Geek Orthodox

Fr. Justin (Edward) Hewlett

Orthodox Christianity and geek subculture, hosted by Fr. Justin, an Orthodox priest and life-long book-, computer-, game-, sci-fi-, and fantasy-geek. geekorthodox.substack.com

  1. 25 THG 10

    The Tale of My Beloved Stellar Empires

    It’s story-time again! This one has a bit of almost all things World of Code about it: early computing history, strategy gaming, programming, BASIC, some actual code analysis, engagement with real-live early programmers, me getting names mixed up, the relationship between computer hardware and software, an actual hardware/software BASIC programming project, and AI triumphs and failures (mostly failures). Let me take you back in time to the early days of my programming and computer-gaming history, and forward to a significant future programming project intended to take folks back to the past, and down into the weeds of debugging and building what, for me, is a pretty significant project. I do get a little bit technical towards the end, but, if you make it that far, do bear with me… I try to make it mostly understandable and my intention as a story-teller is to give you a sense of the joys and perils of programming that is hopefully at least impressionistically accessible to the non-programmer. I feel particularly bad about mixing up Ted and Drew Shorter, the son and father duo who ported my favourite game, “Stellar Empires” (the main subject of this story), to the TRS-80 Color Computer, where I encountered it. For the record, Ted is the son and Drew is the father, and it was Drew (now more than 80!), who, as far as we know, added the “computer player” feature to the game that enabled me to get into it as a solo player—and that really got me digging into the code to reprogram it! I didn’t “re-shoot” that portion because this whole video-podcast was actually done in a single take (and then lightly edited), and I didn’t want to mess with the continuity. I owe a debt of deep gratitude to them and to the game’s original author, Graham Wilson, that this story and this project are attempting to honour. This episode is based, in part, on the following blog-posts, which I hope to transfer over soon to my brand-new technically focussed Substack, Back to BASIC: * The Stellar Empires Project, Part I: The Program, Its Significance to Me, and the Project Proposal * The Stellar Empires Project, Part II: Porting and the Early “Open Source” Community * The Stellar Empires Project, Part III: The Plan, the Problems, and the Development Environment And I would be remiss if I did not also include a link to Graham Wilson’s very enjoyable StellarEmpires.net site! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit geekorthodox.substack.com/subscribe

