Powered by RedCircle
You
are granite. I am an empty wineglass. You know what happens when we touch! You
laugh like the sun coming up laughs at a star that disappears into it. Love
opens my chest, and thought returns to its confines. Patient and rational
considerations leave. Only passion stays, whimpering and feverish. Some men
fall down in the road like dregs thrown out. Then, totally reckless, the next
morning they gallop out with new purposes. Love is the reality, and poetry is
the drum that calls us to that. Don’t keep complaining about loneliness! Let
the fear-language of that theme crack open and float away. Let the priest come
down from his tower, and not go back up!
In this poem by the 13th century poet and Sufi
mystic, Rumi, we are invited to journey into the heart of our humanity, the
fragile space between rock and glass, Lover and Beloved, where Love is the
reality, and poetry is the drum that calls us.
Similarly, the mythologist, Joseph Campbell describes the call
to purpose and meaning in the poetic imagination of myth:
Mythology
is poetry, it is metaphorical. It has been well said that mythology is the
penultimate truth--penultimate because the ultimate cannot be put into words.
It is beyond words. Beyond images... Mythology pitches the mind beyond that
rim, to what can be known but not told.
Mythology is the notes between the lines, beneath the
surface intellect, where we may find meaning in the images and symbols woven
together in the poet’s dream. It invites the priest to come down from his
tower, and not go back up.
Elsewhere, Campbell states:
Wherever
the poetry of myth is interpreted as biography, history, or science, it is
killed.
Likewise, it is may also be killed when we rationalize and
distort the sacred construct of a myth in order to make it say what we would
like it to say. This is the predicament of one of the most profound myths in
human history—the myth of love within the universal family painted in the sacred
Torah-Gospel mythology. From its inception, it is distorted into various
systems of idolatry and social control, symbolized by eating the immature fruit
or morality, ultimately becoming the various moralistic traditions of the
Abrahamic religions. The myth itself is an invitation to move beyond the
fear-based religious systems and hierarchies into the way of love and
relationship, of one transcendent family.
The Torah-Gospel myth is wholly and elementally about love.
The myth internally contrasts this developmental journey towards love with our
need for control, born of fear and doubt. It defines maturity as a prosocial morality
of responsibility and love for one another, supporting and nurturing the value
and well-being of any and all we encounter on the road of life, regardless of
caste, custom, conduct, or creed.
As most have only been exposed to the distorted religious
narrative, I shall endeavor to restore the broader themes of this powerful myth
of love and relationship bounded by a mythological journey over two millennia.
However, I am not prescribing any specific spiritual cosmology regarding the
existence or non-existence of any deeper realities. That is the responsibility
of the individual traveler to seek out for themselves. But it is important to
note that the meaning of the myth is not arbitrary—any inspiration or
conclusion that is not founded on the unadulterated narrative of the myth cannot
and should not be considered to be founded in that particular mythology.
A myth is by nature sacred—whether one considers its origins
divine or by the crucible of time, purified over many generations. If I
take a glass of pure water and add anything to it, there is still water in the
glass but it will no longer be a glass of water—it is fundamentally changed.
Following is an attempt to go back to examining the glass of
water in the written text, albeit, given the brevity of this format, highly condensed.
I have explored this myth more deeply, with more pages and bigger words, in the
much longer format of my book, Serpent in
the Cellar: Love and Death in Life and Myth.
The Torah-Gospel mythology is essentially a moral psychology
beginning with the Tree of Morality in the Garden of Eden and taking us on a
journey over three elemental eons or ages—Primordial, National, and Universal.
Each of these Ages represents a developmental level from juvenile to adolescent
and then adult morality. Each level describes a type of relationship and its
disintegration.
The Primordial Age is outlined in the first Book of the
Torah, Bereshit-Genesis. It lays out the juvenile framework for morality
beginning in Eden and ending in Egypt—from Adam to the patriarchs, Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob. It begins with the establishment of a family of Elohim—a term
meaning a very great power. It describes an intimate relationship between the
Parent Elohim, Yahweh, and the Child Elohim, Eve and Adam, who eventually
become the progenitors of all humanity, the universal family of Elohim. The
core moral principle is Knowledge
developing the central theme of “awakening” beginning with creation, leading to
the knowledge of goodness and badness, or morality, and then to the artifice of
human civilization with all its strengths and weaknesses.
