Online journal capturing the moment and the memory of moments. A meadow meditation. |
L'aura del campo 'é a lua, é a lua, na quintana dos mortos' ♣ Federico García Lorca ♣ L'aura del campo. A breeze in the meadow. So it began the last day of Spring, 2005; on the 16th day of the month of Light of the year 162. This is a supplement to my daily journal written to a friend, my muse; notes I do not share. Here I will share what the breeze has whispered to me. PLEASE LEAVE COMMENTS! I LV COMMENTS! On a practical note, in answer to your questions: IN MEMORIUM VerySara passed away November 12, 2005 Please visit her port to read her poems and her writings. More suggested links: These pictures rotate. Kåre Enga ~ until everything was rainbow, rainbow, rainbow! And I let the fish go. ~ Elizabeth Bishop, The Fish |
We are the Global Cloak woven from castes, creeds, our cloths of many colors, the plenary inspiration of this planet. © Kåre Enga [177.226b] (16.september.2020) 24 syllable couplet: 12/12 alliteration, no rhyme. plenary: in the sense of everyone gathered. cloak: in the sense of coat, shield, protection. For:
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O Ye Born Again! We are the plenary inspiration of this world, not you who seek to divide us into caste, creed or color. © Kåre Enga [177.226a] (16.september.2020) 28 syllables. Caste: the Gospel of Prosperity. Creed: the intrareligious squabbles and demonization of other religious belefs. Color: the refusal to embrace people-of-color as members of their family. From NPR: "For many, the Gospel is more about the need for personal salvation than the duty to address societal ills." Basically, White Evangelicals are racist, so they aren't bothered by that. "White evangelicals love Trump and aren't confused about why. No one should be." https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/white-evangelicals-love-trump-aren-t-confu... From elsewhere: Therefore, the phrase “verbal plenary inspiration” means that all parts of the Bible, as well as every Word of the Bible, says exactly what God wanted said. Biblical inspiration is the doctrine in Christian theology that the human authors and editors of the Bible were led or influenced by God with the result that their writings may be designated in some sense the word of God. |