Thursday, March 26, 2026

God is in Charge

 God is in Charge

    I have worshipped with some Buddhists. Some Hindus, or hari krishnas, I have danced with, chanted, broken bread. They are considered Eastern religions in today's standards. I have grown up my form of Christian, with some attention and participation in Islam and Judaism.

    Philosophies I have been acquainted with, perhaps considered practicing, thought about and contemplated. We ...
    
Continued days later. Now in Oceanside, California. Happy Spring Break.

    Worship and relax.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Salinger- Another Victim of Social Engineering

 Salinger- Another Victim of Social Engineering

    I read a few books about J.D. Salinger, a famous or even infamous author for a few reasons. He faced some awful times in Europe, dealing with some of the worst tragedies and fighting that the war had. Plus, he came upon a death camp, where the atrocities were still raw. Burnt flesh, really bad. Emaciated and tortured prisoners.
    It haunted him for the rest of his long life. He was scarred. 

    Darwinism brought a lot of good to the world, but some folks took it way too extreme and it manifested itself in Germany, especially, where people like the Nationalists took it to the awful conclusion of the Holocaust, which laid waste to vast communities of the world, including the former Soviet Union and millions of Ukrainians, Russians, and many others.

    Soldiers from dozens of the world over perished, some never found. Thousands not discovered till this day, deep into the 21st century.

    Salinger was a byproduct of those times. We study his case still.
    

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Ebal and Gerizim

 Ebal and Gerizim

    The two ancient hills confront each other, facing off, looking and gazing toward the other morning and night. They sat in the plain of the ancient land for millennia: they sit standing, gazing upon each other still. In the 21st century. They await a greater destiny. World events and happenings will come upon them in our future.
    
    It is not the stones of the mountains, these Palestinian or Canaanite hills, that stare down the other. It is their spirits. Spirits and even demons of the past, present, and future.

    Abraham, the faithful, came here from the Mesopotamian plains, from Ur and Babel of the river valleys and wadis far to the east. He came more directly from Haran in the north, in the great lands of Asia Minor, Anatolia. Making his way to the Promised Land.

    The two mountains stood facing each other north and south, for millions of years, some say, scientists posit that the earth and our solar system developed as such. But then come the Hebrews, and perhaps before them the Zoroastrians, and the One God Jehovah, also known as Yahweh, created our first fathers, Father Adam and Mother Eve. Then Shem, and Methuselah, and Noah, till our Father of Nations, Abraham, husband of Hagar and Sarah, went through the land to make it his. And God's, according to tradition.

    As Abraham approached the mountains heading south from Anatolia, on the plains of Esdraelon, he noted the rocks in the clefs of Ebal from afar off. The water had been good in these parts, as opposed to the hills and valleys of much of the way thus far. What would later be known as Syria and Lebanon, he had moved on because of the lack of propitiousness of their natures. Not charged enough, not sound enough. Not evincing the right will of God. Even though the verdant rolling slopes of the future Golan Heights impressed him, Abraham knew it was not the right place.

    Something about craggy Ebal, and the lush Gerizim to the south behind it, as they, his small party, swooped forward, back and forth from left to right, with their camels and donkeys, rising and falling on the valley floor away from the sea to the west, made him stir within himself. But as he often would, he was not entirely sure within himself, so he would push his thoughts and feelings to his beloved Sarah, and also his firstborn Isaac. He had known Ishmael of his servant Hagar in the flesh, but he spoke to his foreordained son Isaac in his dreams. Sarah would, too.

    "Does that seem like a holy, heavenly place to you?" 

    Sarah responded with fortitude. "Perhaps my tired feet and overworked soul are speaking to me, but those mountains seem to me a holy place. We should ask locals around here."

    So they did. There was a band of sheep herders who lived in and around the twin mountains. They, these pastoralists and nomads, claimed special powers about the place. They would go between the great sea to the west (known to us as the Mediterranean), cross between the narrow pass of what would be named Ebal and Gerizim towards the fecund valley of the later known Jordan River, whose waters fed from the lush Golan Heights. They thought the path fortuitous and blessed. When they did not pass between the two rocky mounts, misfortune would befall. Especially circumventing Ebal to the north.

    Hmm, thought Abraham. I must stay south of Ebal. He had learned its name. The taller mount, by a few cubits, to its close partner and smaller twin, Gerizim.

    The passage between them had monuments and many graves. Holy enough.

    Samaritans would someday, centuries and centuries later, build their holiest temple Hyksos there. The Greeks loved their gods there, as did the Israelites of Moses.

    There and then, with Levi and Judah and Benjamin, Joseph and his two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, plus Simeon and Issachar, the six southern-based tribes would counter-pose the other six of the north, symbolizing blessings versus curses. Blessed to the south, cursed to the north.

    The southern kingdom would prevail for a while after Sennacherib and the Assyrians pillaged and broke loose the Northern tribes, but eventually almost all would flee.

    The Samaritans, the mixed peoples, would claim Ebal and Gerizim. Lost to the peoples of Judah, and most of Israel, even till 2026.

    Ishmael's or perhaps Keturah's six sons and their bloodlines would alight upon and about the city that would go from Shechem to Nablus. Nablus, another Naples, like the more famed city of Italy, a later, greater empire.

    Empires become these places.

    Holy or cursed.

