Like a Seed or Signet

Monday, 01-12-2026

The classical writers often speak of laws being “impressed” into something or someone by some divine or human agent, as a seed is impressed into soil or the shape of the signet is impressed into wax.  I think it is worthwhile to consider the various kinds of soils or waxes they had in mind.  I am using the term “laws” broadly, not only for laws in the strict sense, addressed to rational beings, such as “Thou shalt not murder,” but also for patterns which are merely analogous to laws, such as the so called law of gravity.  In either sense, laws are impressed --

Into inanimate things.  Rocks fall to earth.  Acorns aim at becoming oaks.  They can’t help it.

Into the nature of the passions.  Although we can resist excessive passion or stir up deficient passion, we cannot change what the passions are in their very nature.  However misguided our perceptions may be, we become angry only to protect perceived good against perceived bad, never the reverse.  A dog growls when you take away his bone, not when you give him one.  

Into latent knowledge.  Even before we are old enough to grasp abstractions, if mother asks us “How you you feel if she pinched you?”, we may grasp her point.

Into developed knowledge.  That seed of knowledge grows, as all seeds do, so that eventually we do come to understand such things as the Golden Rule.

Into actual knowledge.  It is one thing to know a rule, another to keep it in awareness.

Into effective knowledge, which is also called wisdom.  It is one thing to keep a rule in awareness, still another to grasp how to apply it.

Into innate habit.  An infant will often take the teething biscuit out of his mouth and offer it to those watching, just because the giving impulse strikes him.  This habit is not true generosity, but it can be shaped and trained.

Into acquired habit.  Even if we are fearful, if we resist our fear often enough, the act may become habitual.  A person with such a habit is called brave.

Into acquired virtue.  We must take into ourselves what to be brave about, how brave to be, on what occasions, toward what people, and for what reasons.  A person with such a habit is properly called not merely brave but courageous.

Into infused virtue.  Through cooperation with the grace of God, our ordinary virtues may be healed and uplifted to heights we cannot attain by ourselves.  Consider the martyrs.

Into habitually infused virtue.  Through the habit of cooperation with grace, we may acquire a sort of habit of receiving it.  Contrast a person rowing against a strong current with a person with the wind in his sails.

 

 

New Interview about my New Book

Monday, 01-05-2026

 

My dear readers,

(Doesn’t that salutation make me sound like a Nigerian prince?  But then I would have said dearest.)

My new book Pandemic of Lunacy: How to Think Clearly When Everyone Around You Seems Crazy is coming out on February 3.  Right after Christmas, I was interviewed about it by Tom Loarie of TheMentorsRadio.com.  His popular podcast deals with all sorts of things at the intersection of life and work, featuring conversations with CEO and other prominent figures in the business world – with a few exceptions like me, of course.

He had a lot of thoughtful questions, and I think you’ll find the interview interesting.  We talked less about the content of the book than about what prompted me to write it.  Something strange is happening to us:  Why does our society seem to be going crazy?  (As another reader remarked to me:  “Why do you say seems to?) 

You can find the interview linked on my Talks Page, if you would rather go straight to the audio you can do that too, and if you would like to find out more about Tom Loarie’s podcast series, you can go his own website, TheMentorsRadio.com.

 

 

Chesterton on the Object of a New Year

Wednesday, 12-31-2025

 

“New Years and such things are extraordinarily valuable.  They are arbitrary divisions of time; they are a sudden and ceaseless cutting in two of time.  But when we have an endless serpent in front of us, what can we do but cut it in two? Time is apparently endless and it is beyond all question a serpent.  The real reason why times and seasons and feasts and anniversaries arose is because this serpent of time would otherwise drag his slow length along over all our impressions, and there would be no opportunity of sharply realizing the change from one impression to another ….  It would be good if we expected a bell to ring towards the end of a sunset.  It would be good if we thought the clock might strike while we were in the perfect pleasure of staring at sea and sky.  Such a sudden check would bring all our impressions into an intense and enjoyable compass, would make the vast sky a single sapphire, the vast sea a single emerald.  After long experience of the glories of sensation men find that it is necessary to put to our feelings this perfect artistic limit.  And after a little longer experience they find that the God in whom they hardly believe has, as the perfect artist, put the perfect artistic limit – death.

“Death is a time limit; but differs in many ways from New Year’s Day.  The divisions of time which men have adopted are in a sort of way a mild mortality.  When we see the Old Year out, we do what many eminent men have done, and what all men desire to do; we die temporarily.  Whenever we admit that it is Tuesday we fulfil St.  Paul, and die daily.  I doubt if the strongest stoic that ever existed on earth could endure the idea of a Tuesday following on a Tuesday, and a Tuesday on that, and a Tuesday on that, and all the days being Tuesdays till the Day of Judgment, which might be (by some strange and special mercy) a Wednesday.  The divisions of time are arranged so that we may have a start or shock at each reopening of the question.

