The 2014 TCU Horned Frogs Football Team stormed back in the
national title picture with a vengeance after a few “down” seasons getting used
to how the game is played in the Big 12. With NCAA Coach of Year Gary Patterson
at the coaching helm and Breakout star and Heisman Trophy finalist QB Trevone Boykin leading the way, TCU surpassed
all expectations, soaring to a 12-1 Record. A heart breaking, last-minute loss
to Baylor was the only thing that prevented the proud TCU Football team from
playing in the 2015 College Football Playoff. Yet, was TCU’s exclusion
justified? Read ultimate sports fan Lee Enochs’ definitive case for TCU’s
inclusion in the College Football Playoff and why Lee believes TCU was robbed!
Here I discuss theology and national events from a distinctly Reformed Christian and conservative Libertarian political perspective. I believe the best government is the least amount of government. I believe the State exists along the narrow function of protection against force, theft, fraud, enforcement of contracts and so on. Any more of an extensive state will violate persons’ rights and is hence unwarranted.
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Getting Smashed on New Year’s Eve
In about four hours the glittery
“ball” will drop in Time’s Square (which is not so far from me now) and we will
usher in another New Year. This past year was enigmatic for me, in that it was
filled with very perplexing events and high drama. Against all odds, I managed
to graduate from a fundamentalist Baptist seminary down in Texas. I am not sure
how I managed to graduate from there without getting kicked out.
That did not happen, and I
somehow got out of Texas relatively unscathed. Well, “unscathed” in a physical
sense, since I was absolutely "pistol-whipped" emotionally from the fundamentalist
jihad I experienced down there. I am not certain if I am the same person that I
was when I went in that school.
Somehow, I lost something
about myself during my six full years in the epicenter of Southern Baptist
life. While I graduated at the top of my class, I managed to hit absolute rock
bottom spiritually. So, much so, I feel like getting completely smashed tonight
on New Year’s Eve.
But getting “smashed” is not a good idea. No, I won’t get “smashed” on booze tonight, but turn my heart towards God in prayer and forgive my fundamentalist enemies. New Year’s Day is all about new beginnings and new resolutions.
But getting “smashed” is not a good idea. No, I won’t get “smashed” on booze tonight, but turn my heart towards God in prayer and forgive my fundamentalist enemies. New Year’s Day is all about new beginnings and new resolutions.
My prayer is that no one will
get smashed on booze tonight and end up smashing their cars against an unsuspecting telephone pole. The sad and
tragic reality is that someone will…
Today, I resolve to let my
bitterness towards Paige Patterson and the Southern Baptist nightmare I endured down in the Bayou. There is nothing more I can do about it and I must now place my bad
experiences in the South in the hands of God.
The time has come for me to
move on and fight new battles, scale new heights and rise to new challenges. New
Year’s Day is about New Beginnings and in Christ I am a new creation. The most important thing about being given life in Jesus Christ is that I can begin again, right here and right now.
"If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation, old things have passed away and behold, new things have come" (2 Corinthians 5:17).
Hard Knocks and the Facts of Life: Why I am a Capitalist
Recently, I published my senior thesis, A Biblical Defense of Capitalism on Amazon.com. This is an uninteresting topic to most people, so I doubt that very few people will purchase a copy. However, I wrote this thesis for myself and for my own thinking processes regarding economics, arguing for the basic ethical legitimacy of personal property rights and earning a profit. I wrote my thesis at the height of the “Occupy Wall Street” movement a few years ago.
In A Biblical Defense of Capitalism, I argue from the moral validity of owning your own property from the Mosaic Decalogue (Exodus 20:15). I essentially argue that the Scriptural injunctions against theft and coveting are predicated upon personal ownership of property and not communal ownership.
For if God intended all property to be communal and socialistic in nature, and then the prohibitions against stealing and coveting would be rendered obsolete. This is obvious, since the object or objects under consideration would be collectively owned. In other words, if all property was equally and socialistically owned by everyone, then it would be impossible to steal or covet another person’s “belongings,” since they are in fact communally owned.
I also argue that it is ethically justifiable to earn a profit and that legitimate profit earning is commendable.
I am not arguing for some sort of “exploitive capitalism” wherein an individual is recompensed unjustly for selling something. All I am arguing is that it is justifiable to earn a basic profit in selling or trading something. I believe the time and toil one expends in producing the item or items for sale are commensurate with the profit earned in selling the item.
I learned economics the hard way. At one time, I lived a hand to mouth existence and was a drain on the American economy and my family and friends. I learned to respect basic capitalistic principles through hard knocks and the facts of life...
I learned economics the hard way. At one time, I lived a hand to mouth existence and was a drain on the American economy and my family and friends. I learned to respect basic capitalistic principles through hard knocks and the facts of life...
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Introducing my New Book!
A BIBLICAL DEFENSE OF CAPITALISM
by Lee Enochs
Purchase my new book by clicking onto the following link:
Breaking Bad: When NFL Players do Stupid Things
While I do often comment on sports related things here on
Theologian X, recently there have been enough bone head moves committed by NFL
players for me to say something. Only those very close to me know that I am, in
all actuality, a big sports fan.
In fact, I have followed college and
professional sports my entire life. In any event, I love sports and while I do
not comment about athletics much on my various modes of media expression, I am
still a passionate fan. Having said this, recent events surrounding the NFL
have greatly angered me.
The first bad move I need to comment on is the absolutely
uncool and intolerable behavior of Detroit Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong
Suh, who maliciously stomped on the injured leg of Packers QB Aaron Rodgers
leg.
I believe the video evidence demonstrates that Suh did this on purpose and
deserves the suspension he received from the NFL for this coming weekend’s game
against the Dallas Cowboys. Suh has done this kind of trashy and spiteful stuff
before and deserves to be thrown out of the NFL forever. His cleating of
Rodgers only hurts himself and the Detroit Lions.
The second NFL player I felt obliged to comment about is
Johnny Manziel, who had a horrible rookie season with the Cleveland Browns and
must make immediate and necessary changes or run the risk of getting booted
from the NFL for good. Manziel has a lot of talent but is very immature and needs
some sort of character transplant before next season if he has any hope of not
riding the pine for the 2015 season.
The last NFL athlete I want to comment on is Johnny Manziel’s
teammate Josh Gordon, who plays wide receiver for the Browns. This guy is also immensely
talented at his position, and has been imparted incredible, God given ability, but is
throwing his life and career away by bad decision making. Gordon has previously
been suspended in college and by the NFL for illegal drug use and needs to
somehow get a grip on his life lest he smokes his career away too…
All these NFL players I have mentioned have incredible talent.
However, they are self-imploding and destroying their careers by unwise choices
on and off the field and that is just tragic because they have been given
immense gifts. My prayer is that each of these guys wakes up and get their
lives together before it is too late. They have to learn that they have been
given extraordinary opportunities that may only come once in their lifetimes…
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Two Titans of the Christian Faith: Karl Barth and Martin Luther King, Jr.
As I grow older and branch out from my extreme conservative Evangelical background, I have come to appreciate men such as Karl Barth and Martin Luther King, Jr., more and more. Both Barth and King were titans in their time and I am attempting to understand their respective theologies as I make my own mark in this world.
