[Vision2020] Irony/Comedy in Our Lives and Spiritual Titanism

Art Deco deco at moscow.com
Wed Jun 16 12:53:42 PDT 2010


RE: [Vision2020] Irony/Comedy in Our Lives and Spiritual TitanismThanks for the comment Nick.

I have been informed by unimpeachable sources that the torching of Touchdown Jesus was an intentional, though wholly understandable, Act of God.

God's explanation:  "Upon further review, Jesus did not score a touchdown.  The world is now worse off spiritually and morally than it was before his occurrence.  How anyone looking at the actions in world since that occurrence could have came to any other conclusion is unfathomly hard to understand.  The play is unequivocally reversed."


Art Deco, Channeller for God

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Gier, Nicholas 
  To: Art Deco ; Vision 2020 
  Sent: Wednesday, June 16, 2010 8:36 AM
  Subject: RE: [Vision2020] Irony/Comedy in Our Lives and Spiritual Titanism


  Hi Wayne,

  I've been following this story closely. Statues like this are artistic manifestations of what I call "Spiritual Titanism," an extreme form of humanism in which humans take on divine attributes and prerogatives. 

  For the front cover of my book "Spiritual Titanism" (SUNY Press, 2000, picture attached and reviews at www.class.uidaho.edu/ngier/steab.htm,)I chose the 60 foot statue of a naked Jain saint.  He and his colleagues are considered more perfect than the gods.  As far as I know none of the gigantic statuary of Buddhas, Jain saints, or Hindu gods has been destroyed by lightning, which goes to show where divine favor really lies!

  The very first textbook I used for my philosophy of religion class referred to a study done on tornado damage.  Quite a number of churches had been destroyed, but very few bars and houses of prostitution.  In this case one could not say that high steeples were the attraction.

  I was unaware of all the other Christ statues that have been hit.  There is a real theological lesson here.

  I'm also reminded that a state legislator somewhere wrote a bill changing "act of God" to "act of Satan" for the insurance industry.  This is yet another example of theological illiteracy in the U.S. To deny the omnipotence of God and allow Satan his own agency is the heresy of Manicheanism, an ancient form of cosmic dualism which has always been rejected by orthodox Christianity.

  I have to chuckle when the Solid Rock Church's pastor declared that this was yet another act of self-sacrifice on J.C.'s part!  I would also remind him that the ancient Indians had the good sense to make their huge statues out of solid rock.

  Nick

  Nicholas F. Gier, Professor Emeritus
  Department of Philosophy, University of Idaho
  President, Idaho Federation of Teachers, AFT/AFL-CIO www.idaho-aft.org/ift.htm
  208-882-9212, 1037 Colt Rd., Moscow, ID 83843



  -----Original Message-----
  From: vision2020-bounces at moscow.com on behalf of Art Deco
  Sent: Wed 6/16/2010 6:56 AM
  To: Vision 2020
  Subject: [Vision2020] Irony/Comedy in Our Lives

  Irony/Comedy in our lives, especially the comments made by readers.

  Ohio's Jesus statue is latest religious statue to be struck by lightning

  By Monica Hesse and Dan Zak
  Washington Post Staff Writer
  Wednesday, June 16, 2010; C01



  It appears God has sacrificed his only son. Again.

  A bolt struck a 62-foot-tall statue of Jesus Christ on Monday outside a church in Monroe, Ohio, and the statue erupted in flames. All that remains is a charred steel skeleton, its spindly arms stretched toward heaven, a gesture that once earned it the nickname "Touchdown Jesus."

  Darlene Bishop, co-pastor of Solid Rock Church, says she's simply relieved that the lightning hit Jesus and not the home for at-risk women next door.

  "I told them, 'It looks like Jesus took a hit for you last night,' " she says.

  Act of God? Act of nature?

  In 2008, lightning singed the fingers and eyebrows of Christ the Redeemer, the 130-foot Jesus statue that stands over Rio de Janeiro. In 2007, a bolt blasted the 33-foot Jesus statue at Mother Cabrini Shrine in Golden, Colo. One of Jesus's arms fell off.

  The saints and angels are not safe either. The Notre Dame de Chicago's Virgin Mary burst into flames from her perch atop the church's dome in 1978; the Engineering News Record covered the construction of a new, lightning-resistant statue with the headline: "Burned once, dome reMaryed."

  A bolt that struck St. Joan of Arc's statue in New Orleans sliced her brandished staff in half. Statues of the Angel Moroni, which frequently top Mormon churches, have been hit by lightning with such frequency -- Moroni's horn is particularly susceptible -- that the Salt Lake Tribune once fretted over their safety in a front-page story.

  (Side note: Actor James Caviezel was struck by lightning in 2003 while filming Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ." He was playing Jesus.)

  Believer or not, we can always count on lightning to energize the what-does-it-mean lobes of our brain.

  Ancient Romans equated statues being struck by lightning with bad omens, such as chickens beginning to talk and blood raining from the sky. Presumably, the latter two were less-frequent events.

  To find some modern-day meaning in Touchdown Jesus, we turned to Pat Robertson, host of "The 700 Club," who has divined meaning from Hurricane Katrina (abortionists?) and the Haitian earthquake (historic pact with the Devil?). Alas, he declined through a publicist to interpret the significance of the lightning strike.

  So, we turned to science. Religious structures, especially church steeples, are regularly zapped because they are often the highest point in a given area, according to John Jensenius, lightning safety specialist for the National Weather Service. But the same goes for towering secular symbols.

  "Oh, she's hit by lightning on a continual basis," says Statue of Liberty spokesman Darren Boch.

  When asked whether such lightning strikes might represent a malevolent act of God toward America, Boch says, "I can clearly state that no one here deems it an act of God."

  Which brings us to the main reason for writing this story: Lightning Safety Week starts Sunday.

  Summer is a bolt-heavy season for much of the South and the East Coast, so the National Weather Service recommends seeking shelter when there's thunder and waiting 30 minutes after the last flash to emerge.

  But some people don't need to worry too much: Only five people have been killed by lightning inside the District of Columbia since 1959, despite a flash-per-square-mile rate (11.7) that exceeds 35 states, including Virginia (66 deaths) and Maryland (124).

  As for the incineration of Touchdown Jesus, Pastor Bishop isn't reading into it.

  "Honey," she says, "it's just some fiberglass."


  Post a Comment


  View all comments that have been posted about this article.









-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/vision2020/attachments/20100616/0ff1a813/attachment.html 


More information about the Vision2020 mailing list