Jorge Luis Borges (left) and C. S. Lewis (right)

The Pharisees and Sadducees came, and to test Jesus they asked him to show them a sign from heaven. He answered them, ‘When it is evening, you say, “It will be fair weather, for the sky is red.” And in the morning, “It will be stormy today, for the sky is red and threatening.” You know how to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the times. An evil and adulterous generation asks for a sign, but no sign will be given to it except the sign of Jonah.’ Then he left them and went away. When the disciples reached the other side, they had forgotten to bring any bread. Jesus said to them, ‘Watch out, and beware of the yeast of the Pharisees and Sadducees.’ They said to one another, ‘It is because we have brought no bread.’ And becoming aware of it, Jesus said, ‘You of little faith, why are you talking about having no bread? Do you still not perceive? Do you not remember the five loaves for the five thousand, and how many baskets you gathered? Or the seven loaves for the four thousand, and how many baskets you gathered? How could you fail to perceive that I was not speaking about bread? Beware of the yeast of the Pharisees and Sadducees!’ Then they understood that he had not told them to beware of the yeast of bread, but of the teaching of the Pharisees and Sadducees. (Matthew 16:1-12)

It’s been several decades since the discovery of DNA. Some evolutionary scientists began to notice that the DNA/RNA complex is large collection of information that is passed from generation to generation. A problem arises for evolutionists these days: it is virtually impossible to amass such a large volume of instructions via random mutations. When one considers the moment since Earth became a place suitable for life, there is simply not enough time to form the complex varieties of life around us by blind trial and error. But that is the matter for a future post. (Please see Dr. Stephen Meyer’s Signature in the Cell)

Watching various debates I noticed something interesting. May be this is an irrelevant detail. May be I am creating a tempest in a teapot. Irrelevant or not, it got me thinking. In various conferences I found around the web and in a few personal conversations I observed a reticence, a dislike of the use of metaphors. The source: atheists, dubious mystics, seems to share the same rather unintelligent argument: “I don’t want to hear analogies!” or “Analogies are not valid thought!” When I heard the same from my own brother, a somewhat Catholic individual, I started wondering if perhaps we have before us a new form of distortion.

No analogies, parables, allegories? What?

Today I was introduced to a very intelligent article by Robert Keim: The Greatness of Metaphor in the Gospel of Christ. I was immediately reminded of those essays by Jorge Luis Borges on the KenningarThe Old Norse collection of poetic, figurative  devices in which a carefully constructed image replaces a single term. Those Kennings are poetic analogies.

From Beowulf’s: battle-sweat (blood) and the sagas’ sleep of the sword (death); route of the whale (the sea); feast of Vikings (the battle); pig of the sea (the whale)… You get the idea. The Kenningar form a complex system of metaphors that the skilled poet uses in long rhapsodies sometimes avoiding mentioning anything directly at all. Metaphors galore, analogies for every taste!

The C. S. Lewis masterpiece  The Discarded Image  shows the model of the Universe created by medieval man. The book is a wonderful catalog of notions used by medieval thinkers to assemble a conception of the world that —even if some refuse to admit it— reigned supreme for a good thousand years or more! Within that context, we can see analogies used quite frequently. This leads us back to Robert Keim’s The Greatness of Metaphor in the Gospel of Christ:

“I said on Sunday  Christian culture cannot flourish without metaphor. I could make an even stronger statement. I could say that if we consider human life as an eternal rather than earthbound phenomenon, metaphorical thought and expression is superior to—meaning higher in dignity and importance than—the “factual” or “scientific” modes that modernity so diligently cultivates and teaches to children. I might go further again and say that modern society is dangerously confused about what the human mind should be and do: things like metaphor get buried somewhere in “English” class while people assume that high school graduates are well educated if they can apply the quadratic formula, balance chemical equations, and name the organelles in a eukaryotic cell.” (Boldface is mine)

The semiosphere, a universe of meaning

A question surged in my mind: when did all this business of “this is like that” started? Are we living in what Umberto Eco once called a semiosphere? Then the Aleph came to my thoughts one more time. In Hebrew, each of the letters of the alphabet represent a sound but the signification does not end there. Those letters represent numbers and also a variety of concepts like power or some other idea that emerges from the image that is used to represent the letter. The letter Aleph seems to picture a tiny man pointing with one hand up to Heaven and the other hand down towards Earth. It could also picture a plow or and ox’s head. A short list of possible but important meanings could include:

  • a comparison or equivalence of Heaven and Earth
  • a beginning (because Aleph is the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet)
  • God (Who is the beginning of everything and the Owner of all power)
  • the power of the plow opening the earth to the reception of the seed

A million possible connections come to mind. Genesis 1:1 being the most obvious but others also that are subtle like Matthew 6:9-13 …

The letter Aleph

Pray then in this way:
Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be Thy Name.
Thy kingdom come.
Thy will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread.
And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And do not lead us into temptation,
but deliver us from evil.

And then by extension, in Matthew 16:19 …

I will give you the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven, and whatever you bind on earth will be bound in Heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in Heaven.’

Are these two passages of Scripture (both from the mouth of Jesus) some conceptual facet or verbal variation of the letter Aleph? In this case the keys represent power and authority and so does binding. Heaven and Earth are tied by some invisible string.

What have we stumbled upon? (Please comment!) Is it out there a semiotic universe inhabited by elements ordered to represent a sort of complex forest of meaning? Forgive my lack of words to describe what is emerging in my imagination.

We have considered St. Peter’s role in Matthew 16 many times. I have been orbiting that chapter for many years and it keeps producing mysteries that I can barely hold or describe.

The story begins with the Pharisees and Sadducees asking Jesus for a sign. A sign! And here is where it gets interesting when Jesus responds:

An evil and adulterous generation asks for a sign, but no sign will be given to it except the sign of Jonah.’ Then he left them and went away.

Now Jonah was the prophet sent by God to Nineveh. He got aboard a ship going to Spain instead. Later Jonah is thrown overboard and swallowed by a big fish that vomits him near Nineveh. Read again the image of that Scripture:

Old Israel is left standing there while Jesus takes a boat to the opposite shore right after promising them the sign of Jonah! The Messiah’s mission is to teach Israel but he leaves them ashore and navigates with his disciples to the pagan Decapolis area where Greeks and Romans dwell. That act can be compared to Jonah going the opposite way! And then on top of that Jesus says: “I’ll give you the sign of Jonah” and He does exactly what Jonah did. Now, on the opposite side, He choses Peter to be the Prince of the Apostles. Once in Rome, Peter tries to escape persecution but is supernaturally redirected to Rome again by a vision of Jesus going towards the city. There we have another image suggestive of ‘Jonah’s syndrome’.

A specchio, a mirror image

The concept of Earth mirroring Heaven, suggested by the letter Aleph, now takes shape in the two crosses: that of Christ in Heaven, and the other where Peter offers his life crucified upside down in the Roman Circus. The reflection appears again.

This palimpsest of meaning repeats all over Scripture revealing a depth that can only be deemed as of divine origin.

In Matthew 16 St. Peter seems to play two different kinds of men. The one who walked with Christ in the beginning —‘You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.’—  and the ‘stumbling block’ that works against the Cross: ‘God forbid it, Lord! This must never happen to you.’  

In my mind those two instances represent the beginning of the papacy and then the  leadership of the apostate Church at the end times. The use of the word ‘satan’ by Christ is not unimportant or meaningless. It points at a time of the eclipse of the Church, the hour of darkness that will envelop the papal institution before the arrival of Christ.

Dear reader, if you can make any sense of this rather disorderly exposition … think of the Cross-Aleph as an instrument that breaks the ground open so that the seed from Heaven can generate life. This is perhaps the most important allegory in the history of mankind!

Very truly, I tell you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. (John 12:24)

The body of Christ is that seed regenerating Earth; the “Kingdom of God is like the mustard seed” (Matthew 13:31-32); the Cross is like the plow; Holy Scripture sprouts analogies everywhere because the human mind was created to play the game of ‘this is like that’ over and over. In the few verses we have touched we have seen reflections, images, juxtaposed meanings, all presented to us in a way that can only be an introduction to the multidimensional complexities of the Divine Mind.

Robert Keim: “Christian culture cannot flourish without metaphor!” I dare to add the idea that metaphorical thought is the only possible kind of thought.