Author Takes Readers on a Spiritual Journey and Provides Life-Changing Tips and Tricks – Benzinga – Benzinga

In Ascension: Awakening in 5D' Heather Lee shares her own life experiences as a medium and healer to teach others how to take the first step to live an idyllic life

OAKHAM, Mass. (PRWEB) January 24, 2022

Author Heather Lee has published her third book, titled "Ascension: Awakening in 5D," which acts as a guide for readers who are ready to dive into their ascension journey. Learning to expand awareness and live through the heart is a tough art to master, but reading this book is a huge step toward doing just that. Throughout the book, Lee provides real-life experiences that teach the reader it is possible to live in heaven on earth.

Lee has encountered a lifetime of career experiences in counseling and healing, which she discusses in her book. She shares stories from her personal life as well as some of those she has been involved in with her clients. Working in this career for over 25 years, she has plenty of pointers to share when it comes to embarking on a spiritual journey and learning how to make life-altering realizations.

"I would love for this book to be able to reach an audience who is looking for insight on ascension and has the desire to discover how they can utilize their own life lessons to progress on their spiritual journey," the author said.

In this book, Lee starts at the beginning by explaining the fundamentals of the spiritual world, such as how living is defined for each individual and how to understand the collective consciousness that humans are. Ultimately, by the end of the book, readers will have obtained all the necessary knowledge and tools to begin gaining awareness in new areas of life and live in complete bliss and harmony.

"Ascension: Awakening in 5D"

By Heather Lee

ISBN: 978-1-9822-7654-6 (softcover); 978-1-9822-7653-9 (e-book)

Available through Balboa Press, Barnes & Noble, and Amazon

About the author

Heather Lee has spent 25 years as an intuitive counselor, medium and energetic healer but has possessed these natural intuitive abilities since her childhood. Worldwide, she is known for her connections and has assisted thousands of people on their personal paths through ascension and healing. Heather is often recognized for her humbleness, compassion and down-to-earth personality. Lee is devoted to maintaining the comfort of her clients while simultaneously pushing them out of their comfort zones. This results in healing, learning and growth. Heather is also the author of two other books, "A Bang into Gentleness: A Psychic`s Journey Through Spiritual Transformations" and "Second Sight in 3D: A Medium`s Memoirs." For more information, please visit the author's website.

General Inquiries, Review Copies & Interview Requests:

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Grace Connor

480-998-2600 | gconnor@lavidge.com

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Author Takes Readers on a Spiritual Journey and Provides Life-Changing Tips and Tricks - Benzinga - Benzinga

The Medical & Spiritual Solutions to End the COVID-19 Pandemic – Digital Journal

The Spiritual Meditation Master reveals the Four-Step Plan for the 100-Day World Challenge to End the COVID-19 Pandemic

SALT LAKE CITY January 24, 2022 At the beginning of year 2022, the super contagious Omicron variant swept the world and caused record infections in many countries. In the United States, the new infections reached the record high of over 1.4 million cases on January 10. Even the White House chief medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci admitted that Omicron could elude the vaccine protection and just about everybody could eventually be infected with the Omicron or other new variant of the coronavirus. It seems that the COVID-19 Pandemic is out of control now.

However, the ray of hope always comes after the darkness before dawn. YiChen Master, the Spiritual Meditation Master, prophesies that the COVID-19 Pandemic could be ended by Easter 2022. He laid out the detailed plan for the 100-Day World Challenge to End the COVID-19 Pandemic from January 8 to April 17, the Easter of 2022.

To End this COVID-19 Pandemic, people need to pay attention to the following four aspects. said YiChen Master. First, protect yourself against this super contagious virus. This Omicron variant of COVID-19 can evade the existing vaccine protection. Therefore it is highly recommended for people to wear mask, especially N95 or KN95 mask, as the first line of defense.

Recently, some countries gave up their fight against COVID-19 & its new variants and tried to treat it like a common cold. Thats irresponsible. The Coronavirus could do some long term harm to the human bodies. Dont under-estimate the danger and harm of COVID-19 and its new variants. Protect yourself with a mask.

Second, improve your immune system and strengthen your lungs through Healthy Lung Meditation. said YiChen, this Healthy Lung Meditation combines several traditional Qi Gong Meditation and TaiChi movements that can help people enhance the immune system and strengthen the lungs for fighting against COVID-19 and its new variants. It is especially helpful for people who have already been infected by COVID-19 or its new variant to have a healthy recovery.