    39 phút
  2. 19 THG 9

    World of Code: Switching Things Up II

    In this second half of this two-part World of Code episode in which we dive into actual code and the experience of coding, we’ll take our BASIC light-switch program and re-implement it in a modern programming language, Python, on a modern computer, my M3 MacBook Air. The main takeaway from the experience, I hope, will be a sense of how the ever-increasing power and capabilities of computer technology leads inevitably to more complex code, which then makes necessary the development of new tools that help us to manage the increasing complexity and to take advantage of the increasing power and capabilities the new computer technology. If we track this in terms of the computer technologies and programming languages we’ve covered or alluded to in the World of Code arc of the Geek Orthodox podcast so far, a simplified timeline might look something like this: * computers are hard-wired to do specific tasks * binary code (machine/assembly language) simplifies the process of reprogramming computers * higher-level languages (C, BASIC, etc.) simplify coding and control of computers * operating systems (DOS and then Mac/Windows) simplify control and increase the capabilities of computers but make programming more complicated * modern programming languages are themselves programs, and use Integrated Development Environments (like IDLE) to simplify programming * AI may make programming more accessible (simpler?) by allowing us to “program” computers using natural language (prompts) → see next episode… For those interested in the technical details, here are the four “light-switch” programs we made (two in BASIC, two in Python) over the course of these two episodes: Basic Light-Switch (On/Off) in BASIC: 10 CLS(0) 20 I$=INKEY$ 30 IF I$="" THEN GOTO 20 40 IF I$=CHR$(94) THEN CLS(5) 50 IF I$=CHR$(10) THEN CLS(0) 60 GOTO 20 Notes: In TRS-80 Color Computer BASIC (every early version of BASIC was slightly different, as each version was customized to control the computer it ran on), there are nine colours, 0 = black, 5 = white, the CLS command clears the screen, the INKEY$ command polls the keyboard, and CHR$ refers to characters by their ASCII values, in which 94 = up arrow and 10 = down arrow. Advanced Light-Switch in BASIC: 10 CLS(0) 15 T=5 20 I$=INKEY$ 30 IF I$="" THEN GOTO 20 40 IF I$=CHR$(94) THEN CLS(T) 50 IF I$=CHR$(10) THEN CLS(0) 60 IF I$=CHR$(8) AND T>3 THEN T=T-2:CLS(T) 70 IF I$=CHR$(9) AND TNotes: Early versions of BASIC only allowed one- or two-character variable names, so here T = color temperature; ASCII values 8 and 9 indicate the right- and left-arrow keys, respectively; the colon (:) in BASIC allows multiple commands to be strung together on a single line, with all commands on the same line following an IF statement only being executed if the statement is true; and colours 3 and 7 on the TRS-80 are magenta and dark blue, respectively. Hidden Display Layer and Functions Starting Both of the Light-Switch Python Programs: import pygame # pygame setup pygame.init() screen = pygame.display.set_mode((1280, 720)) UP = pygame.K_UP DOWN = pygame.K_DOWN LEFT = pygame.K_LEFT RIGHT = pygame.K_RIGHT def theUserClosedTheWindow(): # poll for events # pygame.QUIT event means the user clicked X to close your window for event in pygame.event.get(): if event.type == pygame.QUIT: return(True) return(False) def cls(colour): screen.fill(colour) # flip() the display to put your work on screen pygame.display.flip() def inkey(): return(pygame.key.get_pressed()) Notes: Imports the pygame library to detect key-presses and display coloured rectangles, sets up a 720p screen, defines the UP, DOWN, LEFT, and RIGHT keys as nicely named constants, defines a function that determines when the user closes the window, and implements the BASIC commands CLS and INKEY to make clearing the screen and detecting keystrokes look more familiar. Basic Light-Switch (On/Off) in Python: running = True colour = "black" cls(colour) while running: if theUserClosedTheWindow(): running = False i = inkey() if i[UP]: cls("white") if i[DOWN]: cls("black") pygame.quit() Notes: Follows and depends upon the first portion of the program, above. Turns the screen “on” (white) when the up-arrow is pressed and “off” (black) when the down-arrow is pressed. Advanced Light-Switch in Python: r = 255 g = 255 b = 255 running = True colour = (r,g,b) cls("black") while running: if theUserClosedTheWindow(): running = False i = inkey() if i[UP]: cls((r,g,b)) if i[DOWN]: cls("black") if i[LEFT] and r > 0: if b 0: if r Notes: Replaces the “basic switch” code above, and likewise follows and depends upon the “hidden display layer” code. Represents the “coolest” colour temperature as light blue (cyan), which it moves towards as the left arrow key is pressed (r,g,b = 0,255,255), and the “warmest” colour temperature as yellow (r,g,b = 255,255,0), which it moves towards as the right arrow key is pressed. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit geekorthodox.substack.com/subscribe

