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november 5, 2006 (0049us)
barbarity is alive and kicking
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JUST TODAY
SADDAM SENTENCED TO DEATH.
He yells to the judges (photo), "Long live the people and death to
their enemies! Long live the glorious nation, and death to its enemies!
Allah is great!"
Allah
is glorified any old how. So is Christ, whom Bush today at church
thanks for punishing the tormentor of Iraq. And the system keeps going
and invoking its gods, who are not our God, our Father who came back
down to earth in Arès to call on man to love, forgive, live
in peace and real justice that has never occurred
in court.
Saddam is going to be hanged. We immediately understand why safety
precautions were enhanced in all of the airports in the USA and Europe
a few days ago. That sentence in Baghdad and its plausible outcome: an
increase in violence in Iraq and the world, were being expected by all
the Western governments.
We understand, as well, why Saddam's sentence takes place today, on the
eve of public elections in USA. The Republican party, who are in no
position to win, may be expecting some renewed esteem of the American
people for George W. Bush's involvement in Iraq.
In
any case, no one on earth believes that Saddam Hussein's conviction
could ever relieve Iraq of the hardships in which the war has thrown it
into. What's more, as far as the Arès Pilgrims are concerned, they do
not believe that any death sentence, whoever is under it, wherever it
takes place, could be regarded as an act of justice. It is
nothing but barbarity applied to a barbarian. Nothing likely to curb
barbarity ever. Every execution is an obvious attack on Wisdom that
sent out to man that solemn Plea, "You shall not kill (Exodus
20/13)!"
We
are not supporters of Saddam Hussein, but we do not think that the
gallows that he will die on will be anything but one more milestone on
the grim long road to the endless revenge (Rev of Ares 27/9), which
is a certainty to accelerate crime and murder much more than to
restrain them.
Why has Saddam Hussein been convicted and sentenced to hang? In the
current case—we are told that a new case is to come up soon, before he
is hanged (what's the point of judging Saddam Hussein again?)— he is
sentenced for having had 148 persons executed in 1982 after he had
escaped an assassination attempt on him in Dajail. And to think of
600,000 Irali civilians dying because their country has been invaded by
the US Army and their allies! One wonders what sort of sentence should
be pronounced against the men answerable for the invasion.

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november 4, 2006 (0048us)
Truth takes to the street in London
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"God
has no religion" in Paris turned into "God belongs in no religion or
politics" in London. On October 28 and 29 a party of apostles from
France strode along Piccadilly Circus, Trafalgar Square and st-James
Park. The Londoners sympathized with their views.
No,
that's not "populism", for which some Emails blame our mission. Being
populist is seeking popularity by crying out loud that the world could
get rid of all its problems just by getting rid of such and such a
person or thing, in this instance religion and politics and their princes,
their elite, their laws
and institutions. The Ares Pilgrims don't view things from this
simplistic angle. They think that "God belongs in no religion or
politics", because he belongs elsewhere. He belongs in the heart of a penitent.
It's in the man righteous (Rev of Ares XXXVI/19, etc.), good
(30/7, etc.) and free (10/10) that God reappears in the
world. So why isn't this painted on the banner? Because penitence,
a word that today's people misunderstand or even fail to understand,
can no longer meet the eye of the man in the street, who has lost a
good sense of his inner tranformation for his own happiness and the
world's happiness. This has to be spelled out to him, which needs a
talk, even a short one. Hence the banner to trigger it off!
Nevertheless, the mission issue "God belongs in no religion or
politics" is no flytrap. It is a profound truth. Once the first
impressions one has had in skimming through The Revelation of Ares
are dispersed, when one buries oneself in the book seriously, one
realizes soon that the Father does not distinguish between religion and
politics. The Father considers politics as religion's offspring.
Either, though it uses a different vocabulary, imposes its doctrine
upon men: a dogma here, a constitution and law there, and either
punishes the rebels for being sacrilegious. Either makes magnificient
promises. Not only are the princes, the priests and doctors religious
leaders and their staff, but also presidents, government members and
high offices of state and politics. Besides, in The Book the
Creator tells them apart only by the color, because they bring the same
power to bear over mankind: the white king, the black king, one
and the same thigh (XXXVII/14). And in The Revelation of Ares
from end to end the Father does not see himself in either.
Our apostles bring to England faith just as it has to be considered.
Not a man's passive expectation of Mercy and Paradise traded for his
faithfulness to his religion, but his active involvement in building a good
world.