As the COVID-19 could mutate faster than we can produce the vaccine for it, it is important to improve your own immune system and strengthen your lungs against COVID-19 instead of totally depending on vaccines or medicines. YiChen Master will offer free online classes on how to practice this Healthy Lung Meditation during this 100-day World Challenge to End the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Third, share the successful experience and medical research on the prevention and treatment of COVID-19. YiChen said, There are many successful experiences and recent medical studies on the treatment of COVID-19 with the existing medicines worldwide. South Africa and Nigeria are the two countries that have successfully ended the Omicron pandemic with very low rate of vaccination (32% & 6%) while most western countries have experienced the record-breaking infection of Omicron. Its time for the scientists and doctors to be open-minded to find the ultimate solution to the COVID-19 pandemic.

And more importantly, let the frontline doctors decide whats best for their patients without any political interference or special interest influence. YiChen Master emphasized.

Four, share the faith and love with the blessing of God for the world. YiChen said, This COVID-19 Pandemic is an epic disaster for the century. Its not only a medical pandemic but also a biblical disaster prophesied in the Bible. There are some dark spiritual forces behind it beyond our physical world. Only the Blessing of God can help people defeat these dark spiritual forces and bring this disaster to an end. Its time for people to re-strengthen their faith in God and share the love of God with others to fight these dark spiritual forces and end this pandemic together.

Love God with all your heart & love your neighbor as yourself. YiChen said, These two greatest commandments that Jesus Christ gave two thousand years ago are still valid today, not only for Christians, but also for the whole world. Only the Love & Blessing of God can heal this wounded world.

YiChen Master prophesied that the COVID-19 Pandemic could be ended by Easter 2022 if people can follow the four-step plan for the 100-day World Challenge to End the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Easter is the Day of Resurrection. said YiChen, if people can restrengthen their faith in God, the world will be resurrected after this COVID-19 Pandemic.

YiChen Master will offer a FREE online course on the Healthy Lung Meditation for people to enhance their immune system and strengthen their lungs to fight against COVID-19 and its new variants. He will also give away 10,000 FREE Non-Fungible Token (NFT) for the World Challenge to End the COVID-19 Pandemic for the first 10,000 people who sign up for the 100-day World Challenge to End the COVID-19 Pandemic. There will be a special blessing of God for those who receive this Special NFT for this historic challenge.

For more information about the 100-day World Challenge to End the COVID-19 Pandemic, please visit: http://www.EndPandemic.world.

About YiChen Master

YiChen Master has over 30 years of experience practicing meditation and developed the new Healthy Lung Meditation method to help people enhancing their immune systems and strengthen their lungs for fighting against the COVID-19 and its variants.

Website: http://www.HealthyLungMeditation.org.

Media ContactCompany Name: YiChen MasterEmail: Send EmailPhone: 801-895-3699Country: United StatesWebsite: http://healthylungmeditation.org/

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The Medical & Spiritual Solutions to End the COVID-19 Pandemic - Digital Journal

Good News, Mech Fans: Armored Core Spiritual Successor Will Soon Be Free – Kotaku

You can fight some pretty massive mechs in Daemon X Machina.Screenshot: Marvelous

Is Daemon X Machina a good video game? Yes (no). Well. Daemon X Machina was recently described by a friend of mine as a 7/10 Armored Core spiritual successor, with the important note that every Armored Core game is a 7/10. This means that it is a good game by the Renata Price B-Games Are The Best Kind Of Video Game metric, which I will stand by until the day I die. It is also free on the Epic Games Store starting Thursday, the 27th, so you have no excuse not to try it.

Like the Armored Core series that obviously inspired it, Daemon X Machina is a customization focused mech game about auto-aiming weapons and movement driven combatwhich originally released on the Nintendo Switch back in 2019. You pilot an Arsenal, a modifiable mech platform that can carry everything from swords to railguns and twin bazookas. You then pilot this mech around relatively simple maps, killing enemies and scavenging their parts as you go. You then incorporate these parts into your own robot death machine.

This feedback loop is relatively simple, and the games auto-aiming can make weapons feel homogenous over timebut theres enough of Daemon X Machina to sink your teeth into before things become too rote. Its also worth noting that the game has co-op multiplayer, which allows players to tackle massive enemy units with their friends. Like any game, co-op will greatly expand what you can get out of the experiencesince your friends will help smooth out the lulls and weaker moments of a campaign.

Its also important to note that theres crossplay between the games Steam and Epic Games Store versions, which means that youre free to play with whoever you wanteven if your friends maintain a blind vendetta against the Epic Games Store.

As a firm mech lover, I for one can say that I will be diving into the PC version the moment its free to temporarily sate my mecha desires.

