Saturday, November 1, 2025

the Eastern mysticism subversiveness of antiphonal chant Philippians 2:6 to 11: The pre-Gospel Christ-hymn quoted by Paul

 Talk on Philippians 2:6-11 yt

"Most students of the New Testament today understand Philippians 2:6-11 as a pre-Pauline hymn that was composed for early Christian worship"

https://brill.com/view/journals/bi/11/3/article-p361_10.xml 

  Paul acted as a "theologos" in writing a brief speech in exalted prose honoring Jesus Christ, whom he had taught the Philippians to honor instead of the emperor.

https://academic.oup.com/jts/article-abstract/66/1/90/2386177 

 PHILIPPIANS 2:6–11 AS SUBVERSIVE HYMNOS:
A STUDY IN THE LIGHT OF ANCIENT
RHETORICAL THEORY
M ICHAEL WADE M ARTIN
Lubbock Christian University
Michael.Martin@lcu.edu
B RYAN A. N ASH
Lubbock Christian University

 if any were to appreciate the strategy employed in Philippians 2:6–11 of taking up and
then subverting standard headings of praise so that the shameful is exalted (see below), it would have been the uneducated, poor, and enslaved....this hymn celebrates Christ, a pre-existent god, for
becoming human.

 Christ is praised because he adopted what by every topos would normally be judged a more
shameful station than was rightly his. And he did this, the hymn claims, because of his servant nature—because his mind was characterized by humility. (Paul’s introductory comments further elaborate the virtue as a motive: it counts others better than
oneself [2:3]; it looks to others’ interests rather than one’s own interests [2:4]). 

 divine form is usually not visible apart from mystical experience. This suggests to us that in a Jewish religious context the [form in greek] – of God refers to a form or shape with essential existence apart from human perception.

 an assertion of Christ’s pre-temporal origins in divine form.
Whereas praise of divinized men often begins with attribution of
descent from divinity, this hymn asserts that Christ was himself
divine in his pre-existence (understanding ‘form of God’ in a
Jewish religious context to be an accurate reflection of inward
reality).
This, however, is remarkably not the primary point of praise
made about Christ’s origins. The assertion, rather, belongs to a
concessive participial phrase (‘although he was in the form of
God . . .’) that leads to the primary point, namely that Christ
emptied himself and took the form of [greek for slave]" (‘slave’).

 The hymn praises Christ neither for having
high descent nor for overcoming low descent, but rather for
exchanging high for low descent—that is, for traversing the
same spectrum of familial status as the divinized Romulus, but
in the opposite direction. In the move from ‘the form of God’ to
‘the form of a slave’, Christ takes on what in the Greco-Roman world constituted lowest possible origin. 

 The Christ-hymn, by comparison, praises Christ for being ‘born in the like-
ness of humanity’. This is striking in two regards. First it entails
a reversal of the normal polarities assumed in hymnic praise of
the birth of a deus. 

.... we encounter a god who adds to his divine form
fleshly embodiment.
Indeed, the kind of movement celebrated in the hymn—the
fleshly embodiment of the spiritual—was most commonly
viewed in negative terms. In Plato’s Phaedo, the immortal
soul’s descent into the body is framed as an obstacle to rationality. 

 Christ’s emptying of divine form in exchange for human appearance
would have represented an inversion of the normal order of things

 (‘Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility [tapeinoßros0n:] count others more significant than yourselves’). It is the virtue that according to Paul characterizes ‘the mind . . . which is . . . in Christ Jesus’ (2:5; emphasis ours) and also,
as a corollary of Paul’s participationist Christology, the mind of
the church. As Paul puts it, the Philippians should have the
‘same mind’ (2:2); that is, they should ‘have this mind among
[them]selves which is also in Christ Jesus’ (2:5).
In celebrating Christ’s humility as a virtue, the hymn is engaging in the scandalous. Humility was not merely overlooked as a
virtue in Hellenistic society—it was widely considered an obstacle to virtue.

 That Christians should view humility as a virtue was therefore quite striking.

 Crucifixion was a form of execution reserved for only the lowest class of criminals. The Greeks employed it exclusively with slaves.

