Lanced Hearts of Lovers & Martyrs

I'm Eric, a young poet who seems to have been swept away in the Romantic Spirit of Beethoven's Symphonies, struck by the philosophies of Plato & the Poets' lyrics, burned for love like the martyrs of Rome, and can see an honest beauty in love & faith.

This blog is dedicated to my passions in Poetry, Literature, History, Philosophy, and Music, along with exploring the beauty and truth in the Christian faith-- how it rebels and transcends the ways of the world and burns it ablaze; preaches it's the Heart that counts, sings how Love endures, and that Truth is a beautiful Bride & hypocrisy a sin. It reveals that love is self-less, death is no end, and that there's no greater love than to lay down your life for your friends.

• Faith & Philosophy
• History (esp. 19th cen.-WWI)
• Poetry & Literature
• Catholicism

• Christ
• St. Justin Martyr
• Socrates
• Victor Hugo
• J.R.R. Tolkien
• Richard Wagner

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"Reason directs those who are truly pious and philosophical to honour and love only what is true, declining to follow traditional opinions, if these be worthless."
-St. Justin Martyr

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  1. "In my story I do not deal in Absolute Evil. I do not think there is such a thing, since that is Zero. I do not think that at any rate any ‘rational being’ is wholly evil. Satan fell. In my myth Morgoth fell before Creation of the physical world. In my story Sauron represents as near an approach to the wholly evil will as is possible. He had gone the way of all tyrants: beginning well, at least on the level that while desiring to order all things according to his own wisdom he still at first considered the (economic) well-being of other inhabitants of the Earth. But he went further than human tyrants in pride and the lust for domination, being in origin an immortal (angelic) spirit.* In The Lord of the Rings the conflict is not basically about ‘freedom’, though that is naturally involved. It is about God, and His sole right to divine honour. The Eldar and the Númenóreans believed in The One, the true God, and held worship of any other person an abomination. Sauron desired to be a God-King, and was held to be this by his servants;† if he had been victorious he would have demanded divine honour from all rational creatures and absolute temporal power over the whole world.

    * Of the same kind as Gandalf and Saruman, but of a far higher order.

    † By a triple treachery: 1. Because of his admiration of Strength he had become a follower of Morgoth and fell with him down into the depths of evil, becoming his chief agent in Middle Earth. 2. When Morgoth was defeated by the Valar finally he forsook his allegiance; but out of fear only; he did not present himself to the Valar or sue for pardon, and remained in Middle Earth. 3. When he found how greatly his knowledge was admired by all other rational creatures and how easy it was to influence them, his pride became boundless. By the end of the Second Age he assumed the position of Morgoth’s representative. By the end of the Third Age (though actually much weaker than before) he claimed to be Morgoth returned.
    "
    — J.R.R. Tolkien, Letters, #184  (via stoneofthehapless)

    (Source: theringofwords)

     
     
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  3. "The divine power that Aristotle at the height of Greek philosophy sought to grasp through reflection, is indeed for every being an object of desire and of love —and as the object of love this divinity moves the world—but in itself it lacks nothing and does not love: it is solely the object of love. The one God in whom Israel believes, on the other hand, loves with a personal love. His love, moreover, is an elective love: among all the nations he chooses Israel and loves her—but he does so precisely with a view to healing the whole human race."
    — 

    Pope Benecit XVI, Deus Caritas Est [God is Love]

    And now with the philosophical insight of God as Lover, we find ourselves back at Aristotle.

     
     
  4. The Holy— Broken—Family

    In his contemplative reflection, Aristotle found God as this vague and distant ‘Unmoved Mover’; The pure object of all our love, who could be known and loved, yet lacking nothing, could not love us. He was simply the object of our admiration, and not some personal, active being in our lives.

