
In previous posts, I’ve mentioned that I don’t belong to any religion.
(Friedrich Zettl)
I always read Mr. Zettl’s blog, Zettl Fine Arts, with great interest and profit, no less his latest entry. It takes no more than his first few words to set me thinking. I, too, can affirm that I don’t belong to any religion. I know that “belonging” to a religion is just a phrase, and I use it like many. It occurs to me, however, in an idealistic way, that religion might fare better were it conceived as belonging to the believer, and not vice versa. An institution presuming to own its members looms like an ecclesiastical deep state codifying and enforcing a steep corpus of regulations governing the ideation and actions of the faithful. Subscribe, profess, conform, or else. Is that a winning narrative?
I grew up with this doxology: Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world without end, amen, amen. The jingle is stuck in my head’s deep lore like a Brylcreem ad. Make of it what you will. An early brahmin of the Church, I’m not sure who, said this: “Truth is sought by philosophy, found by theology, and possessed by religion.” Cogito, ergo I think not, sir.
Someone says, “You’re religious underneath the brave denials because you jabber about it like this.” No, I’m not. And yes, I know. Spirituality teases me like poetry does. I’m a practitioner of neither in a formal way, but I consume them, and both are vitally irritating. My stake in poetry is increasingly assertive ever since I’ve presumed, as a reader, to own the author’s poem, not be owned by it, thus making of it what I will, or can. Religion and poems are not riddles that have a single meaning specified by their creators. They’re questions seeking better questions.
(c) 2024 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved








How Fare the Wayfarers, Fled and Fleeing?
So the last shall be first…
Wishing for all a home-finding; respite, refuge, safe harbour, dry land; where possible: cheer.
(c) 2024 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved