Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Tolerance is a dirty word.

Don't get me wrong. I wish we could all, to reference the philosopher Rodney King, "get along". I don't really hate anyone on a person to person level, though I can say I hate groups of people, say, freeway drivers, mall crowds, and most of the time, teenagers. I hate people who talk too loud on cell phones in public, and people who talk on cell phones and drive. I hate people who jay walk. And I REALLY REALLY hate with a passion, people who refuse to get out of line to scratch lottery tickets. (I know I should love EVERYONE, but that's another post) So, the fact that I tolerate these people should tip you off that tolerance is not and act of love, or really even an act of "like".

I'm sorry liberals the world over, LOVE is corrective, and instructive. Love forces you to refuse to tolerate your son's drug abuse. Love will not let you tolerate your brother abusing his wife. Love will not let you tolerate theft, or vandalism. Love will not let you tolerate laziness or ignorance. And when you do tolerate these things, it is an act of petty selfishness. Leave me alone, and go do what you want. I've felt that before. I've SAID that before. And it's not an attitude born of love.
In science, tolerance is how much something is allowed to deviate from the standard or norm. And it's a good thing to keep tolerances pretty tight. Interesting then that people who allegedly claim this same world view are the biggest proponents of keeping social tolerance as loose as possible.

So, liberally, who do I not tolerate? I guess they would say I do not tolerate other religions. And I guess they'd be technically right, but practically wrong. I can co-exist with people who do not believe as I do, even like and love them. But to tolerate them would be to abandon them to their fate, deny the truth of Christ, and cease to care whether they lived or died spiritually, and possibly even physically. Do I tolerate people? All the time. But it's to my shame and it's certainly no compliment. And I am sure I will have to give an account for it, and the thought makes me tremble.

So the liberal will say, "but they don't believe in Christ." Well, I do. I believe it is the truth, and I believe it is a truth with grave consequences. So what am I to do? Leave them be? That is NOT LOVE. True, Jihads and Fatwas are not love either, but vigorous debate and apologetics is absolutely in order. The Crusades, The Inquisition? Pure evil. But the evil of men does not taint the Love of God or the Redemption of Christ. I have enough physical and spiritual conviction that I MUST preach Christ crucified for the sins of Man and raised again to redeem him, or I am a liar and a villain! And to "let them be" tempting as it is, surrendering to the temptation as I often have, is NOT in any way an act of love, and is in fact an evil unto it's self.

Do we preach Christ with the sword and the stick? May it never be so!! There is no greater corruption of the truth than to suggest we make belief compulsory. But to not raise an objection to the evil that men do? It's not right, and I hope I never tolerate it.
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And that's enough for now.

Brian Norwood

Platypi Online: The Platypus Portal

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Thursday, March 22, 2007

The Problem of Evil

I'm an atheist at heart. I'm a skeptic. I tend to be a "believe it when I see it" kind of guy. I like science. I like the linear progression of the evolution argument. And, frankly the creation story is vague and seems to have a lot of holes.

So, why can't I be an Atheist? Because Atheism doesn't properly explain the human condition. Why are we superstitious and afraid of death, when it is as natural as birth and occurs just as often? (one out of every one living creatures die) Why did morality evolve when "survival of the fittest" and "might makes right" works for the entire rest of creation? Why did religion evolve? How do you explain so called "paranormal" events documented objectively?
And, most important to me.. How do you explain the intelligence and personality of evil?

While most of us resist it rather well, evil tugs on us all. No one has to teach a child to be evil. A child becomes both selfish and defiant all on their own. Occasionally through history, evil has developed specific plans. That so many countries ignored or allied with the Nazis for so long. That can't be laid solely at the feet of Hitler's insanity. Militant racial groups of all types go far beyond the principals of homogeny.

Why are we tempted by infidelity? We've made decisions of monogamy, and a society that apparently evolved monogamy. And yet debauchery , real or virtual, taunts us, and presents it's self in almost impossible situations, as if by design.

Where do serial killers come from? What other species produces rogues that kill their own as a matter of routine.

Why are the vast, overwhelming majority of us repelled by pedophila when there is no biological reason against it. All other animals mate when they come of age. And, since it IS so naturally wrong, even for amoral Atheists, where do pedophiles come from?

