¶ … Eternal Circle of Time
Electrons circle the nucleus of an atom. Untold trillions of atoms collide together and explode. The universe expands. Electrons race down the copper wires of an electric cable. The sun shines. Leaves digest the sunlight, produce nutrients, live, grow, die, and fall to the ground. The wind bears aloft the leaves, scatters them over earth and sea. The tide moves them, pushes them up into rivers where at last they settle into the mud. Salmon swim upstream; lay their eggs on the muddy bottoms of lakes and rivers. A powerful grizzly bear nuzzles the icy water of a mountain brook. His great paw sweeps into the water and catches a darting salmon. Men come; establish a city on the banks of the stream. They drive the bear off. Their boats coast upon the surface of the sparkling water. Nets plumb the frigid depths, resurface filled with salmon. The men eat the salmon. The salmon are digested, turned into fodder for a thousand other creatures and into the food that builds civilizations. Digested again, these minute particles break down into molecules, and the molecules into atoms. A lone atom floats off in the vast emptiness of space. Electrons circle the atom's nucleus. These are cycles, yes, but wherein lays their ultimate origin? Is there a connection between all that makes up the universe? Is there a plan? Is there some great, single purpose that united us all together through time and space?
The great chain of being returns from beginning to end. One event follows from the previous, on and on, until the top of the chain is reached. While not a popular theory among modern historians and philosophers, the idea of the Great Chain of Being does offer an explanation for the harmonies and interrelationships that exist within the universe. Nothing can occur without a prior cause, and each preceding event is the reason for the following event. This is as true of traditional philosophy as it is of the scientific method. Steam rises out of a pot only because there is water in the pot, and only because that water has been heated to a temperature of two hundred twelve degrees Fahrenheit. Indeed, this process of cause and effect can be carried backwards over and over again - back to a primal cause...the very creation of the universe itself, for it was only the initial creation of the universe that made possible the existence of the water in the pot, and the energy or heat with which to boil it. What is represented here is a hierarchy of events, such as that which comprises the Great Chain of Being, a notion that, according to the historian Arthur Lovejoy was the Conception of the plan and structure of the world which, through the Middle Ages and down to the late eighteenth century...most educated men were to accept without question - the conception of the universe as a "Great Chain of Being," composed of an immense, or...infinite, number of links ranging in hierarchical order from the meagerest kind of existents...through "every possible" grade up to the ens perfectissumum." (Smith, 1993)
But must a chain of events be hierarchical? Must there be a reason behind every action and every event?
According to the most popular current scientific theory, the universe was created through means of a "Big Bang." All the mass that now comprises the universe was compressed into a single object of minute size that suddenly exploded flinging its fragments to the ends of space. This movement to the "ends" of the universe took many ages, but the initial cause of the movement itself - according to science - lay in the physical properties of the original object itself. The primordial object being comprised ultimately of trillions upon trillions of atoms, the individual atoms eventually exerted such an enormous pressure upon one another that the indescribable force of all this energy squeezed into one tiny space caused the entire object to explode with an equally unimaginable force. And from where did all this atomic energy come? It came from the individual electrons whirling around the nucleus of each individual atom. Such is the simple scientific explanation of the Big Bang as first conceived by Albert Einstein. However, such an explanation of the universe's creation presents certain problems for the scientist, namely what was the origin of this tiny speck that contained all of the matter and energy in existence. Of course, creation could be some sort of endless loop, the matter expanding and contracting after the fashion...
Jesus' Teachings, Prayer, & Christian Life "He (Jesus) Took the Bread. Giving Thanks Broke it. And gave it to his Disciples, saying, 'This is my Body, which is given to you.'" At Elevation time, during Catholic Mass, the priest establishes a mandate for Christian Living. Historically, at the Last Supper, Christ used bread and wine as a supreme metaphor for the rest of our lives. Jesus was in turmoil. He was
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