Should Conservatives Support Gay Marriage?
I am a libertarian in my understanding of the relationship between the government and citizenry. Because of this, I wonder if I should be opposed to gay marriage. I am left wondering if we should be advocating government interference in any aspect of our lives....
Saturday, December 27, 2014
The Most Influential Person in My Life: Steve Jobs
While there have been many influential people in my life, none have influenced me like Apple Computer founder Steve Jobs. Although Steve has been gone now for a few years, his vision for technology and commerce made an indelible impact on the direction of my life. I want to be a transformative person like Steve Jobs, who changed the world, one personal computer at a time.
My First Book Should be on Amazon Soon!
As many of you know, I am working on a book on the Southern Baptist Convention. It has been a massive undertaking. In the process of figuring out how to publish my book, I decided to publish my Senior Thesis, "A Biblical Defense of Capitalism" in order to see how the publishing process works. It should be for sale in the next few days!
Friday, December 26, 2014
News on My New Book!
January 15, 2015 Release Date!
Over the next few weeks I will be working around the clock on my new book on the Southern Baptist Convention. I am sorry if the quality and quantity of posts on this blog are not up to their normal level. The target day for the completion of my book is January 15, 2015. I will fill you in on more details as they come in.
I have been writing and rewriting this book for several months and want to give an accurate depiction of what happened to me at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and why I played a pivotal role in exposing a major scandal at SWBTS this past Spring.
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
Why I really don't do Christmas
Why I Really, Really Don’t Do
Christmas
“These are the
shadows of things that have been”
The Ghost of Christmas Past
(A
Christmas Carol)
I am sorry; I really just don’t do Christmas. I know that is
heresy and even blasphemous to you southerners and sentimentalists out there,
but I really just don’t do Christmas, if “doing Christmas” means fighting and
almost killing my neighbor for a parking spot at the mall for that one last
materialist creature comfort that will be thrown in the trash come February…
Call me a Grinch, Scrooge, Goblin or whatever, but I just am
not very interested in perpetuating wanton consumerism and greed.
Now, I can relate to the “Jesus is the reason for the season”
Christian motif. I am fine with that, if that is what Christmas really means. However, I am just not sure if “Christmas” is
anything but a display of abject materialism.
To me, if Christmas “means” anything at all, it means that
Jesus the Son of God was born into this world. He was born to die on the cross
for my sins and rise again from the dead. He did all that if I would simply
repent and believe in His name.
As a conservative, I also get that celebrating Christmas
means honoring tradition and family to so many Americans, but to me it only
brings back horrible memories of alcoholic relatives getting liquored up and
acting badly.
So, for me and probably many other Americans, the holiday
conjures up the “ghosts of Christmas past.” That is why many people are
depressed during the holidays.
Monday, December 22, 2014
My Biggest Blogging Mistake
I made a colossal and unmitigated mistake not standing up for the police in the Ferguson and NYC Police Controversies
"Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger."
James 1:19
I made a mistake. No, "mistake" is too insignificant word for what I have done recently. I failed exceedingly in a recent blog post I wrote about the Ferguson and New York City Police controversies. In fact, major mistakes were made on my part and I am deeply mournful for my failings in this respect.
You see, for my entire life I have been a conservative. I am a 'conservative's conservative" and have always tried to stand up for law and order and the rule of law in American society. However, in the case of the controversies in NYC and Ferguson, I got caught up with the excitement and rushed to judgment too quickly on these issues.
In fact, I allowed peer pressure and the fact that I am trying to make friends and influence people in a very secular and liberal college town to cloud my better judgment. The Bible says, "A fools voice is known through a multitude of words," (Ecclesiastes 5:13), and I have said far too much without checking the facts in order to solicit readership for this blog.
I know want to go down on record that while I do believe that there is justification to be angry about the Eric Garner and Michael Brown shootings, I now know that I spoke far too quickly and rushed to a verdict without doing my my due diligence and own private investigation before saying that these two young men "were murdered" by the police. I simply do not know if this is the case. I need to be far more careful with what I write here on this blog.
Since the beginning of October, over 25,000 people have read my blog and profile page on Google, and I have an obligation before God to speak and write about truthful things. I was far from being accurate in what I wrote and I am sorry. I am crushed beyond belief for my failings in this respect and my heart breaks and mourns the loss of these two police officers who were killed on the job in NYC.
Enemy of the State
Why the Best Government is the Least Amount of Government
by Lee Edward Enochs
Executive Director
Princeton Conservative Club
Executive Director
Princeton Conservative Club
Recently I started the Princeton Conservative Club a society for like-minded conservatives for the purpose of fellowship, discuss, debate and changing our world through the promotion of conservative economic and political values. I figure if I am really going to be here in the Princeton community, I must contribute the best way I can by organizing a club for like minded people, because that is what I do.
I have a confession to make; I am an enemy of the State. Now, don’t get me wrong I love America and believe in our form of constitutional government. But I believe, without reservation, that we, the people of the United States of America, have become far too dependent on the State to meet our basic needs.
I am an “enemy of the State”
in the respect that I reject the socialistic mentality now in vogue in contemporary
American society that says the federal government knows best how we should live
our lives and spend our money.
I am a vocal “small
government” proponent of the “minimal state” concept of government in political
philosophy that essentially argues that the State’s only legitimate function is
the protection from various kinds of assault, theft, breach of contract and
fraud.
I believe the only legitimate
institutions of the federal government are the judicial branch to adjudicate the
law, law enforcement to enforce these laws within the boundaries of our State,
and the military to protect us from threats from the outside.
In a broader sense, I also believe
in the legitimacy of the existence and function of various civil service
departments such as paramedics, fire departments and prisons. Other than this,
I believe in limiting federal agencies and reducing the means by which the
State is involved in our daily lives.
I believe “the leviathan”
that is the current American federal government is far too big, far too
intrusive and is grossly out of control. I am an advocate of introducing an amendment
to the US Constitution that forces the federal government to reduce all debt
and eliminate the national deficit.
I believe the best government
is the least amount of government. I believe in absolute libertarian freedom
and that we as humans function best by determining our own economic well-being
without the long arm of the State being involved in every aspect of our lives.
I believe in
self-determinism, that we are the masters of our own economic and political
destiny. I want to live free from government intrusion in my personal, private,
sexual, economic and political life and believe I, not the State, knows best
how to live and manage my life. I do not look to the federal government to
solve my problems and neither should you.
Each and every time we look
to the State to meet our needs, we give and equal amount of our freedom and
self-determinism away and allow the federal government to stick its hands in
things it has no business being in in the first place.
We are the masters of our own
destiny and the captains of our own fates and with the help of God; we can
limit the power of the State by working hard towards our own prosperity and
self-sufficiency.
I believe in the political
philosophy known as “Libertarianism” that argues that liberty and
self-determinism should be our primary existential objectives. I want to see us
maximize our autonomy, freedom of choice and I advocate the role of our
individual freedom in all matters.
I believe dependency on the
State to meet our basics needs is a form of slavery.
I want to live free or die
hard.
In this respect, I am an “Enemy
of the State.”