    I wonder at that, sometimes, what Aristotle’s dad, then, was like. I wonder if he wasn’t this cold and distant unmoved mover in the young philosopher’s life, who was all but the object of the lad’s noble, striving admiration while living in some distant world of his own. What if Aristotle, just like the rest of us, saw in someway, the world to be just a model of the house he was raised in. Perhaps that makes sense of all the philosopher’s striving, all his wisdom, all his works in life, as but his inner-child’s longing to simply hear, “good job, son.”Maybe that’s why he clung so tightly to Plato, above all other pupils; this male figure that could finally for once speak with authority in his life (and maybe why he constantly had the need to counter and surpass his teacher’s ideas, like a man with something to prove to himself.)

    And to even think, is this not the same God of our own generation? Isn’t God, in our Modern world, as distant and unmoving as our own fathers? We’re a generation of men raised by single moms in homes as broken as the world that keeps telling us is ‘it’s fine, it’s normal’ to live without a real love that moves us. Russel’s Fractal Theory says just like a rock resembles the mountain it broke from, the pieces of everything in the universe reflect the whole. What would this world look like if God were a dead-beat, distant man who walked out on our lives before we ever got to know him? Would it look much different than how we see it today?

    Maybe our lives are the way they are because that’s who our God is, because that’s who my dad is.

     
     
  5. "That a final cause may exist among unchangeable entities is shown by the distinction of its meanings. For the final cause is (a) some being for whose good an action is done, and (b) something at which the action aims; and of these the latter exists among unchangeable entities though the former does not. The final cause, then, produces motion as being loved, but all other things move by being moved."
    — Aristotle, Metaphysics, XII. 7
     
     
  6. "Day by day, hour by hour, Pain drips upon the heart
    As, against our will, and even in our own despite
    Comes Wisdom from the awful grace of God."
    — Aeschylus, Agammemnon
     
     
  7. "If you want to be well off and nevertheless score easy success in being a somebody, then forget God, never let it appear and never let it become really clear to you that it is he who has created you from nothing; proceed on the presupposition that a man does not have time to waste reflecting about him to whom one infinitely and unconditionally owes all—nor is one person entitled to ask another about this—therefore let this be forgotten and join the clamour of the crowd, laugh, cry, be busy from morning to night, be loved and respected and regarded as a friend, as a public official, as a king, as a pall-bearer; above everything else be an earnest man by forgetting what is most earnest of all—to relate oneself to God, to become as nothing…’Never hold fast to God, for by holding fast to him you lose what no man who holds fast to the world ever lost: you lose absolutely everything."
    — Works of Love - Kierkegaard (via jopakka)
     
     
  8. A Soul & City Under Siege— Augustine’s look on Evil

    When I was a child, I used to think as a child. I thought of true evil as a cartoon villain who couldn’t love, trying to destroy the world merely to destroy it: That Evil must be in direct opposite of Good; destroying for the sake of destroying; killing for the sake of killing. That to destroy with strewed intentions of doing good has a shred of innocence, and is not truly evil.  

    It was St. Augustine, though, that once said that evil is really a ‘disordered love’; That it’s not so much the opposite of Good, but the corruption of it. Like Cancer cells to healthy cells of our souls, evil is the Good in our lives twisted to wrong meastures.— When God created the world, he called it good; When he created Man, he called it very good.— The true human nature is good, perfect; but evil is the corruption of our nature, like a lie is the corruption of Truth, or cancer is the corruption of the body.

    One of the most maturing thoughts I ever had was realizing the Tyrant that kills millions doesn’t actually say in his heart “I’m evil and I enjoy it,” but honestly “I’m making the world a better place.” For even Hitler thought he was acting ‘for the good of all humanity.’

    Augustine illustrated the battle of Good Vs. Evil not as two opposite forces ever-warring with equal arms over the fate of the World, but as this: It is that of two cities together; ‘The Eternal City’, the City of God, that stands for Good. But the other— it is not the City of Hell, or Sin but the ‘City of the World’, that along with God, stand’s for the Good, but is under siege, and occupied territory by what is Evil, like a cancer invading our body. And all of God’s and man’s struggle together is to reunite these two cities, and restore everything back to the Good.