The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - Biblical Series: The Call to Abraham
Episode Date: June 7, 2020We continue our biblical series with another Jordan B. Peterson lecture. Thanks to our sponsor: http://trybasis.com/jordan/ ...
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Welcome to season 3, episode 9 of the Jordan B Peterson podcast.
I'm Michaela Peterson, Jordan's daughter.
I hope you enjoy this episode.
It's called The Called to Abraham.
I don't have a ton to say in this intro.
We're still in Florida.
I love it here, really.
The sun is amazing.
I released a podcast with Susan Venker last Tuesday on the Michaela Peterson podcast of
any of you anti-feminist folks are listening.
I know you screw balls are out there. I say screw balls with love. Enjoy this episode.
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Season 3 Episode 9, The Call to this once a month on a continuing basis.
So I think if I do that, I think it'll be here, although it's harder to rent this theater
during the academic year, but if it isn't here think it'll be here, although it's harder to rent this theater during the academic year,
but if it isn't here, it'll be somewhere else. Because I'd like to continue doing this.
I'm learning a lot from doing it.
And once a month would really be good, because then I could really do the background work.
And I could probably do that for a couple of years, because obviously this is going very quickly.
But that's okay.
You know, I mean, it shouldn't go any faster than it can go.
And that's how it seems to me anyways.
So, this has been a very steep learning curve for me with regards to these stories
because I didn't understand them very well.
And I've got better at using the resources online to help me do my background investigation.
I have a lot of books.
And some of you may have noticed that online I posted a conversation I had with Jonathan
Pazio and his brother, Matthew.
I hope it's Matthew.
I remember names escaped me so badly, but I believe that's right.
He just finished a book on the Bible, and so I've been doing a lot of thinking and talking
about these stories, trying to understand what they're about.
And then there's all these commentaries.
There's a great site, I think it's called Bible Hub, that has every single verse of the
Bible is listed there, and then with each verse, they've aggregated 10 commentaries
from about 10 commentaries from over the last 400 years,
and so there's like a dense page on every line.
And that's one of the things that's really interesting
about this book too, is that it's aggregated so much commentary,
that it's much bigger than it looks.
The book is much bigger than it looks.
And so it's been very interesting to become familiar with those, too.
And the fact that this site is set up with all the commentary split up
by versus means you can rapidly compare the commentaries
and get a sense of how people have interpreted this
over, well, at least several hundred years.
But of course, much longer than that, because the people who wrote
the commentaries were, of course, reading things that were older than that. So that's been very, very interesting.
So last week we talked about a couple of things. We talked about how you might understand the idea of a divine encounter.
And then we also paralleled that with the idea that God disappears in the Old Testament.
He bows out as the stories progress,
and that seems to be an emergent property
of the sequencing of the stories, right?
Because all the books were written by independent people,
no different people, and then they were aggregated
by other people.
And so the narrative continuity is some kind
of emergent property that's a consequence
of this interaction
between people, readers, and writers over centuries.
And it's strange that given that,
there are also multiple coherent narratives that unite it.
It's really not that easy to understand that,
but it does at least seem to be the case.
And so, and the third thing we talked about
was that as God bows out, so to speak, the individual
personality of the characters that are involved, the human characters that are involved seems
to become more and more developed.
And it isn't exactly clear what that, I mean, what it means is that God steps away and
man steps forward.
That's what it means.
But why it's arranged like that, or the, say, ultimate significance of that is by it means, but why it's arranged like that, or they say ultimate significance of that,
is by no means clear.
And so, so Abraham, who we're going to concentrate on today,
is quite a well-developed character.
And I would say there are two,
there are multiple endings and beginnings
in the biblical stories.
The most important ending, I suppose,
is the ending of the garden of paradise
and the disenchantment of the world
and the sending forth of Adam and Eve into history,
into the future, into a mode of being
that has a future as part of it,
and that has history as part of it,
and that has the necessity of sacrifice and toil as part of it.
That's obviously crucial, and then that is replayed with the story of Noah,
because everything is destroyed, and then the world is created anew,
and then sacrifices have to be made in order for the world to begin.
And then you see the same thing happen again after the Noah's story and the Tower of Babel,
because history, as we really understand history, seems to start with Abraham,
because the stories of Abraham sound like historical stories.
And scholars debate about the historical accuracy of the Bible.
And I suppose there's no way of ever determining,
once and for all, the degree to which you might regard
the accounts as equivalent to modern empirical history.
But this is a psychological interpretation
of the biblical stories, not a historical interpretation.
And it certainly does seem to be the case
that from a psychological perspective,
we enter something like the domain
of the modern conceptualization, relatively modern
conceptualization of history with Abraham.
Beyond the accounts of divine commands
that Abraham carries out, this is from Friedman,
the man I mentioned in the last lecture who wrote the disappearance of God in a variety of
other books that are well worth reading. The narrative also includes a variety of stories
in which Abraham acts on his own initiative. He divides land with his nephew Lot, he
battles kings, he takes concubines, he argues with his wife Sarah. On two occasions he
tells kings that Sarah is his sister
out of fear that they will kill him to get his wife.
He ranges his son's marriage.
In the place of the single story of Noah's drunkenness,
there are, in the case of Abraham,
the stories of a man's life.
And one of the things I was really struck by
reading this in depth and reading the commentary
is how much like a story about a person it is.
Abraham isn't a divine figure in any archetypal sense
precisely.
He has archetypal elements because he's also obviously
the founder of a nation.
But fundamentally, he's a human being.
And he has the adventures.
And he makes the mistakes of a human being.
That's the mistake part that really struck me, you know, because I was talking with a friend
of mine this week, Norman Doige, who's a very remarkable person in many ways, and he was
taking me to task.
He was reading my book, which I'm going to publish, or which will be out in January.
And in the book, in one section I contrasted, the god of the Old Testament with the god of the New Testament
and made the case sort of based on North
or a prize ideas that the god of the Old Testament was really
harsh and judgmental, and that the god of the New Testament
was more merciful and at least to some degree
more sweetness and light.
And Norman took me to task about that,
saying that that was an overly Christianized interpretation,
which would make sense, because I derived it in part
from Northrop Fry.
And I really have come to understand that more,
that he's right, because he's right about that,
because the God in the Old Testament
is actually far more merciful than he's generally made out
to be.
And you really see this with, it's good news, fundamentally,
if you regard the representation of God as somehow key
to the description of being itself.
Abraham makes a lot of mistakes, serious mistakes,
and yet he has a life, and he's blessed by God,
despite the fact that he's pretty deeply flawed
and engages in deceptive practice.
I mean, he's a good man, but he's not a perfect man
by any stretch of the imagination. And things work out really well for man, but he's not a perfect man by any stretch of the imagination.
And things work out really well for him,
and he's the founder of a nation and all of that.
And that's good news for everyone, because perfect people
are very, very hard to find.
And if the only pathway to having a rich and meaningful life
was through perfection, then we would all be in deep trouble.
And so that's very satisfying to read that.
And the other thing that I've been struck by is that, you know, Abraham, and I think
this is actually absolutely key to the interpretation of the story.
Abraham goes out and does things.
That's the thing.
And so one of the things that I've noticed in my life is that nothing I've ever done
was wasted.
And by done, I mean put my heart and soul into, you know, like attempted with all of my
effort, that always worked.
Now it didn't always work the way I expected it to work.
That's a whole different issue.
But the payoff from it was always positive.
I always, something always, something of value always accrued to me when I made the sacrifices necessary
to do something worthwhile.
And so I think part of the message in this story
of Abrahamic stories is go do something.
And I've thought about this in a variety of ways,
outside of the interpretation of this story,
because I have this program, some of you might be familiar
with, which is called the Future Authoring Program, and it's designed to help people make a plan
for three to five years into the future, you know, and so what you do is you answer some questions,
it's a writing program, you answer some questions about how you would like your life to be,
and what you would like your character to be, three to five years down the road, if you were taking care of yourself, like you were taking care
of someone that you actually cared about, so you kind of have to split yourself into two
people and treat yourself like someone you have respect for and that you want the best
for. That's not easy because people don't necessarily have respect for themselves, and
they don't necessarily want what's the best for themselves because they have a lot of
self-contempt and a lot of self-hatred and a lot of guilt
and a lot of existential angst
and a lot of self-consciousness and all of that.
And so people don't necessarily take care of themselves
very well.
And I think you have an obligation.
It's one of the highest moral obligations
to treat yourself as if you're a creature of value.
And that is, in some that is in some sense,
it's in some sense that's independent of your actions.
And you might think about that metaphorically as a recognition
of your divine worth in the biblical sense,
regardless of your sins, so to speak.
And I think that's powerful language,
as far as I'm concerned once you understand it.
Anyways, with the self-authoring program,
the future authoring program,
you ask, you answer questions about
what, how you would like your friendships to be conducted.
Because it's useful to surround yourself with people
who are trying to move forward,
and more importantly, who are happy when you move forward
and not happy when you move backwards.
Not when you fall, that isn't what I mean,
but when you're doing self-destructive things, your friends shouldn't be there to cheer you on. And because then they're really
not acting like friends, obviously, you know. I know it's obvious, but it still happens
all the time and people allow it to happen. It's not a good idea. And how would you like
to sort your family out? And I was thinking about this this week too, because I was thinking
about Noah's Ark. And there was a phrase in that story that I didn't understand, which was that Noah was perfect in his generations. I thought, I don't know
what that means. And you know, when you're going through a book like the Bible, if you don't understand
a phrase, that actually means you've missed something. It doesn't mean that that's just not, you know,
that's not your main to the story. It means you're stupid. You didn't get it, man. You didn't get it.
You didn't understand it. And so the idea
that Noah was perfect in his generations, and that's why he could build an ark that would
sustain him and humanity itself through the flood, it meant that he not only did he walk
with God, which is something that we talked about in the context of the sermon on the
mount, but that he established proper relationships with his family, with his children.
And so what that meant was that not only was he
well integrated as a person,
but his level of integration had reached the point
where it stretched out beyond him and encompassed his family.
And so it was Noah and the family that was in the ark.
And I can tell you,
and I really understood this this year
because I had a very tumultuous year.
You could think about it from a personal perspective.
I could think about it as a year that had no shortage of floods.
And part of the reason that I was able to get through it, I also had terrible health problems.
And one of the reasons I was able to get through it was because my family really came together
around me, my kids, my wife, my parents, and my friends as well, and particularly a certain
group of friends. And that's partly all of that came together in my mind this week and
I thought, oh, that's what it means to be perfect in his generations, meant that he
hadn't just straightened himself out. He'd also straightened out in his relationships with
his family. And I can tell you that when crisis strikes you, which
it will, it will.
The flood will come, right?
That's why the apocalypse is always upon us.
The flood will definitely come in your life, and to the degree that you've organized yourself
psychologically, and also healed the relationships between you and your family, that could be
the critical element that determines whether you live or die when a crisis comes or whether
someone in your family lives or dies.
So the idea of the arc containing the man who walks with God and whose generations are
perfect and that that's what sustains humanity through the crisis.
It's like you couldn't be more psychologically accurate than that.
The other thing I was thinking about this week, I was thinking about another line in the
New Testament.
I think it's from the Sermon on the Mount,
but I'm not absolutely sure.
Christ compares the kingdom of heaven to a mustard seed.
And so I was thinking about a mustard seed
as a very tiny seed, and it grows into quite a
spectacular, complex plant.
And I was thinking about how you should operate in the world
in order to make it a better place,
assuming that that's what you should be doing. And that is what you should be doing. And there's
lots in the world to fix. Everything that bothers you about the world and about yourself should be fixed.
And you can do that. And my dawning realization, I have a friend who lives in Montreal. His name is
James Simon. He's a great painter.
And he's taught me a lot of things. He's helped me design my house and beautify it.
And I bought some paintings from him a couple of years ago. And he did this series of paintings
where he went around North America and stood in different places. And then he painted the view from
here down. And so it's his feet planted in different
places on roads in the desert on the ocean. I have one actually hanging over my toilet,
which is him standing at a urinal. Well, you know, he was trying to make a point and
the point was that wherever you are, it's worth paying attention. And that's because,
you know, so all these places that he visited, he looked exactly
where he was, standing by the side of the road in the desert, it's kind of mundane in some
sense, but then maybe he put 40 hours into that painting, you know, and it's very, very
realistic painting with really good light. And what he's telling you as a painter is,
everything is worth paying attention to an infinite amount, but you don't have enough time.
And so the artist does that for you, right? The artist looks and looks and looks and looks and looks
and then gives you that vision.
And so then you can look at the painting.
And it reminds you that right where you are is,
there's everything that there is is right where you are.
And that's a hard thing to realize, but it's actually true.
And so I've been telling people online in various ways
and in lectures that they should start fixing up the world
by cleaning up the room.
And I wanted to just elaborate on that a little bit
before I get back to the lecture itself.
So as it's become this internet, weird internet meme,
you know?
And it's a joke.
And good, it's a joke.
I'm really happy about the fact that so much of this has got the leave and of humor, and it's a joke. And good, it's a joke. I'm really happy about the fact that so much of this
has got the leave and of humor, and it's really important.
Because that's what stops things from degenerating
into conflict, humor.
And I was thinking about this idea of cleaning up
your room in relationship to the mustard seed idea.
And you see the thing about cleaning up your room,
this is also something I learned from Carl Jung
and his studies on alchemy, because for Jung,
when the alchemist was attempting to make the philosopher
stone, he was not only engaged in the transformation
of the material world, but he was engaged
in the process of self-transformation
that occurred at the same time as the chemical transformation.
So it was a psychological work in some sense.
Let's say you want to sort out your room and beautify it
because the beauty is also important.
And let's say that all you have is just a little room
like you're not rich, you're poor.
And you don't have any power, that's another thing.
But you've got your damn room
and you've got this space right in front of you.
That's a part of the cosmos that you can come to grips with.
And you might think, well, what's there in front of you
right in front of you?
And the answer to that is, it depends on how open your eyes are.
That's the proper answer, because you could say,
and William Blake said this, for example,
and eldest Huxley made comments that we're very similar,
that in a transcendent state, you can see infinity
in the finite, and you might say, well, you can say,
and you can see infinity in what you have within your grasp, if you
look, and you can say, maybe that's the case with your room.
And so you want to clean up your room.
Well, okay, how do you do that exactly?
Well, a room is a place to sleep.
And so if you set your room up properly, then you figure out how to sleep and when you
should sleep and how you should sleep.
And then you figure out when you should wake up.
And then you figure out, well, what clothes you should wear,
because they have to be arranged properly in your dresser.
And then you have to have some place to put your clothes.
And if you're going to have some clothes, you have to figure out
what you're going to wear those clothes to do.
Right? And then that means you have to figure out
what you're going to do.
And then your room has to serve that purpose
because otherwise it doesn't set up properly.
And if it doesn't serve your purposes, you will be unhappy and
not happy in the room because the way that we perceive the world is as a place to move
from point A to point B in. And then if the place that we're in facilitates that movement,
then we're happy to be there. And if the place that we're in serves as an obstacle to that
movement, then we're unhappy
to be there.
And so what it means to set up your room is that you have to have somewhere to go that's
worthwhile or you can't set up your room.
And then your room has to be set up to facilitate that.
And then the next thing is, well, maybe you have to make it beautiful.
But that's not easy, right?
That means you have to have some taste.
And that doesn't mean you have to have money.
It doesn't.
Because you can be garish with money. and you can be tasteful with nothing. All you need is taste
and taste beats money when it comes to beautifying things. I mean not that money is trivial
because it's not but taste is crucial and people who are very artistically oriented can
make beautiful things out of virtually nothing and not only that the literature suggests
that if you're going to make beautiful things, putting real constraints
on what you allow yourself to do,
facilitates creativity instead of interfering with it.