Sunday, December 21, 2014
The Dogs of War
"Cry 'Havoc!', and let slip the dogs of war."
Act 3, Scene 1, line 273 of William Shakespeare Julius Caesar:
I have spent the greater part of my adult life embroiled in one controversy or another. The problem with controversy is that once it has begun, the person who starts it, has no control of its outcome. Like one who cuts open a pillow case full of feathers and sets them to the wind, the individual who sets them to the wind, does not have control where these feathers land.
This was the case with the muslim controversy at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. While I was the initial student that raised my concern about Paige Patterson's bending of the rules to allow non-Christians to attend a Southern Baptist seminary, I was not pleased with much of what happened as a result of the issue becoming part of the national news.
That is the problem with starting controversy, there is the possibility of letting slip the dogs of war...
Saturday, December 20, 2014
Welcome to the Jungle
Big Things in Store for 2015
"Welcome To The Jungle"
by Guns N' Roses
Welcome to the jungle
We've got fun 'n' games
We got everything you want
Honey, we know the names
We are the people that can find
Whatever you may need
If you got the money, honey
We got your disease
In the jungle
Welcome to the jungle
Watch it bring you to your
knees, knees
I wanna watch you bleed
We've got fun 'n' games
We got everything you want
Honey, we know the names
We are the people that can find
Whatever you may need
If you got the money, honey
We got your disease
In the jungle
Welcome to the jungle
Watch it bring you to your
knees, knees
I wanna watch you bleed
Well, the end of 2014 is fast approaching, and while it has been a good year overall for me (I got the heck out of the South), I have big plans for 2015.
The contemporary music artist "Pitbull" has a new album coming out called "Globalization." I can relate to this incentive. I want to go "global" with my blog, podcast, books and other venues and have some major ideas to gain a large audience for my unique brand of Libertarian radicalism.
I plan to bust out and go big in 2015. Much of my plans for launching myself into the mainstream media involves nearby New York City. Frank Sinatra once said, if I can make there, I can make it anywhere!
Welcome to the Jungle Mr. Enochs, Welcome to the Jungle....
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Is God Dead?
The Death of God in Postmodern America
"The fool has said in his heart there is no God"
Psalm 14:1
“But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts, and always be ready to give a defense to everyone who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you, with meekness and fear.”
1 Peter 3:15
We live in a time period that many scholars and astute observers of our chaotic age have called, “The Postmodern era of Western Civilization.” That is, the vast majority of people now living within the North American hemisphere no longer believe in the notion of absolute truth and morality. In the face of this ethical and propositional wasteland, the Church of Jesus Christ has been commanded by God to make disciples of all nations (Matthew 28:19-20, Mark 16:15, Luke 24:44-47, John 20:21 and Acts 1:8).
In order to effectively reach our relativistic and pluralistic society with the saving Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, his followers must also heed the Biblical mandate to engage in the activity of Christian Apologetics. The term “Apologetics” is taken from the Greek word “Apologia” meaning to “give a defense” of something through rational argumentation. The New Testament uses the term “apologia” eight different times in New Testament. In Acts 22: 1, the Apostle Paul said, “Brethren and fathers, and fathers hear my defense which I offer to you now." In Acts 25:16 Paul said, “Is it not the custom of the Romans to hand over any man before)the accused meets his accusers face to face and has an opportunity to make his defense against the charges?” In 1 Corinthians 9:3 Paul wrote, “My defense to those who examine me is this."
In Philippians 1:7 Paul wrote “Since both my imprisonment and in the defense and confirmation of the Gospel you are all partakers of grace with me.” And in 2 Timothy 4:16 , the Apostle Paul writes, “At my first defense no one supported me but all deserted me, may it not be counted against them.” Not only did the Apostles of Jesus Christ command that Christians engage in the role of apologetics, defending the essential truth claims of the historic Christian faith, but you also see the Patristic Church Fathers obeying this call and command as many of these immediate successors to the Apostles defended the historic Christian faith against the false teachings that raged against the early Church. Church history is replete with examples of the Church Fathers defending the Faith against such heretics as Marcion, the Gnostics and Dynamic Monarchians.
Great Christian leaders of history such as Tertullian, Athanasius and Augustine all were faithful in their time and defended the essential truths and body of non negotiable truths of the historic Christian Faith. Similarly, Christians in our contemporary postmodern world are called to make a defense of the faith and to refute the objections of the unbelieving world around us. We are called to stand up against all opposition and proclaim that Jesus Christ is Lord to the Glory of God the Father (Romans 10:9-10 and 1 Corinthians 12:3-4).
In light of the Christian's responsibility to engage in the mandate to defend the faith, what should the concerned Christian do with the argument that "God is dead?" While the "death of God" school of theology and philosophy is no longer a strong movement in America, the notion of God's death is very much with all of us in the United States.
That is, while many Americans profess to believe in the conception of the Christian God, they live as functional atheists in the respect that their faith has no impact on their decision making and other relevant parts of their lives. "God is dead, and we have killed Him," is a famous comment from long ago.
It may seem outlandish to many, but if we are realistic about the spiritual and ideological state of American society, we would have to admit that the historic Christian conception of God is no longer the prevailing ideological and epistemological driving point of the vast majority of Americans. While we may profess to have a "personal relationship with God" or whatever, we must admit, that abject materialism and secularism are the more dominant worldviews in our society than the traditional conception of God.
Is God dead? In reality, no, God is not dead. He is very much alive. In God, we live and move and have our very being. God is the source of our very existence. However, the traditional conception and notion of God in American culture is very much dead. We have replaced God with the "gods" of abject materialism and creature comfort. While God is very much real, we have killed the conception of God as a cultural reality with our greed and crass consumerism. We must repent as a collective society and turn back to the God of historic Christianity before it is too late. This God sent His only begotten Son to die on the cross and rise again that we might live with Him in glory forever.
"The fool has said in his heart there is no God"
Psalm 14:1
“But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts, and always be ready to give a defense to everyone who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you, with meekness and fear.”
1 Peter 3:15
We live in a time period that many scholars and astute observers of our chaotic age have called, “The Postmodern era of Western Civilization.” That is, the vast majority of people now living within the North American hemisphere no longer believe in the notion of absolute truth and morality. In the face of this ethical and propositional wasteland, the Church of Jesus Christ has been commanded by God to make disciples of all nations (Matthew 28:19-20, Mark 16:15, Luke 24:44-47, John 20:21 and Acts 1:8).
In order to effectively reach our relativistic and pluralistic society with the saving Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, his followers must also heed the Biblical mandate to engage in the activity of Christian Apologetics. The term “Apologetics” is taken from the Greek word “Apologia” meaning to “give a defense” of something through rational argumentation. The New Testament uses the term “apologia” eight different times in New Testament. In Acts 22: 1, the Apostle Paul said, “Brethren and fathers, and fathers hear my defense which I offer to you now." In Acts 25:16 Paul said, “Is it not the custom of the Romans to hand over any man before)the accused meets his accusers face to face and has an opportunity to make his defense against the charges?” In 1 Corinthians 9:3 Paul wrote, “My defense to those who examine me is this."