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Good News, Mech Fans: Armored Core Spiritual Successor Will Soon Be Free - Kotaku

Sundance Q&A: ‘Watcher’ director Chloe Okuno on her spiritual nod to ‘Rosemary’s Baby’ and the therapy of horror – Screen International

After directing a segment onV/H/S/94 and several noted shorts US genre filmmakerChloe Okuno makes her feature directing debut on Watcher, in which Maika Monroe (It Follows) plays a woman who relocates with her husband to Romania and becomes convinced she is being followed, just as a serial killer stalks the city.

Los Angeles-based Okuno was hired to direct Zack Fords screenplay in 2017 after she submitted a 20-page presentation. She collaborated with Ford on dozens of passes of the script and things took off several years later when genre veteran Roy Lee (It, His House, the Ring films) and Spooky Pictures partner Steven Schneider agreed to produce and finance through their new deal with Image Nation Abu Dhabi.

The film shot in Bucharest in spring 2021 under Covid protocols and also stars Kari Glusman (Nocturnal Animals), Burn Gorman (Enola Holmes), and Romanian actor Madalina Anea. The U.S. Dramatic Competition selection premieres on January 21 at 8pm PT. Cinetic and UTA Independent Film Group represent US rights while AGC handles international sales. Okuno is a 2014 AFI Conservatory graduate and recipient of theThe Franklin J Schaffner Fellow Award.

How did the script evolve?Julia and Francis move into an apartment and Julia becomes convinced that theres this man watching her. The interesting thing was that in that original script it was more of a two-hander, split kind of evenly between [them] in terms of narrative point of view. When Roy Lee came onto the project he had the genius idea of just making it Julias story. He said spiritually lets make this Rosemarys Baby, lets make it a story completely told from this womans eyes. And when we did that, I feel like a lot of things really fell into place in this wonderful way.

The original story was set in New York. Then the producers wanted to shoot in Romania. How did that influence the screenplay?Bucharest unlocked a huge number of things. There were a lot of characters that didnt really exist in previous iterations, like the character of Irena [played by Anea] who ultimately was very important. So something that was initially motivated by a practical necessity, rewriting it to take place in Romania, ended up unlocking all these great creative things, which I think have a profound impact on the story.

Julia is an interesting character whose vulnerabilities and doubts give way to an inner strength. How did you develop her arc?I was really hyper aware of this because I wanted to be sure that she would understandably have frustrations and feel this fear and anger because of the situation that she finds herself in. But at the same time Im looking at it from the perspective of what would I do in her situation. And I know that when youre a woman and you want to convince people that what youre saying is credible, you have to be very careful and modify your emotions and not give them any excuse to write you off as being hysterical. So while there is this intense level of fear she has to soften it for the benefit of people around her, which itself is actually very frustrating and probably heightens those feelings of anger and injustice. So it was about how to elevate the stakes without alienating people from her and making sure shes doing things that still felt like you would make the same decisions if you were in her shoes.

What did you like about working with Maika Monroe, who broke out in 2014 Cannes Critics Week horror entry It Follows?She was 19 or 20 when she did It Follows and I was such a fan. The depth of emotion that she brought to Watcher was just astounding. There were days when I stood back and felt shocked at what she was able to do and just conjure from seemingly nothing. Thats the power of really good actors. Shes phenomenal.

And Karl Glusman who plays her husband Francis does a good job of walking a fine line, too.Thats its a very hard role because that character could be intensely unlikable. Karl did a good job of trying to bring some sympathy to a person who could be very unsympathetic. Karl also had a week basically to learn Romanian. Both Maika and Karl came on to the movie a week before we were set to start shooting and we put him together with a Romanian tutor. He really had to learn most of these lines phonetically and he managed to do it in about a week.

How did you find it shooting in Bucharest?It has a pretty incredible infrastructure for making movies. Really good crew and the people we were working with, Abis Film, were really solid. And they were working sort of on an American system. So I think it was pretty easy for us to go shoot it there without, you know, without too much chaos or confusion because the crew was so strong.

What was it like being overseas as the industry was tentatively returning to production after the pandemic paused global shoots?It was a tense time. It was pre-vaccines and we took every precaution we could in terms of testing and masking. We still had a couple of positive tests but luckily they were isolated, they didnt spread, and we were able to keep going. We shot in March and April 2021 and the shoot initially was 28 days and it was extended to 29 because a day before she was due on set Madalina who was fantastic and all the producers fell in love with her when she auditioned got a positive Covid test result. We reshuffled the entirety of the schedule to accommodate her. We were waiting it out until the last minute for her to test negative and thank God we made it just under the wire, and she was able to come and obviously her performance is incredible.