    39 phút
  3. 15 THG 8

    The First Literary Death of Arthur: Geoffrey of Monmouth

    Continuing the process of re-issuing the first arc of my podcast, following on from Episode 1, “The Historical Deaths of Arthur”, available here. In which we examine the transition from the treatment of Arthur as a primarily historical to a primarily literary figure in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s History of the Kings of Britain, and the resultant changes to the handling and implications of Arthur’s death Geoffrey of Monmouth, for all his claims to be writing a history of the kings of Britain, seems actually to have been much more interested much more interested in establishing Arthur as a legendary, heroic figure, and succeeds in establishing many of the main themes of Arthurian legend, despite Geoffrey being (in the words of my hero, C.S. Lewis) “an author of mediocre talent and no taste.” Show Notes: 1. Geoffrey of Monmouth, History of the Kings of Britain * Date: AD 1138 * Causes of Arthur’s death: * Mordred’s betrayal: Arthur’s nephew, who is left in charge during Arthur’s Roman campaign, rebels and marries Guinevere * Civil war: Arthur dies fighting his fellow Britons and a collection of enemies, primarily Saxons, but also “Scots, Picts, Irish” and others * Aftermath: * Guinevere (Guanhumara) flees to a convent * Arthur “mortally wounded” and carried to the isle of Avallon to be cured * kinsman Constantine succeeds the throne, but a rapid succession of rivals replacing one another as well as civil war over the next ten years or so leads to the wasting of what is left to them and the domination of the Saxons * Beginnings of the subsequent shape of the “matter of Britain”: * Theme of freedom: Uther, on defeating the Saxons (leading his troops on a litter due to illness): “Victory to me half-dead is better than to be safe and sound and vanquished. For to die with honour is preferable to living with disgrace.” * Mordred’s betrayal, left in charge because he is Arthur’s kinsman (though here nephew, not son) * Guinevere’s infidelity (though with Mordred) * Single-combat between Arthur and Flollo looks a lot like a joust * Tournaments: three-day tournament at the coronation, with prizes given on the fourth, including: “The military men composed a kind of diversion in imitation of a fight on horseback; and the ladies, placed in a sportive manner darted their amorous glances at the courtiers, the more to encourage them.” * Civil war, which Geoffrey condemns: “Why foolish nation! oppressed with the weight of your abominable wickedness, why did you, in your insatiable thirst after civil wars, so weaken yourself by domestic confusions, that whereas formerly you brought distant kingdoms under your yoke, now, like a good vineyard degenerated and turned to bitterness, you cannot defend your country, your wives, and children, against your enemies?” * Geoffrey’s account, written in Latin and thus widely disseminated, was hugely popular and influential, but was not well received by all his contemporaries – or even by later critics, like C.S. Lewis. * William of Newburgh (c. 1196) condemns Geoffrey for weaving “ridiculous figments of imagination” around historical events recorded by the Venerable Bede and cloaked these old, British “fables about Arthur … with the honorable name of history by presenting them with the ornaments of the Latin tongue.” It is interesting that one of the possible motives he ascribes to Geoffrey for doing so is “to please the Britons, most of whom are known to be so primitive that they are said still to be awaiting the return of Arthur, and will not suffer themselves to hear that he is dead.” William wonders how “the old historians, to whom it was a matter of great concern that nothing worthy of memory should be omitted from what was written … could … have suppressed with silence Arthur and his acts, this king of the Britons who was nobler than Alexander the Great,” and further disparages Geoffrey for translating “the fallacious prophecies of a certain Merlin, to which he has in any event added many things himself” into Latin. * Gerald of Wales, who writes an account of the discovery of King Arthur’s body (more on that later), condemns Geoffrey’s Historywith the story of a man who could see demons: “When he was harrassed beyond endurance by these unclean spirits, Saint John’s Gospel was placed on his lap, and then they all vanished immediately, flying away like so many birds. If the Gospel were afterwards removed and the History of the Kings of Britain by Geoffrey of Monmouth put there in its place, just to see what would happen, the demons would alight all over his body, and on the book too, staying there longer than usual and being even more demanding.” * Lewis, on the other hand, condemns Geoffrey from a more modern, literary perspective: “Geoffrey is of course important for the historians of the Arthurian Legend; but since the interest of those historians has seldom lain chiefly in literature, they have not always remembered to tell us that he is an author of mediocre talent and no taste. In the Arthurian parts of his work the lion’s share falls to the insufferable rigamarole of Merlin’s prophecies and to the foreign conquests of Arthur. These latter are, of course, at once the least historical and the least mythical thing about Arthur. If there was a real Arthur he did not conquer Rome. … The annals of senseless and monotonously successful aggression are dreary enough reading even when true; when blatantly, stupidly false, they are unendurable.” 2. Intermediate sources I’m going to skip Geoffrey’s influential History established Arthurian legend as the English ur-text, the “matter of Britain” and inspired a whole range of imaginative elaborations, most notably the addition of Lancelot by the French, writing in the “courtly love” tradition which Lewis engages with in his most important academic work, The Allegory of Love, as well as English works such as the alliterative Morte Arthure, which seems to have inspired the beginnings of Malory’s great Arthurian work. * French prose cycle: Lancelot, Quest for the Grail, Mort Artu (Malory’s “French book”) * 14th C English alliterative Morte Arthure * 14th C stanzaic Le Morte Arthur This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit geekorthodox.substack.com/subscribe