 Justin Martyr, who felt compelled to address critics who ‘charge us with madness, saying that we give the second place after the unchanging and ever-existing God and begetter of all things to a crucified man’. 79 Justin’s response ‘make[s] it clear that the dishonour involved in the death of Jesus by crucifixion was one of the main objections against his being son of God’. 80 Celsus sounds similar objections, portraying Jesus as ‘bound in the most ignominious fashion [2tim0tata]’ and ‘executed in a most shameful way [a2sc0sta]’. 81 And Christian writers did not disagree. In Heb. 12:2, ‘shame’ and ‘the cross’ are closely linked [3pGreek"; ‘he endured the cross, despising its shame’]. 82

 The Christ-hymn praises Christ for undergoing the latter kind of post-humous exaltation, only with understood caveat that the man exalted and deified also pre-existed in the ‘form of God’.

Christ is posthumously exalted on the basis of a life divested of honour and status out of service to others. In the Philippian context, the handling of this topos above all others may well have served as poignant anti-Roman rhetoric aimed at the ruling class.

 Parallels to the method are seen in Aelius Aristides’ hymn to Dionysus, where at least two different topoi are amplified by comparison:

 the piece displays all the features ancient rhetoricians judged essential to the hymnos genre: it is epideictic in content, it takes as its subject a divine being, it is in contrast to epainos a complete composition, and perhaps most importantly it is shaped beginning to end in both its form and content by epideictic topoi.

 https://corpus.ulaval.ca/server/api/core/bitstreams/3bc8a610-da4f-4172-82a2-289bbdf590c9/content

 The Interpretation of to einai isa theo in Phil 2:6: "Equality with God"?
Thèse Ph.D.
Benjamin Karleen

 Going from divine glorious autonomy to shameful servile subjection would have been
particularly repulsive in the larger eastern Roman society. Paul’s paraenetic objective would lie in
encouraging in his readers the counter-cultural type of humility for the sake of unity in their assembly that Christ had exhibited in his own mindset and choices. Reading τὸ εἶναι ἴσα θεῷ as describing preincarnate circumstances fits naturally into the
flow of such a trajectory. Though the preincarnate Christ belonged to the divine class and not the
human class, received divine recognition by others, and exercised divine autonomy (on which see
above on ἐν μορφῇ θεοῦ), he surprisingly did not consider holding on to living in the remarkable
circumstances in which God lives. That Christ did not retain the circumstances he lived in fits more
naturally and directly in a narrative about social downgrading than the idea that he did not retain
being equal in nature with God. Here we thus take ἴσα θεῷ not as an adjectival phrase
complementing the subject ὃς with εἶναι as linking verb (“being like God”), but rather as an
adverbial phrase modifying εἶναι as a verb of existence (“existing in the way that God exists”).
This latter meaning for εἶναι is well-attested in the lexicons and was a common interpretation of
εἶναι in Phil 2:6 among nineteenth century commentators (see Meyer, Müller, and Vincent in
Chapter 3). We believe that the adjectival translation “being like God,” which we saw was possible
in two later Greek texts in Chapter 6, while not inaccurate for Phil 2:6, does not sufficiently
communicate issues of honor highlighted in the context and for which ἴσα θεῷ was likely chosen
as a collocation.

 https://journals.co.za/doi/abs/10.1080/2222582X.2021.1949367

 recast crucifixion as a masculine act of endurance leading ultimately to glory, as in the so-called Christ hymn of Philippians 2. Yet, visualisation of the crucifixion confronted Christians with the problem that Christ might be viewed, literally, as unmanly, non-ideal. This article elaborates angst over shoring up Christ's masculinity by juxtaposing early Christian interpretations of the Christ hymn, in particular its image of Christ in the form of a slave, and the Alexamenos graffito. Christ's enslaved form, marked in the Roman world as crucifiable, was re-presented by writers such as Clement of Alexandria and Tertullian as a model of self-control, mastering and purging slavishness. In contrast, the Alexamenos graffito, etched within a context of enslavement, put the crucified Christ on full display, complete with a donkey head and its attendant associations with both slavery and the mockery of philosophical figures. Instead of taking the graffito to represent only the ridicule of Christ, or Christians generally, this essay takes seriously its satirical resonances, making a mockery of masculine ideals in ways that may have suggested solidarity with the enslaved. The article thus underscores early Christian anxiety over Christ's masculinity, potential alternative responses among the enslaved, as well as new possibilities for making sense of the Alexamenos graffito within its context.