Because let's say you have to make something out of nothing,
right, which I suppose would be a godly act, right?
You have to make something out of nothing,
you have to be creative in order to do that.
And so then to beautify your room
means that you also have to develop your capacity to be creative in order to do that. And so then to beautify your room
means that you also have to develop your capacity
to be creative.
And so then you can make your room shine.
But then what will happen is that if your family isn't together,
they will interfere with that.
You'll interfere with that because you won't have the discipline
to do it properly.
But then when you start building this little microcosm
of perfection with what
you have at hand, then it'll evoke all the pathologies of everyone in your household. They'll
wonder what the hell you're up to in there. And they won't necessarily be happy because
if they're in a lowly place, let's say, in Soar You and you're trying to move out of
that, then the higher you move out of that, the more the place they're in looks bad.
And you might say, well, what they should do
is celebrate your victory over chaos and evil,
but that isn't what will happen.
What will happen instead is that they will attempt
to pull you back down.
They'll attempt to, and I mean, obviously,
all families don't do that, but all families do that
to some degree, and some families do almost nothing but that.
And so what that means is that if you're going to
organize your room, then you're going to have to confront the devils in your house. And that's often a
terrifying thing because some of those devils have have lineages that go back many, many, many
generations. And God only knows what you have to struggle with in order to overcome that. And so to sort yourself out and to fix up your room
is a non-trivial matter.
And you can do that.
You'll learn by doing that.
And then maybe you'll learn enough by doing that
so that you can fix up your family a little bit.
And then having done that, you'll have enough character
so that when you try to operate in the world at your job
or maybe in the broader social spheres,
that you'll be a force for good instead of harm because you'll have learned some humility by noting
just how difficult it was to put your damn room together.
Well, and yourself for that matter.
And so you'll proceed cautiously with your eyes open towards the good.
And so, well, those are some of the things I've been thinking about this week.
And they're germane.
They're germane to what we're going to discuss tonight because what happens at the beginning
of the Abrahamic stories is basically God comes to Abraham and just says, go.
Get going, man.
Do something.
Do something.
Get going.
And you might think, well, where should I go?
And God is somewhat vague about that.
And where he sends Abraham, it's a real fixer upper, man. It's like there's starvation there, and
there's tyranny, and there's marital dissolution, and there's deceit. It's just like where
you live. It's exactly the same thing. It's tyranny and catastrophe. So that's the tyrannical
great father, because Abraham ends up having to
sojourn in Egypt, and there's a famine, and so Mother Nature is on the rampage, and Abraham lies
about his wife, as we'll see, and so it's the world, it's the world, it's tyranny and vulnerability
and deceit, and yet God says, go, because if you do go, then you'll become a father of nations,
and you think, well, again, that's pretty good news, although it's strange, because if you do go, then you'll become a father of nations.
And you think, well, again, that's pretty good news, although it's strange because you'd
expect that if God chose Abraham, then he'd send him immediately to the land of honey,
land of milk and honey.
And that isn't what happens at all.
It doesn't happen at all.
And Abraham never gets there.
But his mission is still regarded as divine.
And thank God for that, because that's what your mission will be because that's what you will encounter in your life
Those are the archetypal things everyone encounters the tyranny of the social structure and
And the repatiousness of nature and the deceitful the deceitful quality of the human psyche
It's like that's the world now. It's a negative that's a negative view in some sense
But it's positive in the story because what it
basically says is something that's akin to the sermon on the Mount, which is that if
you're aligned with God and you pay attention to the divine injunction, then you can operate
in the midst of chaos and tyranny and deception and flourish.
And you could hardly hope to have a better piece of news than that given that that's exactly where you are.
So, and I didn't see any of that in the Abrahamic stories to begin with, so it's been very interesting to have that sort of reveal itself.
The Abraham section thus develops the personality and character of a man to a new degree in biblical narrative.
a new degree in biblical narrative.
Well, picturing him in a new degree of responsibility, in him a new degree of responsibility.
So here's the other thing that's really struck me.
And I think this is absolutely crucial importance,
and I don't know how much importance,
but it's certainly important to me.
One of the things that has just blown me away
in the last year, because I've talked to lots of people,
lots of people live,
you know, but also lots of people online.
But it's more obvious live and it's obvious in this theater as well, is that I've gone around and spoken
in a large proportion of my audience has been young men, you know, under 30, something like that.
And I've spoken to them a lot about responsibility. And what's so odd about this is that of all the
things that I've spoken about, because I can see the audience and I can feel how the audience is
reacting, because I'm always paying attention to all of you. It's in so far as I can manage that.
So I get some sense of how what I'm saying is landing, you know, which you have to do if you're
going to speak effectively to people. And what what happens is if landing, you know, which you have to do if you're going to speak effectively to people.
And what happens is if I talk about responsibilities, everyone is silent, just like they are now.
It's silent and not moving, right?
Focusing, attentive, say, pick up your responsibility, pick up the heaviest thing you can and carry it.
And the room goes quiet and everybody's eyes open. And I think, who makes me break up?
I was.
I don't know why I was speaking to an English journalist today.
He was going to write an article in Spectate magazine,
and I was talking about this,
and at the same point in the discussion,
the same, I had the same emotional reaction,
I don't really understand it.
I think it's something,
there's something about it that's so crucial,
because we've been fed this unending diet
of rights and freedoms,
and there's something about that,
especially, there's something about that that's so pathologically wrong,
and people are starving for the antidote, and the antidote is truth and responsibility, right?
And it isn't because that's what you should do, and some, you know,
in some, I know better, or someone knows better,
for you what you should do sense. It's that that's the secret to a meaningful life and without a meaningful life,
then all you have is suffering and nihilism and despair and all of that and self-contempt.
And that's not good.
And so the man hits necessary for men to stand up and take responsibility.
And they all know that and are starving for that message.
And the message is more that that's also a good thing
to stand up and take responsibility,
because you're cursed so much now
from when you're young with this notion
that you're active engagement with the world
is part of what is destroying and undermining the planet
and adding to the tyranny of the social systems.
It's like, how about not so much of that?
Because it's too soul-deadening.
It's anti-human right to the core.
And my sense instead is that, you know, if you were able to reveal the best of yourself
to you in the world, that you would be an overwhelming force for good.
And that whatever errors might be made along the way
would wash out in the works.
And that's the other thing that you see in the Abrahamic stories,
because Abraham is not a perfect person
by any stretch of the imagination.
He's a real person, and he makes mistakes,
but it doesn't matter the overarching narrative is,
you know, maintain your covenant with God,
and despite your inadequacies,
then not only will you prevail,
but your descendants will prevail.
It's like, great, that's really good news.
So it's been really something to see that in the stories.
It's not that, so that's responsibility.
It's not just that Abraham is kind or gentle
or more intrepid ethical or a better debater
than his ancestor Noah, rather both and Noah intrepid, ethical, or a better debater than his ancestor,
Noah, rather both the Noah and Abraham stories,
or pieces of a development of an increasingly stronger stance
of humans relative to the deity.
Before the story is over, humans will
become a good deal stronger and bolder than Abraham.
Well, that's really something to say,
because Abraham is pretty bold.
So we'll let's read the stories.
The first one is about Abraham, Sarah, and Lot.
Now these are the generations of Tara, Tara Begatt Abraham. So his name is Abraham to begin with,
and that actually turns out to be important. It's not Abraham, Nayhor and Heron and Heron Begatt lot.
So Heron is Abram's brother. And Heron died before his father, Tara, in the land of his nativity, in Ur of the Cheldies. And Abram and Nehor took them wives. The name of Abram's wife was
Sarah. And the name of Nehor's wife, Milka, the daughter of Heron, the father of Milka,
and the father of Iska. But Sarah was barren. She had no child. And Tara took Abram, his son,
and laught the son of Heron, his son's son, and Sarah,
his daughter-in-law, his son Abram's wife. And they went forth with them from the
ear of the cellities to go into the land of Canaan. That's exile. And they came
onto Heron and dwelt there. And the days of Tara were 205 years and Tara died in Heron.
And there's a reason that Sarah is introduced as Baron. And to set the stage, I think it was Anton Chekov,
who when he was talking about the stage setting for a play,
that if there was a rifle hanging on the wall,
then it had better been used before I believe the second act,
or it shouldn't be hanging there at all, right?
And so this is stage setting.
And part of the reason that the biblical writers are pointing out
that Abrams' wife is Baron is because it's a real catastrophe for Abraham and for Sarah as well that she's
Baron.
And so it's showing the trouble that Abraham is in at the beginning of the story.
And it's also, it's also, see what happens as the story progresses is that Abraham and
Sarah are eventually granted a son, but it's
way late in the story, and they're very, very old by the time it happens. And of course,
you're not going to be a father of nations without having a child. And so the writers
are attempting to make the case that if you forthrightly pursue that which God directs
you to pursue, let's say, that all things are possible.
That's the idea and the narrative.
You know, you might say that's naïve.
And, you know, it's not.
You think it when you're naïve, right?
And then you dispense with that idea.
And then when you stop being the sort of person
who dispenses with ideas, then you come to another place.
And that's the place where you think you have no idea what might be possible for you if
you got things together and pursued what you should pursue.
You don't know how much what's impossible to you right now would become possible under
those conditions.
It's an unknown phenomena.
And like I've watched people who put put themselves together across time, you know,
incrementally and continually, and they become capable of things that are not only jaw-droppingly
amazingly, but also sometimes metaphysically impossible to understand. And so we don't know the
limits of human endeavor. We truly don't, and it's premature to put a cap on what it is that we are,
what that what it is that we are,
what it is that we're capable of.
And so, you know, you're already something,
and maybe you're not so bad in your current configuration.
But you make wonder if you did nothing
for the next 30 years, except put yourself together,
just exactly what would you be able to do?
And you might think, well, that's worth finding out,
but of course, that's the adoption of responsibility.
And one thing I've also learned over the years,
because I've been curious about this battle
between meaning and nihilism.
And I mean, I could see for a long while
the rationale in nihilism and the power of the nihilistic
argument, but it occurred to me across time
that despite that the power of the nihilistic argument is more
powerful than naive optimism, but it's not more powerful than the optimism that is
not naive, because the optimism that is not naive says, itself evident that the world
is a place of suffering and that there are things to be done about that, and it's self-evident
that people are flawed and that there's things to be done about that and it's self-evident that people are flawed and that there's things to be done about that and then the non-naive optimist says the suffering
could be reduced and the insufficiency could be overcome if people oriented
themselves properly and did what they were capable of doing and I do not
believe that that's deniable. I do I think that human potential is virtually limitless
and that there's nothing perhaps that's beyond our grasp
if we're careful as individuals and as a society.
And so I think that there's no reason for nihilism
and there's no reason for hopelessness
and there's no reason to bow down before evil
because we're capable of so much more.
And I think that you can easily know that first because you're not happy with who you are
and you're ashamed and embarrassed about it as you should be.
And you know it because if you look out there,
you see people who are capable of doing great things
and you know that we're not giving it our all.
And still we're not doing so badly, you know?
And so you might wonder if we devoted 90% of our effort
to putting things right instead of 55% of our effort,
or maybe even less than that, you might wonder just how well
could things be put together?
And I think that you can figure that out
by starting with your room, by the way.
And the Lord said unto Abram, and this is the opening
of the story, get the out of thy country and from thy kindred and from thy father's house unto a land
that I will show thee.
And this is one of those phrases where every clause is significant.
Go somewhere you don't understand.
That's the first thing.
Get the out of thy country.
You know, back in the 1920s, there was a whole slew of American writers who ended up as
ex-patriots in Paris, Hemingway among them, and who wrote the great Gatsby Fitzgerald, yes,
and a variety of others.
It was very inexpensive in Paris at the time, and part of their transformation into great
literary figures was the fact that they were out of their country.
And now they can see what their country was because you can't see what your country is until you
leave it. So you have to go into the unknown. And that's God's first command. Go into the unknown
because you already know what you know. And so, and that's not enough unless you think you're
enough. And if you're not enough and you don't think you're enough, then you have to go where you
haven't been. And so that's the first commandment to Abraham.
It's like, okay, that's a good one.
That makes perfect sense.
Go to where you don't know.
Yes.
And from like Kindred, well, that what does that mean?
It means grow up, right?
That's what it means.
It means get away from your family enough so that you can establish your independence.
And that isn't because there's something wrong with your family, although perhaps there is.
And as there is, perhaps wrong with you.
But it means get away.
I talk to people very frequently whose families have
provided them with too much protection.
And they know it themselves.
And that means they're deprived of necessity.
One of the things that you see in the United States,
for example, is that the
children of first-generation immigrants often do better than their children.
And the reason for that is that the children of first-generation immigrants have necessity
driving them.
And you don't know how much you need necessity to drive you because maybe you're not very
disciplined.
And if a catastrophe doesn't immediately befall you if you don't act
forthrightly today, then maybe you never act forthrightly, right? Because the gap
between your foolishness and the punishment is lengthened by your unearned wealth
and so you never grow up and learn and you have to get yourself away from your
dependency in order to allow necessity to drive you forward. And that's to become independent and to become mature.
And I think part of what's happening in our culture is that the force that's attacking
the fourth right movement forward of young men in particular is afraid of the power of
men because it's confused about the distinction between power and authority
and competence.
Like a man who's...
Welcome to season 3, episode 9 of the Jordan B. Peterson Podcast.
I'm Michaela Peterson, Jordan's daughter.
I hope you enjoy this episode.
It's called The Called to Abraham.
I don't have a ton to say in this intro. We're still in Florida. I love you enjoy this episode. It's called the Call to Abraham. I don't have a ton to say
in this intro. We're still in Florida. I love it here really. The sun is amazing. I released a
podcast with Susan Venker last Tuesday on the Michaela Peterson podcast of any of you anti-feminist
folks are listening. I know you screwballs are out there. I say screwballs with love. Enjoy this
episode.
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That's a great deal, a Jordan B. Peterson lecture.
So I've been thinking this week about doing this once a month on a continuing basis.
So...
So, I think if I do that, I think it will be here, although it's harder to rent this theater during the academic year, but if it isn't here, it will be somewhere else.
Because I'd like to continue doing this.
I'm learning a lot from doing it.
Once a month would really be good, because then I could really do the background work.
And I could probably do that for a couple of years,
because obviously this is going very quickly.
But that's OK.
I mean, it shouldn't go any faster than it can go.
And that's how it seems to me anyways.
So this has been a very steep learning curve for me
with regards to these stories because I didn't understand them very well.
And I've got better at using the resources online
to help me do my background investigation.
I have a lot of books.
And some of you may have noticed that online I posted a conversation I had with Jonathan Pazio and
his brother, Matthew.
I hope it's Matthew.
I remember names escaped me so badly, but I believe that's right.
He just finished a book on the Bible.
And so I've been doing a lot of thinking and talking about these stories, trying to understand
what they're about.
And then there's all these commentaries.
There's a great site, I think it's called Bible Hub,
that has every single verse of the Bible is listed there.
And then with each verse, they've aggregated 10 commentaries
from about 10 commentaries, from over the last 400 years.
And so there's like a dense page on every line.
And that's one of the things that's really interesting
about this book, too, is that it's aggregated so much
commentary that it's much bigger than it looks.
The book is much bigger than it looks.
And so it's been very interesting to become familiar
with those, too.
And the fact that this site is set up with all the commentary
split up by versus means you can rapidly compare
the commentaries and get a sense of, you know, how people have interpreted this over, well at least several hundred years, but of course much longer than that because the people who wrote the commentaries were, of course, reading things that were older than that.