“The object of a New Year is not that we should have new year.  It is that we should have a new soul and a new nose; new feet, a new backbone, new ears, and new eyes.  It is that we should look out instantaneously on an impossible earth; that we should think it very odd that grass should be green instead of being reasonably purple; that we should think it almost unintelligible that a lot of straight trees should grow out of the round world instead of a lot of round worlds growing out of the straight trees.  The object of the cold and hard definitions of time is almost exactly the same as those of the cold and hard definitions of theology; it is to wake people up.  Unless a particular man made New Year resolutions, he would make no resolutions.  Unless a man starts afresh about things, he will certainly do nothing effective.  Unless a man starts on the strange assumption that he has never existed before, it is quite certain that he will never exist afterwards.  Unless a man be born again, he shall by no means enter into the Kingdom of Heaven.

“.… Man has, as I have urged in the case of religion, perceived with a tolerable accuracy his own needs.  He has seen that we tend to tire of the most eternal splendours, and that a mark on our calendar, or a crash of bells at midnight maybe, reminds us that we have only recently been created.  Let us make New Year resolutions, but not only resolutions to be good.  Also resolutions to notice that we have feet, and thank them (with a courtly bow) for carrying us.”

— G.K.  Chesterton, Daily News (01-01-1904)

 

 

The Seal of Divinity

Wednesday, 12-24-2025

 

This Christmas night bestowed peace on the whole world;

So let no one threaten;

 

This is the night of the Most Gentle One -

Let no one be cruel;

 

This is the night of the Humble One -

Let no one be proud.

 

Now is the day of joy -

Let us not revenge;

 

Now is the day of Good Will -

Let us not be mean.

 

In this Day of Peace -

Let us not be conquered by anger.

 

Today the Bountiful impoverished Himself for our sake;

So, rich one, invite the poor to your table.

 

Today we receive a Gift for which we did not ask;

So let us give alms to those who implore and beg us.

 

This present Day cast open the heavenly doors to our prayers;

Let us open our door to those who ask our forgiveness.

 

Today the Divine Being took upon Himself the seal of our humanity,

In order for humanity to be decorated by the Seal of Divinity.

 

-- From a Christmas sermon by St. Isaac the Syrian

 

What Forgiveness Is Not

Monday, 12-22-2025

 

In a famous incident in the gospels, Peter asked Jesus, “Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him?  As many as seven times?”  Jesus replies, “I do not say to you seven times, but seventy times seven.”  Some writers say this means that our forgiveness must be unlimited, as God’s is unlimited, and that we must not keep track.  The common saying is “forgive and forget.”

But this view blurs a number of distinctions.

In the first place, God’s forgiveness is limited in certain ways.  In this sense it really has no limit:  There is no repented sin too great for Him to forgive.  He lays Himself across the chasm.  But in this sense it does have a limit:  He will not forgive known, grave sin which I obstinately refuse to repent; refusal to repent is precisely refusal of forgiveness, refusal that the chasm be crossed.

In the second place, God does keep track in certain ways.  In this sense He really doesn’t keep track:  When He forgives me, He forgives me completely, and is willing for me to be entirely reconciled to Him, setting my forgiven sins as far from Him as the east is from the west.  But in this sense He does keep track:  If I sin and repent, sin and repent, in an endless cycle of wrong and remorse, then even though He forgives me, He is not satisfied.  In His inexorable love, He will not settle for cleansing my guilt but leaving all my sinful tendencies intact.  He demands that I submit to His surgery.

Besides, God does not desire that we be hurt.  Suppose my brother has wronged me seventy times seven times, and then repented seventy times seven times.  Yes, I must forgive him seventy times seven times -- but I am not required to expose myself to further harm seventy times seven times.  Must a battered wife continue living in the same household as her violent husband?

Does forgiveness require not wanting the wrongdoer not be punished?  No, that would not even be kind to the wrongdoer, because justice is medicinal.  Does it require acting as though reconciliation has taken place, even though it hasn’t?  No, that would leave us vulnerable to those still likely to hurt us.  Does it require indifference to whether the wrongdoer repents?  No.  Concerning those who nailed Him to the Cross, Jesus did not pray, “Father, forgive them, because they need not be sorry for their sins,” but “Father, forgive them, because they know not what they do.”

Speaking for myself, when I do wrong, I usually know very well what I do.

Then what does forgiveness require?  It requires that I let go of bitterness, setting aside the desire to hurt back, trusting in God’s justice.  It requires that I hope for the wrongdoer’s change of heart, trusting in His grace.  It requires a desire for ultimate reconciliation with the wrongdoer, even while realizing that this may not be possible in the present life.

