(urth) Tzadkiel's form
Lee
severiansola at hotmail.com
Mon Sep 22 05:51:52 PDT 2014
> I disagree that Wolfe is truly distinguishing these two. . . .
>Mark Millman: Well, fair enough. It's also possible that Wolfe distinguished
>between them while writing New Sun, but later changed his mind and
>decided to conflate them in Long Sun and Short Sun.
Agreed, this is a possibility.
>Thus the pagan gods the ancients worships were not just imaginary or entirely
>disconnected from the Judeo-Christian God. They were, in some way, an earlier
>version of Him.
>Or, at least, the impulse to worship them was a step toward
>worshipping the true G-d, as you go on to suggest:
I agree there is a mixed message sense on this issue. On the one hand, Wolfe
seems to make clear in his writing and in interviews that he considers the
worship of pagan gods (including the fictional Abaia and Pas) as false, wrongful
worship.
On the other hand he continues to include mythological elements which seem
to herald or presage Christianity such as The Cumaean (Sibyl) and linking The
Outsider explicitly to Dionysus, syncretic worship (especially the Roman version)
etc.
Given his emphasis on the importance of names, I would like to ask Wolfe what
connection he sees between the Jupiterian epithet "Jove" and the name of the
Judeo-Christian God Jahweh or Jehovah. It is just a naming similarity or is there
more to it?
>I disagree with you on many, many issues in interpreting Wolfe, but I
>agree that Wolfe sees progress toward religious enlightenment (and
>probably most other desirable ends as well) as incremental and
>contingent (in the historical sense; i.e., that actions and events are
>shaped by and reflect their environments).
Yes, full agreement from me there.
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