What is it that draws you to genre?Its a way of talking about serious things that are important to me, but doing it in a fun, mischievous manner that allows people to feel what were trying to say without feeling like theyre being lectured to. Personally I grew up really loving filmmakers who mostly worked in genre, people like David Fincher, the Coen Brothers, John Carpenter and Roman Polanski. I was always drawn to those kinds of movies partially because Im a very anxious person, so watching movies, where youre sort of delving straight into the heart of my own personal fears and anxieties is weirdly very therapeutic; youre watching the movie unfold in a way that is kind of controlled and giving yourself a chance to confront your fears.

As a genre-lover what was it like working with Roy Lee?I adore Roy. He came on and was the person who made this happen because as often is the case with independent films, there were a few years when it wasnt clear this movie was getting made because of the precarious nature of independent financing. Roy came on and believed in the script and he and [business partner] Steven Schneiders new venture Spooky Pictures produces low-budget genre movies in partnership with Image Nation and this was the first movie in that slate. Roys such a titan of horror and like I said he had the truly brilliant idea to just 100% make this Julias movie in terms of the point of view and he really saw through to the heart of it. Theres a reason that hes as successful as he is; his instincts are unparalleled.

Are you doing Rodney & Cheryl next?I certainly hope its my next movie. Its a brilliant script by this writer named Ian McDonald about a real-life serial killer named Rodney Alcaca who was very famous for being a bachelor [contestant] on The Dating Game in the 1970s. He was a horrific predator who was probably responsible for dozens of murders but hes been prosecuted I believe for six. He recently died in prison. Anna Kendrick is attached to play the lead [as The Dating Game bachelorette Cheryl Bradshaw] and were just trying to make the project happen.

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Sundance Q&A: 'Watcher' director Chloe Okuno on her spiritual nod to 'Rosemary's Baby' and the therapy of horror - Screen International

The Bible’s spiritual purpose – Church of the Resurrection

One of my favorite parts in my job is watching students go through Confirmation. The Church of the Resurrection offers a Confirmation course for current 8th-12th grade students. In Confirmation, students have the opportunity to explore their faith by asking questions, they get opportunities to serve their community, and they journey alongside adult mentors to participate in small group discussion. At the end of Confirmation, they are invited to make a public commitment to Christ and become a full member of our church community. In addition to all that, they dig deep into reading the Bible!

Many of our Confirmation students grew up in the church. They remember reading the Bible in Sunday School--the stories about Adam and Eve, Jonah and the whale, Jesus walking on water, and so many others. Some of our Confirmation students are new to the church and are hearing some of these stories for the first time. The powerful thing about Confirmation is that students open up their Bibles together while sitting in a circle, they read a Bible passage, and then reflect on it together. They ask the question, How is this useful for teaching, for showing mistakes, for correcting, and for training character? (like 1 Timothy 1:16 talks about).

It is always powerful to learn from students the perspectives and insight they are bringing into reading Scripture. When I listen to our Confirmation students reflect on the Bible, I feel like Im learning just as much as them as I hear how the Holy Spirit is nudging them in their reading. Im constantly saying, Ive never heard that perspective, or, you view that in a really unique way. Sitting with students and reading the Bible together reminds me that even though Ive been through seminary, sometimes I need to have the posture of an 8th grader when reading the Bible! Reading the Bible together allows us to hear the passages more fully and recognize how the Holy Spirit is working in each others lives.

I encourage you today to open your Bible. Turn to one of those stories you know well. While reading it ask yourself, How is this passage useful for teaching, for showing mistakes, for correcting, and for training character for me today? Maybe take the posture of an 8th grade Confirmation student the next time you read the Bible and ask, How would a student read this passage? There is no limit to what the Holy Spirit can reveal to us, and there is always the opportunity for the Bible to change our hearts. May the Holy Spirit guide you in your reading, and may the Bible's words encourage you today.

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The Bible's spiritual purpose - Church of the Resurrection

Ranking the NESCAC Mascot Costumes: An Emotional and Spiritual Journey – The Bates Student

The other day while I was tapping through Instagram stories and minding my own business, I came across a post from a girl I went to high school with. Shes a varsity athlete at Trinity College, a NESCAC school in Connecticut, and her post contained a graphic from the colleges athletics account.

FEAR THE CHICKEN, the post read. It included spliced photos of several winter athletes, and in the middle was the most bizarre angry cartoon chicken I had ever seen. There is no way a chicken is their mascot, I mused out loud and alone, like a crazy person. But alas, after a quick Google search, I found out that the Bantam (a type of small, aggressive chicken) was in fact their mascot.