And it requires that I remember the mercy that I myself have received, for I have greatly sinned.

 

 

Two Samples from My New Book

Monday, 12-15-2025

 

Those who are curious about my forthcoming book, Pandemic of Lunacy: How to Think Clearly When Everyone Around You Seems Crazy – that’s everyone, correct? -- can now read two samples:  A preview, including the Table of Contents and the Introduction, is here, but you need to scroll down and click the words "Read Preview" under the cover image.  The other sample, about the lunacy of materialism, is right here.

And that is my post for the week!  Except to tell you that the book will be released early in February, and that you can pre-order it now.  Happy reading!

 

 

Targeting Opponents and Turning the Other Cheek

Monday, 12-08-2025

 

Is it right for an officeholder to use the legal machinery to target opponents?  This is a serious question, and the pundits are right to suggest that what we now call “lawfare” establishes a dangerous precedent.  However, you don’t have to like Mr. Trump to believe that in his case, at least, the question has been misframed.

For are his opponents being targeted for opposing Mr. Trump, or for opposing him by illegal means?  After all, the precedent for lawfare had already been established – and established by themI don’t suggest that lawfare had never been used before during the history of the republic.  It has been, and by Republicans too:  Think of Richard Nixon’s plans for his enemies list, plans which were ultimately unsuccessful.  However, lawfare has now become the settled policy of the Left whenever they lose elections or are in danger of losing them.

In 2016, the instrumentalities of justice and national intelligence were spectacularly mobilized to concoct narratives of collusion between Mr. Trump and the Russians, narratives which were known to be false by the officials who promulgated them – if the term “spectacularly” can be used of something which was intended to be secret.  Those involved were, by the way, already quite experienced in this sort of thing.  When Mr. Trump won the election anyway, his opponents announced that they would do whatever it took to bring him down, even if they had to invent crimes for which to indict him.  All in the name of defending democracy.

This strategy was so crass and duplicitous that it provoked a popular revolt, catapulting Mr. Trump into a second term after the interregnum of Mr. Biden.  Even as weak a candidate as Mrs. Harris was, it is very possible that Mr. Trump would not have won his second term if lawfare hadn’t so obviously been waged against him.  Voters didn’t like it.

So the question should not be whether an officeholder should “target his opponents,” but whether he may seek punishment for actual crimes committed against him.  We don’t say that a mugging victim is “targeting his opponents” when he files charges against the muggers.  That’s not mere revenge; it is justice.

Needless to say, if you think some of Mr. Trump’s opponents haven’t perverted justice and violated his civil rights to bring him down, then by all means, protest their innocence.  Perhaps some of them really are innocent.  But don’t defend them just because they have been “targeted.”  In that overbroad sense, every convicted criminal has been “targeted.”

A plausible argument can be made that even if injustice was done to Mr. Trump, maybe he should turn the other cheek.  After all, in a political climate as heated as ours, even indicting people for real crimes is made to look like mere retaliation – isn’t that exactly how the legacy media portray it?  Mr. Trump’s careless rhetoric doesn’t help, because it often feeds into that way of telling the story.  So even though indicting offenders for crimes isn’t the same thing as waging lawfare, couldn’t it deepen the precedent of waging lawfare anyway?

But that reasoning is perverse too.  Habitual criminals always think they are victims, and some people always sympathize with them.  Consider again the fellow who was mugged.  Should we say that he should turn the other cheek, because filing charges would make people think that his muggers had been victimized?  Or that filing charges would provoke them to mug again in retaliation, “deepening the precedent” of mugging?  Of course not.  If they mug again, punish them again, and this time make the punishment more memorable.

The question that not enough people are asking is this:  What if those who subverted our system of justice just to “get” Mr. Trump aren’t prosecuted?  What if they don’t face any consequences for violating his civil rights, not to mention those of many others?

The context of Jesus’ widely quoted remark about turning the other cheek shows that He was speaking of insult, not injury:  Of having one side of one’s face slapped with a palm, not of having one side of the throat sliced open with a knife.  Is it really plausible that letting crooked officials who have done and attempted real crimes off the hook would cool things down – that they would go and sin no more?

No.  They, and those who think like them, would say, "Okay, lawfare didn't work the way we planned the first time around, or the second or third, but it came pretty close, and we didn't pay a price for trying it.  Let's try it again.  In fact, let’s double down this time."

In fact, they are already saying that.  Shouldn’t we take them at their word?

Reminder:

My new book, Pandemic of Lunacy:  How to Think

Clearly When Everyone Around You Seems Crazy, will

be released in February and can be pre-ordered now.