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october 24, 2006 (0047us)
immense weakness (Rev of Ares 36/5) and
"constructive
ambiguity"
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It may
happen that politics has caused damage, which omens even worse damage,
such that Mercy has to come to a compromise with evil so as
to get man out of his mire (Rev of Ares XLIII/12).
The reason, among other reasons, why the Father asks us not to
appeal to his Mercy at every turn (16/15) is that the kind of
mercy that men hope for rarely turns out to be that which the Father
picks. So, today, Mercy
might well come to the Middle East thanks to a man, James Baker, all
the more unexpected because he was not especially beneficial or
providential when he was a member of Reagan and George Bush Sr's
administration. "Jim" Baker may be the wise man that George W. Bush Jr
will pay attention to in order to resolve the catastrophic impediment
in Iraq.
The total number of civilian casualties of the war in Iraq
from 2003 to 2006 has just been worked out: 600,000—actually a death
toll range of 400,000 to 760,000—by humanitarian and medical
organisations seemingly of great integrity. So enormous that it's
incredible! George W. Bush has declared that 600,000 was an "untruthful
and outrageous" number; he has asserted that the number of civilian
casualties in Iraq had been 30,000, if that! Who is right? Who is
wrong?
We don't know. We are just aware that Iraq has been put to fire
and the
sword so much so that some "authorized voices" have made themselves
heard muttering that Saddam Hussein should be called back , because he
alone may be able to re-establish order and save a million to a million
five hundred thousand Iraqi lives very likely to die.
What's more, the toll in American and British military life (not to
mention undisclosed losses) is getting alarmingly heavier day after
day, so that General Richard Dannat, chief of staff of the
British Army, declared on October 13 that the British troops
should
withdraw as soon as possible, because they had come to do nothing but
stir up the hatred of the Iraqi people.
Now and then President Bush still happens to deliver triumphalist
speeches probably sincere. On October 22: "We will win a victory in
Iraq. We only have to change strategy." A victory over what? Over
terrorism? But Iraq has never gone into terrorist action and never
granted Al Quaeda and Bin Laden asylum.
We can see enough obscurity and misfortune in the situation to hope
that the influence that reasonable Americans have started to bring or
try to bring to bear on on George W. Bush will grow more and more
imperious.
Jim Baker, the one whose advice the White House may well end up
following, fits in the realistic body as far as foreign policy is
concerned. He represents all that George W. Bush feels strong aversion
for and wants to fight throughout the world, and that you can sum up in
two words, "constructive ambiguity." This doctrine by James Baker
means
something the Father in person knows, that is, times now and then
happen when man has to negotiate with evil in order to dispel some ten
times worse evil, tragic times when the huge weakness that
nastiness constitutes with some kinds of humans should not be
disregarded (Rev of Ares 36/5). A long way we have to go
until the day when our mission has changed
the heart of men enough to save them from coming to compromises with
evil, but we at the same time realize that our mission is momentous.

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october 1st, 2006 (0046us)
darfur
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No,
I'm not just tormented with the Middle East. I'm lamenting other
sufferings, notably the agony of Darfur, where Westerners are not the
warmongers for once.
Darfur is the west of
Sudan. When talking with people I notice that scarce are those who can
spot Sudan. In broad outline, it is a vast country in eastern Africa.
It starts from Ethiopia and the Red Sea right across Mekka. Then it
runs alonside Egypt in the north. It spreads to the west up to Chad,
which—while we are on the subject—borders Darfur, and Central African
Republic. In the south it runs alonside Congo Democratic Republic
(formerly Zaire), Uganda and Kenya. And then it goes upwards along
Ethiopia and the Red Sea, so it forever runs around the Nile. Its
capital city, Al–Khartum, famous for a few Hollywoodian epics, is
planted at the confluence of the White Nile and the Blue Nile.
Sudan's
problem is not so much its vastness (5 times as large as France) as its
economic poverty and more than anything its population's complex
diversity. In days of old, though already multicultural, it was
entirely black, its population more or less christian from the 6th c.
to the 13th c. Later, the interbreeding between the blacks and arabs
and the islamizing were increasing considerably so much so that we can
consider Sudan as having been arabized and muslim ever since the 15th
c. Nevertheless, a non-insignificant number of Sudanese has stayed
christian or animistic (African native religions) and almost lastingly
intractable to the muslim government for centuries, particularly in the
south.
Arabic is the official language, but 32 African languages
unintelligible to each other are also spoken. It is easy to imagine the
conflicts which have continually occurred among so heterogeneous a
society where grudges and fears have been borne from ancestral times.
And yet, in Darfur, it is not a non-muslim rebellion against the muslim
government that has brought about ruin and desolation, but it is a war
between muslim tribes overlapping with a war between local muslim
ambitious men, the tribes and ambitious men being at the same time
fighting against Al–Khartum's muslim power...An islamo-islamic
situation so much intricate that it is practically impossible to depict
it in a small blog entry. I can only sum up what all of the witnesses
sadly and unanimously report from Darfur: massacres, ruins and
deportations.
About Sudan as a whole I add that the Arab or arabized part of the
population literally colonizes the black part still attached to their
African roots. So Al-Qaeda, whose key idea is that Westerners should by
fair means or foul be stopped from proceeding with recolonization of
the muslim countries, is caught out in obvious hypocrisy in Sudan where
Islam colonizes the non-islamized peoples. The metaphor of the
straw and the big log
(entries #0042 and #0043) can be applied to Islam as well as Rome and
any place in the world. As if Al-Qaeda contradicting itself was not
enough, or because they may have run out of arguments to prevent an
airdrop of blue helmets who may well (though it's quite unsure)
Darfur's agony, Al–Khartum accuses the Westerners of planning to
re-colonize Sudan. As a result, NATO itself, the general secretary of
which is a black man, Kofi Anna (from Ghana), does not like to
intervene, so Darfur keeps on being devastated. Just the same,
Al–Khartum government has tried to stop the Darfur war, but has been
unsuccessful so far. Some people say that the government is the
kalachnikov supplier to the Janjawib (in Arabic: the devil's riders)
militia that kill and persecute the poor Darfurite civilians. But other
people say no, it's untrue, the situation is so thick an obscurity that
no one can determine where the weapons and ammunition come from and
that all that happens is simply and tragically caused by bloodthirsty
brigands who shelter behind the Quran. In history we have already seen
a lot of criminals sheltering behing the Bible, or Marx...Sin travels
throughout the world with a multicolored umbrella over its head.
This sad situation might come to an and when all of Darfurites are
killed or re-enslaved? Sudan like Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon,
Palestine, Israel, keeps me awake.

