Monday, June 10, 2013
DANGERS when society rejects divine assistance
unaided human reason is DANGEROUS
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
ThirdStreet Oratory /Perhaps There's Still Time
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Third Street /Human Ecology /Risk & Reward
When a person is overly-protected, he or she cannot grow. Deprived of the possibilities—the opportunities—of risk and responsibility, one’s chances of maturing are slim.
I cannot discover who I am as long as who you are has me bubble-wrapped and boxed-up with strapping tape. How can I discover my own personhood in your attic? Or on the wall of your museum?
Truth brings with it the reality of risk and responsibility. If a person hides from the truth as one would flee a home-invader, his chances of growing in faith decrease as the darkness of his mind and heart increases.
Take away the tension associated with risk—the tension between rest and exertion, success and failure, solidarity and individualism, good and evil—and I cannot live. How would my heart beat? How could I breathe? How can I think? How can I freely love?
The uncivilized and obscene excess of over-protection is a tyranny which justifies its existence on the grounds that power determines personhood. Violent and degraded men put on government like a sock puppet.
The sock puppet speaks and moves as if it is a person. Men and women of good will—who really are persons but are told they are not—are made to idolize the sock puppet that covers the iron fist of decadent leaders.
Equally uncivilized and obscene is one’s denial of another’s self-determination. Rather than tolerate a community’s right to possess received Truth and to freely experience the risk and responsibility that such truth imposes, violent and spiritless men wage war.
They kill on the pretense of saving lives. They destroy communities and nations in the name of healing. The sock puppet’s trigger finger fires a missile launcher. It pushes the buttons inside a black box.
What fails to grow and mature in human beings who are deprived of the meaningful experience of risk and responsibility in the light of Truth is precisely their humaneness.
Persons who do not grow and mature morph into the frightening—and frankly disgusting—phenomenon of children living inside grown-up bodies. By being overly-protected, these people are conditioned to shun risk and responsibility.
They fear the Truth. To escape these realities, they resort to uproar and violent provocation or by fleeing the tension and taking refuge in self-distraction. Their inhumaneness emerges as hyper-individualism. They are lazy. They rationalize failure. They perceive the good as lighter shades of evil.
And the worst evil manifests itself in persons who are ruled by an abnormal and ungoverned compulsion to keep moving, make noise and hoard things while, at the same time, feeling a toxic revulsion for other human beings.
This profound disruption of the fragile and complex human ecology of personhood and relationships is the precondition for wide-spread and pathological sickness—the profound dis-ease human societies have come to know as tyranny and war.
It is a poverty that human beings are taught to perceive each other as dispensable aggregates of human tissue and data while, at the same time, falling over themselves to award animals the status of personhood—the very thing which men and women (mostly men) seem to understand least of all.
Your blog writer suggests that the stampede to brand animals as persons ought to be deferred for a few years until human beings prove their mutual good will by eradicating tyranny and war among their own species.
After all, what animal today wants to find himself on the front lines fighting a guerilla war in Afghanistan or in Somalia? (More to the point, what happiness could any animal possibly enjoy were it truly aware that Pol Pot had embraced it, calling it friend and brother?)
Very young children often are shocked by the realization that human beings other than themselves are persons in their own right whose needs at a particular moment are equally if not more pressing than those of the precocious child.
Herein lies humanity’s hope—that the socio-scientific disciplines may come to acknowledge that faith, hope, and love are foundational to the larger periodic table of spiritual elements absolutely essential for a balanced ecology of human relationships.
Somewhere along the line, human families, neighborhoods, cities and nations must reacquaint themselves with received Truth, moving beyond mere research--which formulates so many questions it can never answer--to accepting the risk and responsibility of faith and belief.
Should the day arrive when we human beings are less enamored of doing things to, for and against each other and more disposed toward doing things through, with and in each other, then we just might discover something new.
Our respect for human personhood and our reverence of humaneness may point us precisely to that which represents the greatest of all risk, responsibility and reward—the compelling existence and personhood of the One whom God has revealed to us as his very own self.
Third Street /Fathers, Families & the Future
Sunday, December 14, 2008
ThirdStreet /"We Need a Song to Sing"

“We need a song to sing, a message of hope and cheer.
We need a love which transcends time and space.
Our hearts seek the knowledge that amidst all the clamor
and clutter of life, there is Someone who cares.
Jesus is God's message of deliverance given to us.
He is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
He is Emmanuel, God with us. He is God's message of love.
With the angels and shepherds and all God's children we sing,
Sunday, December 7, 2008
3rd Street Ecology /No Toxic Dumps