    33 phút
  4. 23 THG 7

    Thinking through and Implementing the Algorithm

    This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit geekorthodox.substack.com It’s been a while since I posted any bonus content for my few paying subscribers! Since I’ve chosen to put only optional extra content behind my paywall, consistent with the principles I’ve outlined previously, my tendency is to make almost everything public. However, today I have a treat for any paying subscribers who are interested in my approach to programming and/or who would like to learn to program in TRS-80 Color Computer BASIC. While I’ve already covered the basics of BASIC (pun intended) in previous videos, most notably in my latest World of Code episode, in this exclusive excerpt you can see me thinking through the algorithm I want to use to implement our virtual light-switch, and then programming it on my virtual TRS-80 Color Computer. The video also provides a glimpse into the relatively primitive world of programming as it existed way back in the 1980s: editing tools were necessarily a lot more basic and unintuitive back then! Besides the need to juggle the use of BASIC as both the programming language and the “operating system”, without a mouse or a dedicated editor, line-editing had to be done entirely with pretty unintuitive keyboard shortcuts. Geek Orthodox is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Besides giving me a chance to share fun bonus content with my few paying subscribers, my hope and my strategy in making paid content available at a deeply discounted price is to give folks a way * to encourage me to devote more time to creating more geeky content of various types, and * to encourage more general paid support of internet content that we actually love, at an affordable rate.

    1 phút
  5. World of Code: Switching Things Up

    22 THG 7

    World of Code: Switching Things Up

    Having wrapped up the first arc of this “World of Code” arc of the podcast with an examination of the ways in which some of the attributes of computer code have had an impact on two very human activities that are very near and dear to my heart: telling stories and playing games; we now begin a new arc in which we examine some of the impacts that the inherent complexity of computer code has on our world, beginning with the complexity of actually creating code by programming a simplified virtual version of our code-enhanced wireless light-switch. This is the first half of a two-part episode: in this first half, we’ll implement a BASIC version of the light switch on my TRS-80 Color Computer—not to teach programming, of course, but to experientially engage with how code is created and how it works, in order to better understand both what code is and how it rapidly scales up in complexity. In the second half, we’ll re-implement the light-switch program on more modern hardware (my Mac) in a more modern programming language (Python), which will illustrate how the addition of more computing capabilities further increases the complexity of code, leading to all sorts of significant problems which we need to address with new tools that simplify through abstraction but which themselves add even more layers of complexity. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit geekorthodox.substack.com/subscribe

