Extemporaneous musings, occasionally poetic, about life in its richly varied dimensions, especially as relates to history, theology, law, literature, science, by one who is an attorney, ordained minister, historian, writer, and African American.
Wednesday, May 3, 2017
FOR THOSE WHO HAVE EARS
FOR THOSE WHO HAVE EARS
Important as it is to read the words of the narrative, is the importance of hearing the voice of the narrator.
Comprehension in reading a writing is but one intertwining phase, of the training of sight and common sense. "Hearing" vocal nuances , inflections, timbres engages other tacit levels of comprehension, of wisdom. These latter phases are poetic, numerical, musical, aural, intuitive. All senses derive from one divine, sublime source, God, which man shares variously. Because each and all of humans' senses intertwine, as does mankind itself in space-time: sight, sound, taste, scent, touch, intuition all connect mystically geometrically spiritually.
If the adage is true that "All roads lead to Rome," then, it is also true that all well-paved roads to or from Rome, truly have originated in "Africa," in Luxor, Kemet, far up "Father Nile," as Plato termed it, over 300 years before Jesus Christ, whom pagans, the Romans crucified along with tens of thousands of others, who rejected their religion. Greece had taught Rome. This well-known fact is allegorized by Virgil in the "Aeneid" as done by Homer earlier in the "ILIAD."
This is not the past. This is present.
Those who have ears let them hear!