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september 27, 2006 (0045us)
conquering evil only by faith achieved |
In
the night I wake up sharing middle-eastern peoples' pains. I hear Iraqi
women crying over their husbands and children massacred and Iraqi men
moaning over their families mutilated or missing. In a region which I
might add is that where Jesus was martyred. Jerusalem isn’t this far
from Baghdad—the distance between Paris and Nice—. There was no such
religion as bloodthirsty Islam then, which the pope mentioned in
Ratisbon. Jesus had not killed or threatened anybody, but he had
preached some expectations of substituting love, forgiveness,
peace and free intelligence for
religion and government. Which the mighty have forever considered as an
evil, an act of folly against "the nature of things", liable for a
worse chastisement which, worse than the killing, is the deprivation of
the rights of human justice—Just take a look at Guatanamo jails where
among real murderers a few magnificient idealists are almost certainly
rotting.
But something
still worse than justice once denied a crucified man
hastily executed may occur: The second killing that religion would
administer on Jesus, three centuries later, by nailing him not to a
cross, but to an enormous lie. Religion, though it was having a new
look, the church, had been unsuccessful in blotting out the appalling
bad memories of an iniquitous hideous crucifixion performed by
religion. Some churchmen thought that they should make people believe,
through an unprecedented tall story, that instead of the umpteenth
triumph of evil Jesus’ passion had been quite the contrary the extreme
good, the divine plan to save all of men, otherwise the people would
end up fulfilling Jesus’ appeal for love and freedom and it
would be the end of the dominators (27/9, 28/21, 29/2),
their powers, treasures and privileges. The tall story, that halted the
growing of real christianity, is that of God embodied and crucified so
the world’s sin be atoned for once and for all, but a lot of similar
tall stories, religious, political or cultural, have been rife all over
the planet.
We have taken up the challenge not to begin a debate about that tall
story, but simply to resume the achievement
of christianity where the people had left off in the 4th century. We
are still very small David facing still standing big Goliath, but our
sling does not propel arguments or violence. It propels love,
forgiveness, peace, freedom, the arms that, The Revelation of
Ares reminds, give good instead of evil, Life
instead of death.

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september 24, 2006
(0044us)
god belongs in no religion
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In
Paris the Ares Pilgrims' new mission.
Brother Didier Br. lets me know that the mission has begun. A picture
is
attached to his eMail: "Paris this afternoon, here's Brother Alain M.
bearing the banner DIEU N'A PAS DE RELIGION,
which is not that easy
to translate. Maybe GOD BELONGS IN NO RELIGION
or GOD HASN'T RETIRED INTO RELIGION.
"Alain has told me he'd already written off to you about the mission.
The snapshot is by Brother Christophe M. A very interesting picture
shot next to a "Grand Corps Malade" poster (Sick Big Body, a singer's
name), which reminds us of every man as a 'big body' sick with sin...
Brother Didier."
Right from its introduction The Revelation of Ares reminds
that religion never stands for God, "It is easy [for religion]
to speak in My Name when distant from Me... but [I have never
hired any go-between, and a] man, even a man who has never heard
My Word... knows who I am whenever I speak to him [directly] (1/8-9).
"And at a later point in the revelation, "I have not given
myself a mask, I have not set up a row of princes... and their
subservient doctors [religions and clergy] in front of me to
conceal My Face (3/4). "And even farther in the book, "For
ages men have not recognized me by the masks [religions] that
I have been put on (28/3)." Etc., etc. Let's note in passing that
The Revelation of Ares
from end to end considers religion and its lay or atheistic mirror:
politics, as of one and the same nature. So the mission could be based
on the following slogan, "God belongs in no religion or politics," but
it might be too strong. The Word says, "Do not disregard people's
huge weakness (36/5), doesn't it?