In the myth, there is a subtext, later developed in the
Mosaic Law, that truthfulness, trustworthiness, respectfulness, and generosity are
the basis for relationship. The central theme of Awakening disintegrates into
separation and death based on the premise that the consequence of breaking
these relational principles breaks a relationship. Rather than some moralistic notion
of angering the gods by breaking the rules, dooming humanity to eternal
punishment, as traditionally posited, the Exile narrative is simply a core
metaphor for the failure of conscience through doubt and false accusations of
negative intentions upon another, in this case, the Parent Elohim. The death of
intimacy in the Garden of Eden between Parent and Child is portrayed in the
myth as wandering in the wilderness East of Eden.
Archetypally, the juvenile morality of the Child-Parent
relationship disintegrates into the imbalance of power represented by the
Victim-Villain-Victor archetype based on fear and scarcity. As such, Cain, the
first born of Adam and Eve, embodies the villain, monster, or perpetrator by
killing his brother Abel out of jealousy. He is then cursed to wander in Nod, dispossessed
from the land, but still protected by the Parent Elohim. Cain’s offspring
develop the hallmarks of human civilization—music, metallurgy, and the herding
of cattle—and build the first cities. Rather than some moralistic narrative of
good and evil, the myth is more nuanced in representing Cain as the embodiment
of the power and pitfalls of humanity based on scarcity and control, or
conversely, the failure to love. By the end of the Book of Genesis, Egypt comes
to represent the Kingdom of Cain as a great civilization with a powerful king
who enslaves his own people and then eventually, enslaves the nascent tribes of
Israel.
This leads into the National Age which is covered in the
rest of the books of the Torah and the books of History, Prophets, and Poetry,
customarily identified as the Tanakh or Old Testament in the Judeochristian
traditions. The sacred text covers a mythological description of the nation of
Israel’s relationship to the Parent Elohim through about the 5th
century BCE. Additional myth and selective history is described by ancient
scholars over the next few centuries, in particular Josephus and then the
Gospel mythographers, leading up to the destruction of Jerusalem and the Second
Temple during the First Jewish Roman War in 70 CE and then the final banishment
of the Jews from Palestine after the Third Jewish Roman War in 136 CE, ending
the National Age of Israel.
The National Age lays out the adolescent framework for
morality. The juvenile Child-Parent relationship of the Primordial Age evolves
into the adolescent Servant-Savior relationship. The symbol of the Tree of
Morality in the Midst of the Garden develops into the Mosaic Law and the
Tabernacle in the Midst of the Israelite people. The core moral principle is
“Love” developing the central theme of “obligation” represented by the tenets
of the Mosaic Law. The National Age can be divided into three eras—the Kingdom
of Cain in Egypt, the Kingdom of Elohim in Israel, and then the Political
Kingdoms of Israel.
The National Age begins by establishing the Servant-Savior
relationship between Yahweh and the family of Jacob also named Israel through
his favored son Joseph in Egypt. After Joseph becomes the second-most powerful man
in Egypt during a great famine, Jacob-Israel’s family settles in Goshen in
northeast Egypt. However, over generations as the children of Israel grow
exponentially, this devolves into slavery to the Egyptians. And archetypally,
the Servant-Savior relationship disintegrates into a Slave-Master relationship.
The Servant-Savior relationship is restored through the
anointed leader, Moses, who leads the tribes of Israel out of Egypt towards the
Promised Land of Canaan, where their forefather Abraham had previously settled
centuries before. This begins the second era of the National Age, the Kingdom
of Yahweh-Elohim in Israel which lasts another four centuries and represents
the height of the mythic relationship between Yahweh and Israel.
Eventually, the Servant-Savior relationship of the Kingdom
of Elohim in Israel disintegrates back into the Slave-Master relationship in
the next era of the Political Kingdoms of Israel. According to myth and history,
the Political Kingdoms of Israel last for another 12 centuries. This era is
initiated when the Israelites reject the benevolent rule of Yahweh as their Patriarch,
requesting that they put themselves under the authority of a new master, a human
King. In the narrative of the Judge Samuel, Yahweh withdraws his direct
blessing from Israel warning that they will suffer under their new Regal Masters.
