Luria the mysicist
Luria, Isaac | Encyclopedia.com https://share.google/fRpvmhWbgyu5KLcQ7
The title was my hilarious Freudian slip. But all that aside, the name and ideas of this person should surely be remembered.
Today I spent the bulk of the day reading, and the earlier and foundational part reading from the Bible. I was bored and cast off to my cell, a room I am all too grateful for but never manage to gush over quite as well as I wish.
I read two psalms from near the end. I was going to do an extensive, or at least peak at, the psalms and what people really make of them, like what was David really dealing with and did he get, say, a whole punishment for what he wrote in139, because by 140... incidentally there is a psalm that reminds me of my St Francis prayer, and i connected them all in dots, to U2, "let me take a walk with your sister the moon" I can look at that too since Im bored to tears!
But alas! I ended up taking a deeper look at the beatitudes instead. I found a correlation in the second beatitude from either Luke to Isaiah, or at least something like that which led to all this questioning the validity of Jesus, which always seems really silly to me, unless they actually planned to convert hundreds of people just to slaughter them. People tend to forget the grisly details unless it fits with the atheistic outlook.
From there I went looking at all kinds of different things from the past. I looked at Babylon and the Egyptians. About a week ago, in a bit of a stupor, induced by hatred of my fellow man, I decided that God had sent his spirit out one way from Egypt and their understanding went another way. Today the understanding came from Babylon. A Babylon who was squashed by that same mighty dwelling of the spirit of God, his arc. I over wonder. But I always get it right.
What strikes me is not my weird contrived ideas, which are irrelevant just for being uncommon, I'm straight, ok? But that there is a very real correlation between these actual other occurrences, the arc disappearance and the end of Babylon. The. End.
That Greece took up some of their ways is not for sure. Whether the coinciding boom of the founding of many religious traditions happened at that time led to the discovery of Luria above. In my religion class in college I remembered that there was an idea of a shattering and gathering of light, or sparks, something. And these religions seemed last time I was here a sort of fractured world systemized, something akin to a Jesus, claiming the whole in one moment, but in the earlier case, it was done by these separate players.
Speaking of which! I looked at Macbeth this week, and as I am often marveling at the one pure note which runs through all religions, that one note that Macbath got so wrong in his little monologue, that life is just, well you know, signifies nothing.
Everyone who knows knows that's wrong.
Ah Shakespeare! My truly inspired genius!
I believe in true inspiration you know ;)
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