 Clement views the human body of Christ, which is an enslaved body in
Phil 2:7, not as a failure of normative conventions, but as the very model by which
humans can learn about the potential for a human to become divine.
The Lord himself will speak to you, “who, though he was in the form of God, did not
regard equality with God as something to be grasped, but emptied himself,” the
compassionate God longing to save humanity. And already the Logos itself speaks to
you manifestly, putting disbelief to shame. Yes, I say, the Logos of God became a human
in fact in order that you also might learn from a human how perhaps a human might
become a god. (Protr. 1.8.4)16

Clement: 

But that human with whom the Logos dwells does not
embellish himself, nor is he fabricated. He has the form of the Logos, becomes like God,
is beautiful, and does not beautify himself …
If the flesh is a slave, as Paul also testifies, how can anyone reasonably adorn the female
slave as a pimp does? For that the fleshly is the form of a slave the apostle says in the
case of the Lord “that he emptied himself, taking the form of a slave,” calling the
outward human a slave before the Lord became a slave and bore flesh. But the
sympathetic God himself set the flesh free from corruption and slavery, releasing it from
the death-bringing and cruel, and conferred upon it incorruption, bestowing on the flesh
this holy embellishment of eternity—immortality. (Paed. 3.1.1.4–2.3) 

 Clement’s sterilised version of Christ’s enslaved form might be compared with
Tertullian’s strong objection to the assertion by Marcion that the form of the slave
(morphēn doulou) for Christ is not the reality (Marc. 5.20.3–5). 

 book chapter

 Paul cast out a demon spirit of Python in Philippi that was in an enslaved female fortune teller!! (Acts 16:16)....bishop was used a title for the priests at the Apollo temple...

A first century account of church minutes of Philippi have been discovered! Wow. see chapter 7, "meals" in Kloppenberg's "Christ's Associations" p. 209-44.

 Paul quotes a well-known hymn!!!

 It's a Christ version of the 4th Servant hymn of Isaiah, chapter 45:23 and Isaiah 53:12

 chanted in an antiphonal manner!!

 Antiphonal chants - Eastern and Christian playlist

  the Greek for "opposite voice" and is used in music, especially liturgical music, to describe a call-and-response style of singing, like two halves of a choir singing alternating verses

 more book analysis of Philippians

 the adverb used "equality with God" is not meant to be "exact" equality as in an adjective but rather since it's in adverb form it's more of a looser "equality" as in "likeness" or "similarity" (p. 15)

 Grasping equality is seen as allusion to Adam taking the forbidden fruit...Hurtado rejects this...

In the wisdom literature of the 2nd Temple, incorruptibility was the emphasis.

German scholars consider the Hermetic text of alchemy Poimandres to be similar to Philippians 2:6 to 11!!!

 p. 23

 "God is thus love self-emptying...the event of the incarnation..."

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, October 31, 2025

The White House Effect: new doc on Netflix exposing EcoImperialism of George Bush Skull and Bones-CIA drug smuggling

 Exploring the dramatic origin story of the climate crisis and how a political battle in the George H.W. Bush administration changed the course of history.  Trailer

 “The White House Effect” an infuriating portrait of how inaction has potentially doomed humanity. 

https://www.thewhitehouseeffect.com/ 

As Hurricane Melissa raced toward Jamaica on Monday, CBS News senior coordinating producer Tracy Wholf sent an email to the newsroom, detailing the historic storm’s scientific connection to climate change.

In the message obtained by HEATED, Wholf explained how an overly-hot Atlantic Ocean supercharged Melissa, fueling its rapid 70-mph intensification in a single day, boosting winds by about 10 mph, and turning what might have been a category 4 storm into a category 5. Wholf suggested a simple sentence CBS News reporters could use in storm-related stories to make the connection.

Wholf usually sent emails like this in the wake of deadly extreme weather events, two CBS News staffers told HEATED. But it was the first such email Wholf had sent under the company’s new pro-Trump billionaire chief executive David Ellison, and its new anti-“woke” editor-in-chief Bari Weiss.



A screenshot of the email Tracy Wholf sent to CBS News staffers on Monday, two days before she was laid off.

