This space takes inspiration from Gary Snyder's advice:
Stay together/Learn the flowers/Go light

Saturday, 2 July 2011

My mini-Gospel

Jesus said, “No one can be the slave of two masters; they will either hate the first and love the second, or treat the first with respect and the second with scorn. You cannot be the slave both of God and of money.” (Matthew 6:24)

“That is why I am telling you not to worry about your life and what you are to eat, nor about your body and how to clothe it. Surely life means more than food, and the body more than clothing! Look at the birds in the sky. They do not sow or reap or gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not worth much more than they are? Can you, for all your worrying, add one single inch to your span of life? And why worry about clothing? Think of the flowers growing in the fields; they never have to work or spin; yet I assure you that not even Solomon in all his regalia was robed as one of these. Now if that is how God clothes the grass in the field, will he not much more look after you? So do not worry: do not say, ‘What are we to eat? What are we to drink?’ Your heavenly Father knows you need them all.” (Matthew 6:25-34)

“Ask, and it will be given to you; search and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened to you. For the one who asks always receives; the one who searches always finds; the one who knocks will always have the door opened to them. Know your Father in heaven will give good things to those who ask him!” (Mathew 7:7-11)

“So you should pray like this:
 Our Father in heaven,
 may you be held holy,
 your kingdom come,
 your will be done
 on earth as in heaven.
 Give us today our daily bread.
 And forgive us our sins,
 as we forgive those who sin against us.
 Give us strength when we face tests,
 and rescue us from the forces of evil.”
 (Matthew 6:7-13)
Adapted
Jerusalem Bible London 1966

Friday, 10 June 2011

The Infinite

i thank You God for most this amazing
day:for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky;and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes

(i who have died am alive again today,
and this is the sun's birthday;this is the birth
day of life and of love and wings:and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)

how should tasting touching hearing seeing
breathing any--lifted from the no
of allnothing--human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?

(now the ears of my ears awake and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)
          e e cummings          (1894-1962)


Listen to Cummings read this poem (above).You might enjoy the poem set to music. The Eric Whitacre setting is well-known, but the one below by Elliot Z Levine is a fitting upbeat rendering. Enjoy!   



Sunday, 9 January 2011

Prayer of Francis

Lord, make me an instrument of your peace,
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, let me sow pardon;
where there is doubt, let me sow faith;
where there is despair, let me sow hope;
where there is darkness, let me sow light;
where there is sadness, let me sow joy.

O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console;
not so much seek to be understood as to understand;
not so much seek to be loved as to love.

For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.

[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[   
This is one of several striking prayers Francis left to his followers.  Francis was born at Assisi, Italy, in 1182. After a carefree youth, he turned his back on inherited wealth and committed himself to God. Like many early saints, he lived a very simple life of poverty, and in so doing, gained a reputation of being the friend of animals. He died in 1226, aged 44.

Saturday, 1 January 2011

Ho Chi Minh City: The Tall...

At 68 storeys, this new office tower in Ho Chi Minh City is the highest in Vietnam – though Hanoi plans to soon outdo us. The helicopter pad is a striking feature. In contrast, French colonial buildings, as in the foreground, remain in the city, though the rate of loss through wear and tear and pressure for development are taking their toll. The Bitexco Financial Tower opened in October 2010 and when fully occupied about 10,000 people will work there. The design is based on the shape of a closed lotus flower. The building is well-lit at night, adding to Saigon’s attractive profile after dark.Thanks to Rachel and Anh Son for the photos

Friday, 31 December 2010

And The Tiny...

Houses with rooms and shops
in the tourist hub of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Architectural oddities abound in Ho Chi Minh City, formerly known as Saigon, a term still widely used, officially as well as unofficially. The skinny building is an extreme form of what are called "tunnel" houses. They often have no windows at the sides, and can have an impressive depth. Though dark, the houses of this kind are cool, so very suitable for the region's tropical climate. However, there is one more feature of interest beyond the thick skein of phone, Internet, cable TV and electricity wires that mar the street scenery around the city, and that is that the price of the skinny house would probably exceed the cost of a reasonable apartment in most big cities in the US or Europe. Property owners can get huge prices, such is the demand - and the ability to pay big money -  given the rapid growth of the  economy at about 6 per cent a year.