So that's been very, very interesting.
So last week we talked about a couple of things. We talked about how you might understand the idea of a divine encounter.
And then we also paralleled out with the idea that God disappears in the Old Testament.
He bows out as the stories progress.
And that seems to be an emergent property of the sequencing of the stories, right?
Because all the books were written by independent people,
no different people, and then they were aggregated by other people.
And so the narrative continuity is some kind of emergent property
that's a consequence of this interaction between people, readers,
and writers over centuries.
And it's strange that given that there are also multiple coherent narratives
that unite it, you know, it's really not that easy to understand that, but it does at least seem to be the case.
And so, and the third thing we talked about was that as God bows out, so to speak, the
individual personality of the characters that are involved, the human characters that
are involved seems to become more and more developed.
And it isn't exactly clear what that,
I mean, what it means is that God steps away
and man steps forward, that's what it means,
but why it's arranged like that,
or they say ultimate significance of that
is by no means clear.
And so, so Abraham, who we're going to concentrate on today,
is quite a well-developed character.
And I would say there are two, there are multiple endings
and beginnings in the biblical stories.
The most important ending, I suppose,
is the ending of the garden of paradise
and the disenchantment of the world
and the sending forth of Adam and Eve into history, right, into
the future, into a motive being that has a future as part of it, and that has history
as part of it, and that has the necessity of sacrifice and toil as part of it.
That's obviously crucial.
And then that's, that is replayed with the story of Noah because everything is destroyed,
and then the world is created anew, and then sacrifices have to be made in order for the world
to begin and then you see the same thing happen again
after the Noah's story and the Tower of Babel
because history as we really understand history
seems to start with Abraham
because the stories of Abraham sound like historical stories
and scholars debate about the historical accuracy
of the Bible and I suppose there's no way of ever determining,
once and for all, the degree to which you might regard
the accounts as equivalent to modern empirical history.
But this is a psychological interpretation
of the biblical stories, not a historical interpretation.
And it certainly does seem to be the case
that from a psychological perspective,
we enter something like the domain of the modern conceptualization, relatively modern conceptualization
of history with Abraham.
Beyond the accounts of divine commands that Abraham carries out, this is from Friedman,
the man I mentioned in the last lecture, who wrote the disappearance of God in a variety
of other books that are well worth reading.
The narrative also includes a variety of stories in which Abraham Axel and his own initiative.
He divides land with his nephew Lot.
He battles kings, he takes concubines,
he argues with his wife Sarah.
On two occasion, he tells kings that Sarah is his sister
out of fear that they will kill him to get his wife.
He ranges his son's marriage.
In the place of the single story of Noah's drunkenness,
there are in the case of Abraham the stories of a man's life. And one of the things I was really struck by reading
this in depth and reading the commentary is how much like a story about a person it is.
You know, Abraham isn't a divine figure in any archetypal sense precisely. I mean, he
has archetypal elements because he's also obviously
the founder of a nation, but fundamentally he's a human being and he has the adventures
and he makes the mistakes of a human being. It's the mistake part that really struck
me, you know, because I was talking with a friend of mine this week, Norman Doige, who's
a very remarkable person in
many ways, and he was taking me to task, he was reading my book, which I'm going to publish
or which will be out in January.
And in the book, in one section I contrasted the God of the Old Testament with the God
of the New Testament and made the case sort of based on Northrop-Fri's ideas that the
God of the Old Testament was really harsh and judgmental, you know, and that the God of the New Testament was more merciful and, you know, at least
to some degree, more sweetness and light.
And Norman took me to task about that, saying that that was an overly Christianized interpretation,
which would make sense because I derived it in part from Northrop Fry.
And I really have come to understand that more that he's right, because he's
right about that, because the God in the Old Testament is actually far more merciful
than he's generally made out to be. And you really see this with it. It's good news
fundamentally, if you regard the representation of God as somehow key to the description
of being itself. I mean, Abraham makes a lot of mistakes, you know, serious mistakes, and yet he has a life, and
he's blessed by God, despite the fact that he's pretty deeply flawed and engages in deceptive
practice. I mean, he's a good man, but he's not a perfect man by any stretch of the imagination,
and things work out really well for him, and he's the founder of a nation and all of that, and
that's good news for everyone, because perfect people are very, very hard to find. And if the only pathway to having a rich and meaningful life was through perfection,
then we would all be in deep trouble.
And so that's very satisfying to read that.
And the other thing that I've been struck by is that, you know, Abraham, and I think
this is actually absolutely key to the interpretation of this story.
Abraham goes out and does things.
That's the thing.
And so one of the things that I've noticed in my life
is that nothing I've ever done was wasted.
And by done, I mean put my heart and soul into,
you know, like attempted with all of my effort,
that always worked.
Now, it didn't always work the way I expected it to work.
That's a whole different issue.
But the payoff from it was always positive.
I always, something always, something of value always accrued to me
when I made the sacrifices necessary to do something worthwhile.
And so I think part of the message in this story of it,
and the Abrahamic stories is go do something.
And I've thought about this in a variety of ways,
outside of the interpretation of this story,
because I have this program,
some of you might be familiar with,
which is called Future Authoring Program,
and it's designed to help people
make a plan for three to five years into the future,
and so what you do is you answer some questions.
It's a writing program.
You answer some questions about how you would like your life
to be, and what you would like your character to be,
three to five years down the road.
If you were taking care of yourself,
like you were taking care of someone
that you actually cared about.
So you kind of have to split yourself into two people
and treat yourself like someone you have respect for and that you want the best for.
That's not easy because people don't necessarily have respect for themselves and they don't
necessarily want what's the best for themselves because they have a lot of self-contempt and
a lot of self-hatred and a lot of guilt and a lot of existential angst and a lot of self-consciousness
and all of that.
So people don't necessarily take care of themselves very well. And I think it's I think you have an obligation. It's one
of the highest moral obligations to treat yourself as if you're a creature of
value. And that is in some sense, it's in some sense that's independent of
your actions. And you might think about that metaphorically as a recognition of
your divine worth in the biblical sense, regardless of your sins, so to speak.
And I think that's powerful language,
as far as I'm concerned once you understand it.
Anyways, with the self-authoring program,
the future authoring program, you ask,
you answer questions about how you would like your friendships
to be conducted, because it's useful to surround yourself
with people who are trying to move forward,
and more importantly, who are happy when you move forward
and not happy when you move backwards.
Not when you fall, that isn't what I mean,
but when you're doing self-destructive things,
your friends shouldn't be there to cheer you on.
Because then they're really not acting like friends, obviously.
I know it's obvious, but it still happens all the time,
and people allow it to happen.
It's not a good idea.
And how would you like to sort your family out?
And I was thinking about this this week too,
because I was thinking about Noah's Ark.
And there was a phrase in that story
that I didn't understand, which was that Noah
was perfect in his generations.
I thought, I don't know what that means.
And you know, when you're going through a book
like the Bible, if you don't understand a phrase,
that actually means you've missed something.
It doesn't mean that that's just not, you know, that's not your main to the story.
It means you're stupid.
You didn't get it, man.
You didn't get it.
You didn't understand it.
And so the idea that Noah was perfect in his generations, and that's why he could build
an ark that would sustain him and humanity itself through the flood.
It meant that he, not only did he walk with God, which is something that we talked about
in the context of the sermon on the Mount, but that he established proper relationships
with his family, with his children.
And so what that meant was that not only was he well integrated as a person, but his
level of integration had reached the point where it stretched out beyond him and encompassed
his family.
And so it was Noah and the family that was in the ark.
And I can tell you, and I really understood this this year because I had a very tumultuous
year.
You could think about it from a personal perspective.
I could think about it as a year that had no shortage of floods.
And part of the reason that I was able to get through it, I also had terrible health problems.
And one of the reasons I was able to get through it. I also had terrible health problems. And one of the reasons I was able to get through it
was because my family really came together around me,
my kids, my wife, my parents, and my friends as well.
And particularly a certain group of friends.
And that's partly all of that came together in my mind
this week, and I thought, oh, that's what it means
to be perfect in his generations, meant that he hadn't just straightened himself
out.
He'd also straightened out in his relationships with his family.
And I can tell you that when crisis strikes you, which it will, it will, the flood will
come, right?
That's why the apocalypse is always upon us.
The flood will definitely come in your life.
And to the degree that you've organized yourself psychologically and also healed the relationships between you
and your family. That could be the critical element that determines whether you
live or die when a crisis comes or whether someone in your family lives or dies.
And so the idea of the arc containing the man who's who walks with God and whose
generations are perfect and that that's what sustains humanity through the crisis.
It's like you couldn't be more psychologically accurate than that.
You know, the other thing I was thinking about this week,
I was thinking about another line in the New Testament.
I think it's from the Sermon on the Mount,
but I know it absolutely.
Sure, Christ compares the kingdom of heaven to a mustard seed.
And so I was thinking about a mustard seed as a very tiny seed,
and it grows into quite a spectacular, complex plant.
And I was thinking about how you should operate in the world
in order to make it a better place, assuming
that that's what you should be doing.
And that is what you should be doing.
And there's lots in the world to fix.
Everything that bothers you about the world and about yourself should be fixed.
And you can do that.
And my dawning realization, I have a friend.
He lives in Montreal.
His name is James Simon.
He's a great painter.
And he's taught me a lot of things.
He's helped me design my house and beautify it.
And I bought some paintings from him a couple of years ago. and he did this series of paintings where he went around North America
and stood in different places and then he painted the view from here
down and so it's his feet planted in different places, on roads, in the desert, on the ocean.
I have one actually hanging over my toilet, which is him standing at a urinal.
Well, you know, he was trying to make a point,
and the point was that wherever you are,
it's worth paying attention.
And that's, because you know,
so all these places that he visited,
he looked exactly where he was,
I'm standing by the side of the road in the desert,
it's kind of mundane in some sense,
but then maybe he put 40 hours into that painting,
you know, and it's very, very realistic painting
with really good light.
And what he's telling you as a painter is,
everything is worth paying attention to an infinite amount,
but you don't have enough time.
And so the artist does that for you, right?
The artist looks and looks and looks and looks and looks
and then gives you that vision.
And so then you can look at the painting.
And it reminds you that right where you are is,
there's everything that there is is right where you are is, there's everything that there
is is right where you are.
And that's a hard thing to realize, but it's actually true.
And so I've been telling people online in various ways in lectures that they should start
fixing up the world by cleaning up the room.
And I wanted to just elaborate on that a little bit before I get back to the lecture itself. So as it's become this internet, weird internet meme, you know.
And it's a joke.
And good, it's a joke.
I'm really happy about the fact that so much of this
has got the leave and of humor, and it's really important,
because that's what stops things from degenerating
into conflict, humor.
And I was thinking about this idea of cleaning up your room
in relationship to the mustard seed idea.
And you see the thing about cleaning up your room,
this is also something I learned from Carl Jung
and his studies on alchemy.
Because for Jung, when the alchemist was
attempting to make the philosopher stone,
he was not only engaged in the transformation
of the material world, but he was engaged
in a process of self-transformation that occurred at the same time
as the chemical transformation.
So it was a psychological work in some sense.
Let's say you want to sort out your room and beautify it
because the beauty is also important.
And let's say that all you have is just a little room
like you're not rich, you're poor.
And you don't have any power, that's another thing.
But you've got your damn room, and you've got this space
right in front of you, that's a part of the cosmos
that you can come to grips with.
And you might think, well, what's there in front of you,
right in front of you?
And the answer to that is, it depends on how open your eyes are.
That's the proper answer, because you could say,
and William Blake said this, for example,
and eldest Huxley made comments that were very similar,
that in a transcendent state, you can see infinity in the finite,
and you might say, well, you can see infinity in what you have
within your grasp, if you look, and you could say,
maybe that's the case with your room.
And so you want to clean up your room.
Well, okay, how do you do that exactly?
Well, a room is a place to sleep. And so if you set your room. Well, okay, how do you do that exactly? Well, a room is a room is a place to sleep.
And so if you set your room up properly, then you figure out how to sleep and when you should sleep
and how you should sleep. And then you figure out when you should wake up and then you figure out,
well, what clothes you should wear because they have to be arranged properly in your dresser,
and then you have to have some place to put your clothes. And if you're going to have some clothes,
you have to figure out what you're going to wear those clothes to do, right? And then that means you have to figure out what you're going to do.
And then your room has to serve that purpose because otherwise it doesn't set up properly.
And if it doesn't serve your purposes, you will be unhappy and not happy in the room because the way that we perceive the world is as a place to move from point A to point B in.
And then if the place that we're in facilitates that movement,
then we're happy to be there.
And if the place that we're in serves as an obstacle
to that movement, then we're unhappy to be there.
And so what it means to set up your room
is that you have to have somewhere to go that's
worthwhile or you can't set up your room.
And then your room has to be set up to facilitate that. And then the next thing is, well, maybe you have to make it beautiful. But that's not, or you can't set up your room, and then your room has to be set up to facilitate that.
And then the next thing is, well, maybe you have to make it beautiful,
but that's not easy, right?
That means you have to have some taste,
and that doesn't mean you have to have money.
It doesn't, because you can be garish with money,
and you can be tasteful with nothing.
All you need is taste, and taste beats money
when it comes to beautifying things.
You know what I mean?
Not that money is trivial trivial because it's not,
but taste is crucial.
And people who are very artistically oriented
can make beautiful things out of virtually nothing.
And not only that, the literature suggests
that if you're going to make beautiful things,
putting real constraints on what you allow yourself to do,
facilitates creativity instead of interfering with it.
Because let's say you have to make something out of nothing,
right, which I suppose would be a godly act, right?
You have to make something out of nothing.
You have to be creative in order to do that.
And so then to beautify your room
means that you also have to develop your capacity
to be creative.
And so then you can make your room shine.
But then what will happen is that if your family isn't together,
they will interfere with that.
You'll interfere with that because you
won't have the discipline to do it properly.
But then when you start building this little microcosm
of perfection with what you have at hand,
then it'll evoke all the pathologies of everyone in your household.
They'll wonder what the hell you're up to in there.
And they won't necessarily be happy because if you're in if they're in a lowly place, let's say,
and so are you, and you're trying to move out of that, then the higher you move out of that,
the more the place they're in looks bad.
And you might say, well, what they should do is celebrate your victory over chaos and evil,
but that isn't what will happen. What will happen instead is that they will attempt to pull you back down.
They'll attempt to, and I mean, obviously all families don't do that, but
all families do that to some degree, and some families do almost nothing but that.
And so what that means is that if you're going to organize your room,
then you're going to have to confront the devils in your house.
And that's often a terrifying thing because some of those devils have lineages
that go back many, many, many generations.
And God only knows what you have to struggle with
in order to overcome that.
And so to sort yourself out into fix up your room
is a non-trivial matter, you know.
And you can do that, you'll learn by doing that.
And then maybe you'll learn enough by doing that
so that you can fix up your family a little bit. And then having done that, you'll learn by doing that. And then maybe you'll learn enough by doing that so that you can fix up your family a little bit.
And then having done that, you'll have enough character
so that when you try to operate in the world
at your job or maybe in the broader social spheres
that you'll be a force for good instead of harm
because you'll have learned some humility
by noting just how difficult it was
to put your damn room together.
Well, end yourself for that matter.
And so you'll proceed cautiously with your eyes open towards the good.
And so, well, those are some of the things I've been thinking about this week.
And they're germane.