It was also the last. Two days later, as Hurricane Melissa smashed into the Caribbean, Wholf was laid off, along with the majority of the five person team supporting CBS News’s climate coverage.

 

will our pumpkin fit over my head? Ichabod Crane and the turnip origin of the Jack-O-Lantern

No, the Headless Horseman in Washington Irving's original story does not have a pumpkin for a head; instead, he throws a pumpkin at Ichabod Crane
, which is mistaken for his head. 

Sleepy Hallow and Tarrytown is only an hour away.
We have been to the church where the story ends for candlelight readings of the story.
There are tours of the adjacent cemetery.
And the local high school mascot is the Headless Horseman.

  the Headless Horseman chucks an uncarved pumpkin at Ichabod Crane, who is never seen again. But most images of the terrifying villain portray him holding a fiery jack-o'-lantern, which helped the story become a perennial Halloween favorite.

https://www.wgpfoundation.org/historic-markers/headless-horseman/ 

  author Washington Irving’s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, the Headless Horseman has captured imaginations for generations.

 local lore claims that the Headless Horseman is buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Sleepy Hollow, New York. The legend says the ghost tethers his horse to graves in the churchyard, only to set out at night in search of his missing head.

 The story’s influence prompted the village of North Tarrytown to officially change its name to Sleepy Hollow in 1996.

 The concept of using a round fruit or vegetable to depict a human face goes back thousands of years in some northern European Celtic cultures. “It may even have had pre-Christian origins that evolved from the custom of head veneration, or potentially even represented war trophies taken from your foes,” says Nathan Mannion, senior curator for EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum, in Dublin. “It’s quite macabre, but it may have symbolized the severed heads of your enemies.”

  comes from Irish folklore. As the tale is told, a man named Jack, who was notorious as a drunkard and trickster, tricked Satan into climbing a tree. Jack then carved an image of a cross in the tree's trunk, trapping the devil up the tree. Jack made a deal with the devil that, if he would never tempt him again, he would promise to let him down the tree. . According to the folk tale, after Jack died, he was denied entrance to Heaven because of his evil ways, but he was also denied access to Hell because he had tricked the devil. Instead, the devil gave him a single ember to light his way through the frigid darkness. The ember was placed inside a hollowed-out turnip to keep it glowing longer. 
 The Irish used turnips as their "Jack's lanterns" originally. But when the immigrants came to America, they found that pumpkins were far more plentiful than turnips. So the Jack-O-Lantern in America was a hollowed-out pumpkin, lit with an ember

 Yeah our pumpkin is not large enough so I'll just try to find a candle before I carve it into a Jack-O-Lantern....

 

Thursday, October 30, 2025

Speed of Light Earth Schumann resonance=7.5 Hertz ELF "negative resonance" precognition Psi-Plasma

 I don't recall Dr. Andrija Puharich making the connection to the Speed of Light resonance around Earth also being the same as the Schumann Resonance ELF wave? Both are 7.5 Hertz. Puharich certainly argues the Earth's Schumann ELF resonance is a "negative resonance" due to the virtual photons of the magnetic moment between the electron and proton of organic life molecules activated by the vagus nerve relaxation potassium serotonin connection. Stuart Hameroff and Roger Penrose's microtubule research corroborates this ultrasound connection that Puharich emphasized was key to splitting water, thereby resonating the vagus nerve potassium ELF via the virtual photons. 

Now as per the Law of Phase Harmony, relativity can not be ignored and thus the fact that the speed of light Earth resonance is aligned with the Schumann resonance fits in with "Light is Heavy" (article of Gerard 't Hooft) - the argument that the 1/2 spin of matter is due to this inherent virtual photon "negative resonance" precognition of mass with all matter actually being light.