Human nature is not natural. Our conscience makes us unique in nature. We almost universally agree their is a right and wrong. We disagree where to draw the line, but we do seem to have some absolutes. Killing another human being who presents you no mortal danger is , to the best of my knowledge, universally wrong. And only manipulating the terms of "human being" and "mortal harm" ever gets us around that.

And, since we seem to have "evolved" this high moral code, and yet now we are slipping into accepting things previous generations found abhorrent, how does that fit into the promise of continual improvement of evolution?

No, evil is real and present. And evolution does not explain it. Science does not explain it. And so far, I have been presented with only one practical solution to the problem of evil. There is an adversary, and Man was corrupted. And only one thing has ever acknowledged that reality and presented a viable solution to the problem of evil. That is the gospel of Jesus Christ. Only in Him is there a redemption I know I cannot attain in and of my self. And that is why, despite my natural inclination of disbelief, and a desire to be free of moral absolutes, I continue to be a Christian.

Oh, there is one other thing. A profound and personal experience with an overshadowing force of good outside of my own will and conscience, that I have come to know as the Presence of God. But that's a post for another time.

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And that's enough for now.

Brian Norwood

Platypi Online: The Platypus Portal

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Friday, February 23, 2007

Going deep... going bats... (long post)


How does some start a book? Especially a self help book? The weight of the thought that there must be countless people who know as much or more than you must be crushing. Even if you are an "expert" in your field, there are surely thousands of voices that will deride you. And yet, people still write.

So, what am I going on about? It's been on my mind, and my heart to do some writing. And I don't have the world's most impressive credentials. People say I'm talented, and they may be right. I'd put my drawing skills up against anyone. And there was a time I'd have done the same with my skill as a bassist, though the time has now passed. But this isn't about drawing or bass playing. Though art in it's various forms is my passion, it is not my only interest. I have a handful of qualities that will inform this series of writings. I'm open-minded. I'm reasonably intelligent and well informed. I am an amateur philosopher. I am an amateur scientist. And, I am an amateur theologian. All of that should sound fairly dangerous when mixed together.

So, here's the deal. I don't have blind faith. I've wished for it and prayed for it, and it's not mine to posses. So, I pretty much obsess over convincing my self there is a God, and that he cares about me and my life. And it is a struggle. So, I think I've developed some skill at it.

Science, REAL Science, is both observable and reproducible. If it cannot be observed, it is theory. If it can be observed, but not reproduced it is interpreted. Interpretation is Philosophy. Philosophy can, and should be, debated. Much of what is being taught to our children as fact is Philosophy that has the illusion of reality called "Consensus". Consensus is about as useful to real science as playdough is to real construction. Remember, before the humanists could ever make fun of the Church for persecuting Galileo, they had first reached "consensus" that the universe did, in fact, revolve around Earth. They say they learned better. Well, so did we. And the Bible is fairly silent on celestial mechanics, so it's not a matter of religion.

Now, for Philosophy. The most effective lie is one wrapped up in truth. Take something observed and interpreted, and mix in some observable and reproducible, and you can convince a lot of people that it is all hard science. So, what I am not saying is that I have hard science that God is real. I have Philosophy. I happen to think my Philosophy is as good as theirs. What I AM saying, is I don't think they have hard science to say I came from primordial ooze. So, I think I've reasoned out some pretty solid arguments about God and Nature. I think it's time they went trough the Crucible

Let's start small. The evolution of the bat. First, let me say I am not fundamentally opposed to the argument of natural selection. There is plenty of room, and evidence, that change and specialization through breeding can, and apparently does, occur. However, the argument of natural selection is necessary, but not sufficient, for the idea that all organisms evolved from a single, or even a small selection, of primitives with no outside intervention. That is to say, Darwinism.

The order Chiroptera (hand wing) contains the only flying mammals on the Earth. Bats. Which brings up one "rat hole" (rat hole being a tangent that gets far off the subject) immediately. While I don't agree with their premises, I will use accepted scientific nomenclature where appropriate. Thus the family, or rather "Order" of bats. As I said, these are the only mammals on Earth that truly fly. And they are unlike any other mammal, and yet quite like other animals.