3rd Street Oratory /For Starters

3rdStreet Present Tense /The Hero Pt III /The Hero Rises Up
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
3rdStreet \School of Truth
Saturday, November 22, 2008
3rdStreet Present Tense /The Hero Pt II /The Heroic Spirit
The person whose life is a series of promos publicizing who he is scorns the idea of God and eternity. He has no use for either; if he has to die to get to them, they're not worth having. God and eternity is an insider's joke for the self-referenced techno-modern maven of brand-identification and suspicion. Death, the ultimate redline, can be ignored like an irritating brother-in-law. The modern man recoils from the thought that his humanity is flawed, his nature fallen. The real offense is not my own defects (or evil), he blathers, but rather your refusal to recognize my genius. Offenses which cannot be flicked away he answers with rage and revenge. In the end, everyone is a threat to him--including his parents. Their first acts of aggression were his conception and birth.
The anti-hero is a coward and a fraud. He deludes himself by imagining that everything beautiful in the world is a signpost pointing to him. He believes he is what the world has been waiting for. He is the master of mind over matter--the world and all things in it exist for the express purpose of validating him. The sure proof of his mastery over reality? His haughty disgust for reason, the thing that makes human experience-hence one's own humanity--intelligible.
He flatters himself with his own contempt. His disdain does not arise from measurable excellence, still less from a life's work and accomplishment. His ignorant vanity is the consequence of a soft life arrogantly lived. It is the base emotion of a patently self-absorbed person unconquerable by reason, unable to distinguish fact from perception, and convinced that predatory selfishness is a form of justice. His is the triumph of mediocrity.
Is all human thought and activity relative and meant to be stewed in a tin pot? Are we forced to admit that man’s fallen nature is irrelevant or altogether fabricated? Is contemporary human violence merely a remnant of the primordial human food chain? If one answers yes to any of these questions, then mediocrity is entrenched and no need exists for heroes or lives lived heroically.
However, if we are not destined to kowtow to a squalid and depressingly popular mediocrity, and subsisting, in the words of Theodore Roosevelt, “with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat”, then enough room remains for excellence, the heroic spirit and one more hero.
Is it possible that men and women in this generation still possess the will and capacity to “dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure”? [Roosevelt] In short, if heroism is possible, and heroes even now are emerging in this “gray twilight”, who might they be? What constitutes a hero?
A hero is an ordinary man who undertakes to meet an extraordinary challenge. He does not exploit his unusual experiences for profit or notoriety. He is loathe to write about “heroism” as a subject for fear of self-referencing and self-indulgence.
Who is qualified to write on the subject of the hero? Certainly not this writer. Why, then, is this essayist doing precisely that? Because we all have heroes whom we admire. Quite properly, there is a personal bond between the admirer and the hero who has earned our recognition. We look for an opportunity to express our gratitude.
Apart from ordinary citizens, heroes could not exist. And the admirer will always know more about his hero than his hero ever will know about him. It would be no exagerration to say that a hero and those whose lives he changes by his personal courage form an enduring, even intimate bond.
Clearly a shared understanding, shared values and beliefs, and a shared vocabulary exist between a hero and those who look up to him. A few moments of honest reflection affirms that the admirer of a hero can have something to say about him and the subject of heroism. A hero is a man whose personal courage and intellectual integrity has a transformational effect on the people of his generation. It is a not improbable that the same heroic spirit can be shared by an extraordinary individual and the people of his nation.
The greatest enemy of the hero is intentional mediocrity. Far from being a passive place marker in the market of human behavioral transactgions, mediocrity threatens the human person's understanding of self and the faculty of reason. Mediocrity dissolves and therefore relativizes the hierarchy of truth. It presents truth as fantasy. The metastasis of mediocrity is complete when the human intellect, starved of knowledge (and wisdom), wearies of pretense and accepts as its content egregious lies.
Critics will impugn a hero using the vocabulary of their own torpor and emptiness of spirit. Yet they are powerless to deny the existence of good and evil or the hierarchy of truth. Whatever form and intensity their stupidity takes on, they cannot alter the fact that humanity is enthralled and all too often overcome by evil. Nor can they talk away the massive evidence of human criminal conduct, corruption, violence and murder in the most advanced societies.
At the end of the day, the fact that all human communities seek out heroes affirms man's enduring conviction that good and evil exist and, moreover the good must triumph over evil. A hero is someone who fights against wrong whether it is in the realm of thought, deeds or witness. He fights for those who--in the mind of the society which embraces him--are deserving of his care and protection. “Those” in need may be few but more often are the many. The hero of the few may soon be forgotten. The hero of many will be remembered for a generation or longer. (Part 2 of 3.)
3rdStreet Zoology /Pattern of Behavior