    31 phút
  6. 9 THG 7

    The Historical Deaths of Arthur

    Why does Arthur—someone who may or may not have been King of England, and may or may not have even existed—become such a hugely important figure in England and English Literature, and why is the death of this one man so important? The beginning of our answer, I think, can be found in what he comes to represent, and the time (or times) in which he represented it: Arthur, as warleader (dux bellorum) and later as king, fighting as the leader of the remnants of Roman Britain against the various barbarian invaders, came to represent the last valiant stand of civilization against the overwhelming forces of chaos and collapse. It was, for the Romanized Britons, long accustomed to the benefits and comforts of Roman civilization for almost half a millenium, the end of the world—or at least the end of the world as they knew it, and they did not feel fine. While it would be nice to be able to say definitively whether Arthur existed or not, the historical evidence is, ultimately, inconclusive. Evidence for his existence from the Annals of Wales may have been inserted later, given the relatively late date of our extant copies, and our best contemporary source (Gildas) for the final collapse of Romanized British civilization mentions the Battle of Badon and Ambrosius Aurelianus, but not Arthur. There may, of course, be good reasons for this, such as Arthur being only a warleader, not a king, or my favourite rationale, that Gildas held a grudge against Arthur for killing his brother, but the fact remains that the earliest semi-reliable historical source we have for Arthur ends up being Nennius’ The History of the Britons, written some three centuries later. For what it’s worth, I myself am partial to giving the Annals of Wales entries more credence than most, and if there is a good case to be made for Arthur’s historicity, I think it is as Ambrosius Aurelianus’ warlord. Perhaps most notably, not necessarily for Arthur’s historicity, but for what he comes to represent as the myth becomes the man, is the repeated mention of Arthur triumphing at the Battle of Badon bearing a Christian symbol—whether that be the cross of Christ or an image of the Virgin Mary—on his shield and armour, with the victory over the barbarians on that day being almost unanimously attributed, in the historical (or semi-historical) record, to Arthur as an instrument of the Lord. Ultimately, then, it doesn’t matter that much whether Arthur actually existed, or whether he was a king or just a warlord: what he came to represent for the British people was a sort of Christ-figure, or, at this point, an instrument in the hand of God for the preservation and salvation of His people—or at least His civilization—holding at bay for a brief but glorious time the forces of barbarism, chaos, and darkness. This is the legendary and/or historical kernel of what Arthur and his death will ultimately come to represent for the British people, and, by extension, for the people of all English-speaking countries, as we will see in the upcoming episodes. Show Notes: Historical Context: Roman Britain, AD 43 – AD 410 * conquest began 43-47 with four legions sent by Claudius, conquering the southeast (SE of Fosse Way) * continued 77-84, conquering as far north as Caledonia/north-Scotland (up to the Antonine Wall) * road network completed around AD 150 * Emperor Honorius, himself under siege at Ravenna at the time, tells the Roman Britons they are on their own AD 410 1. Annals of Wales * Date: c. 12 C copy of 10th C original Year * Main quote re Arthur: * 72 [c. AD 516] The Battle of Badon, in which Arthur carried the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ on his shoulders for three days and three nights and the Britons were victors. * Year 93 [c. 537] The Strife of Camlann in which Arthur and Medraut (Mordred) fell and there was death in Britain and in Ireland. Notes: * The words for “shoulder” and “shield” were, however, easily confused in Old Welsh – scuit “shield” versus scuid “shoulder” – and Geoffrey of Monmouth played upon this dual tradition, describing Arthur bearing “on his shoulders a shield” emblazoned with the Virgin. * Alternate dates for the Battle of Badon, sometime between AD 430 and 516: 493 or 501. Or maybe 490. 