The flying squirrel actually only glides. It's mechanism for "flight" is excess skin between it's limbs that catches air as it leaps from tree to tree. Sure, a skill worth evolving. And, a reasonable evolutionary move. A small, arboreal mammal learns it's safer to leap from tree to tree than it is to climb down and climb up. Others observe and imitate. One particular animal has a little extra skin. Maybe it was fat and then lost weight. Maybe it was a freak. But, it would have had to have been a genetic "sport". Something reproducible. And getting to this one extra tree meant this little guy could eat. He survived. He made babies that could also "fly". They thrived and specialized. Flying squirrels.

Bats are a whole other case. They really fly. They fly on membrane stretched between their fingers. They have light, specialized bodies, kind of like birds, that make flight possible. So, how do we get bats? The obvious and easiest path is that a bird evolved into a mammal. This would make sense and need the smallest amount of change. Feathers become fur, and voila! The hair and warm blood would certainly help out. I think the argument of a live birth over and egg is an evolutionary advantage is weak at best, but ok. I'll take it. The problem is, no one in their right mind would try to say that a bird became a bat overnight. And, their are no transitional bird/mammals in the fossil record to speak of.

So, bats must have evolved from a mammal. This already makes life easier as other mammals have sonar, the sound device bats use to hunt. We can say "That came from a common ancestor" and let it go. Same with eyes, ears, fur, tails, nostrils, etc. The real problem is those wings. Unlike any other mammal. So like a bird. Or a pterodactyl. So, our primitive is possibly an arboreal insectivore mammal. It develops the ability to leap to catch buts. With an additional food source, it survives and thrives. Specializes. Then one is born with flaps of skin between it's fingers.

Oops. Someday, when these become wings, they will be a mighty evolutionary leap. Right now they are a gigantic pain in the ass, and hinder more than they help. As he instinctively claws at his prey, like other insectivores, he actually catches air in his flaps and slows down just enough to miss this bug. He has to hunt nose first, and then land on his feet. This is NOT an evolutionary advantage. Maybe our squirrel should try to swim instead. Catch fish, maybe.

Nobody is arguing that a rat grew wings overnight. That would be laughable. So the wings had to grow incrementally. Over thousands of years. The problem is, until this membrane actually becomes a wing, it is a detriment to the creature. Nowhere near as stable as the flaps on our flying squirrel. So, maybe they grew flaps like a flying squirrel, and then wrapped them around their fingers? This is the gorilla in the room of evolutionary argument. Until a large change occurs an adaptation is not necessarily a beneficial evolutionary step. A dinosaur that simply grows feathers has not moved forward. Developing hollow bones so you can fly makes you weak and vulnerable until you can actually fly. A larger brain is just dead weight until you become significantly smarter. Light sensitive cells that may someday become eyes become a distraction first, until a brain develops to process the images. And, lets not forget an almost universal in the animal kingdom. Being a freak makes it hard to mate.

So, in summation. No one has convinced me that evolution did happen. However, if it did happen, it needed a lot of help. There is a point at which, unless you are actively fleeing the idea of god, that the odds against fumbling and stumbling accidentally from Big Bang to modern man become absurd. Let's be clear. I don't believe in "Intelligent Design". I believe in Creation. I think if you believe in evolution, you should arguing for intelligent assistance. It makes it much more plausible. And, I think the idea that I am fearfully and wonderfully made in the image of God is beautiful. So, I'll give it the benefit of the doubt.


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And that's enough for now.

Brian Norwood

Platypi Online: The Platypus Portal

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Monday, December 25, 2006

Can any one tell me..... what christmas is all about?


"I can tell you Charlie Brown. Lights please..."
"And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night.
And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were sore afraid.
And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.
For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.
And this shall be a sign unto you; Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.
And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying,
Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men."

All other gifts today are secondary to this. May the glory of Christmas surround you today. Peace on earth and good will to men.
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And that's enough for now.

Brian Norwood

Platypi Online: The Platypus Portal

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Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Santa Claus has cancer.