I was disturbed. I was distraught. But, most importantly, I was curious. I soon fell down the rabbit hole of NESCAC mascot costumes and let me tell you, what our league boasts in prestige we lack in good mascots. I laughed. I cried. I became fearful (shout out to the Hamilton Continental). Here is my very official and correct Managing Sports Editor ranking of the NESCAC mascot costumes.

LAST PLACE: Amherst College. Theyre kind of disqualified because although they have a mascot, they have yet to create a mascot costume despicable. Student fans used to attend games dressed as Lord Jeff, but it turns out he was deeply racist and murdered Indigenous Americans with blankets covered in smallpox, which is obviously a huge no-no. They are now the Mammoths. I know for a fact that one of the options they were considering during the switch was the Hamsters; I think they should have done this because its hilarious (and an anagram for Amherst, but most importantly, its funny).

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Ranking the NESCAC Mascot Costumes: An Emotional and Spiritual Journey - The Bates Student

A spiritual look at the violence in Columbus – WSAV-TV

COLUMBUS, Ga. (WRBL) Ask anyone about crime in Columbus and theyll likely have an opinion. More than 65 homicides have occurred this year, surpassing the citys record high of 46 homicides set in 2020.

The faith community has answered the call by law enforcement to be a part of the solution. Members of the clergy are putting the finishing touches on an upcoming virtual sort of town hall meeting to address the violence from a spiritual context. The Road To A Safer Columbus: A Spiritual Discussion on Violence will take place on social media at a date and time to be arranged. The public is invited.

On February 16, 2021, Columbus Police Chief Freddie Blackmon put out a call to the public.

We need all hands on deck. The Columbus Police Department and the Muscogee County Sheriffs Office cannot do this alone.

I sat down with three men from different walks of life, Muscogee County Sheriff Greg Countryman, Shawn Raleigh, an ex-con, and the Reverend Dr. J.H. Flakes, III for their take on the violent crimes being committed in Columbus. Though their paths began differently, they each made the decision to make faith the cornerstone of their lives. Dr. Flakes, who pastors Fourth Street Missionary Baptist Church says one of the initiatives the clergy will address is godly parenting.

I believe its important for us to raise the awareness within our community, within our city, within our neighborhoods that there is a godly order and when one steps outside of that order then what you will have is chaos, said Rev. Dr. J.H. Flakes, III.

Sheriff Countryman says his mother was a strict disciplinarian.

Checking on your children and knowing what your children are doing is a thing of the past, said Sheriff Greg Countryman.

Shawn Raleigh says hed like to see this next generation avoid the pitfalls hes had to face.

Youre putting everything else on a scale, put that on a scale, put your life on a scale and ask yourself is that what you really want to do? Do you really want to go to prison?, said Shawn Raleigh.

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A spiritual look at the violence in Columbus - WSAV-TV

Column: This Christmas, reach out to those who are spiritually, emotionally lonely – The Columbus Dispatch

Pastor Ben Douglass| Special to The Columbus Dispatch

Its the Christmas season,filled withstrings oflights,festivesongsand excitement thatchildren feelwhen you say the word,Christmas.I love it, and youmightas well.

Theres ajoyand lovethat we want to share with everyone around us. But its not easy for everyone.Elvis famously sangthat hes going to have ablue, blue, blue, blue Christmas without the love of his life, and hes not alone.

Here in Columbus,nearly onein twopeople in our city feel lonely, according to a recent BarnaGroupsurvey. Think ofyour neighbors,the guys you work with, the personsittingin trafficnext to you, maybe even yourself. We area societyof manylonelypeople.

We need Christmas.We need to let Godshopeand loveflood our hearts, to rememberwhen in historytheKing of Kingscame tous, right where we werein our depression, in our loneliness, in our anxiety.When we felt the crisis of life,Gods Soncame into our world,andheloved us.He lovesyou.

When I think back to Bethlehem,I remembera young,verypregnantMary,and hernewly mintedhusbandlooking for helpin their crisisof homelessness.Doubtless they had nofamily,or they would havenot been knocking on the doors of strangers.Where would they go?

And in that moment, Mary and Joseph felt the cold realitytoo many knowof being alone.

Is it by accident that Jesus,our Savior,was born in these circumstances?Was it coincidence thattheiralonenessmade itintoournativity scene?

We are created forgenuinecommunity with God and people.In the beginning,by Gods design, he saidit wasnt good forus to bealone.

Weare created forauthenticcommunity,but sin permeates andcorrupts us,sowesettle for lesser communitieswhere we do notlive inrelationship with God, nor freely share the journey of our soul.

Into our loneliness,depression, anxietyand burnout,he came.When we did not love him, when we wererunningfromGod, thelove of Godcame to us.Immanuel, "Godwith us."