2. Gildas, “On the Ruin and Conquest of Britain” * Date: c. AD 526/560 * Homily on the ruin of Britain by someone who would be a contemporary of Arthur * Fascinating description of the ruin of Roman Britain by one who personally witnessed the final stages of the dissolution of the remnants of the Roman state: “A council is held, to deliberate what means ought to be determined upon, as the best and safest to repel such fatal and frequent irruptions and plunderings by the [Scots and the Picts]. At that time all members of the assembly, along with the proud tyrant, are blinded; such is the protection they find for their country (it was, in fact, its destruction) that those wild Saxons, of accursed name, hated by God and men, should be admitted into the island, like wolves into folds, in order to repel the northern nations. … They sailed out, and at the directions of the unlucky tyrant, first fixed their dreadful talons in the eastern part of the island, as men intending to fight for the country, but more truly to assail it. To these the mother of the brood, finding that success had attended the first contingent, sends out also a larger raft-full of accomplices and curs, which sails over and joins itself to their b*****d comrades. From that source, the seed of iniquity, the root of bitterness, grows as a poisonous plant, worthy of our deserts, in our own soil, furnished with rugged branches and leaves. Thus the barbarians, admitted into the island, succeed in having provisions supplied them, as if they were soldiers and about to encounter, as they falsely averred, great hardships for their kind hosts. These provisions, acquired for a length of time, closed, as the saying is, the dog’s maw. They complain, again, that their monthly supplies were not copiously contributed to them, intentionally colouring their opportunities, and declare that, if larger munificence were not piled upon them, they would break the treaty and lay waste the whole of the island. They made no delay to follow up their threats with deeds. … In this way were all the settlements brought low with the frequent shocks of the battering rams; the inhabitants, along with the bishops of the church, both priests and people, whilst swords gleamed on every side and flames crackled, were together mown down to the ground, and, sad sight! there were seen in the midst of streets, the bottom stones of towers with tall beam cast down, and of high walls, sacred altars, fragments of bodies covered with clots, as if coagulated, of red blood, in confusion as in a kind of horrible wine press: there was no sepulture of any kind save the ruins of houses, or the entrails of wild beasts and birds in the open, I say it with reverence to their holy souls (if in fact there were many to be found holy), that would be carried by holy angels to the heights of heaven. For the vineyard, at one time good, had then so far degenerated to bitter fruit, that rarely could be seen, according to the prophet, any cluster of grapes or ear of corn, as it were, behind the back of the vintagers or reapers. Some of the wretched remnant were consequently captured on the mountains and killed in heaps. Others, overcome by hunger, came and yielded themselves to the enemies, to be their slaves for ever, if they were not instantly slain, which was equivalent to the highest service. Others repaired to parts beyond the sea, with strong lamentation… Others, trusting their lives, always with apprehension of mind, to high hills, overhanging, precipitous, and fortified, and to dense forests and rocks of the sea, remained in their native land, though with fear. After a certain length of time the cruel robbers returned to their home. A remnant, to whom wretched citizens flock from different places on every side, as eagerly as a hive of bees when a storm is threatening, praying at the same time unto Him with their whole heart, and, as is said, “Burdening the air with unnumbered prayers,” that they should not be utterly destroyed, take up arms and challenge their victors to battle under Ambrosius Aurelianus. He was a man of unassuming character, who, alone of the Roman race chanced to survive in the shock of such a storm (as his parents, people undoubtedly clad in the purple, had been killed in it), whose offspring in our days have greatly degenerated from their ancestral nobleness. To these men, by the Lord’s favour, there came victory.” [source] * Mentions the Battle of Badon (“obsessionis Badonici montis” = seige of Badon Hill): * “From that time, the citizens were sometimes victorious, sometimes the enemy, in order that the Lord, according to His wont, might try in this nation the Israel of today, whether it loves Him or not. This continued up to the year of the siege of Badon Hill, and of almost the last great slaughter inflicted upon the rascally crew. And this commences, a fact I know, as the forty-fourth year, with one month now elapsed; it is also the year of my birth.” * Mentions Ambrosius Aurelianus, but not Arthur * Arthur ahistorical? assumed? not relevant to homiletical purpose? But if Ambrosius is mentioned to contrast ancient heroism with modern corruption, why not Arthur? * Alternate explanation offered by Gildas’ 12th C hagiographer: * “That Arthur had gone unmentioned by Gildas, ostensibly the source closest to his own time, was noticed at least as early as a 12th-century hagiography of Gildas which claims that Gildas had praised Arthur extensively but then excised him completely after Arthur killed the saint’s brother, Hueil mab Caw.” [Wikipedia] 3. Nennius, The History of the Britons * Date: c. AD 828 (Nennius’ “Preface” dates itself 858) *