He
shall take your menservants, your maidservants and your choice young men, the
best ones, and your donkeys, and he will use them for his work. He shall take
the tenth of your flock; and you shall become slaves for him. You will cry out
on that day because of your king whom you have chosen for yourselves; yet
Yahweh shall not answer you on that day.
For the rest of the mythological history of Israel, Yahweh
continually invites the Israelite people back into the Servant-Savior
relationship through various prophets, only to time again be rejected for a
National Kingdom. Within the mythological framework, this then leads to their
dissolution as a nation according to the later prophets and the gospel
accounts.
The Era of the Political Kingdoms can be divided into three
periods beginning with the Israelite Kingdoms, then the Vassal Kingdoms, and
then finally the Messianic Crusades—each demonstrating some aspect of the
Slave-Master relationship. During the first period, the initial unified
Israelite Kingdoms of Saul, David, and Solomon disintegrate into the Divided
Kingdoms of Israel in the north and Judea in the south. After a couple of
centuries, the northern Kingdom of Israel is then conquered and forced into captivity
by the Neo-Assyrians in 722 BCE leaving only a remnant, which became derisively
known by Judeans in later accounts as the Samaritans.
A little over a century later Judea is similarly conquered by the
Neo-Babylonians in 588 BCE and also forced into captivity. The Judean capital
of Jerusalem is destroyed along with their center of worship, the Solomonic
Temple, thus ending the Period of the Kingdoms of Israel.
The Vassal Kingdoms arise after the Persians conquer the
Babylonians in 516 BCE who then release the captive Judeans from Babylon;
allowing them to return to rebuild Jerusalem and a second Temple as vassals of
the Persian Empire. The Persians are then conquered by the Greeks under
Alexander the Great in 332 BCE who shortly thereafter dies leaving his generals
to divide the kingdom locally into the Ptolemaic Dynasty in Egypt and the
Seleucid Dynasty in Syria. The Vassal
Kingdom of Judea which sits between these warring dynasties consequently bounced
back and forth over the next couple of centuries.
The next period of the Messianic Crusades describes a series
of revolts led by messianic leaders intending to reestablish autonomous
political rule in Judea. Who and what is the awaited Messiah or Anointed One
referred to by the Jewish Prophets is highly contentious throughout this
period. But the dominant view is that the Jewish God would send a Warrior-King,
a political messiah, to destroy Judea’s enemies, delivering them from
oppression, and reestablishing a powerful Jewish Kingdom. The proof whether
someone was The Messiah, instead of
just a failed or false messiah, tended to be whether the leader succeeded in
battle, which didn’t happen very often, or whether they were killed, which did
happen very often.
However, the first successful revolt of this period was the
Maccabean uprising in 167 BCE against the Hellenistic Jews and the Seleucid
Kingdom. The warrior-priest-king Simon Maccabee was a messianic leader that
ultimately defeated the Seleucid coalition thus establishing the Hasmonean Dynasty
around 140 BCE, gaining greater independence, although not complete autonomy
from the Seleucid Kings. This came to an end shortly after the Romans conquered
Palestine in 63 BCE who then established their own vassal kingdom in Palestine
in 37 BCE under a quasi-Jewish Herodian Dynasty.
Over the next century, various messianic leaders arose
attempting to free Palestine from their Roman masters. Early on, these revolts were
mostly minor guerrilla squabbles that were quickly squashed by the Romans. Then
in 66 CE a larger revolt arose, known as the First Jewish Roman War, which
resulted in the apocalyptic destruction of the city of Jerusalem and the second
temple by the Romans in 70 CE. While this cataclysm destroyed the heart of the
Jewish political and religious culture, the Jews persisted on for another 66
years through two more wars. In the Third Jewish Roman war, the last political
messiah of the Messianic Crusade Period, Simon Bar Kokbah briefly succeeded in
establishing a degree of autonomous rule in parts of Judea for a few years
before being killed and then the last of the revolt was finally defeated by the
Romans in 136 CE. This time the Romans decided to end these messianic revolts
once and for all and banished all Jews from Palestine, thus ending the National
Age of Israel.
In the midst of the Messianic Crusade against Roman rule in
the first century CE, a different kind of Messiah arose, seeking peace not war,
declaring the responsibility to love one another, including one’s enemies, thus
restoring the Universal Family founded in Eden. In this mythology, the Familial
Messiah is the Anointed Son of the Parent Elohim, Yahweh, founded in the
ancient poetry of love underlying the Torah-Gospel myth.