Makeno mistake,God loves you. You matter to him.He calls you back into the community you were predestined to know from the foundation of the world.

Mary and Joseph, abandoned by the world, were not abandoned by God. He was with them. Mary carriedJesuswith her everywhere she went. He is not far fromany one of us.

The greatest need of the soul is to know the God who lovesyou andcalls us to turnback towards him and find him. FindGodthis Christmas.Ask him to meet you and speak to your heart.

Wewerecreatedfordeepspiritualcommunity with Godandpeople,greater communitythan acat or dog,than aFacebook group,orrooting foryoursports team can fill.You were designed for aspiritualcommunity-you were designed forhealthyChristian community, made up of familiesand singles, men and women,people of everyage, ethnicities, and even, yes, politicalpositions.

We must live itout andseek it out.Healthy Christian communitylooks like living life togetherbeyondSunday mornings,sharing life together, sharing each others burdens, praying for each other. It looks likegetting beyond thesurface levelmakeup of what we want people to seeand being honest witheach other, and getting into each others messy lives so that we can love each other just like Jesuslovesus.

We must share it. This Christmas,wemust sharethe hope of Christmas and Christian community withthose who arealonephysically,or spiritually, or emotionally.Rememberthe neighbor next door, the coworker who lives alone,the cashier at the grocery store.Invite them into Christmas with you, to know the God who calls them intocommunity.

IfMary and Josephcame to your house, begging for a place to stay, would they find a place to sit downa moment? Would they find a cup of wateror coffee? A hot meal? Wouldthey findcommunity and help?

This Christmas, we are surrounded by lonely people.One out of every two people in our city.People who are wandering, who are far from the heart of God, and arent just superficially lonely, but are spiritually lonely, emotionally lonely, and who need to know Jesus relationally.

These men and women are longing forhonestChristianitycommunity.Lets share it.We need Christmas.

Pastor Ben Douglass isis the lead pastor at Faith Community Church on the West Side.

Keeping the Faith is a column featuring the perspectives of a variety of faith leaders from the Columbus area.

"Blue Christmas" services are meant to offer comfort for those who are grieving or otherwise seeking healing or hope around the holidays. Here are some local churches who host the services:

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Column: This Christmas, reach out to those who are spiritually, emotionally lonely - The Columbus Dispatch

Whitney Hubbs’s Unholy Rites for the Spiritually Bankrupt – frieze.com

A couple of years ago, on the cusp of turning 40, Whitney Hubbs moved from her native Los Angeles to a remote corner of upstate New York, to take a teaching job. It was isolating. It was cold and foreign. The subjects of her previous work brooding California landscapes in noirish chiaroscuro, psychosexual portraits of faceless female friends in washed-out 1970s colour-space were suddenly unavailable. These new limitations led to a revelation: her true subject matter had always been herself, but she had been veiling it with proxies and metaphor. So, she turned her camera on herself. The resulting work is raging, funny, brutal, raw; it was a quantum leap in her practice. In front of the cameras unblinking eye, Hubbs faced down her demons and laid bare her hidden desires, transmuting humiliation and degradation into pillars of personal power, as if by some unholy rite.

The pictures a collection of which have just been published, alongside an essay by Chris Kraus, in a handsome volume titled Say So (2021) by Self Publish Be Happy could be superficially described as sadomasochistic erotica, since they feature Hubbs in a variety of compromising positions (bound and gagged, piss-covered, breasts plastered with glistening blobs of pink chewing gum) and in various states of undress. But classing the work as this would do it a disservice. When we plumb their depths, these pictures reveal themselves as being less about titillation and more about universal, close-to-the-bone emotional struggles, and Hubbss attempt to overcome them.

Whitney Hubbs,Untitled, from the series Say So, 20192020. Courtesy: the artist andSelf Publish Be Happy

I was spiritually bankrupt, Hubbs told me when I asked what spurred her to make these images. This entire project was about taking agency over so many aspects of my own life, she continued. As Ive gotten older, I put up with less bullshit, so I wanted to be as direct as possible in these works. She has certainly achieved her aim. Francesca Woodman is a tempting historical touchstone, particularly in works such as Untitled (1976), for which she festooned her nude torso with an assortment of clothespins, or Self Portrait, Providence (Nude with Glass) (1976), in which she presses two pieces of glass against her naked breasts and stomach, squashing and distorting them. But the comparison doesnt quite fit: Woodmans works appear enthralledwith the dusty, gothic patina of their own sadness. Hubbs, you get the sense, wants out, struggling angrily against her issues. This lashing out feels punk and, like punk itself, prototypically macho. Unsurprising, then, that Hubbs was something of a punk herself in her youth and that among the artists she cites as her competition (she doesnt use a gentle word like inspiration) are California enfants terribles Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy, and that grimy poet of Russian dissolution, the photographer Boris Mikhailov.

