Weβve tried over Christian history, in all sorts of ways and contexts, to imitate other kinds of militancy. And my feeling about that is: well that worked, didnβt it! I want to ask: how does Christ change things? One thing I think you can be fairly sure about in the New Testament is that he doesnβt use the techniques of available power systems. βThis is how the kings of the gentiles work.β What we do in our militancy for the faith, that is our committed and courageous attempt to witness to what weβve been given and make it available to others, we do by lives of holiness β which means an awful lot of hard work for the vast majority of us who are nowhere near that level and who resort to shortcuts all the time.Β
My endorsement of this β and of his comments on the demonic in political life β is absolute.Β
The funny thing about Matt Taibbi's summary of Samuel Moynβs new book β βOld People Suck and We Should Take Their Stuff" β is that it's 100% accurate. That is precisely what Moyn argues.Β
Looking at a painting is a welcome respite from scanning a screen. In that sense, this exercise is reactive: I labor in the small cottage industry of attention that has sprouted up in the cracks of the massive complex of distraction all around us. A phenomenological turn often occurs at times of intensive mediation, but the point is not simply to have our perceptions mirrored back to us. T. J. Clark has put the aim nicely: βWhen I am in front of a picture the thing I most want is to enter the pictureβs world: it is the possibility of doing so that makes pictures worth looking at for me.β To look at a painting is also to exit our world for a while, and then to return to it cast in a different β distant β light. The time travel is often wonderful, and almost free.
Currently reading: Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives by Alan Bullock. Bullock is obviously drawing on Plutarch β and the story of how widely read Plutarch used to be versus how completely unknown he is today is a story worth telling β but he also says this in his preface: “Looking back, I cannot think of a better preparation for writing about Hitler and Stalin than the familiarity I acquired at Oxford in the 1930s with Thucydides, Tacitus, and those sections of Aristotleβs Politics that deal with the Greek experience of tyranny.” If we today had the lessons of ancient history ready to hand we could have much more productive political debates. People who know only the present β i.e. almost everybody β have no means of comparative measurement and so live by the feels. π
Hank Green’s timeline of Artemis mission photos is great.