In Philippians 1:7 Paul wrote “Since both my imprisonment and in the defense and confirmation of the Gospel you are all partakers of grace with me.” And in 2 Timothy 4:16 , the Apostle Paul writes, “At my first defense no one supported me but all deserted me, may it not be counted against them.” Not only did the Apostles of Jesus Christ command that Christians engage in the role of apologetics, defending the essential truth claims of the historic Christian faith, but you also see the Patristic Church Fathers obeying this call and command as many of these immediate successors to the Apostles defended the historic Christian faith against the false teachings that raged against the early Church. Church history is replete with examples of the Church Fathers defending the Faith against such heretics as Marcion, the Gnostics and Dynamic Monarchians.
Great Christian leaders of history such as Tertullian, Athanasius and Augustine all were faithful in their time and defended the essential truths and body of non negotiable truths of the historic Christian Faith. Similarly, Christians in our contemporary postmodern world are called to make a defense of the faith and to refute the objections of the unbelieving world around us. We are called to stand up against all opposition and proclaim that Jesus Christ is Lord to the Glory of God the Father (Romans 10:9-10 and 1 Corinthians 12:3-4).
In light of the Christian's responsibility to engage in the mandate to defend the faith, what should the concerned Christian do with the argument that "God is dead?" While the "death of God" school of theology and philosophy is no longer a strong movement in America, the notion of God's death is very much with all of us in the United States.
That is, while many Americans profess to believe in the conception of the Christian God, they live as functional atheists in the respect that their faith has no impact on their decision making and other relevant parts of their lives. "God is dead, and we have killed Him," is a famous comment from long ago.
It may seem outlandish to many, but if we are realistic about the spiritual and ideological state of American society, we would have to admit that the historic Christian conception of God is no longer the prevailing ideological and epistemological driving point of the vast majority of Americans. While we may profess to have a "personal relationship with God" or whatever, we must admit, that abject materialism and secularism are the more dominant worldviews in our society than the traditional conception of God.
Is God dead? In reality, no, God is not dead. He is very much alive. In God, we live and move and have our very being. God is the source of our very existence. However, the traditional conception and notion of God in American culture is very much dead. We have replaced God with the "gods" of abject materialism and creature comfort. While God is very much real, we have killed the conception of God as a cultural reality with our greed and crass consumerism. We must repent as a collective society and turn back to the God of historic Christianity before it is too late. This God sent His only begotten Son to die on the cross and rise again that we might live with Him in glory forever.
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Faith from the Ashes
Burned by the fire of fundamentalism
" Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him" (1 Corinthians 2:9),
However, despite my anguish and deep wounds, I still believe. I am still a Christian and believe in Jesus Christ and the historic and most holy Christian faith with all my heart, soul, mind and being. Despite being burned by the fundamentalist flame and the sin of my own undoing, I still believe in Christ and want to follow God. I still believe in the cross of Christ and cling to Him now. I love you all. I am still on the path to heaven, I hope...
" Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him" (1 Corinthians 2:9),
Dear Family and Friends,
My semester here in Princeton, New Jersey is fast drawing to a close. My finals are done and now, all that is left is a few papers that I think I will be able to finish by the December, 19 deadline. It has been a very hard year for me.
Although I finally graduated and earned my elusive B.A. degree, it was not without a very deep and anguishing personal price. My time there at that Southern Baptist school and within fundamentalist Evangelicalism has charred and scarred me beyond recognition. I have been burned by the fire of fundamentalist fervor and I do not where my home is. I am lost and do not know if I can ever get back to where I once belonged...
However, despite my anguish and deep wounds, I still believe. I am still a Christian and believe in Jesus Christ and the historic and most holy Christian faith with all my heart, soul, mind and being. Despite being burned by the fundamentalist flame and the sin of my own undoing, I still believe in Christ and want to follow God. I still believe in the cross of Christ and cling to Him now. I love you all. I am still on the path to heaven, I hope...
Merry Christmas,
Love,
Lee Edward "Ed" Enochs
~
It was the day the world went wrong
I screamed til my voice was gone
And watched through the tears as everything
Came crashing down
Slowly panic turns to pain
As we awake to what remains
And sift through the ashes that are left behind
But buried deep beneath
All our broken dreams
We have this hope:
Out of these ashes... beauty will rise
And we will dance among the ruins
We will see Him with our own eyes
Out of these ashes... beauty will rise
For we know, joy is coming in the morning...
In the morning, beauty will rise
So take another breath for now,
And let the tears come washing down,
And if you can't believe I will believe for you.
Cuz I have seen
The signs of spring!
Just watch and see:
Out of these ashes... beauty will rise
And we will dance among the ruins
We will see Him with our own eyes
Out of these ashes... beauty will rise
For we know, joy is coming in the morning...
In the morning...
I can hear it in the distance
And it's not too far away.
It's the music and the laughter
Of a wedding and a feast.
I can almost feel the hand of God
Reaching for my face
To wipe the tears away, and say,
"It's time to make everything new."
"Make it all new"
"Beauty will Rise"
Steve Curtis Chapman
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
No Kings, Dictators or Despots!
Why I have
been blogging and taking bold positions
by Lee Edward "Ed" Enochs
by Lee Edward "Ed" Enochs
Throughout the annals of human
history there have been certain individuals who have “thought outside the box”
and have pushed the human race forward with innovative thinking and bold
actions. The limits of time and space prohibit me from chronicling in depth for
you the prodigious mental and physical efforts of these unique transformative
individuals who have radically altered the course of human history.
However, pick an era of world
history and you will see a bold woman or man who dared to challenge conventional
wisdom and the prevailing outlook of their times. Whether it was Confucius,
Martin Luther, John Calvin, Amelia Earhart, M.K. Gandhi, Albert Einstein,
Winston Churchill, Stephen Hawking, Martin Luther King, Jr., Mother Theresa or
Steve Jobs, these bold pioneers of human history pushed us forward and changed
our world for the better and forever. As I grow older and the time of my
departure from this earthly sphere draws near, I have decided to buck the conventional Evangelical and suburban American wisdom and actually attempt to make a difference in this great big world we live in. I believe there is more to human existence than making a bunch of money so I can live in a big mansion and take luxury cruises to the Bahamas’ and live out the rest of my days in a mundane suburban existence.
I want to radically change the world and in
this era of specialization, I realize now that I cannot change the world in
every area, so I have decided to focus on a few important matters of importance
to human existence. I have come to believe, after decades of “wilderness
wandering” and contemplation about what contributions I can make for the
betterment of collective society, I have come to believe that I want to be
known as an individual who stood, with great vehemence, for human autonomy and
personal freedom. That is, I want to stand for our right as human beings to be
our own decision makers in the world of politics, economics and religion. I
want to stand for a brand of conservatism that stresses fiscal and personal
independence from church and state.
I have come to believe that pure libertarianism, the belief that
human freedom and liberty from external control is the principle objective of
human existence. I have come to believe that our personal autonomy and freedom
of choice in the areas of economics, politics and religion is the very thing
that all of us need to be truly authentic human beings. The maximization of our
personal freedom and autonomy from government control and tyranny is my primary
reason for existence. It is my mission statement and the reason why I live,
move and have my being. I want us to be truly free that we might live, succeed and
worship God without being controlled by anything but the dictates of our own conscience.
