Friday, April 4, 2025

Offsite Post: ‘Two Kinds of Economies’

 

Louisiana finds herself in the middle of a debate about the best ways to spur economic development.  Regulatory reform, tax reform, budget reform, tort reform, and others are all part of the conversation.  This is a long overdue discussion, but there is another aspect of the economy that also needs our attention – the end goal of it all.  What is the purpose of a growing economy?  How should we use the surplus that it creates?  These and other questions must be answered if we want a rightly ordered economy here in Louisiana.

There are really only two options for these end goals.  The first is what we will call the Golden Calf type of economy; the other is the Christian type.

The Golden Calf Type

For those who remember their biblical history, while the Holy Prophet Moses was upon Mt Sinai receiving the Ten Commandments and the other laws from the Lord, the Israelites had set up a golden calf to worship in the place of the Holy Trinity (Exodus 32).  This is similar to what has happened in Louisiana and the rest of the States:  Economic development by and large has become, not a means to an end, but the end itself.  It has become the reason for being of mankind, and everything must be subservient to the growing economy, including Sundays and other holy days, family cohesion, etc.

The Pelican Institute formulates this secular vision this way in their Louisiana’s Comeback Agenda document:  Louisiana’s collection of safety-net programs needs a paradigm shift so its low-income, work-capable citizens can move out of dependency on government and find hope and lasting self-sufficiency. This starts with connecting people with a job, which is the best path to prosperity. Work brings dignity, hope, and purpose through the life-long benefits of earning a living, gaining skills, and building social capital.

The measure of success in this vision of the economy is generally whether or not each generation is better off materially than the one before.

The excellent Southern writer, Elizabeth Madox Roberts, gives a helpful illustration of these elements in her short novel The Great Meadow, which follows a Virginia family of the late 1700s as they migrate into Kentucky for the sake of better economic opportunity.  She writes,

 

Around them stretched the delirium of a fine land, level expanses delicately tilted to fine curves, here and there cane patches of rich fat growth, here and there noble trees.  . . .

 

‘What do we want here?  What did we come for?’  She was shaken with delight and wonder.

 

‘We want a fine high house, out in the rich cane.  We want a farm to tend . . . fields . . .’

 

 . . . There was a low temporary cabin on this ground, a mean hut which no one occupied since the enemy made life outside the fort insecure.  Berk viewed this humble shed with contempt.  ‘I want a fine high house, the roof high up off my head,’ he said, turning back to the stockade.  ‘Room for a man to lift up his head in’ (Hesperus Press, London, 2012, pgs. 102, 108).

This, ultimately, is what man strives for in the Golden Calf economy:  more, bigger, etc.  Nearly all attention is focused on the material side of life, while spiritual things are mostly ignored.

The Christian Type

Economic development is not forbidden in the Christian vision, but it does happen sometimes in ways that are very different from those in the Golden Calf type, for the simple reason that progress in the spiritual life is paramount rather than material advancement alone.

We have seen how the Golden Calf economy sees a reduction in a person’s or generation’s material prosperity as an indicator of failure.  Often in the Christian vision this has been seen rather as a sign of great spiritual progress.  Across the wide expanse of Christendom, from the West to the East, scores and scores of men and women have abandoned all they possessed to become monks and nuns in monasteries or hermits in the wilderness for the sake of obtaining the Pearl of Great Price, union with God.

And in doing so, their holiness of life, the Grace of God that overflows from them, attracted hosts of people, seeking to benefit from their spiritual gifts of wisdom, healing, prophecy, and so on.  In time, entire villages and even cities grew up around these isolated places in the middle of nowhere.  In the far west, in Orthodox Wales, there is the example of St Deiniol of Bangor (reposed c. 584):

 . . .

The rest is at https://thehayride.com/2024/07/garlington-two-kinds-of-economies/.

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Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Offsite Post: ‘My Country’

My country is not a snow-capped mountain

In the Colorado Rockies

Or a seacoast town in Maine

Or the tropical islands of Hawai’i.

Fine places to be sure,

With many fine folks,

But they are not my country.

