard” (2:4; cf. Numbers 1:52; 2:2, 3, 10, 17, 18, etc.) over the “house of wine” suggests that the feast is a victory feast as much as a love feast. . . . . Continue Reading »

Shadows

Solid, opaque things cast shadows.  Our presence is not confined to the solid and defined outline of our body.  Our presence spreads out, casting a shadow and providing shade. That’s the phenomenological basis behind the Bible’s use of shade/shadow imagery.  Shadows . . . . Continue Reading »

Ontology of peace

Robert Barron (in an essay in Sacramental Presence in a Postmodern Context ) writes of the “radical non-violence” in Thomas’s theory of casuality and especially of creation: “In any causal relationship between finite things, there is some sort of intrusion of one being upon . . . . Continue Reading »

Mirror image

Eckhart writes, “This image is the Son of the Father and I myself am this image and this image is wisdom.”  It is a characteristic formulation: The Son of God is born in believers such that the Son and believer become “identical.” At the same time, Eckhart insists that . . . . Continue Reading »

Postmodernism rightly understood

In his Postmodernism Rightly Understood: The Return to Realism in American Thought , Peter Augustine Lawler says that “Postmodern thought rightly understood is human reflection on the failure of the modern project to eradicate human mystery and misery and to bring history to an end.  One . . . . Continue Reading »

Purpose of creation

Eckhart says in his second German sermon that the “whole of Scripture was written” and “God created the whole world and all the orders of angels” so that “God may be born in the soul and the soul be born in God.” He adds: “It is the nature of every grain of . . . . Continue Reading »

Rehabilitating Garrigou

It was inevitable, I suppose, that someone would work to rehabilitate the reputation of Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, perhaps the most prominent neo-Thomist assaulted by the nouvelle theologie .  Aidan Nichols does a fine job of it in his lucid  Reason with Piety, Garrigou-Lagrange in the . . . . Continue Reading »

Creation and Contraction

Marcus Pound ( Zizek: A (Very) Critical Introduction (Interventions) ) summarizes the Kabbalist account of creation that he finds analogous to the move of “withdrawal” that Zizek thinks is fundamental to Schelling, German Idealism, even, in a different register, Descartes: . . . . Continue Reading »

Principles of philosophy

“The principles of philosophy are certain truths within the immediate ken of every human person,” writes Ralph McInerny ( Praeambula Fidei: Thomism And the God of the Philosophers ).  His first example: “Who could fail to grasp being, since it is grasped in anything we . . . . Continue Reading »

Capitalism as cultural system, 2

Weston Hicks responds to my post on Joyce Appleby’s book on the history of capitalism: “The state used to be a tool of the powerful to entrench themselves and press their advantage, but Christendom transformed it into an arbiter of fair play, unleashing the . . . . Continue Reading »