    43 phút
  7. 26 THG 5

    Homily: How the Blind Man Saw Things

    I don’t usually post my homilies here, and I’m not intending to make a habit of it: they can generally be found, if anyone is interested and if I post them at all, on my church website and its associated podcast, “Translating the Tradition”. But since today’s homily was inspired in part by a fellow Substack writer, I thought it only fair to post it here, along with a few qualifying remarks. I was thinking about how to respond to the writings of Ben Curtis, most specifically the initial post in his Substack, “Why I’m not a Christian Anymore”, and his post “The God of the Bible vs the God of the Philosophers”, which led to some of the musings at the beginning and the end of today’s homily. However, while I want to give credit where credit is due and to offer to Ben my central observation in the homily as something to consider in his “Journey Through Reality”, I also want to clarify what my intent here is not. Namely, my intent here is: * not to reconvert Ben to Orthodox Christianity: While I would of course love to be able to do that, I’m under no illusions that a passing remark of mine (and that’s all I was really able to afford in the homily!) would have any chance of reconverting such a thoughtful young man who is already clearly well on his way away from Christianity—all I’m hoping to do in offering this here on Substack is to maybe give him one or two things to think about on the journey. Besides, he made it clear in his first post that there’s a host of other reasons he’s not a Christian, none of which I’ve addressed in this homily. * not to address Ben directly: My homily is primarily addressed to my own people, who know me. Ben seems like he’d be a lovely person to get to know and chat with (based primarily on what little I’ve read of his writing and his willingness, despite his obvious disagreements with his father, to recommend his father’s Substack), but I don’t know him and have no expectations that he should or would be interested in engaging with me on his journey. * not to respond to or refute anything that Ben has said, other than to offer my central thought, which is simply that I think he’s misunderstood the role that philosophy plays in Christian thought (or at least most Eastern Christian thought)—namely, that the primary intent is to use the limited but very useful tool-set that philosophy provides to try to make sense of our collective experience of God, not to reason out the nature of God from “first principles”. I think Ben’s journey through reality looking for Truth is admirable, and I think I’ve been fairly close to where he found himself at the beginning of his journey. I came to some different conclusions, obviously, which is why I’ve ended up an Orthodox priest, but I feel hopeful that, if he’s seeking honestly, we may well end up at the same destination eventually. He seems to me to be the sort who might appreciate the sentiment I wrote in a poem many years ago—even if he might express it somewhat differently: I am a friend of all seekers of Truth and all men of pity, from Boaz to Ruth, and I am a lover of simpler times when men looked for reasons and wrote them in rhymes. And so, in this pitiless time of "true lies" I rejoice to find friends who have opened their eyes. That being said, I do also suspect there is “a great gulf between us”, given that the two main objections to Christianity that Ben raises in his opening post are Orthodox Christianity’s “outdated and problematic” understanding of sexuality and the sexes, and it’s belief in (as he puts it, using David Bently Hart’s deliberately polemical turn of phrase) “eternal conscious torment”—both of which I think are highly problematic objections to Christianity, but which are clearly beyond the scope of these short “show notes” (as Substack terms anything attached to an audio file). Which is why my offering here is just that—an offering, a small suggestion of a shifted viewpoint that Ben may or may not want to consider and that may or may not be helpful to him in the grand scheme of his overall journey. The last thing I want to post here is a bit of context for my homily that “my people” will know, but that I don’t think I’ve posted about previously on Substack: namely, that I think there’s a very helpful distinction to be made between what I term the “Hebraic” approach to God’s intervention in “our” affairs, and what I call the “Greco-Roman” approach. My logic runs like this. As far as I can see in the Old Testament (and the New Testament too, for that matter), the Hebrew’s foundational assumption about God was that He was good. The text that I usually refer to to illustrate this point is Abraham’s rhetorical question when he’s negotiating with God over the fate of Sodom and Gomorrah: “Shall not the judge of all the earth do right?” The assumed answer is, of course He will. This assumption is not shared in Greek philosophy or religion, as far as I can tell. Not only are the Greek gods more than a little amoral (even immoral, at least by Judaeo-Christian standards), but the main argument for the existence of a single Creator in Greek philosophical thought—that there must be a Prime Mover—does not carry any implication that that Prime Mover is either good or bad. Given this, most of the Church Fathers, writing as they are from within the Greek philosophical tradition and making use of it to make sense of the Christian tradition they’ve inherited from the Hebrews, are often at some pains to make sure that they’re not making the Prime Mover—God—the author of evil. This led them and leads us—working as we ourselves are from within this Greco-Roman-informed heritage—to often talk about evil as something God “allows”, where those writing within the Hebraic tradition—working, as they are, with the automatic and absolute assumption that of course God is good—would simply say that God did it. Examples of this within the Old Testament that I like to cite here are God sending an evil spirit to torment Saul, or sending Nebuchadnezzar to take the Israelites into captivity as a punishment—events and, more pertinently, clearly attributed causations that we, working as we are from within our Greco-Roman Christian heritage, have a lot of trouble accepting, never mind justifying. I would suggest the two traditions are actually in harmony with one another, and are, in fact, different ways of saying more or less the same thing within two radically different contexts. For context, then, my homily is intended to move us back more towards what I would term the “Hebraic” mind-set: after all, shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit geekorthodox.substack.com/subscribe

    23 phút

Giới Thiệu

Orthodox Christianity and geek subculture, hosted by Fr. Justin, an Orthodox priest and life-long book-, computer-, game-, sci-fi-, and fantasy-geek. geekorthodox.substack.com