They're like, they're germane to what we're going to discuss tonight,
because what happens at the beginning of the Abrahamic stories is basically,
God comes to Abraham and just says, go. Get going, man. Do
something. Do something. Get going. And you might think, well, where should I go? And God is
somewhat vague about that. And where he sends Abraham, it's a real fixer upper, man. It's like
there's starvation there, and there's tyranny, and there's and there's marital dissolution, and
there's deceit. Like it's it's just like where you live, you know, it's exactly the same thing.
It's it's tyranny and catastrophe. So that's you know, the great the tyrannical great father because because Abraham ends up having to
Sojourn in Egypt and
And there's a famine and so Mother Nature is on the rampage and Abraham lies about his wife, as we'll see. So it's the world. It's the world. It's tyranny and vulnerability and deceit.
And yet God says, go, because if you do go, then you'll become a father of nations.
And you think, well, again, that's pretty good news, although it's strange,
because you'd expect that if God chose Abraham, then he'd send him immediately to the land of honey,
the land of milk and honey.
And that isn't what happens at all.
It doesn't happen at all.
And Abraham never gets there.
But his mission is still regarded as divine.
And thank God for that, because that's what your mission will be, because that's what you
will encounter in your life.
Those are the archetypal things everyone encounters, the tyranny of the social structure, and
the repatiousness of nature
and the deceitful quality of the human psyche.
It's like, that's the world.
Now, it's a negative view in some sense,
but it's positive in the story
because what it basically says is something
that's akin to the sermon on the Mount,
which is that if you're aligned with God
and you pay attention to the divine injunction, then you can operate
in the midst of chaos and tyranny and deception and flourish.
And you could hardly hope to have a better piece of news than that
given that that's exactly where you are.
So, and I didn't see any of that in the Abrahamic stories
to begin with, so it's been very interesting
to have that sort of reveal itself.
The Abraham section thus develops the personality and character of a man to a new degree in
biblical narrative.
While picturing him in a new degree of responsibility, in him a new degree of responsibility, so here's
the other thing that's really struck me, and I think this is absolutely crucial importance,
and I don't know how much importance,
but it's certainly important to me.
One of the things that has just blown me away
in the last year, because I've talked to lots of people,
lots of people live, but also lots of people online.
But it's more obvious live.
And it's obvious in this theater as well,
is that I've gone around and spoken
in a large proportion of my audience has been young man,
you know, under 30, something like that.
And I've spoken to them a lot about responsibility.
And what's so odd about this is that of all the things
that I've spoken about, because I can see the audience,
and I can feel how the audience is reacting,
because I'm always paying attention to all of you,
and so far as I can manage that.
So I get some sense of how what I'm saying is landing,
which you have to do if you're going to speak effectively
to people.
And what happens is if I talk about responsibilities,
everyone is silent, just like they are now.
It's silent and not moving, right? Focusing, attentive.
Say, pick up your responsibility, pick up the heaviest thing you can and carry it.
And the room goes quiet and everybody's eyes open and I was, I don't know why I was speaking to an English journalist today who's going to
write an article in Spectate magazine, I was talking about this, and at the same point
in the discussion, the same, I had the same emotional reaction, I don't really understand
it.
I think it's something, there's something about it that's so crucial,
because we've been fed this unending diet of rights
and freedoms, and there's something about that,
especially, there's something about that that's
so pathologically wrong, and people are starving
for the antidote, and the antidote is truth
and responsibility, right?
And it isn't because that's what you should do in some, you know,
in some I know better or someone knows better for you what you should do sense. It's that, it's that,
it's that, that's the secret to a meaningful life and without a meaningful life, then all you
have is suffering and, and nihilism and despair and all of that and self-contempt. And that's not good.
And so the man hits necessary for men to stand up
and take responsibility.
And they all know that and are starving for that message.
And the message is more that that's also a good thing
to stand up and take responsibility.
Because your curse so much now from when you're young with
this notion that your active engagement with the world is part of what is destroying and
undermining the planet and adding to the tyranny of the social systems.
It's like, how about not so much of that?
Because it's too soul-deadening.
It's anti-human right to the core.
And my sense instead is that if you were able to reveal the best of yourself to you in the world,
that you would be an overwhelming force for good.
And that whatever errors might be made along the way,
would wash out in the works.
And that's the other thing that you see in the Abrahamic stories,
because Abraham is not a perfect person by any stretch of the imagination.
He's a real person,
and he makes mistakes, but it doesn't matter the overarching narrative is, you know,
maintain your covenant with God and despite your inadequacies, then not only will you prevail,
but your descendants will prevail. It's like, great, that's really good news, you know? So,
it's been really something to see that in the stories. It's not that, so that's really good news, you know? So it's been really something to see that in the stories.
It's not that, so that's responsibility.
It's not just that Abraham is kinder, gentle,
or more intrepid, ethical, or a better debater
than his ancestor Noah, rather both the Noah
and Abraham stories, or pieces of a development
of an increasingly stronger stance of humans relative
to the deity.
Before the story is over, humans will become
a good deal stronger and bolder than Abraham. That's really something to say because Abraham
is pretty bold. So let's read the stories. The first one is about Abraham, Sarah, and
Lot. Now these are the generations of Tara, Tara,
Begat, Abraham. So his name is Abraham, to begin with, and that actually turns out to be important. It's not Abraham, Nehore and Heron and Heron begot lot.
So Heron is Abraham's brother.
And Heron died before his father, Tara,
in the land of his nativity, in ur of the celldies.
And Abraham and Nehore took them wives.
The name of Abram's wife was Sarah,
and the name of Nehore's wife, Milka,
the daughter of Heron, the father of Milka, and the name of Nehors wife, Milka, the daughter of Heron, the father of
Milka, and the father of Iska. But Sarah was barren, she had no child. And Tara took Abram
his son, and laught the son of Heron, his son's son, and Sarah, her daughter-in-law, his son,
Abram's wife, and they went forth with them from the ear of the cell-dies, from the
cell-dies to go into the land of Canaan, that's exile. And they came into Herod and dwelt there.
And the days of terror were 205 years,
and terror died in Herod.
And there's a reason that Sarah is introduced as barren.
And it's to set the stage, I think it was Anton Chekov,
who, when he was talking about the stage setting for a play,
that if there was a rifle hanging on the wall,
then it had better been used before I believe the second act or it shouldn't be hanging
there at all, right? And so this is stage setting. And I get part of the reason
that the biblical writers are pointing out that Abrams' wife is Baroness because
it's a real catastrophe for Abraham and for Sarah as well that she's Baron. And so
it's showing the trouble that Abraham's in at the beginning of the story.
And it's also, it's also, see what happens as the story progresses is that Abraham and
Sarah are eventually granted a son, but it's way late in the story and they're very, very
old by the time it happens.
And of course, you're not going to be a father of nations without having a child.
And so the writers are attempting to make the case
that if you forthrightly pursue that which God directs you
to pursue, let's say, that all things are possible.
That's the idea and the narrative.
And you might say that's naive.
And it's not.
You think it when you're naive, right? And then you dispense
with that idea. And then when you stop being the sort of person who dispenses with ideas,
then you come to another place. And that's the place where you think you have no idea what
might be possible for you if you if you got things together and pursued what you should pursue.
You don't know how much what's impossible to you right now
would become possible under those conditions.
It's an unknown phenomena.
And I've watched people who put themselves together
across time incrementally and continually,
and they become capable of things that are not only jaw
droppingly amazingly, but also sometimes
metaphysically impossible to understand.
And so we don't know the limits of human endeavor.
We truly don't.
And it's premature to put a cap on what it is that we are, what it is that we're capable
of.
And so you know, you're already something, and maybe you're not so bad in your current
configuration.
But you make wonder if you did nothing for the next 30 years,
except put yourself together just exactly what
would you be able to do?
And you might think, well, that's worth finding out.
But of course, that's the adoption of responsibility.
And one thing I've also learned over the years,
because I've been curious about this battle
between meaning and nihilism.
And I mean, I could see for a long while
the rationale in nihilism and the power of the nihilistic
argument, but it occurred to me across time that despite that the power of the nihilistic
argument is more powerful than naive optimism, but it's not more powerful than the optimism
that is not naive.
Because the optimism that is not naive says,
it's self-evident that the world is a place of suffering
and that there are things to be done about that.
And it's self-evident that people are flawed
and that there's things to be done about that.
And then the non-naive optimist says,
the suffering could be reduced,
and the insufficiency could be overcome
if people oriented themselves properly
and did what they were capable of doing.
And I do not believe that that's deniable.
I think that human potential is virtually limitless, and that there's nothing, perhaps, that's beyond our grasp,
if we're careful as individuals and as a society.
And so I think that there's no reason for nihilism and there's no reason for hopelessness
and there's no reason to bow down before evil
because we're capable of so much more.
And I think that you can easily, you know that first
because you're not happy with who you are
and you're ashamed and embarrassed about it as you should be.
And you know it because if you look out there,
you see people who are capable of doing great things.
And you know that we're not giving it our all. And still we're not doing so badly And you know it because if you look out there, you see people who are capable of doing great things. And you know that we're not giving it all. And still, we're not doing
so badly, you know. And so you might wonder if we devoted 90% of our effort to putting
things right instead of 55% of our effort, or maybe even less than that, you might wonder
just how well could things be put together. And I think that you can figure that out by starting with your room, by the way.
And the Lord said unto Abram, and this is the opening of the story,
get the out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house,
unto a land that I will show thee.
And this is one of those phrases where every clause is
significant.
Go somewhere you don't understand.
That's the first thing.
Get the out of thy country.
Back in the 1920s, there was a whole slew of American writers
who ended up as expatriates in Paris,
Hemingway among them, and who wrote the great Gatsby.
Fitzgerald, yes, and a variety of others.
It was very inexpensive in Paris at the time and part of their transformation into
great literary figures was the fact that they were out of their country and now
they can see what their country was because you can't see what your country is
until you leave it. So you have to go into the unknown and that's God's first
command. Go into the unknown because you already know what you know.
And so, and that's not enough unless you think you're enough. And if you're not enough and you don't
think you're enough, then you have to go where you haven't been. And so, that's the first commandment
to Abraham. It's like, okay, that's a good one. That makes perfect sense. Go to where you don't know.
Yes. And from like Kindred, well, that what does that mean? It means grow up,
right? That's what it means. It means get away from your family enough so that you can establish
your independence. And that isn't because there's something wrong with your family, although
perhaps there is, you know, as there is perhaps wrong with you, but it means get away. You know,
I talk to people very frequently whose families have provided them with too much
protection and they know what themselves and that means they're deprived of necessity
You know one of the things that you see in the United States for example is that
The children of first-generation immigrants often do better than the children than their children and the reason for that is that the children of first-generation
Immig immigrants have necessity
driving them. And you don't know how much you need necessity to drive you, because maybe
you're not very disciplined. And if a catastrophe doesn't immediately befall you, if you don't
act forthrightly today, then maybe you never act forthrightly, right? Because the gap between
your foolishness and the punishment is lengthened by your unernd wealth, and so you never
grow up and learn, and you have to get yourself away from your dependency in order to allow necessity
to drive you forward. And that's to become independent and to become mature. And I think part of what's
happening in our culture is that the force that's attacking the fourth right movement forward of young men in particular
is afraid of the power of men because it's confused about the distinction between power and authority
and competence. Like a man who has authority and competence has power as a byproduct, but the authority and competence is everything.
And people who can't understand that
fail to make the distinction between power
and authority and competence,
and they're afraid of power,
and so they destroy authority and competence.
And that's a terrible thing
because we need authority and competence.
What else is going to allow us to prevail in the long run?
And so you get away from your country and you get away from your kin and from your father's
house, right? And you go out there and you establish yourself in the world. It's a call to adventure.
That's what this, the first lines in Abrahamic story is a call to adventure. so great, unto a land that I will show you. Well, you know, what does that mean?
You know, one of the things that I've been struck very hard by a number of writers, Carl Jung,
obviously, among them. I mean, he wrote things like Nietzsche that if you understand them,
they just break you into pieces, you know
and and one of the things that Jung understood in the psychoanalysts understand is one of the most terrifying
Elements of psychoanalyst thinking is very tightly allied with religious thinking which is that you are not the master of your own house
There are spirits that dwell in you within you meaning
You have a will and you can exercise a certain amount of
conscious control over your being, but there are all sorts of things that occur
within you that seem to be beyond your capacity to control. Your dreams, for
example, that's a really good example, or your impulses, for example, you might
think of those as so foreign from you that they're not even, you don't even want
them to be part of you, but more subtly even, how about what you're interested in,
what compels you?
Like, where does that come from?
Exactly.
Because you can't conjure it up of your own accord, you know?
So if you're a student and you're taking a difficult course,
you might say to yourself, well, I need to sit down
and study for three hours.
But then you sit down and that isn't what happens.
Your attention goes everywhere. And you might say, well, whose attention is it then if it goes everywhere?
Because you say it's your attention. It's like, well, if it's your attention, maybe you
would be able to control it, but you can't. And so then you might think, well, Jen, just
exactly what the hell is controlling it. And you might say, well, it's random. It's
the, well, it's better not be random. I can tell you that. That happens to some degree in schizophrenia.
There's an element of randomness in that.
It's not random.
It's driven by the action of phenomena
that I think are best considered as something
like subpersonalities, although even that's only
a partial description.
You can't make yourself interested in something.
Interest manifests itself and grips you.
That's a whole different thing.
And so what is it that's gripping you?
And how do you conceptualize that?
Is that a divine power?
Well, it's divine as far as your concern,
because it grips you, and you can't do anything about it.
And so there's a calling in you towards what you're compelled by and what you're interested in,
and sometimes that might be very dark,
and sometimes not, but you're compelled forward by your interest.
And so the idea that what moves you away from your country
and your father's house and the comforts of your childhood
at home is something that's beyond you,
and that you listen to and harken to, that's exactly right. And you can say, well, I don't want to call that God. It's like,
it doesn't matter what you call it exactly. It doesn't matter to what it is, what it's called.
It still is. And if you don't listen to it, that's the other thing. If you don't listen to it,
and I've been a clinician and talked to enough people now, as
old as I am, to know this absolutely.
If you do not listen to that thing that beckons you forward, you will pay for it like you cannot
possibly imagine.
You'll have everything that's terrible about life in your life and nothing about it that's
good.
And worse, you'll know that it was your fault and that you squandered what you could have had.
So, this is not only a calling forth but a warning unto a land that I will show thee,
and that's it, that I will show thee, and you don't want to be too concrete about this, you know.
There's all sorts of new territories that you can inhabit.
There's abstract and conceptual territories of new territories that you can inhabit. If you, there's this abstract and conceptual territories
of go to university and you study biology or you study physics
or any discipline, you're in a territory, right?
You're in the territory that all the scholars have established.
And then as you master the discipline,
you move out beyond the established territory
into the unknown.
And that's a new land, right?
Maybe it's even a land of your enemies for that matter.
But it's a new land.
And the frontier is always in front of you.
And so, you know, when the earth was less inhabited than it is now, the frontier was the
psychological frontier and the geographical frontier was the same thing, and now they've separated to some degree because there's not so much
geographical frontier. But there's the frontier is a place that never disappears, and the land that's beyond the land that you know is always there, and it's always where you should go, and all of that's packed
into these, what, four phrases.
So when I've been thinking about narrative, you look at the world through a story, you
can't help it, and the story is what gives value to the world, or the story is what you
extract from the value of the world.
You can look at it either way, you're somewhere,
and it's not good enough.
That's the eternal human predicament,
wherever you are isn't good enough.
And to some degree, that's actually a good thing,
because if it was good enough, well,
there's nothing for you to do.
So it's actually maybe a good thing that it's insufficient.