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september 22, 2006
(0043us)
faith and reason
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As
a result of my entry #0042 my mailbox has filled with harsh or
supercilious Emails, personal reproaches rather than comments. This
following answer is suitable for all of them, I think.
When
I very promptly told the news of Benedict XVI's statement, made in
Ratisbon, that Islam was blameworthy for its violence and that the
Muslim world had already responded angrily, I only wanted my readers to
be the first to hear it. My entry #0042 was indeed published late on
September 15 night, on the day the pope gave the offending lecture, but
for all that I did have some idea of it. In the daytime a Muslim
brother had told me the event and Islam's first reactions; an English
copy of the offending text was attached to his eMail — News travel very
fast nowadays —. It was a lengthy theologico-philosophic lecture, in
which somebody had underlined the few uncalled-for sentences.
The
pope's lecture was on the perpetual dualism of faith and reason. I was
aware of this on September 15, but today I take some time to say a few
things about it — because I do not "take the convenient shortcuts the
press usually takes, so I can spare myself the trouble of thinking." I
think, please have no doubts about it, I think, but as far as this
website is concerned, which is just a blog, but not a compendium of
metaphysical thoughts, I've striven to keep level with everybody reads
it. I exceptionally post this additional entry, though, to show those
critical of me that I'm capable of having opinions.
The anxiety
about reason raised by Benedict XVI in Ratisbon, I am of the
opinion
that traditional christiandom, whether based on the concepts of Nicea
(325) or those of Rome or those of Jean Calvin, is going to need it
some day (a day inexorably bound to come) in order to repeal some
dogmas like the trinity — the God with three heads (Rev of Arès
23/7) — or the blood — vacuous (or empty) is the blood (Rev of
Arès XXXII/9) —
shed on the cross for the redeeming of the world's sins. Therefore, I
like the state of anxiety for reason in all domains that Benedict XVI
is in, so that his church and other churches may re-read the Scripture
in its real plainness and reinterpret it.
What I find is to be
regretted in Benedict XVI's lecture in Ratisbon is that he gave it as
Professor Joseph Ratzinger — he had indeed been a professor in that
university —, but not as a pope in charge of worldwide
responsabilities. He should have remembered it and refrained from
mentioning in his discussionon of reason another discussion dating back
to 1390 or so, once held between a Muslim scholar and Byzantine emperor
Manuel II, who, they say, had concluded it by, "...God dislikes the
blood (shed by Muhammad, which) is not acting with reason, (so it is)
contrary to God's nature." Had Benedict when preparing his lecture been
innocent of any ulterior motive by selecting this quote? Hadn't he had
the possibility of quoting something similar but concerning the blood
plentifully shed by Christians in History? I don't want to judge
Benedict XVI on mere intent, but I insist that he in Ratisbon was a
perfectly adequate illustration of the straw and the big
log metaphor in the Sermon on the Mount.
No, I never fell into line with the men that throughout Islam have
taken advantage of the pope's statement and prompted Muslims to set
fire to churches and even kill an innocent nun in Somalia. I said
nothing but that Benedict XVI should have thought of the probability of
his lecture bringing about and "justifying" misdeeds by islamist
rioters in view of the awfully strained relations between Westerners
and Easterners.

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september 15, 2006
(0420us)
the splinter in your eye, the big log in my eye
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In
Germany the pope castigates islam for its violence.
He has to fly back to Rome hurriedly under an international flurry of
protests.
If
he had castigated every violence: the violence of christianity and that
of judaism (Israel) as well as that of islam, his speech would have
displeased everybody, but referred each religion to its own sins.
Benedict XVI instead has proved himself the perfect illustration of the
famous verse in the Sermon on the Mount, Why do you observe the
splinter in your brother's eye? What about the big log in your own? ...
Hypocrite!
The
Revelation of Ares reworks the warnings once launched by the
Father in slightly different words, the weight of which is similar,
though: But
you shall not judge anyone either in public or in private; don't have
the least judgement in the inmost recesses od you brain, because
trapping a judgement is as impossible as trapping a flea; it will leap
onto your tongue unawares (36/16).
The Ares Pilgrims are sinners among whole sinful mankind, but
they, at least, are trying to love all of men, their
brothers, trying to make their peace with them (Rev of
Ares28/15), trying
to refrain from violence, if only from verbal abuse, if only against
their most violent disparagers: ADFI, MIVILUDES...and the Church, who
ever since 1974 has blackened the Arès Pilgrims' name, especially their
founder's name. I wish to hear that islam forgives the Church
just as we forgive her. There is really no need to stir up
grudges in the world.

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september 3, 2006 (0041us)
iraq: a disaster
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Yesterday,
September 2, the Pentagon, the US military leadership, issued an
official report on Iraq. No more and no less than an admission of
disaster.
Now there are more than 3,000 calsualties/month. Chaos, ruins and even
extreme hunger are spreading.
There's
no need to be a political scientist to understand that the USA and its
allies in Iraq are a profounder evil than Saddam Hussein was. Shiites
and sunnites are killing each other. Bombs and rockets are exploding
everywhere. The black market is becoming rife. The Iraqi government
"democratically elected" is not governing anything.
The Revelation of Ares's Call is proving forever
justified.

