PAGE 23, FIFTH SENTENCE UPDATE: Sophron Mambrina has posted:
A 'Fifth Sentence' Poem Composed from the Books on My Desk
The myth of the Godman Jesus can only be properly understood alongside the myth of the Goddess Sophia.
Sometimes pure light, sometimes cruel, trying wildly to open, this image tightly held within itself.
It looked so smart on you.
How wonderful it would be if the divine warrior should again come righteously to Israel's rescue!
To kill for murder is an immeasurably greater evil than the crime itself.
According to the Eberus Papyrus, a 68-foot-long scroll on alchemy that has been called the oldest book in the world: "Man's guide is Thoth, who bestows on him the gifts of his speech, who makes the books and illumines those who are learned therein; and the physicians who follow him, that they may work cures."
The patients spit out bloodied confessions, trade bacilli, compare fever charts, settle into a friendship of danger signals.
Similarly, a man who is violently in love feels that if he could possess the girl, his freedom would be infinite; the delights of union would make him undefeatable.
Actually the poor bugger was in a trance.
Each of these phenomena has been associated with divine activity in other biblical episodes.
How else to get attention for one's product or one's art?
We refuse to listen to our clamoring inferiors and their arguments.
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The books, in no particular order, are:
Fires, by Marguerite Yourcenar
Glass, Irony and God, by Anne Carson
A Guide to the I Ching by Carol K. Anthony
The Illuminated Prayer: The Five-Times Prayer of the Sufis by Coleman Barks and Michael Green (there are only two sentences on p. 23 of this book, so I've used the last one)
The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoevsky
The Occult by Colin Wilson
The Emerald Tablet: Alchemy for Personal Transformation, by Dennis William Hauck
Christ: A Crisis in the Live of God, by Jack Miles
Regarding the Pain of Others, by Susan Sontag
The Hidden Face of God, by Richard Elliot Friedman
Jesus and the Lost Goddess, by Timothy Freke and Peter Gandy
Tropic of Capricorn, by Henry Miller
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