Whitney Hubbs,Untitled, from the series Say So, 20192020. Courtesy: the artist andSelf Publish Be Happy

Despite this desire to joust with the bad boys, Hubbss project is also inescapably bound to traditional notions of femininity. Women in their 40s, Hubbs lamented when we spoke, are often still expected and not so politely to fade their bodies and desires into the background and take up the mantle of either saintly mother or pitiable spinster. (Unless, like rule-proving exceptions such as Jennifer Lopez, they find ways to look forever young, through some miracle of genetics or the deft application of a surgeons knife.) Hubbs flips an emphatic middle finger at all this: she is unabashed in flaunting and debasing her not-so-young flesh, though this should not be taken to mean that she is totally unafraid. Fear, in fact, proved to be a great motivator. She told me her response to the first photo shoot she did for this series was: Oooh, these kind of scare me. I should keep taking them. And, of course, she was right. Running face-first into your fear is one of the most vitalizing forces in art-making: its rocket fuel to escape the gravitational pull of by-the-numbers pablum.

Whitney Hubbs,Untitled, from the series Say So, 20192020. Courtesy: the artist andSelf Publish Be Happy

Lets be clear, though: facing-down fear might generate good art, but it does not guarantee triumph over it. Hubbss work does not travel an inexorable arc toward redemption. Quite the opposite, in fact. She insists that her photographs are about failure, and not in the trendy fail upwards kind of way. Its just that kind of failure of getting older, she told me, and things not working out the way you wanted them to. We get older, our bodies break down, we disappoint ourselves, we disappoint others. Nothings perfect, but we feel like maybe it should be. This is the most fundamental kind of bondage: we are all tied forever to our own lives. Perhaps at the root of the masochistic fetish itself is the desire to alchemize the pain of our sorry fates into pleasure though perverse play-acting. Hubbs tells me that she found making these images cathartic, which is a kind of pleasure. Immerse yourself in her work long enough, though, and you can tell that her greatest delectation comes from rage.

Main Image: Whitney Hubbs, Untitled, from the series Say So, 20192020. Courtesy: the artist and Self Publish Be Happy

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Whitney Hubbs's Unholy Rites for the Spiritually Bankrupt - frieze.com

Foucaults Political Spirituality, Punjab And TLP – The Friday Times

Just before the 1946 general elections in British India, Muhammad Ali Jinnahs All India Muslim League (AIML) was poised to become the largest party of Muslims in the region. In 1940, the AIML had declared its intention of forming a separate Muslim-majority enclave as a way to counter the political and economic dominance of Hindu majoritarianism.

AIML was formed in 1906 to safeguard Muslim economic and political interests in India. It was founded by groups of Muslim economic elites as a counterweight to the Indian National Congress (INC). The INC was founded in 1885. It had positioned itself as a secular nationalist outfit, but its core leadership and following were largely Hindu. And it had in its ranks some pockets of radical Hindu nationalists as well.

The AIML emerged as a Muslim interest group that had evolved from the ideas and activism of the 19th-century Muslim reformer Sir Syed Ahmad Khan. He had worked towards building an empowered Muslim class of intellectuals, civil servants, white-collar workers and businessmen in India. His modus operandi in this respect included reformist campaigns and the establishment of educational institutions to impart modern (European) knowledge to the Muslims. He also formulated a more rational and disenchanted reading and interpretation of Islams sacred texts.

The size and scope of the AIML remained minor compared to that of the INC, or for that matter, in relation to the Deobandi Islamist party Jamiat Ulema Islam-Hind (JUI-H) formed in 1919, and the radical Majlis-e Ahrar (formed in 1929). However, from the late 1930s onwards, the League lurched forward in an attempt to become the largest Muslim party in India, especially when the liberal barrister Muhammad Ali Jinnah became its foremost leader.

According to the economist Shahid Javed Burki (in State and Society in Pakistan), the influence of AIML members from the urban Muslim middle-classes grew from the late 1930s. Burki is of the view that this undermined the influence that the landed elites had enjoyed in the League. In this context, the view of the late sociologist Hamza Alavi is slightly more nuanced. In an essay for the November 2000 issue of the Economic and Political Weekly, Alavi wrote that until the start of the Khilafat Movement in 1919, the AIML was a secular party willing to work with the INC to oust the British from the Subcontinent.