This is why I have been blogging
and shooting these odd little videos, I am on the verge of launching myself
into the world of ideas and the public arena. I want us to give libertarianism
and true freedom a choice. I do not want to be controlled or regulated by the
state or any given religion. This is my stand, for freedom and for autonomy
from external control.
I have come under the sway of freedom and have become
drunk on the wine of liberty. My goal is for the maximization of our autonomy
from government and religious coercion and control. I believe for women and men
to be truly free we must take a stand and free ourselves from dependence on
anyone but ourselves. Give me liberty or give me death. Let her or him who has
ears let them hear! I know that very few people take me seriously now, but what the heck! Maybe something will happen and by the grace of God, I will change the world. The world has been changed by dreamers that few believed in during their lifetimes, but now their ideas rule the world!
Monday, December 15, 2014
Announcing My New Book: The Southern Baptist Blues
Written in the style of Jack Kerouac's On the Road, it chronicles my journey into the insanity and heart of darkness that is the Southern Baptist Convention and how I barely made it out alive. A riveting and hilarious look at dysfunctional and autocratic fundamentalism in America's largest Protestant denomination.
The Southern Baptist Blues is a book about a man who left a houseboat in Hawaii and wound up deep in the heart of the southern Bible Belt at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, one of the most absurd and bizarre institutions of " higher learning" in America. It chronicles how he covertly stood up to fundamentalist leader Paige Patterson and while he lost that battle, he regained his authentic soul...
Stay tuned for the details and hang on to your seats folks, because The Southern Baptist Blues will pull no punches in exposing the lunacy presently transpiring at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and throughout the Southern Baptist Convention.
I promise you it will be one of the most controversial books of 2015 in the Southern Baptist world. Wait and see, it should be released to the public this coming January! It will give my side of a controversy that took made the national news this past summer!
The Southern Baptist Blues is a book about a man who left a houseboat in Hawaii and wound up deep in the heart of the southern Bible Belt at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, one of the most absurd and bizarre institutions of " higher learning" in America. It chronicles how he covertly stood up to fundamentalist leader Paige Patterson and while he lost that battle, he regained his authentic soul...
Stay tuned for the details and hang on to your seats folks, because The Southern Baptist Blues will pull no punches in exposing the lunacy presently transpiring at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and throughout the Southern Baptist Convention.
I promise you it will be one of the most controversial books of 2015 in the Southern Baptist world. Wait and see, it should be released to the public this coming January! It will give my side of a controversy that took made the national news this past summer!
Paige Patterson and his dog
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Congratulations to Marcus Mariota: Hawaii's First Heisman Winner
I just wanted to give the University of Oregon's Marcus Mariota his props for being the first native Hawaiian to win the the Heisman Trophy, College Football's most coveted award given to the best player of a given season.
I have spent a lot of time in Hawaii myself and have found the Islands great and the people even greater. I will never forget my eight separate trips to the Hawaiian Islands from 2006-2010. I actually lived there for a year in 2006-2007 and had the time of my life. My dad spent the last twenty years of his life in Hawaii and have fond memories of my great visits and escapades in those majestic islands in the South Pacific.
Saturday, December 13, 2014
An Apology to Law Enforcement in America
Dear Friends,
Today I received a message from a long time friend who works in the law enforcement industry, that simply said, "You are no friend to law enforcement." I was stunned by this, because all of my life I have tried to be a faithful American and obey the laws of the land. I have always sided with law and order and believe I owe the vast majority of law enforcement officers in America an apology. I am sorry if one of my recent blogs on the Eric Garner case in NYC in any way could be perceived as being against police officers. I believe the vast majority of law enforcement officers in America are doing a great job at a very difficult task. I am sincerely sorry for my comments.
Sincerely in Christ,
Lee Edward Enochs
Finals are almost here!
Dear Friends,
It has been a wild year and it is almost over. I won't be blogging much for the next week because I have finals and three papers due this coming week! It has been a blessing to contribute to this blog and I have some great things planned for the coming year including the launch of my new podcast!
Have a great week!
Sincerely in Christ,
Lee Edward Enochs
Friday, December 12, 2014
Should America Torture Its Prisoners?
Broken
Trust: Why America disgraced itself in the Torturing of Detainee’s
If
the foundations are destroyed, what can the righteous do?
Psalm 11:3
by Lee Edward Enochs
Executive Director
Conservatives for California
by Lee Edward Enochs
Executive Director
Conservatives for California
Today I would like to focus on the recent
stunning revelation that just six days after the September 11, 2001 attacks orchestrated
by Osama Bin Laden and his Al Qaeda operatives, President George W. Bush signed
a secret order to capture and imprison terrorists, and many of these alleged
operatives were tortured by the C.I.A.
New York Times writers James Risen and Matt
Apuzzo reported on the front page of their newspaper yesterday that these
detainees were “chained to walls and forgotten, froze to death on concrete
floors and were “water-boarded” until they were rendered unconscious.” (See NYT article, "C.I.A. First Planned Jails Abiding by U.S. Standards, 12-11-14).
I am very disturbed about this and have a
great deal of passion about this matter, for I believe this is no way for
America to act.
I believe these actions clearly violate the
US Constitution that guarantees in the fifth and eighth amendments that those
tried by the US government will be rendered “due process of the law,” and that
they will not experience “cruel and unusual punishment.”
The fact that the American government was
involved in torturing people is unconscionable to me because our nation is
predicated upon civil liberties and the rule of law.
I know that these alleged Al Qaeda
operatives are not American citizens, but I believe that every person that is treated
by the long arms of America’s justice system should be afforded the same
constitutional rights as anyone else that is being rendered adjudication by our
judicial process.
I do
not care if these alleged criminals were Al Qaeda operatives or not, since each
person under the Constitution is innocent until proven guilty.
This “presumption of innocence” is the very
bedrock foundation of American justice and should be afforded to all who is
judged by it. I believe in the principle of Ei incumbit probatio qui dicit, non qui negat (the burden of proof is on he who declares,
not on he who denies).
Irrespective of how reprehensible these
alleged operatives acted, they deserved and deserve their day in court and
should be afforded the same rights of a fair trial anyone else is who is being
adjudicated by the American judicial system.
I believe there should be no exceptions to
this since America is supposed to be government of the people and by the people
and guided by the highest moral principles and the supposed rule of law.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Don't Mess with Texas (What I Liked About the Lone Star State)
I think it is time that I wrote something about what I found good about living in Texas. I lived in the Lone Star state for almost seven years. I worked, scratched and clawed my way to earning a degree at a Southern Baptist college that clearly has some issues.
However, despite my intense fear and loathing for much of what I encountered at that Baptist college, living in Texas was not all bad.
In fact, I found most of the people outside Southern Baptist fundamentalism to be decent and honorable people.
I worked at a church that was very good to me. The people there were amazing and adopted me as one of their own.
I often feel bad about writing on my issues with the Southern Baptist Convention, because lost in my campaign against the SBC, is the great time I had with people outside of fundamentalism.