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september 2, 2006 (0040us)
the moral of new orleans' story
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New
Orleans engulfed by the waves of sin (Rev of
Ares 33/22), drowned like Noah's sons (2/7). Every
one of us comes to the same end, no matter what sort of death, only
much less trumpeted, and that's it. Atlantis was not rebuilt and New
Orleans will be. It's no big deal! Just a question of era and
technics. But what man has to do is rebuild himself good.
New Orleans is bound to live on
dangerously under sea
level just as the whole world has lived dangerously under sin (Rév
d'Arès 30/2).
On August 29, New Orleans mayor rang the bell that commemorates last
year's leveebreach while Marlon Jordan blew the taps (photo) and then
played for the thousands who had lost everything. These as always are
the penniless who would have nothing to lose is they left and settled
elsewhere in a place safer and even more beautiful, but very few are
those that do not want to stay on.
This is what I set about mulling
over on August 29. Why the global reluctance to change home like to change
one's life
(Rev of Ares 30/11)? Because for thousands of generations
subjected to evil intelligence has dwindled to a dull
candle end (Rev of Ares 32/5), the head has filled
with the hot air from the system's bookish masters (doctors)
(23/4), reason has fallen asleep, mankind has sinned so
much and thereby grown so frail
that it has ended up believing that misery and death are inevitable and
the best life consists in living just as men have continuously lived.
We Arès Pilgrims have to remind men that the Maker came back to Earth
in 1974 and 1977 not to get incarnated and die on a cross, but to ask
men to let Him blow into their blood and let their blood
be running and running (Rev of Arès
XVI/12) with penitence so as to rebuild good
and happiness,
which are worth thousand times as much as the most beautiful big city.
Why does man, who holds himself to be free, but who is not, behave like
a big cat which at the time of going asleep turns around and around to
find the best place, which ends up being virtually the same every
night? That routine is like the cranky constancy of religion and of its
offshoot politics. Unlike what religion and politics claim to be they
are not the champions of the good
in a continuous fight against antagonistic powers (which for their part
claim to be so). They constitute nothing but a routine, but has anybody
noticed it ever?
Unaware of the fact that they should look for the Good
elsewhere, men fiercely maintain their religion—even atheists, counter
to what they claim, do have a religion, the religion of their own
ideas—, they maintain it so fiercely that our missionaries, who are
liberators, find it incredibly hard to remind them they are badly in
need of freeing themselves. Freeing themselves from evil, which has
originated all of routines, especially religious routines which people
regard as blocks to evil like secure strong citadels (Rev of Ares
13/7), whereas The
Revelation of Arès regards the action to be taken as
altogether different. It is not by taking up position, but it's by running
like blood (Rev of Ares XVI/12) or the nimble foal (Rev
of Ares 10/10) that men can set constructive faith and creative love
going, which will conquer evil and misfortune, if men additionally put intelligence
(32/5) into the action.
There is without question fodder for thought in the destruction of New
Orleans and its reconstruction pending another destruction by the sea
or any new fury of history or simply by time. New Orleans in which the
whole world is mirrored, which has to be convinced of a single
Truth: Change (Rev of Ares 28/7).

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august 24, 2006 (0039us)
a talk of faith under the belltower
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On
one of the final Pilgrimage days, a pilgrim unknown to me approaches me
under the belltower.
I tell him in the nicest possible way: "I have to shun talking with
brothers, except to meet service requirements. My cardiologist reckons
that I can't help but talk passionately, so my heart is severely
tested."
He nods, but he
speaks, just the same, "We've never met... I'm just a temporary
pilgrim.
I wanted to see the place where The Revelation of Arès has
awakened a very simple faith in the world. Faith in Good,
the faith that leads you to God, even if you are not interested in
God
at the outset, like a simple bee ends up leading you to the the
beehive. Also I wanted to pay my respects to you. You have thirty-two
years without making concessions stood up for the simplicity that
dissolves religion. What's more, what a hard sailing into the wind of
dechristianization..."
I cut him off, "...and of
despiritualization, which is even worse. I hope that by rediscovering
the ideas that make up the Word in the very place quite
simple where the Creator gave it again, you'll be more determined than
ever to pursue the Good!
This is a place where man like restores the children's capability and
pleasure of unlimitedly listening to a tale he has already listened to
a lot of times. "
He says, "The Revelation of Arès
has an answer for everything. No need of disputable interpretations, no
need for theology or dogmas. All you've got to do is read and achieve."
I say, "And yet I had to remind the readers of the true (Rev of
Ares II/8-9, XX/2, XXXIV/1-4), that is, I had to write
footnotes galore, because culture and thinking habits make the true
cloudy or disguise it, but you might have been an atheist or
agnostic, a man with no preconceived ideas. "
"No I was not. I'm a Jew." He looks up at the belltower. "For centuries
the
religions, those you call Abrahamic in your writings, have lived side
by side with each other under a single belltower, or tabernacle, or
minaret, oisinewithout ever worrying about what has got them dividednt
or estranged. This I realized when I discovered The
Revelation of Ares."
He turns emphatic, "This is the murder, the deicide!" He widely
gestures his weariness towards the East. He almost certainly thinks of
Lebanon. His voice becomes softer, "However, the Quran is just an
Arabic bible, just as the Christian bible is just the Jewish bible."
I reply, "The finality of faith doesn't lie in the Word.
The Word
is the Father's philosophy, the virtual. During the Pilgrimage pilgrims
legitimately philosophize about salvation, happiness, the end of
earthly worries and sufferings, life to be changed (Rev of Ares
30/11) and the world that has to change (28/7), but once
the Pilgrimage is over, it's the real that has to be dealt with. You
have to achieve it. This is really completing individuals'
destiny by penitence and the world's destiny by multiplying
the number of penitents. All of good men, even
those who don't know the Father's Voice (Rev of Ares
28/12) and those who hate him (28/14) help change
the world, help the final Truth to triumph (28/7).
This belltower does not only conjure up the Abrahamic religions, it
conjures up the whole world."