First, if you do nothing else about this post, I desperately urge you to go read Leonard Pitts Jr's editorial
"Ailing 'Santa' is receiving gifts this Christmas"
.(Unfortunately, the Herald wants your info to read the column. I re-tell the story below anyway) It originally ran in the Miami Herald, but was reprinted today in the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin.

I was literally moved to tears. This man, Larry Stewart, a wealthy 58-year old businessman, instantly became one of my very favorite people. I think he's a believer, but I'm not sure. Irregardless, he taught me more about how to live my faith than any one I can remember. This man is literally a saint.

It started in 1979, with a 20 something Larry was eating at a drive up restaurant. He had just lost his job the week before Christmas for the second year in a row and was feeling low. Then he noticed the waitress. I'll quote the man if you don't mind. "It was cold and the carhop didn’t have on a very big jacket and I thought to myself, 'I think I got it bad. She’s out there in the cold making nickels and dimes.' "

He gave a her a twenty on a two or three dollar tab, and told her to keep the change. No small gesture in 1979. The woman's desperate, tearful thank you changed his life.
He withdrew $200 from his bank and passed it out to those who looked needy. And thus began almost three decades of anonymous giving. Reporters were allowed to follow him as he did his work, on the condition he not be named.

Now Larry has cancer, and he might miss his first Christmas since the Carter Administration. Mr. Pitts seems to think he might have let himself be reveled so that the kindness doesn't die with him. It won't. I won't let it. I don't have a lot to give, but I am going to give. And I challenge you. Anyone reading. Twenty Bucks. That's where he started. You can break it up in to four $5 bills, or give someone the whole twenty. Just find someone in need, and give it. If you really can't, give 10. Give five. But don't just drop it in a red kettle in a store front (a good charity, to be sure). Put it in a person's hand.

And if you do it to the least of these, you know what you get.
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And that's enough for now.

Brian Norwood

Platypi Online: The Platypus Portal

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Monday, November 06, 2006

Hypocrite

I see this word being thrown around a lot these days, and I find it's use funny. Funny as in odd, like "it smells funny". Of course, the Mark Foley thing. The Ted Haggard thing. The John Kerry Thing... Wait, what's that? John Kerry, how so?
I know he didn't intend to insult our troops. However, I think making fun of someone's intellect, some one with the same ivy league education you have, and then omitting the one word that could take you from presidential hopeful to presidential "I-don't-think-so" pretty much makes you a hypocrite. It's like the pot calling the kettle black by using a racial slur. This poorly written and even more poorly (if possible) delivered poke at President Bush has been compared to the legendary "Dean Scream" as the stupidest way ever to end a political ambition. Not to mention that it implies little respect of the office he so badly wanted to occupy.

So, why so hard on Kerry? To make a point on hypocrisy, which is that we are ALL hypocrites. And don't lie to yourself (you can't lie to me personally unless you were to email platypibri at gmail dot com), you are a hypocrite. Unless you are a web crawler scanning my site, you are human, and as such you have made mistakes, and you have certainly compromised your morals. I don't care if you kept change that wasn't yours, slept with your friends girl, or just indulged in some excessive speed on a rare moment of uncluttered freeway. You have done yourself and others wrong. And if that doesn't drive it home for you, you have to know you have done things you don't want your kids, or future kids, doing. Hypocrite.

So, now that I've arranged my palette, here's my point. Hypocrite is one of those words, like racist, that is all too often used negate the merits of an opponent's view point. Calling someone a hypocrite means "I can safely dismiss your argument, and refuse it's moral impact on me." So, I'm going to get real vulnerable, to drive my point home.

For a couple of years just before I met my wife, I was desperately lonely. I despaired. I cannot remember a lower point in my life. My only social life was internet chat, which I spent hours doing, sometimes going to work having not slept. Having already had a long distance "relationship" that was supplemented by chat, it already felt somewhat natural to pursue romantic feelings online. Now, online, because it is by nature impersonal and artificial, the pace of online relationships is dramatically accelerated. And as ridiculous as it sounds, people date, go steady, pronounce a "chat marriage" and get a "chat divorce" In a matter of a month. Sometimes days. And what else does a "married" couple do, but engage in "cyber-sex" which will often evolve into phone sex, both of these supplemented by porn in an attempt to emulate the real feelings of a healthy human relationship. And as it is inherently unsatisfying, there is pressure to try more and different situations in pursuit of feeling.