The Meaning of Christmas

Those who greet Jesus at Christmas shall be called 'The Holy People' (1). Why 'holy'? Surely only God is holy? Perhaps it's that, with Christmas, in the first and ever since,
Light shines forth for the just
and joy for the upright of heart.
Rejoice, you just, in the Lord;
give glory to his holy name.(2)
Those who are holy, whether human or divine, are just, upright or full of integrity. It is that fullness of integrity that enables one to be  'holy', and a definition of holy is 'being separated, apart from, beyond what anything less than what dignity demands as right and true'. When there is no impurity in the mix the outcome is  a perfect state.
A king rules by integrity
and princes rule by law;
each is like a shelter from the wind
a refuge from the storm,
like streams of water in dry places.(3)
And Christmas is a time when we get an inkling of the perfect state that should be:
Once more there [is] poured on us
the spirit from above;
then shall the wilderness be fertile land;
integrity will bring peace,
justice give lasting security.
Happy will you be, sowing by every stream,
letting ox and donkey roam free.(4)
We also get some insight into the goodness of God,  who, by becoming human,  is prepared to do what is incomprehensible by any measure other than love. This is the summation of the 'good news' of  Jesus, at once true man and true God, that Paul makes in his letter to his young colleague Titus, when he writes (in this edited form):
When the kindness and love of God for mankind was revealed...it was for no reason except his own compassion that he saved us. He did this so that we should become heirs looking forward to inheriting eternal life.
That relationship with God who loves us demands that we be focused on fulfilling God's wish that each person follow a way of life that has integrity at its heart.

(1) Isaiah 62:11-12
(2) Psalm 96:11-12
(3) Isaiah 32:1-2
(4) Isaiah 32:15-17, 19-20

Wednesday, 6 October 2010

Human engineering

One of the biggest challenges humans have ever faced is beginning to confront us. More and more often it is demanded of us, in one country or another, to decide whether there is an ultimate value to the human person. The decision that we will need to make repeatedly during the next 100 years is whether humans ought to allow themselves to be transformed to an extent where a being's humanity is in doubt - though that transformation is promoted as a way of making a person better able to block disease and illness, to perhaps be more intellectually able, to reduce stress. The possibility is that some humans become of the manbearpig kind and will be exploited as deserving less respect. Thereon in there will be classes of humans, with vicious exploitation of "lower" classes being the norm.
Genetically engineered creatures are much on the mind of artist Patricia Piccinini. The Young Family, above,  is from 2003. A later work has a half-human, half-ape wet nurse, one of several works where a "woman" is a controllable artifact.
"Why not make a half a dozen while we at it?" Two forms of human engineering, the cloned and the genetically manipulated.
The media have looked at the implications of cloning for society, but genetic engineering is less often speculated about. It's easier to go down the cyborg path in portraying the human future. But Michel Houellebecq's Atomised (*) does explore an existence of a new human race without individuality - as everyone shares the same engineered genetic code. The French novelist, poet, and provocateur, to use John Updike's description, portrays a new solely rational species, and one that no longer relies on sexuality for reproduction.

The most terrifying element of this future is that the people would accept the transformation because they believed the solution to every problem was a technical one - science would deliver a world where there was no egotism, cruelty or anger. On that account, in search of an easy life, the people capitulate, allowing the loss of personal freedom, dignity, and the desire for truth and beauty. People become disposable so that one "neohuman" can annihilate a lesser creature with “the sensation of accomplishing a necessary and legitimate act”, as Houellebecq puts it in a later novel that Updike discusses.

Updike concludes by questioning the quality of the "neohuman" future, "a world [...]  that excludes the pleasures of parenting, the comforts of communal belonging, the exercise of daily curiosity, and the widely met moral responsibility to make the best of each stage of life, including the last".

The ease with which a "neohuman" future could entrap humankind was shown in the push for universal availability of abortion, just when humanity took pride in sweeping away the legalized racism of the United States and South Africa. Another round of confusion is over the "right to die", which Updike refers to, and euthanasia, the path to final victimization. Humans are apt to take the easy option, and World War II especially  shows disappointingly how moral development does have its reversals.

Also, unwary humans could find ourselves where we did not set out to go. If we look at the travails of Monsanto in 2009-2010 we find it has big problems as weeds "learn" to cope with its herbicides and its genetically modified soybeans have not performed as well as expected. So things don't always go to plan in the world of genetic engineering. Likewise there are dangers in scientists creating human embryos to harvest stems cells, all for a good cause, but in the process treating the living human being as just something to be used and discarded, despite all the oversight committees.

Scientists don't want to accept limits even though there are other avenues to proceed along to get stem cells. That widespread, though not universal, refusal to accept limits is in contrast with the soul-searching that went on among the Manhattan Project team developing the atom bomb. American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer was not afraid to air his doubts as to the morality of the assignment, and after the war, on the risk of an arms race, which, of course, eventuated. 

In brief, there is an urgent need for humans to be humble, and to learn from the evidence from all around us, of the mistakes we make. The evidence proves we are not masters, but stewards of our world, and that includes of our own destiny. 


(*)Vintage 2001, translated from Les Particules élémentaires