In the cultural traditions of Mesopotamia and the Levant, a father
anointed one of his sons, customarily his first born, to represent his
authority and identity in his absence or death. Rarely, the father might spurn
a first-born child whom he felt did not represent his authority or identity. In
the Torah, this rare occurrence is not so rare, but rather the predominant
pattern in the mythology. After Adam’s first-born Cain murders the second-born
Abel, the third-born Seth becomes the anointed son to carry the family forward.
In the patriarchal narrative, Abraham’s first-born Ishmael is spurned for the
second-born Isaac. Isaac’s first-born Esau is spurned for the second-born
Jacob. And Jacob’s first-born Rueben is spurned for his eleventh-born Joseph.
Archetypally, in the final plague of the Exodus myth which
sets up Israel’s emancipation from slavery in Egypt, the Angel of Death kills
the first-born of Egypt and passes over the first-born of Israel that are
marked by the lamb’s blood on the doorpost. At the end of the previous Book of
Genesis, the Egyptians were identified with the Kingdom of Adam’s first-born
Cain as the preeminent archetype of human civilization. In the Passover myth,
these archetypal first-born of Adam are symbolically replaced by the
subsequently born Israelites as his newly anointed favored nation going forward
to represent the Father’s authority and identity.
In the Torah mythology, the authority and identity of Yahweh
is represented by his name. Hebrew scholars have often interpreted the name Yahweh to indicate One who has self-referential
existence to the tune of “I am that I am,” which connotes that he cannot be
defined or represented by another. This is the context for the commandment in
the Decalogue to not take Yahweh’s name in vain, that is, to not misrepresent
his identity or attempt to illicitly speak on his behalf.
A more developed theory is that the name Yahweh is initially Arabic, a closely related
Semitic language to Hebrew. In the Exodus myth, Yahweh reveals his name to
Moses at the foot of the sacred Mount of Elohim in the land of the
Arabic-speaking Midianites where Moses has lived for the past 40 years after
being exiled from Egypt. As such, the name Yahweh
invokes the Arabic meaning of One who loves, breathes, or falls, which is more consistent
with the fullness of the Parent Elohim’s character throughout the mythology as
the Parent who breathes life into his
children within the juvenile stage of moral development, then the Savior from
whom blessings fall upon his Servants
within the adolescent stage, and then finally, the Lover who loves his Beloved within the adult
stage.
This is then expanded in the Gospel mythology of the
Familial Messiah, wherein the Anointed Son from the tribal lineage of Israel
reestablishes the continuity of the Parent Elohim’s authority and identity by
archetypally replacing the first-born Elohim, Adam, who had previously failed
to represent the truth of the Father’s authority and identity.
In the Gospel mythology, the Anointed Son, or Familial
Messiah, is identified as Rabbi Jeshua. His life and ministry are intended to restore
the truth of the Father’s identity as “compassionate and gracious, slow to
anger, and abounding with kindness and truth.”
Rabbi Jeshua identifies the central Gospel message with a
passage in the Book of Isaiah stating that his mission, or anointing, is to bear
good tidings to the powerless, to
bind up the broken-hearted, to herald liberty to captives, sight to the
sightless, and emancipation to the bound. In the first part of this passage, the
Hebrew word basar is translated as
“good tidings” which is elsewhere translated into Greek as evangel and then later into English as the more commonly used religious
word “gospel”.
In the Torah-Gospel mythology, Rabbi Jeshua restores the Servant-Savior
relationship based on the Torah obligation to love one another that was
originally established in the Kingdom of Elohim in Israel which had
disintegrated into the Slave-Master relationship of the Political Kingdoms. However,
this is only the adolescent stage of moral development. It is not the end of
the story. It is intended to develop further into the next stage of morality.
The subsequent and final Universal Age lays out the adult
framework for morality. The adolescent Servant-Savior relationship of the
National Age is intended to evolve into the mature Lover-Beloved relationship.
The symbol of the Tree of Morality in the Midst of the Garden that had
developed into the Mosaic Law and the tabernacle in the Midst of the People, finally
becomes a mature conscience written in the Sacred Midst of the heart.
Rather than some oblique goal of attaining moral perfection
as proposed by the various moralistic religions, the core moral principle is
“Goodness” supporting the central theme of “restoration” governed by the
dynamics of compassion and empathy—thus, actively seeking to maintain intimacy
within community by being ready to restore any value taken or lost in offense
of a relationship, to embody the experience of love for one another.