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august 18, 2006 (0038us)
will any day the chocolate virgin be gagged?
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After
one of the most fervent pilgrimages in Arès, without any trace of it in
the papers, I am set on by news thick and fast like by fleas from the black
dog (Rev of Ares XLIII/11, XLV/1):
In
the Near East, as no basic problem is solved or about to be so, it's
just a truce; well, that's something anyway . Mother Violence
hates
being bored, so it moves to Colombo, Sri Lanka; a mammoth brawl "for
some unclear reason" between protesters for peace and Buddhistic monks;
ragged yellow gowns; hundreds of people bashed up taken to the
hospital. Qumran (where the Dead Sea biblical scrolls were found) was
not an essenian or protochristian monastery, but an ancient tile
factory or a public dump, quite simply. Right on the middle of the
Pacific three castaways are found, Mexican fishermen who were drifting
for months, their engine out of order, living on rain water and raw
fish; it seems as if no one had given a damn about them, their
disappearance had never been reported. A miracle at the chocolate shop
Angiono, Fountain Valley, California: A "chocolate holy Mary" has
miraculously formed under a cocoa vat; "That's just like the virgin of
Lourdes", they say (see picture). Detroit, Michigan, a federal judge
rules that phone-tapping ordered by President Bush is illegal even on
antiterrorism grounds. London, the exact opposite of the previous piece
of news: Interior ministers gather together to discuss nothing less
than the blocking of "all of the websites favorable to terrorism."
I
push the papers aside and close my eyes. It's clear to me that, just as
all powers from time immemorial have controlled ideas and information,
current politicians see terrorism as the excuse to screen the internet
with a view to deleting from it whatever displeases them.
Five
minutes ago my darn stupid old jeering humor, I admit, came back to the
fore when I read the story of the chocolate virgin, but now that I read
news of politicians being discussing repressive censorship of the web
my lips freeze. How about that somewhat silly chocolate virgin turning
into a martyr to liberty? If, as it has already occurred in history,
some movement of opposition to the world's powers adopted Mary
as an emblem? That chocolate Mary might be considered as dangerous and
banned from the web. As the politicians in London state that "apart
from any support for terrorism, no standard expression of conscience is
to be banned on-line," but do not specify what they mean by that, you
never know.
Ever since the internet started I have expected it to
be censored. People used to tell me, "On the web it is technically
impossible to take control of the spread of ideas. The spread of ideas
is to stay forever free." I used to reply, "The powers have continously
striven to control man's conscience. They will likewise be striving to
control it on the internet. On this basic points just as on other basic
points our mission is important. We have to show the paths to
salvation and happiness through penitence and at the same
time we have to remind men of the impossibility of reaching absolute good
without first gaining absolutely free expression of conscience, which
has to be set free from the harnesses that the system has
always put on it (Rev of Ares 10/10).

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july 30, 2006 (0037us)
the soul is suffering; blogs
are blowing hope
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If
I've been a penitent good enough to have made myself a soul,
my soul is suffering (Rev of Ares 4/5). This sail,
which will take and keep me away from the shores
of pain as long as my pounded bones (Rev of Ares
17/4, 18/4) are awaiting resurrection (Rév d'Arès 31/11),
like a skin gets scratched by grief. Now
I understand Jesus' feeling process better, every time that he looked
unwell in front of me in 1974. Even though he had been resurrected and
transfigured, his soul kept suffering, but it was suffering
from love and nobleness sickened by the grime and the stale smell given
off by my poor heart of a then selfsatisfied "christian".
That little soul of mine is much less gloriously suffering
from remorse for having failed to harvest (Rev of Ares 6/2, 31/6)
the number of penitents
it would take to spare 34 children fear and death today in Qana,
Lebanon. I too experienced fear during bombings in 1943 and 1944. I
know the sort of horrible anxiety felt by everybody, even kids, under
the roar of the unseen blind force just about to kill at random, kill
no-one knows whom or when or where.
I wanted this blog to be often,
say, every other entry, a joyful alternative to the sometimes too heavy
seriousness of faith and worries given us by hard earthly realities,
but what can I make it now? In the Middle East the compendium of pain
and death in Palestine, Israel, Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanistan, the
maelstrom of problems currently insolvable between mentalities still
culturally incompatible, are tormenting my soul.
When I created this blog I only sought to share my thoughts with my
sisters and brothers, but not be a pain in the neck with cause for
concern too much repeated, I just intended to stay ever present amid
the assembly while leaving a window opened for chance strangers
(Rev of Ares 25/3-4) to take a glance at me. I figured
that, as the world has to change (Rev of Ares 28/7), I ought
to let men take time to decide on that change, I should make
sure that I never put them off by repeatedly reproaching them for their
sins, I should feed their minds with moderation and gentleness (Rev
of Ares 25/9)
and should not forget to amuse them at times. Unfortunately, I can't.
Today, July 30, Israel has bombed Qana, Lebanon, and in minutes has
killed 54 fellow humans, 37 children among them. I have cried once
more...
But
even if I am grieving, I am not in dispair. I mend my sail, my
soul, it swells with the wind of faith and reason.
My soul
will not grow three legs and three wings like the crane
that can no longer run or fly — religion and politics, in short,
Néro — (Rév d'Arès XXII/1-2). I've got a blog, a blog which
defies distance, haven't I? My blogger soul
flies and joins the bloggers who over there, in Lebanon and Israel,
send each other messages, but no bombs, no missiles. All of those
messages are not polite, but many of them are not negative, I'm told.
Yes, indeed, bloggers in their forums and chats exchange hopeful
messages all the way over the poor plastic-coasted cocoons that the
Qana children have been made into (see picture). Hundreds of bloggers
tell each other their expectation that they all will be some day living
together on the land that the religious and the politicians are
fighting over. Then, although I feel somewhat frustrated, because I
cannot talk in Arabic and Hebrew with my fellow bloggers in the Orient,
I am relieved to hear that they see the situation intelligently
unlike their leaders.