I also made friends with several people inside that Southern Baptist school, so my time there was not all bad.
I owe all my friends at that school and outside of the SBC a word of apology. I have not forgotten your acts of kindness towards me nor your friendship.
I do not want you to get caught up in my world, so I have not included you in my posts on this blog. Thanks to all those who reached out to me. I would not have made it without you!
As for Texas, I liked most of it. Most of all I loved that Texas had no state income tax. The BBQ at Railhead was amazing as was joking around with my friends about the TCU Horned Frogs and those perennial under- achievers, the Dallas Cowboys.
I will never forget those good people I met in Texas.
Thanks for the memories.
Monday, December 8, 2014
How Morrissey Helped Me Survive a Fundamentalist Baptist College
"There Is A Light That Never Goes Out"
By the Smiths
(Lyrics by Morrissey)
Take me out tonight
Where there's music and there's people
Who are young and alive
Driving in your car
I never never want to go home
Because I haven't got one anymore
Take me out tonight
Because I want to see people
And I want to see life
Driving in your car
Oh please don't drop me home
Because it's not my home, it's their home
And I'm welcome no more
And if a double-decker bus
Crashes in to us
To die by your side
Is such a heavenly way to die
And if a ten ton truck
Kills the both of us
To die by your side
Well the pleasure, the privilege is mine
There is a light and it never goes out
There is a light and it never goes out
There is a light and it never goes out
Where there's music and there's people
Who are young and alive
Driving in your car
I never never want to go home
Because I haven't got one anymore
Take me out tonight
Because I want to see people
And I want to see life
Driving in your car
Oh please don't drop me home
Because it's not my home, it's their home
And I'm welcome no more
And if a double-decker bus
Crashes in to us
To die by your side
Is such a heavenly way to die
And if a ten ton truck
Kills the both of us
To die by your side
Well the pleasure, the privilege is mine
There is a light and it never goes out
There is a light and it never goes out
There is a light and it never goes out
I have a major public confession to make; the famous British pop singer with an ambigious sexuality named; Morrissey helped me get through a weird, little Baptist college located deep in heart of Texas.
In fact, I think I would not have made it if were not for a secret box set of the complete songs of Morrissey and the Smiths that I bought on Amazon at some point, and listened to everyday in the Bible belt.
Without anyone knowing this, I listened to this set of CD's over and over and over again, seeking some sort of existential reality in the deep, southern fried hell I found myself in.
My time at that fundamentalist college was the worst time of my life for sure and in my angst, anger and desperation, I turned to the only music I could relate to turning this tragic time in my life.
It was a hideous time for me. I was surrounded by strange, cowboy- boot wearing, gun-toting people in an even stranger Baptist world.
I always felt like an evil person when I questioned if there should be gaudy, stained-glass depictions of currently living Southern Baptist leaders on the chapel windows.
I also felt out of place when I questioned the president if the ostentatious carcasses of animals shot in big game hunts should be in the President's office and student center...
I can relate to this song because I was most definitely estranged at that Southern Baptist school.
I often felt like Albert Camus' "Meursault" in his epic book; The Stranger. I definitely felt bitterly out of place and estranged in that surreal, John Wayne emulating world of Southern Baptist fundamentalism...
My last semester there, I was told by that Southern Baptist school's administration that even though I was a major academic scholarship winner with a 4.0 GPA, was on the Dean's List and the President of the largest student led club on campus, that I was not welcome there anymore.
I thank God that I had some respite from that storm in working and meeting people off campus and outside of the Southern Baptist world. Without them I would have went insane for sure.
I am thankful for the many friends on that campus. Despite the odds stacked against me, I graduated...
I also thank God for Morrissey and the Smiths, without them, I would most certainly be the first in the gang to die and this light would surely be out.
"There is a light that never goes out."
I Don't Care About George Bush's Socks
Time for the Republican Party to
Stop Playing Preppy Games and Make a Difference
I'm Sorry my Republican and conservative friends, I just don't care about George Bush's socks. I know I am crushing dreams and bucking a national trend here and that George H.W. Bush's socks are being peddled on eBay, the National Review, the Republican National Committee for a good cause (I guess). Hopefully they are not being sold just to make another rich white dude just a little bit richer.
I am sorry if that seems a little crass and insensitive. And don't get me wrong, I am a life-long conservative and voted for Bush and Son every time they were on the Presidential ballot.
However, my dear, dear conservative friends, there are just more important things going on in America than buying George W. Bush's socks on the Home Shopping Network. Come on folks, Ferguson is burning, the people of New York City are up in arms about the Eric Garner case and here we are hawking George Bush's socks on eBay!
This is part of the problem my Republican friends. In the same way that the Roman Emperor Nero fiddled while Rome was burning, we are fiddling away out hard fought victories in the House and Senate while America is on fire and verge of collapse.
There are infinitely bigger problems facing our party, the conservative movement in America and the entire country in general then concerning ourselves with petty and stupid things like George Bush's argyle socks.
We have Obamacare to overturn and a national deficit spiraling out of control and endangering our future. We have ISIS to defeat and the problem of global terrorism to be concerned with. We have just no more time to spend on preppy foot accessories.
Maybe this is why we have lost the last two Presidential elections. Maybe we are out of touch with the concerns of the average rank and file people that actually live, work and die in America.
Maybe we need to start facing the reality that the Republican Party and conservative movement in the United Stated states seems like the party and movement for rich white people and appears threatening to many people across the country.
I know it's Christmas time folks, but please don't hate me if I play the Grinch and tell you that I just don't give a flying rip about George Bush's socks.
Sunday, December 7, 2014
The Importance of Prayer from Augustine of Hippo
Learning about Prayer from an Important Church Father
Traditionally, Sunday is the Christian Sabbath, a day where Christians of all denominations and theological stripes come together as the Body of Christ, to worship God and fellowship with one another. I know my blog is wild at times. I often focus on controversial things that are edgy and thought provoking. It is my intention to start a nationwide podcast called, "The Lee Enochs Show" (The Great American Podcast). I also plan to release to the public a few books I have been working on. The first one entitled, "Crisis in the Southern Baptist Convention," will focus on a massive controversy presently transpiring in America's largest Protestant denomination.
I want my new online radio show to be the most controversial podcast in America and generate a lot of publicity for my Libertarian and small government views. A long time ago, when I was living in Southern California, I had a very popular radio show on KBR and plan to launch this show nation wide in the days ahead. It will be a wild and controversial show that will focus on political, economic and cultural issues facing America. This week on my podcast I want to focus on the continuing issues surrounding Ferguson, NYC, Cleveland, police brutality and give my take on the University of Virginia fraternity scandal.
However, on Sundays, I like to dial it down a notch. I like to take this day to focus on and worship God.
An important aspect of my life pertains to Christian theology and history. I am a big fan of studying church history and the doctrines of the historic Christian faith. One of my favorite authors in Christian history was Augustine of Hippo (354-434 AD).