My country is a little strip of land in Arkansas,

Near where the wagon wheel fell off –

The beginning of the Walton family homeplace there in Strong,

Where our roots have burrowed deeply down,

 . . .

The rest is at https://www.reckonin.com/walt-garlington/my-country-poetry.

--

Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Friday, March 28, 2025

Remembrances for April - 2025

 

Dear friends, if you have time, please pray for these members of the Southern family on the day they reposed.  Many thanks.

But one may ask:  ‘What good does it do to pray for the departed?’  An answer is offered here:  https://orthochristian.com/130608.html

Along with prayers and hymns for the departed:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6je5axPodI

April 1st

Ellis Marsalis, Jr

One of New Orleans’s great jazz musicians.

https://selu.libguides.com/BlackHistorySELA/marsalis

April 2nd

Gen A. P. (Ambrose Powell) Hill

Amongst the best generals serving under Lee.  Both Jackson and Lee called upon him as they stepped into the life beyond death.

https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/hill-a-p-1825-1865/

April 3rd

Richard Weaver

Perhaps the greatest defender of Southern ways to be born in Dixie.

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/weaver-richard-malcolm-jr

April 6th

Gen Albert Sidney Johnston

One of Dixie’s leaders during the War, killed at the Battle of Shiloh.

https://www.battlefields.org/learn/biographies/albert-sidney-johnston

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/4334/albert-sidney-johnston

April 7th

Judge Jackson

He helped the Southern folk-art of shape-note singing to blossom.

https://www.abbevilleinstitute.org/blog/the-colored-sacred-harp/

April 9th

Appomattox Day

If you have time, please pray for the South on April 9th, Appomattox Day, the beginning of our sojourn in captivity.  Do some fasting as well if you can:  The Holy Fathers tell us and show us over and over again that humility attracts the Grace of God.

April 11th

Caroline Gordon

One of the South’s best writers of novels and short stories.

https://www.visitclarksvilletn.com/plan/clarksville-connections/literature-and-journalism/caroline-gordon/

April 11th

Gen Wade Hampton III

A fine calvary officer in the War; he was chosen to succeed JEB Stuart as the leader of that department after he was killed in battle.  After the war he served his State of South Carolina in political office.  A more dedicated man to the cause of Southern independence would be hard to find.

https://northcarolinahistory.org/encyclopedia/wade-hampton-iii-1818-1902/

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/439/wade-hampton/photo

April 12th

Gen Richard Taylor

He lived and fought in Louisiana before and during the turbulent War years and was buried there after he died.

http://www.la-cemeteries.com/Notables/Civil%20War/Taylor,%20Richard/Taylor,Richard.shtml

https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fta31

April 13th

Col Edmund Rucker

A leader under General Forrest in the War; lost his left arm at the Battle of Nashville.  After the war, he led the industrial development of Birmingham, Al.

https://www.geni.com/people/Col-Edmund-W-Rucker-CSA/6000000017376848156

April 18th

Grady McWhiney

Writer of one of the seminal works of Southern culture – Cracker Culture: Celtic Ways in the Old South.

https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/statesman/name/grady-mcwhiney-obituary?id=26939345

April 22nd

Fr Abram Ryan

An eloquent poet and priest beloved of people across the South.

https://catholicism.org/priest-poet-patriot-father-abram-j-ryan.html

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7494769/abram-joseph-ryan

https://www.docsouth.unc.edu/southlit/ryan/ryan.html

April 22nd

Alabama Confederate Memorial Day

April 25th

Donald Davidson

Another outstanding 20th century defender of the South and an excellent writer of poems, non-fiction prose, and ballads.

https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/donald-davidson/

https://theimaginativeconservative.org/2013/06/philosopher-poet-donald-davidson-agrarian-south.html

April 26th

Don Andrés Almonaster

A wealthy Spanish civil servant who lived in New Orleans during Spanish rule of Louisiana.  He gave very generously to rebuild the city after the Great Fire of 1788.  Two of his notable benefactions are what would become Charity Hospital and the St Louis Cathedral in which he is buried.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andres_Almonaster_y_Rojas

April 26th

Florida Confederate Memorial Day

April 28th

Jack Hinson

A family man in Tennessee trying to stay neutral in the War.  When Yankees murdered two of his sons in cold blood and mutilated their corpses, he became one of their deadliest enemies as a sniper.