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july 23, 2006 (0036us)
if there's such a place on earth where man has to change
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Middle
East: Acrid smells of gunpowder and distress! No hopes of enduring
solution as long as the enemies do not make the slightest change in
their perspectives.
Fights in Lebanon and Palestine will leave everything unresolved,
except (with no certainty, though,) Ehud Olmert's political position
and Mahmoud Amahdi-Najad's, because their respective electorates still
trust in violence.
On the Isreali side, Sharon, gone old and much
less spurred by political ambition, might have avoided launching such
an extensive attack. On the Muslim side, Ahmadi-Najad, whose letter
sent to Bush (see #0026us) demonstrated that he was open to a moral,
peaceful solution, provided the White House was willing to discuss it,
can't help but support Muslims.
So the situation has returned to the insoluble point of the problem,
that David Ben Gurion—who would be appointed prime minister in Israel
30 years later—was clearly aware of in 1919 while already campaigning
for Israel's revival, "There's no solution! There is a gulf and nobody
can bridge it... We jews as a nation want this country, and the
[muslim] Arabs as a nation want this country." We can't help but think
of the Father's words, the nations will move back to Me (Rev of
Ares 28/21),
that is, they will disappear as religious and political divisions and
then make up a one people, My People. We can't but think of the single
Path that the Father points to to all of men: penitence,
in order that they can reach love, forgiveness, peace, intelligent
solutions, which will drive evil out of the planet.
Evil originated from the personal project—the
system—which Adam's people as free creatures contrived and since then
have pitted against their Creator's plan (Rev of Ares 2/1-5). This is
why man originally immortal altered for mortality (the grave, 2/1),
although for a long time he was enjoying a remarkable life expectancy—Methuselah
(Mathusalem) lived for 969 years (Genesis 5/27)—. Unfortunately,
man did not take the opportunity of long life to return to Eden. His
life expectancy was dwindling away as evil was growing more rampant,
which resulted in man being unable to resolve in a single process the
terrible problems evil has brought about. Which explains why four
generation will not be sufficient (Rev of Ares 24/2) to find the
way to Eden, the Path, the
solution remaining possible notwithstanding. The near caricature of a
show which evil and the hardships that go with it are currently making
in the Middle East might help mankind to hear The Revelation of
Arès and begin achieving it.
In 1988, during a great public meeting in Cirque d'Hiver (Winter
Circus) in Paris, I launched the idea of fitting out a new "Exodus", a
potential ship bound to the Middle East, not to found a nation which
could raise big problems in the area, but quite the contrary to found
harmony or understanding there between the antagonistic dwellers of the
land. It was not yet completely hopeless calling on the Israeli and
Palestinians to take heed of The Revelation of Ares,
but the Ares Pilgrims did lack the means of undertaking the venture
then. In 2006, everywhere everyone seethe with rage in the Middle East,
madness it seems has turned overwhelming. From the sole of the
foot to the head there is nothing healthy (Isaiah 1/6) and only
extreme pain will make the enraged men see reason over there. If
there's such a place on earth where man has to change, but
has grown to the utmost unable to change, it's definitely
that one. I'm crying.