And that might be why sometimes having less
is better than having more. And I might be why sometimes having less is better
than having more.
And I don't want to be a polyanna about that.
I mean, I know that there's deprivation
that can reach to the point where it's
no, where it's completely counterproductive.
But it isn't always the case that starting with little is,
if you start with little, you start with more possibility.
It's something like that.
So you move from always from what's unbearable about the present to some better future, right?
And if you don't have that, then you have no, you have nothing but threat and negative
emotion.
You have no positive emotion because the positive emotion is generated in the conception
of the better future and then the evidence that you generate yourself, that you're moving
towards it.
That's where the positive and fulfilling meaning of life comes. So you want to set up this structure properly.
It's very, very important and so what it means is that you want to be going somewhere
that's good enough so that the going is worth the while. And you can ask yourself that and that's partly what we try to build into the future
authoring program which is, well, we know what's wrong with life it's right with suffering and
insufficiency and deception and evil it's all of that obviously okay what would
make the journey worthwhile or you can ask yourself that it's like all right in
order to bear up under this load what is it that I would need to be striving to
attain and if you ask yourself that, that's to knock,
and the door will open.
That's what that means.
If you ask yourself that, then you will find an answer,
and you'll think, you'll shrink away from it,
you'll think, well, there's no way I could do that.
It's like, well, you don't know what you could do.
You don't know what's possible.
And you're not as much as you could be.
And so God only knows what you could do and have and give
if you sacrificed everything to it.
And that's the reason Abraham is constantly making sacrifices.
It's archaic, right?
He's burning up like baby lambs, but like, well, they're alive.
You know, that's something.
And they're valuable, and that's something.
It's, you have to admit, even if you think about it as a modern person, that the act of
sacrificing something might have some dramatic compulsion to it, you know, to go out into
a flock and to take something that's newborn and to cut its throat and to bleed it and
to burn it, might be a way of indicating to yourself that you're actually serious about
something.
And it isn't so obvious that we have rituals of seriousness like that now.
And so it's not so obvious that we're actually serious about anything.
And so maybe that's not such a good thing.
And so maybe we shouldn't be thinking that these people were so archaic
and primitive and superstitious.
It's possible that they knew something that we don't.
And certainly in the Abrahamic stories, one of the things that maintains Abraham's covenant with God
is his continual willingness to sacrifice.
And it's so that sacrificial issue is so important
because you are not committed to something
unless you're willing to sacrifice for it.
Commitment and sacrifice are the same thing.
And I think it's borders on miraculous
that those concepts are embedded into this narrative
at the level of dramatic action,
you know, instead of abstract explanation,
people are acting this out.
And the fundamental conception is so profound
that it's really quite awe-inspiring,
it's breathtaking, really, when you understand
what message is trying to be conveyed.
You have to make sacrifices, what do you have to sacrifice?
You have to sacrifice that which is most valuable to you currently that's stopping you.
And God only knows what that is.
It's certainly the worst of you.
It's certainly that.
And God only knows to what degree you're in love with the worst of you.
So, well, so you move from the unbearable present to the ideal future.
And you can't help that.
You have to live in a structure like that.
That's your house.
That's another way of thinking about it.
And if you want to get your house in order and if you want it to be a place that you
can live properly, then you have to plan the future that is perfect.
And then I think, well, what does that mean? And it means it's good for you,
right? And one of the things that I do all the time with my clinical and consulting clients is
try to figure out what would be good for them. But we do more than that. We try to think, okay,
well, how can we set this up so it's really good for you? And that all the side consequences of that
are things that are good for other people.
And so because people are often also timid
about trying to get something that's good for themselves
because they feel that it's selfish
or that they don't deserve it.
So we set it up so that, well, look,
we're gonna set it up so that it's plainly obvious
that this will not harm the structure of the universe.
For you to have what you need
and to do it in a way that's
of benefit to other people. There's no downside to that. And so it's okay. It's okay if you reach out
and take that. And one of the things that's interesting about the biblical stories, the Abrahamic
stories as well, is that God doesn't really seem to be opposed to this success of the people that he's
chosen. You know, what happens to them is as they progress
through their journey is they get larger flocks
and they get more authority and they get more,
they get life more abundant.
That's what happens.
God doesn't seem to be a miser in the Old Testament.
It's like if you put in the effort and you accept the covenant
and you make the sacrifice,
is then you get to be successful and maybe successful
beyond your wildest dreams.
And that that's actually seems to be okay with God.
And that's pretty cool given that general notion
of Old Testament God is that all he's doing
is casting out curses and death wherever he happens
to wander.
And I mean, there's certainly no shortage of that.
But again, it seems to me
that that's very good news and that you also don't have to be perfect in order to have that happen.
And then the other thing, this is the issue about going into the unknown. It's like, well, if you leave
your country and your kin and your father's house and you go out into a land that your intuition guides
you to, you're going to undergo these radical transformations.
This is a sacrificial transformation too,
because you're moving forth rightly and voluntarily
into chaos, right?
And that's the same as the dragon fight,
that's the hero's story.
And what will happen there is that you will transform yourself.
And so the call to an ideal is also the call
to a sequence of deaths and rebirths that move you closer and closer to the ideal.
And that's what God is calling Abraham to do.
In the first sentence of this story, you see these things echoed in the strangest places.
And so these are stills that I took from Pinocchio and this little
cricket, so it's the still small voice, right?
That's the thing that calls to you.
It's your conscience in part, it's your intuition in part.
And it's the thing that opens up the great book of the world, the great sacred book of the
world, and that's what happens here, right?
And the animators are at pains to show you that.
It's a leather bound book with guilt lettering.
It's a valuable book.
And it's something that's quiet that's showing it to you.
You have to meditate, let's say.
You have to be somewhere where the world isn't
drowning you out in order to understand how to open this,
to listen to that voice that tells you where you should go,
what you should do next.
And then what happens is that something
beckons to you.
In the night, it's a star, right?
It's something that transcends the horizon.
It's glitters, it's brilliant.
It's not day to day.
It's something that's beyond you.
It's something that represents a transcendent ideal
and that makes it manifest to you
if you're quiet enough to listen.
And that's what you wish upon so strangely, right?
And people do that, they wish upon a star, they teach their children that, and they don't know why?
Well, what do you mean you wish upon a star? What in the world does that mean?
It means you lift your eyes to the heavens and make a pact with the transcendent.
And then what your heart's desire will come to you. That's what it means.
And you think, well, that's not naive.
It's the most sophisticated thing that you can know.
And it's the birth of the hero, right?
Because that's the nativity star, obviously.
And this is where it takes place.
It's just anywhere.
And the person in it is just. It's just anywhere and the person
and it is just a carpenter and a toy maker.
But that's pretty good.
A carpenter, if you're a deceitful carpenter,
then your house falls down.
And if you're a toy maker, then you love children.
That's a good start.
So a japaedo who lives in this little,
it's not a grand house.
It's just an everyday house,
but everything that's happening and it is good.
And so that means it's a palace
because everything that's happening is good.
There's a saying, and I don't remember where it comes from,
that it's better to have bread and water in peace
than a feast and conflict.
And that's not a saying.
That's just the starkest possible description of the truth,
because there's nothing worse than eating a grand meal
with people you hate and despise
that are at each other's throats.
It's much better to have bread and water in peace.
It's not, it's just clear-headed analysis
of the structure of the world to say things like that.
And so the magical transformation can happen
in the most mundane of places,
because, and the reason for that is that the mundane
nature of places is in illusion because every
place is the potential
birthplace of the kingdom of God. That's the case
And so Jebetto, he's a good guy
He has a kitten, you know the kitten likes him. He makes puppets and he's humble person
and he knows that compared to the ideal that he's attempting to subscribe to, that he's not
a baste before it or anything like that. He's not despicable in relationship to it. But the reason
he's on his knees is because the thing he's pointing at is above him. You know, it wouldn't be the right aim if it wasn't above him.
And so the fact that he's on his knees, so to speak,
is only an indication that his aim is proper,
because you should be on your knees to something
that you actually admire.
And if you don't feel like being on your knees in front of it,
then perhaps you don't actually admire it.
And then that means you haven't got the stage set properly.
It could be, it should be something that fills you with awe, your
aim should, should be at something that fills you with awe. Because what, why, why do something
else? Well, perhaps because it's easy and perhaps because it's malevolent and all of those
things, but, but those are no answer to the problems that be set you. They just make things worse, and that's clear.
And so then, Jopetto, having made his pact, his covenant, just like Abraham, he falls into
a dream, right?
He falls into a dream, and the rest of the movie actually takes place in a dream, and it's
a dream, it's the dream within which transformation takes place.
And that's laid out, at least in part part time stops in the Pinocchio story and everything
happens to Pinocchio in some sense in a land that's outside of normal time and that's the
infinite archetypal space and that's a real place, that's a real place. The infinite and the
finite coexist and most of the time we're in the place of the finite but that doesn't mean that the
place of the infinite doesn't exist. It just means that we can't get access to it. We just get intimations of it from time to time.
You know, when things are going perfectly well for you
on those rare occasions where everything comes together
for the brief moment you inhabit that divine place
and you have some sense of what your life could be like
if you organized it from the smallest element
to the largest element and that's a place that you can inhabit,
if not forever in a manner that at least felt like forever.
Because of Jepetto's decision,
the transcendent manifests itself.
It takes the form of the blue fairy here,
that's the positive element of nature.
Right, so we could say, well, nature,
it's not so clear that she's on your side, right,
she's the red queen in Alice in Wonderland
who runs around screaming when you go down the rabbit hole.
She runs around screaming off with her heads
and who says, in my kingdom, you have to run as fast
as you can just to stay in the same place.
That's Mother Nature, but then we might say,
well, how do we know that Mother Nature's attitude towards you
isn't negative because your attitude towards things isn't proper?
And that's what this film attempts to indicate.
The idea is that if you aim properly, then nature aligns itself behind you.
Now it also arrays itself in front of you, perhaps even as an antagonist, but the power that it provides you with from within might be sufficient to overcome
it from without. And I think that the clinical evidence is clear about that, because one of the things
that we do know is that if you take people who are confronting terrible things and shrinking from them,
and shrinking from them. And you teach them how to structure their behavior
so that they can advance with courage.
Everything works better for them.
Their fears decrease, and their character grows.
And so there might be enough of nature within us
to help us withstand the nature that's outside of us.
And it depends, at at least to some degree
and how it is that we orient ourselves in the world
to some unknowable degree.
Now, Jeopardo wants an autonomous individual as a son.
And that's also something that makes him a great person
because autonomous individuals
have their own will.
And if you're a tyrant, it's the last thing that you're going to want.
And if you're the tyrant whose jealous of his son, it's even more so the last thing
you're ever going to want.
And so to aim high and to want the development of the autonomous individual are the same
thing.
And I would say that's the core story in some sense of Western culture,
is that to aim high and to develop
the autonomous individual are the same thing.
And that's what happens in Pinocchio.
That's what happens in the story of Abraham.
And the transformation takes place,
the magical transformation.
And in the Pinocchio story,
one of the things that's so interesting about it,
and this is part of its mythological substructure, from the scientific perspective, there's only two determining
forces with regards to the destiny of the individual.
There's nature, deterministic, and culture deterministic.
And then scholars wrangle about which of those is the greater force.
But in mythological stories, there's always a third element.
And that third element is something like autonomous consciousness.
And there's no place for autonomous consciousness
in the deterministic story of nature and culture.
But we all act as if autonomous consciousness is the primary reality.
And the biblical stories are predicated on the idea that
autonomous consciousness is what gives rise to the world.
And I don't think that we're in a position to presume that that is necessarily an error.
And so what that means is to aim high and to develop the autonomous individual is simultaneously
the decision to formulate an allegiance with the conscious power that brings being into existence.
with the conscious power that brings being into existence.
And that all takes place inside this little puppet. And then he has his adventures, right?
He's still half jackass and half deceptive,
but he's still despite all the errors.
He has the capacity to move forward and to transform into something, to transform himself into something
that can be properly considered described as a true son of God, and that's the right aim.
And it works like this as far as I can tell, you know, when I talk to people about doing the
future authoring program,
they often put it off, and it's not surprising because it's hard.
And be it, but it's more than that, they think, well, I don't know how to write.
I'm going to do a bad job.
I don't really like assignments.
I'm going to have to do it perfectly.
I need to wait till I have enough time.
And like one of those is enough to stop you cold and all five of them you're just done and so I tell people
Do it half-hazardly a
tiny bit at a time and badly
Because you can do that. I tell my students when they're doing their thesis master thesis
Right a really bad first draft and then we have a little conversation about that because they don't think I mean that
Because it sounds like a cliche in some sense.
It's not a cliche.
It's not a cliche at all.
It means you're a terrible writer.
But if someone put a gun to your head and said,
you have to have your 100 page thesis done by next Monday,
or I'll shoot you.
But I don't care how terrible it is.
You would sit down and write it.
And the thing is, then you have it, right? Then you have, you would sit down and write it.
And the thing is, then you have it, right?
Then you have something, and then you can fix it.
You can iterate and fix it. That bad first draft, that's the most valuable thing.
And so that's what you need. You need a bad first draft of yourself.
And there's an idea that Jung developed about the trickster and the gesture, the comedian, right?
The trickster is the precursor to the savior.
That's one of the things I learned from Jung that was just,
it's so unlikely, you'd never think that.
It's so amazing that that might be the case,
but the satirical and the ironic and the troublemaker,
the comedian, the fool, the fool is the precursor
to the savior.
Why? Because you're a fool when you start something new. And so if you're not willing to be the fool, the fool is the precursor to the savior. Why? Because you're a fool when you start something new.
And so if you're not willing to be a fool, then you'll never start anything new.
And if you never start anything new, then you won't develop.
And so the willingness to be a fool is the precursor to transformation.
And that's the same as humility.
And so if you're going to write your destiny, you can do a bad first job.
You're going to get smarter as you move forward.
That's the thing is that so something beckons to you. That's what happens here.
Maybe the star that you pet a wish on was the wrong damn star, but at least it was a star.
Right? At least it was in the sky. At least it moved him forward. And so you say in your life,
well, something grips you and fills you with interest. And you think, well, should I do that? And the answer is, if not that, then something. What if it's a mistake?
It's a mistake. Rest assured. What do you know? You're going to stumble around, right?
And what's going to happen is this, you're going to move, you're going to not stay in
stasis. You're not going to wander around in circles. And I see people like that. They said, well, I never knew what to do and now I'm 40.
It's like, that's not so good. That's not so good. And you might say, well,
and there is a literature too that suggests that people are a lot more
unhappy when they look back on their lives.
About the things they didn't do, then they are about the mistakes they made while they were doing things.
And so that's really worth thinking about too, because there's redemptive mistakes.
And a redemptive mistake would be a mistake that you make when you go out and try to do something.
You know, you actually, you think, okay, I'm going to try to do this.
And you're not good at it. You make a bunch of mistakes. It's like, what's the consequence?
If you pay attention, you're not quite so stupid anymore.
That's the thing is, you've been informed by the results of your errors.
And so what happens is, you follow the beacon, you follow the light,
and you're blind, so you don't know where the light is.
It's dimly apprehended only, and you're afraid to follow it.
But you decide to take some stumbling steps towards it.
And as you take stumbling steps towards it, you you decide to take some stumbling steps towards it. And as you take
stumbling steps towards it, you become illuminated and enlightened and informed
because of the nature of your experience, because you're pushing yourself beyond
where you are and you're going into the country that you have not yet been in.
And you learn something. And so what happens then is the star moves. You move 10
feet towards it and you think, no, that's not right. I didn't get it right.