    Today it is controlled under Arab hands, measured. There are occasional eretz Israel (Zionist) settlers who look to intervene in the otherwise not too bad West Bank. What is the population? Over 150,000. I think of that as crowded, especially nudged between Ebal and Gerizim. I can imagine houses of stone crammed together, spanning the ascents of the hills, these two mounts, climbing higher and  higher. How far up to the mountains go the homes? Like the ever-rising homesteads in California and the benches of Utah, or Colorado, where mansions and dream luxury houses go on into the elevations, the rises. Like the twin mounts here. How many live above, like at Mount Tabor or Carmel?

    It is not walkable like Mount Carmel, where Elijah did amble two plus millennia ago. Burning down the bullocks over the imaginary Baal and his misled priests. That is more a solitary mount, where we walked it thirty years ago in my religion class. In the Holy Land. Must be more Israeli Jewish owned, I presume?

    Neighborhoods in the Holy Land can and should be for tourists, but then there are places like Ramallah or some Ultra-Orthodox area like Mea Sharim near downtown Jerusalem that cater to the locals. Muslims, Jewish. Some Christian places are safer, or more universal. Mount Carmel was safe for us, many other Christian sites.

    In a year when the peace process was still moving forward. Times change. 1995. 2026. What will the future bring? What does the Bible say? What do people believe? Do the prophesies fulfill themselves?

    Animosity and hatred boil up. Like the last two and half years, too intensely. Down further along the coast in the Gaza Strip, where Ashdod and Ashqelon were located anciently. Folks other than Hebrews, or Israelites, who where Philistines or Phoenicians.

    The past and the present, the historic and tragic of yesteryear prefigures the future. Is it always violence and hate? Is there always the good and the evil, those against God and those for them?

    Ebal and Gerizim. Curses to the north, rocky, barren, empty. Blessings to the south, fecund, fruitful, blooming. Half of the twelve tribes represented, symbolized the cursed among the covenant of the twelve. Zebulon, Dan, Nephtali, the other three... All were given to Ebal, the lowly opposite of God's chosen. The taller mountain to the north, but the more forlorn.

    Cursed. Do we believe that the opposite of blessings occur? If there is a God, be there curses?

    Ebal and Gerizim. 

    The saga continues.

    How many lives and destinies are lived out here, between the shadows of the mounts of the plain, swept up in Har Megiddo, where the End of Days will transpire? Who surrounds the Holy Ones of Israel?

    Where are the Twelve Tribes now? We are they.

    The Mountains are us, the rocks and plants and all of the spirits having lived and breathed and died there, facing one another, looking after the good and bad, is found in us now. And forever.

    

Saturday, March 21, 2026

AJ Dybantsa Needed to GO to the Rim

 AJ Dybantsa Needed to GO to the Rim

    Two minutes to go, BYU had trailed all game but had cut it to four, and Texas was ripe.

    AJ did not drive. He dribbled and set up a play. For a missed shot.

    He. Needs. To. Go. To. The Rim. 

    Downhill. Get to the line or get a three point play.

    But. We lose.

    We lost a great athlete prior to the season, then Dawson Baker, then Richie Saunders.

    Thus went the season that could have been...

Thursday, March 19, 2026

I Picked Houston, I want BYU, then Purdue

 I Picked Houston; I want BYU, then Purdue

    None of them have won the NCAA, or did Houston with Olajuwon? The Phi Slamma Jamma?
    
    Anyway, the great Purdue teams have not, nor have the mighty Cougars of BYU.

_____
UPDATE: Cougars tried to rally late, but not enough.

Two minutes to go and AJ and the rest should have gone to the rim...

    Ugh. 

    Go Purdue?

    

Thursday, March 12, 2026

BYU Basketball Has Hope. Say "Moo".

 BYU Basketball Has Hope. Say "Moo".

     The Brigham Young University Cougars Men's Basketball team was going to be a top ten program this season. Then, injuries.

    First, it was a guy that I do not know his name or much of his story. I will look that up. He was new to the school.

    Then, fifth year senior Dawson Baker, kind of the perfect sixth man off the bench. 6'5", a good shooter, tough, versatile, experienced. Then: Richie Saunders. Ugh. He was part of the big motor of the offense and the defense. Even though they struggled for a bit with him playing healthy prior to his gut wrenching injury around Valentine's, man do they miss his abilities and heart.

    Thus the Cougs were getting punked by Cinncy and UCF, and others. They rallied to beat a tough Texas Tech squad (minus their injured guy Toppin). In Provo, where the recently better BearCats had handled the Cougars.

    We needed guys to step up. We needed Kennard Davis, among others like Mboup and Ahmed, and of course Keita and Kostic or Boskovic or Diomande. Whoever. Mrus? Not enough defense.

    Well, then I learned that they call him "Moo". Two nights ago versus Kansas State. Moo!

    Yes, not a canard or kennard! We got Moo. Davis has been playing better, getting more shots, rebounds, being who we hope he might be. The big guys have been doing better... Kadim or Khadeem is fun to see play with his vigor.

    No Pickens, Baker, or Saunders? We shall see... 

    March Madness.

    Oh, yeah. We got Dybantsa and Wright.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Indiana Men's Basketball Sucks so Bad. It Makes me kind of Ill.

 Indiana Men's Basketball Sucks so Bad. It Makes me kind of Ill.

    Out-coached, out-played, out-hustled, out-thought-- The Cats are much better than IU, proving it twice in the last two or so weeks. The death knell was being snookered and out-punched by them in Bloomington not too long ago. Tonight is sadder still. The United Center, a place to beat an inferior squad.

    NO!

    So bad. More later. Maybe. Likely.