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july 13, 2006 (0035us)
fotbal
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Some
messages in my mailbox say, "Tell us briefly about the soccer world
championship, especially the finals..." Two mails add, "What about
Zizou's head-butting?"
My
maternal grand mother called that fotbal. As to the 'head-butting', she
probably was unaware of what it is , but had she watched the scene,
what would she see? By the end of the last match of a lengthy
championship, some exhausted players—Tiredness deprives man of his
mind (Rev of Ares 35/8)—A
fotbaler in white whose head struck a fotbaler in blue's breastbone
(not that brutally, anyway; I used to see much more efficient blows in
my childhood's brawls) and the fotbaler in blue pretending to fall
under the impact, his eyes with the fitting look (dazed, very
photogenic). The referee saw nothing, but the tattletales, maybe crafty
fellows of the provoker (well, fobal is a show!) saw everything. The
referee in a dramatic demonstration, with his arm imperially stretched
out, sent the fotbaler in white to stand in the corner. My grandmother
with her timid little bird voice (but there was a Ma Dalton side to
her) would have said, "Is that all? But if the big boy has abused the
little one, he deserves to be knocked senseless ('to know or club
senseless' was her word). As she belonged in a generation when people
did not make a whole lot of fuss about a broom shaft blow or a dust-up,
she would have added, "That's a real tonic," in a tone meaning, "That
keeps you in good health." But minutes ago I heard that (victim)
Materazzi had thrice insulted the women of (agressor) Zidane's family.
My grandmother would had said then, "That Italian deserved to be three
times knocked senseless." As you can see, I was very badly brought up.
Only, the Creator has rehabilitated me in Ares, but he has likewise
badly rehabilited me, because I like something in Zidane's
head-butting—something unlike what my grandma would have liked,
however—. I'm not referring to the violence: Zizou would have been
better off pricking up the other ear to Materazzi's insults just as
one'd better turn the other cheek, but
the violence was very moderate, anyway, he was not foaming with rage
and the 'victim' did not look as if he was in great pain. I'm referring
to that freed side to him, to the man that freely chose his
destiny. By his head-butting Zidane meant, "After all, this is just
fotbal... I don't give a damn for the rules." A champion so thinking,
that's great, isn't it? That man could be a great penitent,
whose task is to give up a lot of principles. Zidane, the discultured
football player! Don't be that surprised, therefore, if I tell you
there's nothing to make a fuss about that head-butting.
As fotbal is a show, anyway, fotbal players have developed all of the
tricks of the comedy trade.

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july 8, 2006 (0034us)
the price of ideological vainglory
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On
July 1st, the Britons remembered the enormous cost in human lives paid
over the Somme district on July 1st, 1916, and I found myself pondering
the exorbitant price of our sociopolitical struggles.
90
years ago, in the early hours, 13 British infantry divisions leapt over
their trench parapets to attack the German frontline. Out in the open.
They were to pay the heaviest cost ever paid by an army, all of wars
taken together, in a single daytime: 40.000 soldiers wounded and 20.000
dead among whom only 30 officers dead—A lot has been said about such a
disproportion—. But the damage brought about by our ideological
vainglories: patriotism here, socialism and capitalism there,
christianity, judaism and islamism, etc., does not only enlarge
graveyards, but it enlarges economic problems, legislative measures,
the hold every administration has over people, disappointments.
How
many vainglories, sources of pains and problems, in the name of
ideologies in -ism, are we going to contrive again? Even though the
"35-hour week law", the big French socialist attack on the "labour
front" has not caused any loss of lives, it has in a similar
ideological spirit damaged our production tool and the prospects of
creativity, of jobs, therefore— "to beat the employers" just as we
meant "to beat the huns" (1916), "to beat the aristos" (Russia, 1917),
"to beat the rich" (Paris, 1936 ), "to beat the jews" (Germany, 1937)
and "to beat the yanks" (New York, 2001). None of those vain displays
of glory, in the brutality of weapons and iron laws, whenever it has
not just induced misdeeds, has never had beneficial effects which could
not be brought about later in peace. The only real glory (Rev of
Ares 37/9) will be that of Eden revisited, but not
revisited through endless revenge (Rev of Ares 27/9), but
revisited through love, forgiveness, intelligence and, let's
never forget them, moderation, patience (Rev of Ares 35/7)
and work (37/8).
"Yes, but we don't want any free market economy planned between the
rich," some people, possibly altermondialists, said to me lately. I
answered, " If you're impatient, if you can't wait for the world
to change—necessarily at a slow pace: it'll take more than
four generations, 24/2 —and
thus doing to make free market planned between accomplices naturally
disappear, your struggles will keep costing much more than benefitting.
What did the rioting youth in Paris and other big cities suburbs gain
through violence in November, 2005? Nothing but a brief outlet given
them by a short while of madness (I when a youth experienced the same).
They could have got the CPE (job law, see #0014us & #0015us), which
was especially designed for them, but other youths, the students, who
have no need of the CPE to get jobs, had it abolished. Madness leads to
more madness." I added, "Just as the system was having all means of
killing 20,000 and send to hospital 40,000 British soldiers in a
daytime, on July 1st, 1916, not to mention the thousands of German
soldiers who died or were wounded on that day, the system (through the
street as well as bureaucracy) will continue having all means to break
every too bold-looking change. This is why the Father through
The Revelation of Ares
gives us unbreakable weapons. Weapons which are not forged in
steelworks, and which are never dealt with by arm dealers, and which
are never wielded by any riot police, and which no law can implement: love,
mercy, peace, intelligence, absolute spiritual freedom,
given to man only in return for efforts of penitence (Rev of Ares
28/25). The
happy future is forged in man's heart." Those who had been listening to
me looked at me like at an old baboon delousing itself, and then they
left to continue wandering about the empty world, all the spiritual and
even moral springs of which have been broken save their own springs,
they thought. As to me, I guess that they will be given an opportunity
of thinking over what I said to them.

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