It isn't there.
It's actually there.
And so then you see it somewhere else
and you shift yourself slightly and you move forward.
And that's what happens is that you continue as you change.
The thing that guides you forward moves.
It's like God in the desert, in Egypt, the pillar of light that
you're following. It's moving. It's not a permanent thing. You move towards it and it
moves away. It guides you forward. And so you say, well, is what I may mean at? Paradise
itself. And the answer to that is no, because what do you know? You couldn't see Paradise
if it was right in front of you, but you might get a glimmer of it.
And so you move towards it and you grow.
And then the next time you open your eyes,
you see a little bit more clearly.
And that's what happens is that just happens over and over.
It keeps moving.
And so you move like this.
But the thing that's so cool is that all those zigs and zags, you say, and each of
those zags and zigs is a catastrophe. I hit a wall, my God, and then I had to die a little
bit, and I barely got back up. It's a phoenix transformation at each turn, and it's painful.
But the thing is, is that even though you've traveled 20 miles, let's say, on that road, and you've only moved three miles
forward.
You've moved three miles forward instead of falling backwards because that's the thing
too, is that if you stand still, you fall backwards.
You cannot stand still because the world moves away from you if you stand still.
And there's no stasis.
There's only backwards.
And so if you're not moving backwards,
forwards, then you're moving backwards.
And that's more of the underlying truth of the Matthew principle,
to those who have everything more will be given.
From those who have nothing, everything will be taken.
It's a warning.
Do not stay in one place. Well, as you zig and sag, maybe
the cataclysm of each transformation starts to lessen. There's not so much of you that
has to die with every mistake. And maybe you end up oriented at least reasonably properly.
And if you were sensible, that would have been your trip.
But it wasn't, right?
It's that.
And perhaps it's a lot worse than that.
Perhaps there's no shortage of backtracking,
but it doesn't matter because as you stumble forward,
you illuminate and inform yourself.
And perhaps that's partly because the world is made of information.
And if you encounter it and tangle with it,
then it informs you and then you become informed
and then you're information and then you're ready.
And so God says,
to Abraham, I will make of the a great nation.
And I will bless thee and make thy name great and thou
shall be a blessing. That's a good offer fundamentally. I mean it means what
does it mean to be made a great nation of? Well, perhaps it has something to do directly with your descendants,
but I don't think it's just that.
If you're a force for good in the world,
then that radiates out from you.
And if you're good enough, it's difficult to say
how much of an impact on things you could have.
You know, Dostyewski, who is a very crazy person,
partly because of his epilepsy,
he said, a man is not of his epilepsy, he said,
a man is not only responsible for everything he does,
but for everything that everyone else does.
And you think, well, no.
No.
No.
No.
And yes, sometimes no.
Sometimes that's what you think if your cataclysmically
depressed, right, is that your sins are so egregious that they're unforgivable and that in some manner,
you're at fault for everything that's terrible with the world.
But there's actually truth in that, and there's actually redemptive truth in that,
is that things wouldn't be so bad if you weren't so far from what you could be,
and that's terribly pessimistic
because it's all on you, man,
but it's terribly optimistic because God,
there's a lot of things that you could do.
And if you're crying out for something to do,
then that's the best news you could possibly have.
It's like, things aren't so good, but neither are you.
So if you stop doing the things that you knew to be destructive,
which is the right place to start, you know,
if you're going to clean up your room, what do you do first?
Well, you just get rid of the mess.
You know, and you know what, no one has to come and
tell you, hopefully, what's the worst mess?
It's just it announces itself to you.
And you can certainly know yourself.
And this is a very easy meditative exercise to sit down
and think, OK, I'm doing one thing really stupidly that I should stop doing.
It's like how long is it going to take you to figure out what that is?
It's about two seconds, right? You've known it forever,
and you could even make it less demanding, you could say,
there's some stupid things that I'm doing
that I know are stupid and wrong,
that I could stop doing, that I know are stupid and wrong, that I could stop doing,
that I would stop doing.
And then you can just start with that.
And you can just do that.
And maybe it's just a little thing, although it's not because it's a step forward on the
proper voyage.
It's not a small thing.
And you think, well, what would happen?
You could say, let's do this for a year, even a month. Just try not to do things you know to be stupid and wrong for a month. And that means not to say
things you know to be stupid and wrong as well. Maybe that's the most important thing. Just do it as
an experiment. See what happens. And it's so fun because I have people writing to me from all over
the world who are saying they're doing that. They're saying, well, you know, I cleaned up my room and then I stopped saying stupid things and my God, it's like things are way better. It's like,
who would have guessed it? You know? And so it's low hanging fruit, man. Because that's
the other thing. If there's a lot of things wrong with you, then it's really easy to
start fixing it, you know? You've got so, you've got so much territory that you can inhabit.
I will make of the Great Nation. I will bless thee.
That's good. I mean, the whole nation thing, that's positive,
but to have God on your side, that's, you know,
you might want that when things get rough, that would be good,
and make that name great. And that would show be a blessing.
Wonderful. That's a good deal.
When I will bless them that bless thee, that's good too, and curse him that cursed thee, and
in thee, shall all families of the earth be blessed. That's something. That's something, it wouldn't be something if you could wake up and your day was composed
in part of people thanking you for all the good things you've done in the world.
Wouldn't that be good?
It's not impossible for that to happen.
So Abraham departed, yes, as the Lord had spoken unto him,
and Lot went with him, and Abraham was 70 and five years
when he departed out of Iran.
That's old.
Now Abraham lives a long time, but this is also part of this story.
So he has a wife who can't have children.
He has nothing.
Obviously, he's been hanging around dad's shack for a little too long,
given that he's 75, right?
It's time to get on the fire lit underneath him a bit.
And so he's not got much going for him,
but he still decides to move forward.
And I've seen this too, you know,
like if you don't have your destiny in hand
by your time you're 30, it's rough.
You start hurting.
And if you don't have your destiny in hand
by the time you're 40, then you really start hurting.
And 40 is a real
fork in the road. The fork in the road, that's always where you meet the devil by the way. And
that's because every time you have to make a decision, the possibility of evil backings, that's why
that is. I had a friend, I've told you a little about him, and he killed himself just after 40.
He had had a book published,
and he was a very small press.
He was quite a good writer,
but he could not get himself together,
and it hit him too hard at 40.
And I'm not saying that it's hopeless at 40.
I'm not saying that,
and I'm not saying that partly because of these verses,
but also partly because of what I've seen
in my clinical practice.
I've had people come to me who have had very chaotic
and ill spent lives, let's say,
who were in that neighborhood of age,
and it's true for people who are older as well,
who then decided to make a real effort
and to try to make where they were better,
instead of being better about where they weren't,
because that's the bitterness that really does you in.
It's really not good.
It's the opposite of gratitude.
It's the manifestation of resentment.
It makes you malevolent.
It's very, very bad to be bitter.
It's not, it's not, it's hell to be bitter.
And if you're 40 and you're not successful,
then you have to accept your lot.
And you have to start to improve what's right in front of you.
And if you do that, it doesn't take very long.
It's quite interesting to watch people.
Things can be a lot better in six months,
and they can be way better in two years.
Like, it's a struggle, uphill struggle,
but it's by no means impossible.
And I don't know, again, what the limit of that is,
I suppose it depends to some degree on the degree of your commitment.
But anyway, so, Aiber, it's another indication of the real validity of this story.
God isn't setting this up to be easy, right?
Abraham is old, and his wife is old too, and more than that she's barren,
how is he going to be the father of nations?
How is he going to be successful?
Well, the initial departure point is insufficient,
radically insufficient, and that's very inspiring
because it means that you can start from where you are.
So Abram departed as the Lord had spoken
on to him and Lot went with him.
And Abram was 75 years old when he departed out of her hand.
And Abram took Sarai's wife and Lot lawt his brother's son and all their substance that
they had gathered.
And he know he has a relationship with lawt, right?
And he doesn't have his own son, but he his brother died.
And so he takes his nephew as his son.
That's grateful.
You know, he could be very angry and have nothing to do with him because he didn't get
his own son, but that isn't that isn't what happens is he's offered a substitute let's say and he accepts it and so good for him you know and and
that's and that's also something that I've seen that characterizes people who can make the best of a
bad lot is they don't get exactly what they want but something comes along that offers possibilities that are sufficient, perhaps, if exploited properly, and they open their heart and
welcome them in instead of rejecting them in bitterness. And so that's a good
thing, and that's part of Abraham's character. And Abraham took Sarai's wife and
lot his brother's son and all their substance that they had gathered, and all the
souls that they had gotten in her hand, and they went forth to go into the land of Canaan into exile,
let's say, and into the land of Canaan they came.
And that's another repetition of the transformation story, right?
You have to go to a land where you're not welcome.
An Abram pass through the land
onto the place of C-Cechem, unto the plain of Mora, and the
Canaanite was then in the land, and the Lord appeared unto Abraham and said unto thy
seed, I will give you this land, and there he built an altar to the Lord who appeared unto
him.
And he removed from then son to a mountain on the east of Bethel and pitched his tent having
Bethel on the west and high on the east, and there he built an altar unto the Lord and
called upon the name of the Lord. Now we don't understand these rituals precisely. I don't know if the people who did this engaged in a
meditative ritual was not the idea that you take something of value, you do this, you undertake this
dramatic transformation, a life and death transformation, and is that an aid to meditation? And what do you do?
Do you sit down and think?
Do you pray being to ask, you know, to, what do I do next?
How do I orient myself in the world?
It's a useful exercise to do that.
I think it's something that people could do every morning.
I think it's useful to sit down and think, okay,
what's the most important thing I should do today?
What, I have an array of things that call to me to be done,
some of which I will do with joy, and some of which I will bear as responsibilities,
but they array themselves in front of me.
And what should I attend to first?
Well, do you ask or do you decide?
And it seems to me when I do it, because I do it all the time.
I do it every morning. I try to sit down and think, okay
I've got things that I would like to do and things that call to me out of necessity
What do I do first and it's not so much a decision as it is a question and
I don't know what I'm calling on it's I'm calling on my capacity to think I suppose, but that's not my capacity exactly
calling on my capacity to think, I suppose, but that's not my capacity, exactly.
I can commune with whatever provides answers
and I can think that that's me thinking, but.
And that I believe that I can't think.
I do believe that I can consciously think,
but that's not the same as calling for inspiration.
It's not the same process,
just like a dream is not conscious thinking.
It's something that happens to you and that kind of inspiration is also something that happens to you.
Because I ask myself, well, what's the most important thing I could do next?
And then I have an answer to that, but it isn't because I decided exactly.
I've decided that I'll do it, whatever it is, and that I want to know what it is. Those are the
decisions. But there's an involuntary aspect to the sorting
that occurs.
And that's the psychological equivalent, I suppose, to this.
And I guess the sacrifice is, when I feel
that I will do whatever it is that calls to be done,
then I don't do the other things that I might want to do. And that's a sacrifice.
It's, to me, it's the proper sacrifice because my sense is that things don't go
properly unless you do what's most important. And if I want things to go
properly and I do, because I've had my taste of things not going properly. I want things to go properly.
And so then it's not so difficult to do what's necessary
to do what makes things go properly
under those circumstances.
And it's partly, see, this is partly why the story
of Sodom and Gomorrah is embedded in the Abrahamic stories,
I think, because that's an apocalyptic story, right?
If things go badly enough, the whole city is destroyed.
And then, and the reason it goes badly is because the people in the city do not behave properly.
And the people in the city might be you.
And so if you're not behaving properly, then you go and so does the city.
And maybe you don't want, maybe you do want that.
But maybe you don't want that.
And if you don't want that, then maybe,
and you know that if you don't do things properly,
then it's you and the city.
If you actually know that,
then maybe that terrifies you badly enough
so that you're willing to make the sacrifice
to do the right things instead of the impulsive things that you might otherwise want to do.
You know, I learned from Victor Frankl and Carl Jung and from Alexander Solzhenitsen, and
from many of the people whose works on the Holocaust that I read, and on the catastrophes in the Soviet Union. And the people who studied it most deeply always came to the same conclusion.
The state became corrupted because each individual allowed themselves to be corrupted, or
perhaps participated joyfully in the process of being corrupted.
And the consequence of that was the end of the world.
And so what that means is that if you don't behave properly, then you bring about the
end of the world.
And maybe you think, well, that's only the end of your world, fair enough, or maybe
it's the only the end of your family's world, you know, which I suppose might give you
some pause.
But there's more to it than that because you're connected to everyone else and what you do that isn't good
Distributes itself and all the things you don't do that could be good take away from the whole
And so if you know that and I do think you know that if you take it seriously because if you look at
think you know that if you take it seriously because if you look at the historical events, the cataclysmic events of the 20th century seriously, I do not think that you can fail
to come to that conclusion.
And Abraham journeyed going on still towards the south.
That's interesting, because to go south means to go downhill.
It's not good to go south.
It's cloak-wheel for going to where you shouldn't go.
And so this is what happens to Abraham, you know,
he, his assent is preceded by a descent.
And that's very common in life, I would say.
And so the redemptive element of this narrative
is that if the covenant is constructed properly,
so it's an ark, which is your decision
to align yourself with God for all intents and purposes,
then even the journey south can be part of a broader journey upward.
And there was a famine in the land.
That's Mother Nature failing to cooperate.
I mean, that's got to be pretty disheartening for Abraham, don't you think?
Because he finally gets it together when he's 75 to leave.
And then, you know, because God says, well, it's, you know, to get going.
And so the first place he goes, everyone's starving to death.
It's like, you know, you might think about that as a test of faith, wouldn't you say?
But he keeps going.
And then what happens? Well, he has to go to Egypt.
So great, he goes where he's starving, where everyone's starving.
And then to get away from where everyone's starving, he goes to a tyranny.
So the whole beginning of the story is not particularly
auspicious.
And Abram went down into Egypt to Sojourn there
for the famine was grievous in the land.
It's a repetition of the same idea again.
There's downhill voyage out into chaos.
It's repeated over and over that the beginning of Abraham's
journey is basically a sequence of experiences
of exile, chaos, tyranny, and catastrophe.
Well you should be able to relate to that.
You know how hard it is to get things together.
You know, you go out to do what you're supposed to do, say, and there's your beset by the
intransigence of the world and failure.
Well, so what are you supposed to do about that?
Well, maintain your faith in the good
and continue to move forward.
That's the idea.
And part of that, even if you don't buy the metaphor,
it's like, what are you gonna do instead?
That won't make it worse.
So even if it isn't an op that you're pursuing, you're at least for stalling the transformation
of the chaos of your life into sheer hell.
And that can certainly happen.
You see people who are having a terrible time, and then you see people who are having
a terrible time who are also in hell.
And it's a lot better to just have a terrible time than to have a terrible time and be in hell
at the same time.
And it came to pass when he was come to near to enter into Egypt that he said unto Sarah
his wife, behold now, I know that thou art a fair woman to look upon.
Therefore it shall come to pass when the Egyptians shall see that they shall say this is his wife
and they will kill me, but they will save the alive.
So look, I mean, Abraham is really having a rough time.
He's a failure, right?
I mean, he's wandering around through the land of starvation.
Now he's going to go be a quasi-slave in Egypt.
He has this incredibly attractive wife, and all he can look forward to is the fact that
the most successful man in Egypt, the Pharaoh,
will take her from him.
So he's got the whole embitterment thing pretty much nailed down as far as I can tell.
And this is when he makes one of his errors, let's say.
And one of the errors that humanizes him say, I pray thee that thou art my sister,
that it may be well for me for thy sake,
and my soul shall live because of thee."