https://www.gunsandammo.com/editorial/the-story-of-civil-war-sniper-jack-hinson-and-his-rifle/247860

https://www.abbevilleinstitute.org/jack-hinsons-one-man-war/

April 29th

Mississippi Confederate Memorial Day

Also, to celebrate some of the saints of April from the South’s Christian inheritance of various lands, follow these links on over:

https://southernorthodox.org/orthodox-saints-for-dixie-april/

https://confiterijournal.blogspot.com/2020/05/happy-feast-for-saints-of-april.html

--

Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Offsite Post: ‘A Southern Golden Age’

 

How the lands of our forebears once shone

With the iridescence of the Gospel’s glow!

Saint Timothy illumined northern Africa –

His body, burned alive, left ashes

Kindled with noetic fire

That drove away the darkness of idolatry

From a multitude of hearts.

Saint Manire of Scotland’s northern Highlands,

His apostolic preaching became more powerful

Through the persecution he endured –

His words and deeds, crystals radiating light.

 

Dixie’s carelessness and mulishness have allowed

Their memories, and many other holy ones’,

To be lost in the black mist of oblivion.

But our lives will never be complete without them,

For they are sacred members of Christ’s Body,

Filled with His Grace, and separate from them,

We deny ourselves deifying gifts.

 

How quickly should we repent of negligence

And willful spurning of these chosen ones,

 . . .

The rest is at https://www.dissidentmama.net/a-southern-golden-age/.

--

Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Friday, March 21, 2025

Offsite Post: ‘Archbishop Elpidophoros vs the Holy Fathers on Americanism’

 

For self-defeating actions, the GOA’s Abp. Elpidophoros is the undisputed champion.  His 2024 encyclical for the 4th of July is the latest in a long line of such actions.  There are notable points where he is at odds with both history and with the judgment of holy saints of the Orthodox Church.

‘The Fourth of July is our National Birthday . . .’

False.  As we have previously pointed out, separation from the British Empire produced thirteen new nations, not one.  Now there are 50 nations, instead of 13.

‘ . . . celebrating the Declaration of Independence, a truly remarkable document that every American should read every year on this date.’

We actually agree with his Eminence on this point.  The Declaration is ‘truly remarkable’, but not in a positive way.  The Holy Father St. Athanasios Parios (+1813) demolishes the concepts lionized in that Enlightenment-tainted political treatise, such as individual freedom and equality.

Of freedom, he says,

 

 . . . I do not accept that people are born free (independent) in the world. On the contrary, I support and will prove that there is no such freedom in the world: people are born and live in the world as "slaves" (dependent) in many ways.

 

- People are "slaves" of God, just like the rest of creation. That people are "slaves" is so true, that when they are ignorant of their Creator and do not carry out His commandments, they are punished even for eternity. In fact, this punishment does not apply to any other tangible creature, because only people are distinguished from all the rest, since they have reason and have been adorned with the gift of autonomy, so they voluntarily become wicked and worthless servants and disobedient to the orders of their Master.

 

- Therefore, those who proclaim with words and decide in accordance with the law that people are born free are ignorant and foolish. Those who think this way are among the herd of Epicurus' followers. They are atheists and believe that the soul is mortal. They are apostates of the Divine revelations, rebels against the greatness of God Himself, deserving of hatred and despising by all creation, as enemies of God, the Creator and Lord of all. So here we have a way of "slavery" (dependence) that is necessary and inevitable, as long as it is impossible for the creature to deny its Creator, the formed its Fashioner, the caused its Cause. After all, who is so ignorant that they do not know that the constituent parts of man are two, that is, the body and the soul? And that the rational soul is the one that governs the body, that is, the irrational part, and causes it to move wherever and however it wants? So is there anyone who doesn't know and doesn't accept this truth, which is known even to the Gentiles? A slight observation is enough for everyone to locate it in their consciousness.