Augustine on Prayer by Lee Enochs
While some people today might view Augustine as a theologian that primary dealt with arcane and impenetrable doctrines such as original sin and predestination, these same individuals may be surprised to find out that Augustine wrote a considerable amount of material on prayer and mystical devotion to God. In 412 A.D., Augustine wrote a letter of correspondence to a widowed Roman noblewoman by the name of Anicia Faltonia Proba. This letter contains Augustine’s most comprehensive statement on prayer and postulates two main arguments. The first line of argumentation Augustine delineates is that before a person can pray with any degree of devotional authenticity, he or she must achieve a state of “spiritual desolation” before God irrespective of one’s financial status. Secondly, Augustine argues that one should abandon worldly entertainments to achieve the “happy life” or a state of spiritual bliss. In this blog post, I will argue that Augustine’s two main points of argumentation in his letter to Anicia Faltonia Proba are congruent with apostolic teaching and have a direct relationship with apophatic and cataphatic theology (theologies of negative and positive statements about God).
Why
Augustine Wrote Anicia Faltonia Proba
As bishop of the North African city of Hippo
Regius, located in present day Annaba Algeria,Augustine carried out a prodigious correspondence with a wide variety of people
including members of the Roman aristocracy. One such prominent member of the
upper division of the ancient Roman ruling class that he communicated with
through writing was the wealthy window Anicia Faltonia Proba, the daughter of
the extremely powerful and aristocratic Roman politician and pro-counsel
Quintus Clodius Hermogenianus Olybrius, the son of the renown, a Praefectus Urbi of Rome.
Anicia Faltonia Proba’s grandmother was the famous Christian poet Faltonia
Betitia Proba who wrote the classic Latin work Cento Vergilianus de laudibus Christ.
Anicia Faltonia Proba was the young widow of the extremely wealthy
and powerful Roman politician Sextus Claudius Petronius Probus (358-390 AD) who
was the grandfather of the Roman Emperors Petronius Maximus (396-455 AD)and Anicius
Olybrius (died 472 AD).
Proba wrote Augustine after the
sack of Rome took place at the hand of Alaric I and the Visigoths on August 24,
410. Proba had to flee from Rome with her daughter in-law Anicia Luliana and
granddaughter Demetrias to North Africa. She was a devout Christian who had
already been in contact with such noted church leaders as John Chrysostom, the
arch-bishop of Constantinople when she began her correspondence with Augustine
on the subject of prayer. Augustine commences his letter to Proba by
addressing her as “a Devoted Handmaid of God,” indicating that Augustine
believed Proba to be a devout believer in Jesus Christ from an “illustrious,
noble and wealthy” background, who had sincere and godly questions before the
Lord. Augustine seemed to express a tremendous willingness to answer Proba’s
questions regarding prayer due to her “pious desire.” Augustine said the he
could not “express into words” how greatly he rejoiced upon her request for
Augustine perceived her “great solicitude about this supremely important
matter.”
Augustine argues that there could
be no more important thing for Proba to consider during her widowhood but to,
“continue in supplications night and day.”
Augustine says that she should be “desolate, trust in God and continue in
supplications day and night.”
Augustine communicates to her that prayer should “occupy her heart and claim
first place in it.”
Augustine addresses the question of what sort of things should a person pray
for and how a person should go about offering such a prayer before God.
Augustine postulates the idea that irrespective of how fortuitous one’s
materialistic circumstances may be, this affluence cannot achieve lasting peace
and happiness outside devout commitment to Jesus Christ. Similarly, Augustine
argues in his writing, On the Trinity,
“Those moved by the reminder to convert again to the Lord from the state of
deformity wherein worldly desires conformed them to this world have received
from the Lord their reformation.”
To Augustine, true spirituality is achieved partly through an abandonment of
this world’s material possessions as seen in the following section of spiritual
“desolation.”
Augustine
on Spiritual Desolation
In his letter to Proba, Augustine
argues that a person must aspire for a form of ecstatic spiritual “desolation”
or a complete emptying of one’s personal desires and says that she should be
“desolate, trust in God and continue in supplications day and night.” Augustine
communicates to her that prayer should “occupy her heart and claim first place
in it.”
Augustine addresses the question of what sort of things should a person pray
for and how a person should go about offering such a prayer before God.
Augustine postulates the idea that irrespective of how fortuitous one’s
materialistic circumstances may be, this affluence cannot achieve lasting peace
and happiness outside devout commitment to Jesus Christ. Augustine argues that
for Proba to have lasting spiritual contentment she must renounce her material
and physical desires and desire a desolation or abandonment of all earthly
cravings due to their inherent temporality.
Augustine quotes Jesus Christ in
this respect and says that, “it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of
a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.” Augustine
communicates to Proba that there can be no lasting fulfillment and contentment
in this world and that unless one achieves a spiritual abandonment or
desolation before God, “the life of the soul can have no portion.”Augustine’s view of “spiritual desolation” pertains primary
not only to lack of financial and physical prosperity, but also to a
deprivation of soul that comes from the quest for material possessions above
spiritual sustenance. This realization of the futility of seeking earthly
treasures above the eternal and abiding spiritual treasures that union with God
alone can provide is ultimately a by-product of Augustine’s monergistic view of
justification. That is, in diametrical opposition to a synergistic combination
of human effort and divine aid as believed by his nemesis and theological
opponent Pelagius, Augustine believed that all human beings are utterly
depraved and enslaved to themselves and the vain things of this world until
they experience saving and divine grace.
Augustine
instructs Proba not to have the “the devout anxiety which makes it necessary to
ask my counsel” and bemoan the fact that she lost her substantial fortune after
Rome was sacked by the Visigoth’s in 410 AD. Augustine implies that
poverty is in all actuality a far better physical condition than prosperity
since it is, according to Augustine, exceedingly difficult for a wealthy person
to enter the kingdom of God. Augustine
writes, “Wherefore when they were grieved, not for themselves, but for the
whole human family, and were despairing of the salvation, for it is easier for
a camel to go through the eye of a needle than a rich man to enter the kingdom
of God. (Matthew 19:21-26).
Augustine
argues that in the case of Proba’s wealthy family members and Roman compatriots
that he caused them to be poor in a temporal and physical sense in order to
make them wealthy spiritually. Augustine says that God, “Made them more truly
rich by extinguishing their desire for riches through imparting to them the
Holy Spirit.”
Furthermore, Augustine asks Proba, “For how could you trust in Him if you were
fixing your trust in uncertain riches?” Thus, in Augustine’s
theological perspective, physical poverty is better than monetary riches since
wealth often clouds one’s spiritual and eternal outlook. However, in
diametrical counter distinction to physical wealth and worldly acquisition, physical
poverty causes a sort of mystical union and devotional state that physical
wealth could never bring.
Augustine
on the Happy Life
Similarly, Augustine argues
that in order to achieve a “true” and “happy” life, one needs to “account
yourself desolate in this world, however great the prosperity of your lot may
be.”Augustine ultimately argues that this “happy life” does not come through
earthly consolation. Augustine says that true felicity and happiness only
exists without our union with God and eternal values.Augustine argues that this “happy life” is ultimately and epistemologically the
only “true life.” This life of sacred desolation and abandonment of this world
riches alone can achieve devotional consolation before God. Augustine argues
that the word and its riches are “darkness,” but God calls us to the light. He
says, “In the darkness of this world, then in which pilgrims absent from the
Lord as long as we walk by faith and not by sight (2 Corinthians 5:6-7), the
Christian soul ought to feel itself desolate and continue in prayer and learn
to fix the eye of faith on the word of the divine sacred Scriptures.”