And it came to pass that when Abraham was come in Egypt,
the Egyptians beheld the woman that was she was very fair.
The princes also of Pharaoh saw her and commended her before Pharaoh,
and the woman was taken into Pharaoh's house.
And he entreated Abraham well for her sake,
and he had sheep and oxen, and he asked,
as in menuses and men servants
and made servants and sheauses and camels.
So actually things work out pretty well for Abram
despite his deceit, right?
Which is quite interesting.
And I guess it's because if the overarching structure
is solid, something like that, it's something like that.
Then errors can still be forgiven to speak about it from a metaphorical perspective.
And the Lord plagued Pharaoh in his house with great plagues because of Sirai Abram's wife.
Well, it doesn't seem very fair, but because the Pharaoh didn't know, but it's not the right way
to look at it. The right way to look at it. See, there's a story later in the Bible about David.
And David, David could be a pretty bad guy, you know? So one of the things he does is when he becomes king, he's in his castle, and he's looking over the city, and he sees a woman bathing nude, sun bathing nude on a roof out on the city, and he's smitten by
her, floored by her, and he has inquiries made about who she is, her name is Bathsheba,
and he finds out who her husband is, and her husband actually happens to be a general
in his army.
And he arranges for that general to be put at the thick of the battle and killed, and
then he takes Bathsheba.
So, and the Lord is not pleased by that.
Let's put it that way.
And that's interesting.
You know, it's an interesting story because you might say,
well, why can't the king do whatever the hell he wants?
Like, seriously, he's the king.
He's not just, and he's not like the prime minister,
the president, right?
He's the king.
And so you might say, well, why is the king subject
to any rules whatsoever?
What's the rationale for the king being subject to rules?
Well, the rationale emerges in these stories is there are social strictures that are such,
that even if the ruler of the land transgresses against them, there will be hell to pay.
And that's continually presented over and over in the biblical stories.
And it's a natural law sort of idea, it's that there are intrinsic rules to the
game of social human being, and maybe intrinsic rules to the natural state of human being.
You break those rules consciously or unconsciously at your absolute peril, and not only at your
peril, but at the peril of the state, and it doesn't matter who you are.
And so I would say this is actually an indication
of God being fair rather than being unfair,
because the rule here is, fair or not.
You don't get to take someone else's wife,
and the ignorance is no excuse.
Now you might say that's a little bit harsh,
and perhaps it is a little bit harsh,
but it's not without merit. The idea is not without merit and of course
Abram is complicit in this despite that he is successful. And Pharaoh called
Abram and said, what is this that thou hast done unto me? Why did so now tell me
that she was thy wife? Why said so? She is my sister.
I might have taken her to me to wife. Now therefore behold thy wife, take her and go thy way.
And Pharaoh commanded his men concerning him and they sent him away and his wife and all that he had.
And Abraham went out of Egypt, he and his wife and all that he had and locked with him into the south.
And Abraham was very rich in cattle and silver and in gold.
And that said, it's so interesting.
You know, Abraham, he goes to the place of famine and then he goes to the place of
tyranny and then he lies and then he almost loses his wife.
But because he goes, things work out for him.
And so, toay for that.
And he went on his journeys from the south, even to Bethel, and to the place where his tent
had been at the beginning between Bethel and High, and to the place of the altar, so he
makes another sacrifice, which he had made there at the first, and their Abram called
on the name of the Lord.
Well, so he's had an adventure, right?
He's finished his journey. And so there's a
culminating point in this narrative and now he doesn't know what to do. He's left the place he's
at. He doesn't know what to do. So it's time to build an altar and make a sacrifice and figure out
and to ask for divine guidance once again to figure out, okay, well, I'm done that. Being there,
done that. What's next? And the question is asked seriously,
and this is something to consider,
if you want to know what to do, ask seriously,
and say, I'm willing to see,
Abraham sacrifices a life to his vow.
Well, so what do you do?
Well, you don't sacrifice an animal,
you don't make a blood sacrifice,
you do it psychologically.
You say, I'm going to sacrifice my life to the same.
That's what you do if you're serious.
What do I do next?
Well, I'm going to sacrifice my life to the same.
What is it that I should do that's worth
sacrificing my life to?
That's a serious question.
Well, and maybe that's the sort of question
that people don't ask because they're afraid
of the seriousness of the question and the and the
magnitude of the potential answer. Do you really want to know what you should
do that would be worth sacrificing your life to? Well, the answer is yes because
it's worth it, but the answer is also no because really it's your life, you know?
What if you're wrong?
And you're probably wrong.
But maybe that doesn't matter, maybe it doesn't matter, because maybe the rightness is
in the process and not in the decision, right?
Because it's the beginning of a sequence of decisions, as we've already pointed out,
to the place of the altar which he had made there at the first and their Abram called
on the name of the Lord. And Lord also, and Lord also which went with Abraham Abraham had flocks and herds intense and the land was not able to bear them
That they might dwell together for their substance was great so that they could not dwell together and there was a strife
Between the herdsman of Abrams cattle the cowboys and the herdsman of Laud's cattle and the Canaanite and the parasite dwell then in the land
Well, and that's interesting too because Abrams having a pretty good time of it now, right?
He's out of starvation. Hey, that's good.
He's out of the tyranny. Now he's kind of wealthy.
And then the story flips on him. He's wealthy.
And now a bad thing happens to him, right?
And so he's got all this wealth and so does his nephew.
Now they can't get along because they have too much stuff.
So that's quite comical as well. I think that's a comic interlude here. Now they handle it properly
And Abram said unto law let there be no strife. I pray thee between me and thee and between my herdman and thy herdman because we're brothers
Is not the whole land before thee separate thyself? I pray thee from me if you'll take the left
Then I'll take the right or if you depart take the left, then I'll take the right,
or if you depart to the right, then I'll go to the left.
So basically they sit down and say, well,
one of us is going to get out of town,
and it can be one or the other.
It doesn't really matter.
We can flip a coin or, but we have to separate.
And so they do it amicably.
And Lot lifted up his eyes and looked at,
all of the plane of Jordan, that it was well-watered everywhere
So that's an intimation of Eden, right? Because you remember Eden means well-watered place
Before the Lord destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah
Even as the Garden of the Lord like the land of Egypt as thou commest unto Zor so interesting you get foreshadowed
We hear again, right? So
Lot and Abram are making the decision about where to go and Lawt looks
out and sees a reasonable place. But then this warning comes up that there's a city out there.
There's a place out there where things are not going to go well. Things are being done badly and
things are not going to go well. Then Lawt chose them, all the plane of Jordan and Lawt,
journey to East, and they separated themselves,
the one from the other.
Abram dwelled in the land of Canaan,
then Lot dwelled in the cities of the plane,
and pitched his tent towards Sodom.
But the men of Sodom were wicked,
and sinners before the Lord exceedingly.
Now, the word sin, I've mentioned this to you before,
I think, it's an interesting word.
It's the derivation of a archery term,
in my understanding of its derivation.
And the Greek word was Hamartia.
And Hamartia is an archery term, which
means to miss the bullseye.
And you think it's worth thinking about that metaphorically,
because you've got to think about all the ways
that you could miss the bullseye, right?
You could close your eyes.
That's very common.
You could just not lift up the damn bow and arrow
to begin with. You could just not lift up the damn bow and arrow to begin with.
You could face the wrong way.
You could be unskilled in your aim.
But I also like the archery metaphor
because human beings are built on a hunting platform.
And we always aim at things.
We're things that were ballistic creatures on a trajectory always.
And we're always aiming at something.
We're always aiming at the mark, which is, of course,
what you do when you hunt, right?
Because you have to hit the mark precisely.
And that's what we're like.
And so what we're like that psychologically,
we have to aim at something and then move towards it.
And so to sin is to miss the mark,
is to miss the bullseye, to fail to take aim,
to aim badly, aim carelessly, or to not aim at all.
And that says, well, that's like a sin of omission.
That's to not do.
And then to be wicked is to aim at what you know you shouldn't aim at.
And again, I don't think of that as an external morality precisely.
I think that you can read the entire biblical narrative, again, from a psychological perspective
and say, we're not talking about external codes of conduct here, although we could.
We're not.
The wickedness that's being described is the act of you doing something that you know to
be wrong.
Period.
You know, and you may do something you don't know if it's wrong or not.
That isn't the sort of thing that we're talking about. And we're not talking about the things that
you do that are right, that other people think are wrong. We're not talking about those
either. We're talking about those things that you consciously do, although you know them
to be wrong yourself. And that's the things that seem to get people into the most trouble
in these stories. And I believe that to be the case. I think that's very accurate psychologically.
It's amazing because I see this all the time.
If you do something wrong and it's because you're ignorant,
you don't know better.
It doesn't go well for you.
That's the case.
But if you do something wrong and you know it's wrong,
the punishment is manifold.
And I think the reason for that, I think the reason for that,
is because that makes you cane. It means you betray your own ideal, right? If you just don't
know, well you haven't betrayed your ideal, you're just not together, maybe
you're even willfully blind. But if you do something you know to be wrong, then
you've betrayed your own ideal. And that lands you. Cain says to God, one once Cain
destroys Abel, he says, I cannot bear my punishment.
destroys Abel, he says, I cannot bear my punishment. And the Lord said unto Abram, after that Lord was separated from, lift up now thine eyes.
Look upward.
And look from the place where there are, northward and southward and eastward and westward,
for all the land which thou seeest to thee I will give it and to thy seed forever.
And I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth,
so that if a man can number the dust of the earth,
then shall all thy seed be numbered.
Arise, walk through the land, in the length of it,
and the breadth of it, for I will give it unto thee.
In the cathedral at Shart, I can't say that properly because by French it's non-existent.
So a cathedral is a cross and the transformation takes place at the crux of the cross, which
is exactly right because the transformation takes place at the point of maximal suffering
and the cathedral is designed to indicate that, right,
symbolically.
Now, what happens in a religious ceremony
is also a journey.
And it's a journey, in some sense, to the Holy City.
And then that's also played out in the idea of pilgrimage,
right, because you go to the Holy City.
Actually, you go to Jerusalem or wherever
it is that you think the Holy City is. you go there and that takes you out of your country
and away from your kin and away from your family into the strange land and as you make the journey,
you transform and when you come back you're not the same. That's the Hobbit, right? That's the
story of the Hobbit. But let's say you can't afford to go on a pilgrimage. So you go to the cathedral at Shard and there's a huge maze on the ground.
And it's the world, northwest, south, and east, just as God describes here.
So it's laid out.
And you enter the maze at one side.
And in the middle is a stone pattern that looks like a flower.
And it's the place where being
wells forth and it's at the center of the cathedral. And what that means is that
if you accept your suffering, then you move to the place where the spirit of
being wells forth. That's what that means. And so you enter the maze and you walk
and it's divided into quadrants and you walk one quadrant completely
and then the maze pathway takes you into the next quadrant and you walk that completely and then
it takes you to the third one and the fourth one and then when you walk the maze completely
everywhere when you've gone everywhere in the world north south east and west where you
when you traverse the territory completely then you come to the center, and then it's yours.
And that's what this is.
So I've noticed when I've been renovating houses,
I like to do that.
I paid a lot of attention to the psychological process
of house renovation.
Because I learned from Jung that Jung said this.
This is something, man.
He said, because he was talking about the stages of integration, psychological integration.
And he looked beyond Piaget, I would say.
Although Piaget looked very far, he said, here's a conjunction.
You have to get your rationality and your emotion together.
That's a male, female conjunction symbolically speaking, male rationality, female emotionality.
You want to bring those together
so that they're oriented in the same direction.
Your emotions and your rationality serve the same purpose.
So then you're unified in mind and spirit, let's say.
But that's not good enough.
Once you've got that together, then you have a body
and then that's a male female conjunction.
Again, a divine conjunction, the recreation of Adam before his division
into female and male,
and the reconstruction of the Androgenous Christ,
that all those ideas are linked together.
So now you have your emotion and your rationality
moving in the same direction,
but you're not acting it out.
So now you have to unite that abstract part of you with your body and start acting out what you think and feel.
And that's the next conjunction, but it's not the last one. The last conjunction is when you realize that there is no distinction between you and your experience.
They're the same thing. And so then when you put together your house, you're putting together yourself.
thing and so then when you put together your house you're putting together yourself. So I've noticed in when I've lived in places, rented or owned, didn't matter.
Then if there were part of the place, if there was a part of the place that I hadn't attended
to, whatever that might mean, it might have been cleaned, it might have been fixed, but
it certainly meant at least thoroughly investigated.
Then that was chaos.
It was like the desert that part.
That's a way of thinking about it.
It wasn't mine, even if I owned it.
It wasn't mine.
I had to interact with it before it became mine.
And I had to interact with it,
and I had to put it in order,
and then it became mine.
And then, to the degree that it became mine
and was in order,
then I was also put in order.
Now, you know that because you go into places
that make you uncomfortable, and maybe it's your own house.
It's highly probable.
It's highly probable.
I walk into, well, Chinese doctors do this.
Traditional Chinese doctors, they go into places,
people's place, and they diagnose their health conditions
on the balance of Yin and Yang, chaos in order.
They walk into a house, this is easy in order. They walk into a house.
This is easy to do.
You walk into a house.
There's too much chaos.
Hey, you can detect that in no time flat.
Everything is out of order and chaotic.
You don't even want to be there.
You certainly don't want to open the refrigerator.
That's for sure.
And there are things that should have been done years ago
everywhere.
And every one of those things is a fight that hasn't happened.
And something that's been avoided. And you can't even walk in there and maintain your health.
As soon as you walk in there, you're sicker than you were when you were outside. And that's
one sort of place. And then another sort of place is you go in and you look at the living
room. And the person has vacuumed the living room, rug, and the lines that were vacuumed are parallel to one another.
And the furniture is covered with plastic, and you get a glass of water, and then just
as you're going to set it down on the coffee table, the person rushes over and puts a
coaster underneath it.
And everything in that house says to you that it would be a lot more perfect in that house
if you were either not there or dead.
And that's the message that the whole house is blasting at you.
And if you happen to live there, then you're going to be sick.
And what you're going to be sick from is too much order.
And in the other house, you're going to be sick from too much chaos.
And so when you interact with a house,
the unexplored parts are the chaos that parts that you have not yet contended with are the chaos that has not yet been transformed by your embodied,
logos action into habitable territory, and it does not belong to you.
Arise, walk through the land, in the length of it, and the breadth of it,
for I will give it unto thee. The neighbor and removed his tent and came and land, in the length of it, and the breadth of it, for I will give it
unto thee." The neighbor and removed his tent and came and dwelt in the plain of Mamra, which is in
Hebrew, and built there and all to run to the Lord. And it came to pass in the days of Amrifil,
King of Shinar, Ariac, King of Alessar, Chirta Lomor, there's a lot of kings. We won't talk about
them. These made war with Barra, King of Sodom, and with Persia, King of Gomessar, Chirta Lomor, there's a lot of kings. We won't talk about them. These made war with Barra king of Sodom
and with Persia king of Gomorrah,
Shinab king of Adma and the king of Bala, which is Zor.
And these were joined together in the veil of Siddham,
which is the salt sea.
Now this is actually very much relevant, hey?
Because you see, the veil of Siddham,
which is the salt sea, is the farthest south you can go if
south is down, because it's the Dead Sea, and the Dead Sea is the lowest place that there
is.
So what's happened is that there's chaos in the lowest place that there is.
That's what this story says.
And what happens to Lord is He gets tangled up in the chaos of the lowest place that there
is.