The Universal Age can be divided into two eras—the Lower
Kingdom of Elohim on Earth and the Upper Kingdom of Yahweh Elohim in the Sky,
beyond life and death. The Lower Kingdom is foreshadowed by Rabbi Jeshua in the
Gospel accounts equating his own death with the eventual destruction of the
Temple. Thus, Jeshua’s resurrection from death symbolically ushers in a new age
of love, truth, and healing after the destruction of the Temple in 70 CE,
beginning the Universal Age.
It is important to re-note here that Myth is poetry not
history. It may however be a selective interpretation of history in support of
a specified storyline. Poetry is built from the flow of meaning. The poetry of
the Torah-Gospel myth is focused on moral development leading to loving
relationships.
It is at this point that we, in the here and now, become myth. We inhabit the Lower Kingdom of
Elohim on Earth that Rabbi Jeshua invoked in the Gospel Accounts. We are the Elohim
in the Kingdom of Elohim—the Great Powers in the Kingdom of Great Power. In
this living myth, it has become our responsibility to embody the poetry of
love, the heart of Yahweh, to build a society, a universal family, based on
compassion and empathy. In the arc of the mythology, the poetry of love gives
us all we need to become mature adult Elohim, great powers formed in the image
of the Parent Elohim. We have the power to choose to be compassionate and
gracious, slow to anger, abounding in kindness and truth.
The Upper Kingdom in the mythology is a symbol of hope. It
invokes a more powerful realm of love and intimacy between the Lover and
Beloved beyond life and death. Other than that, this Kingdom beyond life and death
is an article of faith for the traveler to explore as a part of their own spiritual
cosmology.
However, it is important to note that the Universal Age is
not some utopian cosmology as often portrayed in the moralistic Religions. The
adult Lover-Beloved relationship may still deteriorate into a Rival-Adversary
relationship motivated by domination and control. Over the first two millennia
of the Universal Age, the Poetry of Love has been continuously mixed with a miasma
of institutional religious and political power.
Historically, Rabbinic Judaism is, of course, the earliest institutional
branch of the Abrahamic traditions coming into the Universal Age. After the
destruction of the temple cult, the Jewish tradition that espoused the
centrality of the Temple sacrifice ceased to have any relevance. The local
Synagogue became the primary foundation for Jewish religious life.
Over the centuries, Rabbinic Judaism has continued to deepen
the racial theology of God’s chosen people, while searching for a political
messiah to establish an ethno-theocratic nation in Palestine based on the
religion of Judaism. Eventually, in the mid twentieth century, in large part as
a response to the suffering of the Holocaust caused by the Nazi’s attempt to expel
the Jews from Europe (mostly by murdering them), the Zionists stopped waiting
for a messiah and took up arms to forcibly expel the modern inhabitants of
Palestine from the lands that the Jews had been expelled from nearly two
millennia before. Thus a new nation of Israel was born in 1949—although 70
years later, it continues to be at war with the local Palestinians who were
inconveniently expelled from their homes.
Theologically, from the first century through modernity, new
prophets have arisen claiming an entirely new vision of the Abrahamic
tradition. The earliest prophet at the transition from the National Age to the
Universal Age was the neo-Apostle Paul who became the Father of Christianity. Paul
declares a new moralistic gospel that Jesus died for your sins to save you from
the judgment of the Angry God—in other words, paradoxically, the Christian God
must save humanity from himself. In his
letter to the Galatians written around 50 CE Paul claims that his new gospel of
sin and salvation was received from a prophetic vision separate from the Gospel
accounts and teachings of Rabbi Jeshua as understood by his students, stating:
I want you to know, brothers and sisters, that the gospel I
preached is not of human origin. I did not receive it from any man, nor was I
taught it; rather, I received it by revelation from Jesus Christ.
This new prophetic gospel soon overtakes the original Isaiah
Gospel message of love, freedom, and safety proclaimed by Rabbi Jeshua. By the
second century it becomes firmly established as the basis for the new religion
of Christianity based on Paul’s prophetic epistles.