 

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Corporations, as "legal persons" have more rights than "natural persons"

Mobil Oil, now part of ExxonMobil, helped pioneer the idea of corporations as citizen-like entities with free speech rights in an effort to revive their reputation back in the 1970s. Exxon and Mobil backed other corporations First Amendment lawsuits, arguing that companies should be free to express their views on “matters of public concern,” including climate change. In Supreme Court cases like First National Bank v. Bellotti and Citizens United v. FEC, the idea of corporate free speech was expanded to usher in nearly unlimited corporate money in politics.

https://www.exxonknews.org/p/exxon-uses-free-speech-argument-to?publication_id=20607&post_id=177496007&isFreemail=true&token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo4NTEzMzczLCJwb3N0X2lkIjoxNzc0OTYwMDcsImlhdCI6MTc2MTc2MzYwMywiZXhwIjoxNzY0MzU1NjAzLCJpc3MiOiJwdWItMjA2MDciLCJzdWIiOiJwb3N0LXJlYWN0aW9uIn0.k98-qyeFf-hOwuOJZA5xcyr6RGz1ljY5CGkkmK15uVs&r=52gyl&triedRedirect=true 

 

 

Balzac cranked out excellent novels, 13.5 hrs a day, then croaked at 51 yrs old after he drank 5 cups of coffee a day

 http://airshipdaily.com/blog/01282014-balzac-coffee

The Pleasure and Pains of Coffee,” he warns coffee-drinkers of the beverage’s near-fatal potential by relating his own experience:

… you will fall into horrible sweats, suffer feebleness of the nerves, and undergo episodes of severe drowsiness. I don't know what would happen if you kept at it then: a sensible nature counseled me to stop at this point, seeing that immediate death was not otherwise my fate.

 I go to bed at six or seven in the evening, like the chickens; I’m waked at one o’clock in the morning, and I work until eight; at eight I sleep again for an hour and a half; then I take a little something, a cup of black coffee, and go back into my harness until four. I receive guests, I take a bath, and I go out, and after dinner I go to bed. I’ll have to lead this life for some months, not to let myself be snowed under by my debts.

So he sleeps from 7 pm till 1 am or six hours of sleep and then sleeps after work for another 1.5 hours so 7.5 hours of sleep.... not too bad of a schedule but he was relying on caffeine to produce a hyper-alert waking state for his writing. Very fascinating. For his second shift of work....

 9:30 A.M. to 4 P.M. (Mind you, he only mentions drinking “a” cup of coffee.)

 he’d still have to down a cup of coffee every 16 minutes. Even if he drank them three at at time (which he recommends only for those of “particularly vigorous constitutions”), he would still have to take a coffee break every 48 minutes!

 so 6.5 hours of work during the day and 7 hours of work during the night for a 13.5 hour work shift per 24 hours  - 7.5 hours of sleep leaves only 3 hours of free time a day for eating/socializing. Wow.

 you get roughly four to five cups a day — a figure notably similar to how much Balzac describes one of his characters drinking in his story “Venetian Nights.”

 Balzac often had a pot simmering away (contrary to current advice) while he was writing, which was most of the time. And since he wrote like a machine, it's unlikely that he wasted much time pouring and drinking. At one point, though, when he was suffering stomach cramps, he claimed to be drinking only three cups of black coffee a day. This might be taken as the minimum.

 

 

Arctic Ice volume loss averages: we lost over 35% of arctic ice volume since year 2000

 proving that yes, as a matter of fact, we lost over 35% of that Sweet Millennial ice.

posted by "Going South" - a researcher in Greenland 

16% loss/decade, or 3100 km³ from the COP20 (Lima) base of 19,500 km³ reading from the 30-yr avg graph …

Arctic sea ice this week at 5.3 k km³. This week saw daily sea ice volume at 5.3 & its 30-year average at 16.3. This was also an All-Time Low for the latter. The annual average is approaching 12,900 km³. Odds are, COP 30 in the Amazon this November will change absolutely nothing.


 

Latest projections estimate the minimum at around 3,897 km³, making it the 2nd lowest after 2012's 3,673 km³. The 2025 annual mean could still drop below 2017's record low of 12,800 km³, 

 


so 53% loss of arctic ice volume since 1979.... or 25,400 kilometers cubed to 13,600

https://extinctionati.substack.com/p/i-caught-schellenberger-lying-on  

What doesn't get mentioned in the media is there's 1200 gigatons of pressurized methane in the world's largest ocean shelf - the subsea permafrost of the East Siberian Arctic Shelf! 

 The taliks have melted down to that permafrost for 50 gigatons being triggered already - soon to be released as an "abrupt eruption" that will soon double atmospheric temps within the decade (could happen any day though). The arctic ice is melting from below due to the 500 extra Zetta joules of heat in the ocean (hence the hurricane in Jamaica being so much more powerful due to ocean heat).

New Shakhova research group paper published!