And in the 14th year came Chador Le Mora and the kings that were with him and smote the refaims and asterooth, Coneim, and the Zuzums and Ham and the Emons in
Shava, Curia, Curia Thame, and the Horites in their Mount Sire, unto Elparen,
which is by the wilderness, and they returned and came to Enmishpat, which is Kadesh.
And smote all the country, the Amalakites,
Amalakites and the Amarites that dwelt in, has a, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha Gamora and the king of Adma and the king of Zboim and the king of Bella, the same Zor. And they joined battle with
them in the Vale of Sidim. So this is absolute chaos and mayhem in the lowest place. It's hell,
essentially. With Chetalom or the king of Alam and with tidal king of nations and Amrifal,
king of Shinar and area king of Elazar, four kings with five.
And the veil of Sidham was full of slime pits, low and hell-like with war isn't enough.
They had to throw the slime pits in there.
Apparently, around the Dead Sea, there are pits of bitumen, like the tar pits in near
LA.
And so this seems to actually be historically accurate.
And the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah fled and fell there,
and they that remained fled to the mountain,
and they took their goods,
and they took all the goods of Sodom and Gomorrah,
and all their rituals and went their way.
And they took law at Abram's brother's son,
who dwelt in Sodom and his goods and departed.
So Abram has a family member who falls into the lowest place.
And there came one that had escaped and told Abram the Hebrew,
for he dwelt in the plane of
Mamor the Amorite, brother of his gall and brother of Anor, and these were Confederate with Abram.
And when Abram heard that his brother was taken captive, he armed his trained servants,
born in his own house, 318 and pursued the month of down. Well, so now we also know that Abram's
a pretty brave guy, right? He gets word that this horrible war has broken out in the worst of all possible places and that his nephew is involved.
And the first thing he does is mount up his posse and get the hell in there and rescue his nephew.
So Abraham's no, whatever goodness is from the Old Testament perspective, it isn't harmlessness.
It isn't emasculation and castration.
It's not that, It's not weakness.
It's not the inability to fight.
None of that is associated with virtue.
It's the sort of strength that enables someone to mount an arm
team of 300 people when he finds out that his nephew is being
kidnapped in a terrible war and to get the hell out there and
take him back.
And so that's a call to power a, that's a call to, to, it's a call to power that, not, not a kind of peaceful meekness.
That's funny too, because there's a line in the New Testament that says, and sin the sermon on the Mount,
says the meek shall inherit the earth. And that, I heard, that line always bothered me. I thought,
no way, that's not, that's not right. Meek can't be the right word. So when I was doing this story of Noah
and talking about the sermon on the Mount,
I spent a bunch of time looking at commentaries
on that line, looking at the roots,
the Greek roots and the Hebrew roots
and trying to figure out what that meant.
And it meek does not mean meek.
That's wrong.
Here's what it means.
Those who have weapons and know how to use them
but still keep
them sheathed will inherit the earth. Jesus, that's a lot different, man. It's a lot better, right?
Because the way it's normally interpreted is, if you're so weak that you're harmless, then things
will go well for you. It's like, no, that's not right, that's not, that can't be right, it doesn't fit with the narrative, it certainly doesn't fit with
this narrative. And he divided himself against them, he and his servants by night and smoked
them and pursued them unto Hobo, which is on the left side of Damascus. And he brought
back all the goods and his brother-lawed and his goods and the women also and the people.
Good work, Abraham.
And the kings of Sodom went out to meet him after his return at the slaughter of
Chert-Alomar, and of the kings that there were there with him at the Valley of
Shival, which is the King's Tale, and Melch is a deck king of Salem, brought forth
bread and wine. And he was the priest of the most high God, and he blessed him and
said, blessed be Abraham of the most high God, possessor of heaven and earth, and blessed be the most high God,
which has delivered the enemies into thine hand,
and gave him tithes of all.
And the king of Sodom said to Abram,
give me the persons and take thy goods to thyself.
That were the goods that Abram rescued,
of the kings, and Abram said to the king of Sodom,
I have lift up my hand unto the
Lord. What does that mean? It means I've made a vow. That's what it means. That's what that phrase
means. I've made a vow to God, the possessor of heaven and earth, that I will not take anything from
a thread, even to a shoelace. I won't take anything that's yours. Lest you should say, I've made Abram
rich. I'll take only that, which my young men have eaten.
And the portion of men that went with me,
and Ainer, Echkol and Mamra,
let them take their portion.
And so Abraham decides here,
he's made this immense sacrifice,
and done this incredibly brave act,
and rescued his nephew,
and rescued the kings' goods,
and they offer him a reward.
And he says, I'm not going to take the reward.
And the reason for that is that he doesn't want
to contaminate the ethical purity of his actions.
He doesn't want to be paid, he doesn't want to benefit
from doing, he doesn't want to, what is it exactly?
He doesn't want to benefit inappropriately
from doing the right thing, it's something like that.
And so it's another testament to his character
and a very complex testament, right?
Because he's not a good man in any simple sense.
I mean, look what's just happened.
He's mounted an armed, he's mounted an armed,
he's led an army into battle and participated in a slaughter. Refuses to benefit from it, except
to get back what was his. That's it. He refuses to benefit from it, except to get back what was
rightfully his. And in that way, he maintains his covenant with God. Even to a shoe latchet, anything though never so small
or mean less thou sheds claim a share with God
in the honor due to him.
This is from Matthew Poole,
who was an English non-conformist theological
commenting on that line.
Even to a shoe latchet, Ie anything though never so mean
or small, less thou sheds claim a share with God
in the honor due to him.
To whose blessing alone I do and I will owe my riches.
Or, less thou sheds say, Abram is enriched with my spoils, and however he pretended kindness
and charity, yet indeed it was his covetousness that put him upon this work.
After these things, the word of the Lord came unto Abram in the vision, saying, fear not,
Abram, I'm nice shield, and I exceedingly, and I exceeding great reward.
The vision issue again.
Well, we went through that last week.
Fear not, Abraham, I'm nice shield,
and I exceeding great reward.
And Abraham said, Lord God, what can you give me?
Seeing as I'm childish, childless.
And that's the only thing that matters,
to Abram, at this point.
And the steward of my house is this illeasy
of Damascus, no kin.
And Abraham said, Abraham said,
behold, to me thou hast given no seed,
and lo, one born in my house is mine heir,
and behold, the word of the Lord came unto him,
saying, this shall not be thy air, but he that shall come forth
out of thy known bowels should be nine hair.
So he gets promised the impossible once again.
And he brought him forth abroad and said,
now look towards the heaven and tell the stars
if thou be able to number them.
And he said unto him, so shall thy seed be.
And he believed in the Lord and counted
to him for righteousness.
him, so shall thy seed be, and he believed in the Lord and counted to him for righteousness. See in that this is the covenant idea, this belief, because here's the belief. It's the
willingness to act as if the world is constructed, so that if you do the right thing, the best possible outcome will occur.
It's a decision, that's the covenant.
It's a decision about how to live in the world
because the evidence can't be there
before you make the decision.
And so you might hedge your bets.
When Christ comes back in the book of Revelation
to judge people, because he comes back as a judge
and virtually everyone gets cast out with the chaff and not saved with the wheat.
He says something very interesting.
He appears in the vision with a sword coming out of his mouth.
It's a horrifying vision.
And he divides humanity into the damned and the saved, or the damned, yes, the damned and the saved.
He says something very interesting.
He says, to those who were neither hot nor cold,
I will spew you out of my mouth.
And it's a disgust metaphor, right?
And what it says is that the worst punishment isn't waiting for those who committed to
something and did wrong.
The worst punishment is reserved for those who committed to nothing and stayed on the fence.
And that's really something too.
That's really something to think about.
And it's also something I believe to be true, because I see that stasis is utterly destructive.
Because there's no progress.
All there is is movement backwards.
There's aging and suffering and no progress.
And so to not commit to anything is the worst
of all transgressions.
To commit means to put your body in soul into something,
to offer your life as a sacrifice means
that you're willing to make a bargain with fate.
And the bargain is, I'm going to act as if I give it my all,
then the best possible thing will happen because of that.
And to not see the analogy between that
and the active faith in God is to misunderstand
the story completely.
And it has to be an active faith because how are you going to know?
You can look at other people, but that isn't going to do it.
At Kirkagard was very clear about this sort of thing.
There's certain sorts of truths that you can only
learn for yourself through experience.
And that's, of course, why Abraham also has to go out alone.
He has to leave this, Ken.
It's an individual process, like dying.
It's something that you do alone.
There's no way you can tell what is within your grasp,
let's say, unless you make the ultimate sacrifice.
And there's no way of finding out without actually making it.
And so that's the sacrificial act.
That's re-emphasized in the act of Abram being called upon to sacrifice Isaac.
Think about that. His Abram, he's been doing, he's been like breaking himself into pieces,
trying to progress forward through starvation and tyranny and war and deceit and the potential
loss of his wife and childlessness and like everything that can really befall you in some sense.
And finally, God grants him Isaac when he's old.
It's impossible. He gets Isaac his son.
And then what does God do next?
He says, well, you know that son that you've been waiting for so long.
It's like, I like to see just exactly what you're made of.
So I think you should offer him up as a sacrifice.
And I mean, it's a very barbaric story in a sense,
and maybe in more than just a sense, but Abraham does
maintain his covenant
He's willing to make the sacrifice. He's willing to make this is the thing
He's willing to make whatever sacrifice is necessary to keep his covenant with God intact and that's that and that's the decision
Well, maybe it's no surprise that people don't do that.
And he believed in the Lord and he counted it to him
for righteousness.
And he said unto him, I am the Lord
that brought the out of the earth of the cellities
to give this land to you to inherit it.
And he said, Lord God, whereby shall I know
that I shall inherit it?
And he said to him, this is a sacrificial story again, taken heifer of three years and a goat
of three years and a ram of three years and a turtle dove and a young pigeon.
It's fairly specific, actually.
And he took all these and divided them and laid each piece one against another, but the birds
divided he not.
Now, there's a reason for that, and I don't know the reason for it.
And when the foils came down upon the carcasses, Abram drove them away. And when the sun was going down,
a deep sleep fell upon Abram and low, a horror of great darkness fell upon him. That didn't mean he
was afraid of the dark, which is what I thought it meant when I first read it. It isn't what it means.
It means that he fell into a trance or something like that. And then he was enveloped by absolute horror. So that's
how this story begins. And here's the commentary from Joseph Benson, who was an English Methodist
minister who lived in 1749, who was born in 1749. And when the sun was going down, about
the time of the evening, evening, oblation and the washing, for he abode by them,
praying and waiting till toward evening.
A deep sleep fell upon Abraham.
Well, this was not a common sleep through weariness,
or carelessness, I don't know what a sleep is,
that's supposed to be sleep.
Not a common sleep through weariness or carelessness,
but a divine ecstasy that being wholly taken off from things sensible, he
might be wholly taken up with the contemplation of things spiritual.
Well, it really makes you wonder what Abraham was up to in his campsite.
So he was participating in something that enabled his experience.
And Loa, or a horror of great darkness fell upon him. This was designed to strike
awe upon the spirit of Abram and to possess him with a holy reverence. Holy fear prepares
the soul for holy joy. God humbles first and then lifts up. Echoes of psychedelic experience.
And he said unto Abram, no of a surety that thy seed shall be a stranger in a land that is not
theirs, and shall serve them,
and they shall afflict them 400 years, and also that nation whom they shall serve, I will judge.
And afterwards shall they come out with great substance, and thou shalt go to thy fathers in peace.
Thou shalt be buried in a good old age.
But in the fourth generation, they shall come hither again, for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full.
Commentaries of Joseph Benson once again,
they shall come hither again, hither to the land of Canaan,
wherein thou not art, now art.
The reason why they must not have the land of promise and possession
until the fourth generation is because the iniquity of the Amorites
was not yet full. The righteous God has determined that the Amorites
shall not be cut off till they arrived at such a pitch of wickedness, and therefore till
it come to that, the seed of Abraham must be kept out of possession. So the interpretation
of the story essentially is that Abraham's descendants will end up enslaved in Egypt
for a lengthy period of time and eventually come back to the land of Canaan. And it's
interesting too, because this is part of Abrams,
bargain with God and in this divine vision.
I mean, he's been promised everything,
but it's a pretty tough bargain,
because when God is pushed or reveals himself,
let's say he says, look,
you're gonna get your damn descendants, you know?
But it's not gonna be a tough journey.
They're gonna be enslaved for a very long time and eventually come back and
you won't see it.
You'll be dead long before then.
And so it's a realistic promise in a sense and you might say, well, Abraham is so desperate
to keep the faith that he's willing to read good into what isn't good.
But I think, I don't think that's the right way to look at it.
I think the right way to look at it is that the people who wrote these stories were very realistic and they knew that
even if things turned out well for you, I mean, it was still going to be real, you know,
it wasn't going to be some fantasy. It's like, let's say you have a family that flourishes,
it's, people are still going to die, they're still going to get sick, they're, they're still going
to have, they're still going to be alive, you know, with all of its suffering, but it'll be,
the, but it'll be a life that's rich enough and complete enough
so that it'll justify its nature essentially.
And so it came to pass that when the sun went down
and it was dark, behold a smoking furnace
and a burning lamp that passed between the pieces.
Albert Barnes, American Theologian, commented on this,
the oven of smoke and lamp of flame symbolize the smoke of destruction in the light of salvation.
They're passing through the pieces of the sacrificial victims and probably consuming
them as an accepted sacrifice are the ratification of the covenant on the part of God
as the dividing and presenting of them were on the part of Abram.
In the same day the Lord made a covenant with Abram saying, unto thy seed I have been given this land from the river of Egypt,
unto the great river, the river Euphrates, the key knights and the kinisites
and the cadmenites, etc. Now Sarai Abram's wife bear him no children,
and she had a hand made, wait a second. I think we'll stop there. I'm
tiring out and it's just at it's 9.29 so that's a very good place to stop. So yes.
So, so I should I should close properly and just sum up.
So what happens here is that Abram enters into a covenant with God to act in the world.
And the action is an adventure story, essentially.
And the adventures repeat and they're punctuated by success and sacrifice and recontemplation.
And so it's this journey. It's the hero's journey uphill.
I'm here. There's a crisis. I collapse. I reconstruct myself to a higher place.
And life is like that. Continually. And that's the story of Abraham.
And that's all contained, though. It's all contained.
And this is the thing that's so cool, because that is what your life is going to be like,
whether you plan out your life or not.
It's going to be punctuated like that.
Maybe it won't go up.
Maybe it'll go down.
The question is, what sort of container
do you need to be in in order to tolerate the movement up
and down?
And that's what the story of Abraham provides.
It provides a description of the covenant that's
like the ark.
The covenant and the ark are the same thing, right?
Except the covenant is the psychological equivalent of the ark.
And the covenant is, have faith in the structure of existence and go forth.
That's the covenant.
And the story is, that's the best possible solution that you have at hand.
If you found this conversation meaningful, you might think about picking up Dad's books,
maps of meaning the architecture of belief, or his newer bestseller, 12 Rules for Life,
and antidote to chaos.
Both of these works delve much deeper into the topics covered in the Jordan B. Peterson
podcast.
See JordanB Peterson.com for audio, e-book, and text links, or pick up the books at your
favorite bookseller.
Remember to check out JordanB Peterson dot com slash personality for information on his new course, which is 50% off.
I hope you enjoyed this episode.
If you did, please let a friend know or leave a review.
Next week's episode is a continuation of the biblical series and is titled Abraham, a Father of Nations. Talk to you then. my blog, information about my tour dates and other events, and my list of recommended books
can be found on my website, JordanB Peterson.com.
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