Tag: foolery

the absurd, the bitter, even the comical

Rowan Williams:

The Spirit’s work is to make the believer like Christ, and being like Christ means living through certain kinds of human experience – not once, but daily. 2 Corinthians is Paul’s most passionate meditation on this.

Here he speaks of the daily affliction, the daily rejection, the daily dying by which the Spirit works, transforming us ‘from one degree of glory to another’ (3.18). The veil of the Law is removed, illusion is stripped away; but only slowly does this penetrate every area of human living. And it penetrates by means of the pervasive and inexorable experience of failure, by the ‘wasting away’ (4.16) of the instincts which look for clarity, ease and effectiveness and the acceptance of the hiddenness of God’s working..

Here is the transfiguration from glory to glory, realized daily in the absurd, the bitter, even the comical; this is, surprisingly, what it is to live in the Messianic age and be conformed to the pattern of the Messiah.

When the future breaks into the present order, it shows itself in Paul’s ‘folly’ for Christ, in the stupid incongruities of this curious life in two worlds.

the Cains and Abels of ignorance

Kurt Vonnegut:

“Beware of the man who works hard to learn something, learns it, and finds himself no wiser than before. He is full of murderous resentment of people who are ignorant without having come by their ignorance the hard way.”

George MacDonald:

“But indeed the business of the universe is to make such a fool of you that you will know yourself for one, and so begin to be wise!”

cf. The name of this site.