The next major prophet to come out of the Abrahamic
tradition in the Universal Age is Mohammed who, in the early 7th
century, becomes the Father of Islam after the angel Gabriel reveals a new
message from God. Islam develops as a mixture of selective interpretations of
the Torah-Gospel mythology along with these new prophetic revelations as
written in the Quran.
And a more recent prophet of the Universal Age is Joseph
Smith who, in the early 19th century, became the Father of Mormonism
after an angel visited him and gave him several golden plates inscribed with
esoteric Judeochristian history which was then translated and published as the
Book of Mormon.
Beyond these Founding Fathers of new religious traditions, there
have also been innumerable Master Teachers that have expanded the
interpretations of these new religious mythologies to create countless new
sects within the Abrahamic religions. Rabbinic Judaism has developed various sects
based on differing interpretations of the Talmudic commentary on the Mosaic Law
and ritual practices. Within the Christian tradition, it has been estimated
that there have been over thirty thousand sects over the past two millennia
based on the various teachings of those claiming to be Master Teachers. And
Islam, a name which ironically means “peace,” has been in a perpetual war
between the followers of its main Master Teachers for centuries.
Whereas religious authority was forbidden by Rabbi Jeshua,
this has been politely put aside by necessity of the political nature of the
institutional church. From the high church Popes, Cardinals, and Bishops to an
army of Pastors, Priests, Deacons, and Church Leaders spread across the globe,
these religious officials enforce the authority of each denomination’s
political claim to power.
So from the beginning of the Universal Age, the Isaiah
Gospel message of love, freedom, and safety quickly became suffused with
various additive theologies starting with Paul’s prophetic gospel of salvation
from sin a decade or so after the crucifixion of Rabbi Jeshua. Soon after, Hellenistic
Gnosticism was fused with the gospel framework to create Christian Gnosticism
inspiring a plethora of new Gnostic gospel writings over the course of the next
few centuries. In early Christianity, aspects of Hellenistic Mystery Religions
and Neo-Platonism were infused into the gospel framework of mainstream
institutional Christian theology by way of the Early Church Fathers.
Politically, in mainstream Christianity, the institutional
church is formalized under the Council of Nicaea as mandated by the Roman Emperor
Constantine in 325 CE—establishing a universal church dogma canonizing Paul’s
moralistic gospel. A few decades later, in
380 CE, Christianity becomes the official state religion of the Roman Empire
under the Edict of Thessalonica by the Roman Emperor Theodosius I.
These are just a few highlights. The pattern of hierarchical
power and control continues throughout history up to and including today as
each generation invokes a new political messiah for their time and purpose.
Ultimately, we have the power to choose Love over Control.
However, as we have seen, the outcome is not preordained. The myth merely
provides a moral framework of possibilities. In the Gospel accounts, Rabbi
Jeshua forbids his followers from taking on the principal roles of Master
Teacher, Hallowed Father, or Religious Authority—emphasizing that we are all
brothers and sister of one family and that he is our one and only Master
Teacher and authority, and that Yahweh is our one and only Father.
He then tells his students that power is found in service to
others which he demonstrates by getting down on his knees and washing their
filthy feet after a long day on the road. And when asked by his students who of
them will be the greatest, he states that the first must be last, that they
must become open and uninhibited like little children. He emphasizes that the
Kingdom of Elohim will not be found in any institution or system, rather it is
in their hearts. The Torah-Gospel mythology is radically, diametrically opposed
to any canonical religion, systemic authority, or hierarchic order—and cannot
coexist with the worship of wealth or power.
Fundamentally, the poetry of love, founded in the
Torah-Gospel mythology, is a moral psychology, a way of living that happens in
any mundane moment we instinctually reach out in kindness and generosity
towards another human being in need. It is motivated by a mature conscience,
symbolized as the Sacred Spirit or Breath, and founded on the essential value
of all within the universal family as brothers and sisters. It comes to life
when we embody our responsibility to proactively and prosocially respond to the
needs of others, to build a society and community based on love.
Ergo, as a wineglasses emptied by the struggles of life, we
may then be broken by the granitic reality of the poetry of love—as Lover meets
Beloved. Only passion stays, whimpering and feverish, like stars consumed by the
morning sun. Love becomes reality, the drumbeat that calls us to a new purpose
beyond loneliness and fear. As Love opens up our chest, thought returns to its
confines, patient and rational considerations leave, the priest may then come
down from his tower, never to return.
No comments:
Post a Comment