Furthermore, Augustine argues
that this “happy life,” or state of blissful union in the presence and purposes
of God comes the light of divine revelation. Augustine writes, “For the
ineffable source from which this lamp borrows its light is the Light which
shines in darkness, but the darkness comprehends it not. The Light, in order to
seeing, which our hearts must be purified by faith, for blessed are the pure in
heart.”
Augustine, in attempting to console Proba in her abject poverty and utter loss
of material possessions, argues that the “happy life” is the think that must be
sought above all earthy pursuits. Augustine says, “My aim has been for you
feel, even while your family is spared you, and you can live as you would
desire, you are desolate so long as you have not attained to that life in which
is the true and abiding consolation.”
Congruency with Apostolic Teaching
Augustine believed, as did the New Testament apostles
Paul and James, that material wealth often eviscerates a person’s passion to
have a strong devotional life with God. Paul said, “For the love of money is
the root of all sorts of evil, it is for this craving that many have wandered
away from the faith and have pierced themselves through with many sorrows” (1
Timothy 6:10). Similarly, Paul said, that the rich should not place their
confidence on uncertain riches but on God who, “provides everything richly that
we might enjoy” (1 Timothy 6:17-18). The Apostle James was even more vehement
in his denunciation of the rich and the abundance of their material possessions
(See James 2:5-7 and 5:1-6).
It is clear from these
passages of Scriptures that the Apostles saw the rich as potential exploiters
and the poor as in a better spiritual position before God. To the apostolic
writers, wealth and material possessions often had the ability to cloud one’s
spiritual discernment and devotion to God, since these items of materialism are
things that are “seen.” However, the Apostle Paul placed a positive emphasis on
the “things that are not seen.” Paul wrote, “While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the
things which are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal, but the
things which are not seen are eternal” (2 Corinthians 4:18). Paul seemed ambivalent at best about the
“riches of this world” and ultimately placed an emphasis on acquiring the
spiritual and non-temporal “riches of Christ” instead. Paul said, “Oh, the depth of
the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments
and how inscrutable his way” (Romans 11:33). Also see; Romans 11:12, Ephesians
2:7, 3:8, and Philippians 4:27 and Colossians 1:27-2:2.
Relationship with Apophatic
and Cataphatic Theologies
In contrasting the benefits of poverty from
the detrimental effects of wealth, Augustine believed
in a sort of apopthatic negation by postulating that a state of wealth
ultimately brings true poverty and a state of physical poverty brings the
desired state of spiritual wealth. To
Augustine, poverty is ultimately good and wealth is generally bad. Similarly,
to Augustine, poverty brings true riches while wealthy brings a tragic state of
spiritual poverty. In Augustine’s thought, physical desolation brings about
spiritual consolation and materialistic indulgence brings about a state of
spiritual desolation. However, in diametrical counter distinction to aphophatic
description of God, Augustine seemed to be more accustomed to speaking about
God in a Cataphatic manner.
That is, Augustine seemed to generally engage in the practice of using positive
terminology about the person and essence of God. Augustine’s use of positive
descriptions about God seem to have historical and ecclesiastical precedence in
the life, ministry and teachings of such noted Catholic theologians as Anselm
of Canterbury
and Gregory Nazianzus. This “cataphatic” or positive description of God was in
diametrical opposition and counter distinction to the theology of negation
employed by Neo-platonic author who went by the name of Dionysius the
Areopagite
and the author of the Cloud of Unknowing
who both encouraged their readers to throw off their preconceived understanding
about God and encounter God through that which is unknown.
Conclusion
In this blog post, I examined a letter
Augustine of Hippo send to the window Anicia Faltonia Proba. This letter contains Augustine’s
comprehensive statement on prayer and discusses Augustine’s conception of
“spiritual desolation.” Augustine argues that one should abandon worldly
entertainments to achieve the “happy life” or spiritual bliss before God. I
argued that Augustine’s views on wealth and poverty are congruent with
apostolic teaching and argued that Augustine’s letter to Proba contained
aspects of both apopthatic negation and cataphatic (positive) description of
God. Augustine of Hippo’s letter to Proba and the theology therein is both
sublime and practical in every respect. Augustine’s letter gave consolation to
a widow who experienced abject despair.
Bibliography
Bibliography
[2] Knowledge of God achieved through positive
description of God. Cataphatic theology was denied by Pseudo-Dionysius the
Areopagite who thought such positive descriptions of God were limiting.
[3] Theodor Mommsen,
William P. Dickson, and F. Haverfield, The
Provinces of the Roman Empire, from Caesar to Diocletian, 2 vols. (Chicago:
Ares Publishers, 1974), 345-350.
[4] J. B. Bury et al., The Cambridge Ancient History, 12 vols.
(Cambridge Eng.: The University Press, 1923), 10-21.
[5] Jane Stevenson, Women Latin Poets : Language, Gender, and
Authority, from Antiquity to the Eighteenth Century (Oxford ; New York:
Oxford University Press, 2005), 65.
[6] S. Wise Bauer, The History of the Medieval World : From the
Conversion of Constantine to the First Crusade, 1st ed. (New York: W.W.
Norton, 2010), 68.
[7] A. H. M. Jones, J. R.
Martindale, and J. Morris, The
Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire (Cambridge Eng.: University Press,
1971), 736-740.
[8] Augustine’s Letter 130 (AD 412) to Proba found in Philip Schaff, ed.,
“Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers,” First series, vol. 1, 1887. Christian
Classics Ethereal Library pp. 997.
[9] Ibid.,997.
[10] Ibid.,997.
[11] Ibid., 997-998.
[12] Louis K. Dupré and
James A. Wiseman, Light from Light : An
Anthology of Christian Mysticism, 2nd ed. (New York: Paulist Press, 2001),
67.
[13] Ibid., 998.
[14] Ibid., 998.
[15] Ibid.,998.
[16] Augustine, John A.
Mourant, and William J. Collinge, Four
Anti-Pelagian Writings, The Fathers of the Church (Washington, D.C.:
Catholic University of America Press, 1992), 13-33.
[17] Augustine’s Letter 130 (AD 412) to Proba found in Philip Schaff, ed.,
“Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers,” First series, vol. 1, 1887. Christian
Classics Ethereal Library pp. 997.
[18] Ibid., 997.
[19] Ibid.,998.
[20] Ibid., 998.
[21] Ibid., 999.
[22] Ibid.,998.
[23] Ibid., 1000.
[24] Ibid., 1000.
[25] Ibid., 1000-1001.
[26] Vladimir Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church
(Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1976), 26.
[27] Anselm, R. W. Southern,
and Franciscus Salesius Schmitt, Memorials
of St. Anselm, Auctores Britannici Medii Aevi, (London,: Published for the
British Academy by Oxford U.P., 1969), 35-43.
[29] Ibid., 247-264.
[30] Ibid., 81-87.
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