Orthodoxy

Orthodoxy means, literally, ‘right glory’.

In other words, it means to allocate glory appropriately. Not to give too much glory to those things which do not deserve the excess, and not to give too little glory to those things which deserve more.

It is one way of understanding the first commandment, to have no other gods than God. In other words, not to give too much glory to things which are created, and to give glory fittingly to the Creator. It means not to worship graven images, not to build golden calves.

Orthodoxy does not mean ‘right belief’ – although that is the understanding which, as the result of Protestant influence, Orthodoxy has been reduced to. Orthodoxy is principally about value, worth – Quality. It means that the world is seen as it truly is, without distortion.

The principal distortion from a Christian point of view is called sin. Sin can be understood as anything which interrupts the relationship between creature and Creator. In other words, sin is anything which means that the creature does not relate properly to the Creator – that causes the creature to give improper glory to the Creator.

Which brings us to worship. Worship is the right relationship between creature and Creator. Sin arises where worship is offered to that which is not the Creator; where value is seen through a distorting mirror, and the world becomes misshapen. Worship causes the worshipper to become worthy (higher Quality) – it does not cause the Creator to become worthy. So right worship is what enables the worshipper to enter into their inheritance, to become who they most truly are. Worship gives value and Quality to the worshipper. Only the holy can see truly.

Right worship is therefore the activity that gives right glory. As a result of sin, this activity cannot be inner-directed. It cannot be chosen or assessed on the basis of internal feelings or sentiment. It can only be on the basis of revelation. Right worship must ultimately come from outside – that which enables the legacy of sin to be overcome. Worship offered in accordance with revelation is that which gives right glory to the Creator, and right life to the creature. It gives life in abundance.

As worship is offered, as right glory is given, so the creature is changed, from glory to glory, in accordance with that which has been revealed. This is why doxology is the heart of worship.

Glory be to the Father,
And to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit,
As it was in the beginning, is now,
And shall be forever. Amen.

Great article in Salon about Peak Oil

I particularly liked this: “I think that we can adapt, but our adapting may not be so much technological, as sociological, and maybe even spiritual,” Robinson says. “It really comes down to the question of the place that we see for ourselves in the world and what we need in order to live a meaningful life. For quite a while now, a meaningful life in America has meant acquisition of things and cheap energy, and we associate that with freedom. We do not see that it’s really a form of dependence and slavery.”

Eggsackly.

Full article available here – you’ll have to watch a short advertisement to read the whole thing.

Wow

The British Ambassador to the United States discusses the energy crisis here.

Quote:
“…the supplies of oil on which we depend are finite. Global oil production is apparently nearing its peak. Although there is intense debate about exactly when this will happen – something Daniel Yergin discusses in the Foreign Affairs article I referred to earlier – current estimates seem to be converging on some point between 2010 and 2020. Oil itself will never run out – as the saying goes, “the stone age did not end because of a lack of stones.” But the unavoidable fact is that the economics of pumping it in future are uncertain. One of the most intriguing things about this debate is that it is happening at all. It is extraordinary that a century into the age of oil, with the global economy dependent on $3 trillion worth of this black liquid each year, we don’t even know how much is left.

The International Energy Agency predicts that, if we do nothing, global oil demand will reach 121 million barrels per day by 2030, up from 85 million barrels today. That will require increasing production by 37 million barrels per day over the next 25 years, of which 25 million barrels per day has yet to be discovered. That is, we’ll have to find four petroleum systems that are each the size of the North Sea.

Is this realistic? Production from existing fields is dropping at about 5% per year. Only one barrel of oil is now being discovered for every four consumed. Globally, the discovery rate of untapped oil peaked in the late 1960s. Over the past decade, oil production has been falling in 33 of the world’s 48 largest oil producing countries, including six of the 11 members of OPEC. How then will we meet the soaring demand that the growing global economy will require?

If someone that well embedded in the political establishment is aware of the problem, you can be certain that the governing class as a whole knows what is coming.

Why aren’t they doing their damnedest to make people wake up? Please tell me the conspiracy theories aren’t true…

Strangely enough, I am feeling more and more optimistic about coping with the Peak. All the doomer analysis I read makes the mistake of ignoring what MoQers call ‘Dynamic Quality’, ie that which cannot be foreseen, including human responses to a crisis. I believe that we will pull through. It will be painful – at least a major recession in Europe, probably a major depression in the US, worse in the rest of the world – but we will get through it. The sooner we start to prepare, though, the better off we will be.

Feeling lousy

Before I begin – there’s a good 9/11 article here.

I’m feeling lousy. Cancelled my afternoon appointments, might even have to bail out of tonight’s, although that would be a real let down. My wife has just begun to emerge out of nearly two weeks illness, this cold/cough/buggy thing that never seems to go away. And guess who is now succumbing to the symptoms? I think I got it more than a week ago, but I have been fending it off as much as I could – too many annual meetings to have missed – but I am now feeling it claim me. And the APCMs were hard work – they didn’t go well at all, with one exception, and I suspect the next month is going to be dominated by clearing up the mess. Still, it’s all a good learning experience, and as I keep reminding myself, if the Lord is gracious then I’ve got another thirty years of this to get it right 🙂

Of course the other major factor is Ollie – I think I’m feeling the effect of a moderate increase in exercise! That’s a good thing, though, even though I feel I could do with a lot more sleep. I’m going to try and get as much rest and relaxation as I can in the next 48 hours, see if that will sort me out.

There you go.

/end self-pitying whinge

Interview with ++Rowan

Read it all here. I particularly liked this bit: “creationism can end up reducing the doctrine of creation rather than enhancing it” – which is exactly what I was trying to put across in a recent Learning Church talk.

Which reminds me, I need to do some updating about the Learning Church stuff. I have had very little time recently, due to it being APCM season (despite the plethora of posts – they’ve all been short and sweet).