Month: January 2025

  • Can Grammar Prove God? Reflections on Language, Time, and the Divine.

    Can Grammar Prove God? Reflections on Language, Time, and the Divine.

    A radical argument for God’s existence emerges from grammar itself: our ability to make meaningful statements about what “will have been” requires an eternal consciousness to preserve all truths. Without it, our language about past and future would reference nothing real, making communication meaningless.

  • California, Dreaming?

    California, Dreaming?

    At the edge of a strip mall, where the Pacific Ocean’s vastness begins, a stark truth emerges. Surfers appear like fleeting thoughts, birds embody ancient hunger, and the ceaseless waves reveal the illusion of progress. This evocative poem by Cornelius Climatus is a meditation on emptiness, acceptance, and the profound truth hidden in plain sight, questioning our restless pursuit of…

  • The Weight of Nothing: Grace, Meaning, and the Courage to Be

    The Weight of Nothing: Grace, Meaning, and the Courage to Be

    Human existence is a struggle for meaning, authenticity, and redemption in a chaotic world. In this text, we look at some of Flannery O’Connor’s gripping stories and read them with insights from Sartre and Kierkegaard. We also explore existentialism with Thomas Merton, where grace transforms despair into hope and freedom.

  • Born Again, Enlightened, Analyzed: Exploring the Many Faces of Conversion.

    Born Again, Enlightened, Analyzed: Exploring the Many Faces of Conversion.

    This essay explores the concept of conversion as a transformation of the self, examining its manifestations in Christianity through figures like Paul, Augustine, and Luther, and comparing it to Islamic submission, Zen enlightenment, and Lacanian psychoanalysis. All involve a reorientation of identity and purpose.