Yes, I confess I lived this lifestyle for a while. I knew it wasn't healthy. I knew it was still debauchery, even if it was "cyber-debauchery". By grace I stopped myself before I downloaded and viewed anything illegal. No, I take that back. I did not stop myself, I was delivered from it. But, man, I walked to the edge and peeked over. So, now I'm a hypocrite, because I'm telling you that this life I lived is wrong. It's unreal, and unhealthy. The lack of satisfaction will drive you ever onward, like a junkie trying to reproduce that first high. And you'll never get that high again. So you go lower and lower. People fall to this stuff daily, ruining their lives spending whole paychecks on porn chasing that impossible desire. People destroy their families pursuing transient, artificial relationships rather than working on the real ones.

And I'm a hypocrite, because like a monkey on my back, internet porn whispers in my ear all the time. I use safe search on Google. I've taught my wife how to check up on me, and encouraged her to do so. I have to say no to it daily. Sometimes hourly. And because I have the audacity to "preach" to people about the danger, the evil, the life destroying poison that is internet porn, I'm a hypocrite. And I'll STAY A HYPOCRITE forever, for there is the slightest hope I can steer even ONE person away from the horror of porn addiction.

Pastor Ted Haggard believes homosexuality and drugs can ruin your life. The fact that he became a hypocrite and proved that point does not erase the truth of it. I'm sure he believes it now more than ever.

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And that's enough for now.

Brian Norwood

Platypi Online: The Platypus Portal

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Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Habemus Papam!

... which is Latin for "We have a Pope!"
So, what can I add to the dialogue being the non-catholic that I am? Here's my take.
"Liberal Catholics"... walk away. This is a simple thing to understand and it applies to all of the world's religions.
The job of any religion is to dispense the revelation of god to the people. Now, we might all argue over who or what God is, but the fact is, if you believe in an eternal creator of the universe, HE WILL NOT CHANGE. HE CANNOT CHANGE. He is ALREADY eternal, and sufficiently powerful enough to create all that there is. How is is that you can believe in any god and then believe it is HIS job to change to serve YOUR needs?

What ever version of "truth" you subscribe to, truth was not handed down by said god lightly. He is omniscient. He is omnipresent. He foresaw that human beings would begin to apply a sliding scale to morality and he laid down the law to combat that. (At the minimum) 6000 years ago, the God of the Abraham was NOT unaware of the concept of practice of homosexuality. He, in fact, DEALT with the issue and said "Man shall not lie with man". If you cannot live with that decree, you are not obedient to the God of Abraham. (Which includes Christians [including catholics, orthodox and protestants], Jews and Muslims). It's really simple. He won't change his mind simply because we as a society have become comfortable with Homosexuality. He called it a moral wrong. If you are a Child of Abraham, it continues to be a moral wrong. If you do not consider it a moral wrong, you are not a Child of Abraham. You do not believe in THAT god. You may say "but interpretations change". They do. But there is no "interpretation" of that scripture that is going to allow the church to embrace gays. [EDIT] This is a poor choice of words on my part. Many churches do embrace homosexuals. I am talking specifically about the Abrahamic Faiths and their stance on the homosexual lifestyle. Now, the idea that priests cannot marry is extra biblical, but if the Catholic church were to turn on ideas like homosexuality, divorce, and core issues like that, it will only be shortly before it's demise. It is when doctrine swings in the wind that the religious institutions of the world will cease to be relevant.

Now, you may be arrogant enough to believe that you alone on the earth are enlightened, and that you can figure out your own cosmology. I can't get there. I think that a faith fundementally must be something larger than my own ego or intellect. However, if you are so very sure that you have it all figured out, you can just forego the comfort of the "church".

And yet the very large majority of us, sinners though we be, seek the comfort of a religious institution. Why is that? With all that has happened since the Enlightenment project began, why does man still long for God? I believe it is instinct.
We know that there something larger than us. Something that science cannot explain away. And I don't expect that He will conform himself to my image. I don't think you should expect it either.
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And that's enough for now.

Brian Norwood

Platypi Design

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