 

 . . . - When we encounter another kind of "slavery", dependence on the body, which is completely natural and necessary, how can various vain people say and write that people are born free? After all, isn't each of us born under parental authority? Don't parents naturally have the absolute power over us to treat us the way they want us to live when we don't live right or obey their promptings? Don't they punish us? Do they not renounce us and deprive us of our paternal inheritance?

 

- But isn't every head of household a kind of monarch at home? Doesn't he have different people at his workplace and he tells one "come" and they come, and to the other "do this" and they do it? And what happens to every apprentice and students of every specialty? Aren't they subject to the authority of their teachers, as if they were masters? Who can deny that they obey with respect and definitely carry out the orders and are severely punished when they do not obey the rules of apprenticeship accurately?

 

- When we see people subjected in so many ways and maybe even more, where is their natural freedom? Even if we consider that they can be freed from parental and doctrinal dependencies, how can we ignore the dominance of the innate soul and that of the First and Supreme Cause, that is, the Creator and God of all?

 

- To the extent that it is impossible for the Creator and Maker not to be the Lord and Master of men, and to the extent that it is impossible for the soul, as a rational and intangible nature, not to be the hegemonic part of human composition, it is to the same degree that it is impossible for people to be free, independent.

 

 . . . And, if that wise opinion is true (and must be true) that says "it is more burdensome to be enslaved to one's passions than to external tyrants," they are absolutely slaves to the passions, and this slavery is much more burdensome, worse and poorer than enslavement to tyrannical people. Because the body is by nature subject to the commands of the dominant soul, and for this reason it is not paradoxical to submit to some external power and perform bodily services and works. However, it is completely unheard of and paradoxical for the dominant soul to fall from its high order, the utterly free one, and to submit with its own will to the irrational and filthy passions of the body.

Of equality, the following:

 

- But with their declarations of freedom, they also link the declaration of Equality. And high on their flags they write "Freedom-Equality". And the reckless and relentless mob, what else more attractive, appealing and motivating for uprisings against superiors would they expect to hear beyond these declarations? With the proclamation of Freedom, he imagines himself free from all external human power, which he indiscriminately calls tyranny, even if it is not. With Equality statements, the water carrier and the one who cleans the feces, imagines himself as the most noble and prominent.

 

Stupid and vain people! If, as Gregory the Theologian says, the monkey imagines he is a lion, what good will such an imagination do him? Equal! Tell me, where is this equality? He lives in fancy palaces and towering towers, and you, unfortunate one, have a poor hut, enough to house your sick and tired body. He is resting in a golden and ivory bed and on soft mattresses, and by force you have a wooden mat, to lay down your tormented body. There is not much space left on his table due to the abundance of food and wine, and you just have some bread and some poor quality cheese to fool your hunger!

 

But why expand on the matter? How can two people be called equal when one is very rich and the other is starving and forced to steal because of his poverty? These declarations are an invention of cunning and insidious people, who, wanting to satisfy their passions and fulfill their evil desires, instilled in the minds of the common people this unbridled wind of equality, to help them achieve their purpose. Can there ever be equality in societies dominated by greed, dominated by passions, where no other expression is heard more often than "mine" and "yours"?

St. Athanasios points out where real equality can be found, and it ain’t in ‘Murcan ‘democracy’ or capitalism, but in the life of the Orthodox Church:

 

Equality, yes, did exist once! But where? In the newly formed Church of those good Christians, the simple and pious! There, as Saint Luke describes it (Acts 4:32), no one had anything of their own, but it was all common - money, clothes and food. But why was everything common? Because, he says, the hearts and souls of the faithful were one! Everyone had an opinion and a will about God and they were all connected with brotherly love, so close that, although they were a lot of people and of different ages, men and women, old and young, they were all so unified that they looked like one body that was moved by one soul.

 

The same equality and solidarity has existed for many centuries in the coenobiums of the Venerable ones of old, Pachomios, Savvas, Euthymios, Theodosios and many others, because in them brotherly love and solidarity were preserved. That, indeed, was true Equality!

If the Archbishop’s views of freedom and equality sound more Freemasonic than Christian, it is because they are.  St. Athanasios explains:

 . . .

The rest is at https://orthodoxreflections.com/archbishop-elpidophoros-vs-the-holy-fathers-on-americanism/.

--

Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!