Alavi wrote that the Khilafat Movement that emerged in 1919 to protest the ouster of the last Ottoman caliph in Istanbul was quickly joined by INCs spiritual leader Mahatma Gandhi. The Khilafat Movement was spearheaded by Islamist outfits and Muslim nationalists in concert with the INC. Gradually, the movement became more about the ouster of the British from India. According to Alavi, during this period, the AIML was stormed by Islamists who dislodged the partys secular leadership. Jinnah walked out in disgust, warning that the emotions driving the Khilafat Movement would mutate and turn inwards, spelling disaster for Indias Hindu and Muslim communities. This is exactly what happened. After failing to dislodge the British, the movement turned on itself when violence erupted between its erstwhile allies.

After the movement exhausted itself, the Leagues secular leadership rebounded and returned to a position of influence in the party. Burki attributes this to the rise of urban middle-class groups in the League. But here again Alavi takes a more nuanced view. He agrees that the partys secular leadership made a comeback after the collapse of the Khilafat Movement. However, he insists that this leadership, now headed by Jinnah, was not quite interested in carving out a Muslim-majority country. The pressure to do so came from landed elites who feared that an INC government would confiscate their lands. The pressure also came from Muslim salary-dependent classes who were facing increasing competition from the Hindu salaried classes. The latter had an advantage because they were in a majority and more qualified.

Hamza Alavi wrote that until the start of the Khilafat Movement in 1919, the AIML was a secular party willing to work with the INC to oust the British from the Subcontinent

Alavi and Burki agree that when time came to put the idea of a separate Muslim country as a promise in front of the electorate during the 1946 elections, the reasons behind this were almost entirely economic. Alavi wrote that the new country was not offered as a theocracy but as a Muslim-majority region where the economic and political interests of the Muslims would thrive in the absence of hegemonic Hindu majoritarianism. In a way, the Muslim nationalism which led to the creation of Pakistan treated the Muslims and Hindus as separate economic and ethnic groups. Religious differences between the two were not overtly highlighted.

This was because the League had put the nationalist impulse of Muslims in the public space but relegated Islams theological aspects to the private sphere. This is a major reason why Islamist outfits such as JUI-H, the Ahrar and Jamat Islami (JI) were critical of the Leagues programme. They warned that Pakistan would be a secular Muslim nationalist realm and its politics divorced from the faiths theological doctrines.

However, whereas the Leagues programme managed to get traction from Muslims residing in Hindu-majority regions of India, the party had to adopt a more populist line of action in Muslim-majority areas such as East Bengal, Sindh and Punjab. The Muslim populations and their political representatives in these regions were deeply rooted in colonial politics of patronage that had benefitted the Muslim landed elites. One of the largest political parties in the Punjab was the secular but conservative Unionist Party (UP). This party was the political vessel of Muslim, Hindu and Sikh landed elites and a prosperous bourgeoise. Politics in Sindh, too, was dominated by landed elites, whereas in East Bengal, the Muslims were embroiled in a tussle with Hindu moneylenders.

Therefore, in East Bengal, the League formulated a strategy in which Pakistan was explained as country whose creation would eliminate the influence of the exploitative Hindus. Land reforms, too, were promised. Since East Bengal also had a large Hindu community within which there were tensions between upper-caste Hindus and so-called Dalits, the League encouraged the Dalits to opt for Pakistan and/or a country that would treat them as equal citizens. A prominent leader of Bengals Dalits, Jogendra Nath Mandal, joined the League with his followers. The Leagues election campaign in East Bengal, therefore, mostly revolved around local economic issues and tensions. Islam here was simply articulated as a religion of economic equality.

Unlike Punjab and East Bengal, where Muslims had razor-thin majorities, the Muslim majority was significant in Sindh even though the province did have a large Hindu minority (25 percent). Most of these were residing in Karachi, which was declared Sindhs provincial capital in 1936. The problem that the League faced here was that a faction of the Muslim nationalism that the party was advocating had broken away and mutated into becoming Sindhi nationalism. The League overcame this by co-opting various dimensions of Sindhi culture and placing them in the context of Muslim nationalism.

Secondly, even though there were historic tensions between Muslims and Hindu moneylenders, Muslim Sindhi politicians did not want to trigger Sindhi Hindus because the latter were vital components of Sindhs economy. However, when Sindh was declared a province in 1936 by the British, Sindhi Hindus had opposed the move. Sindh had been part of the Bombay Presidency since the mid-19th century. Opposition by the Hindus against Sindh becoming a province did create resentment amongst the Muslims of the province, but no communal violence took place. Sindh overwhelming voted for the League. Its voting pattern was also influenced by Sindhs landed elites. The Leagues programme was designed to appeal to the culture of religious syncretism in Sindh and to the desired unity of Sindhi Muslims.

During the campaigning phase of the 1946 polls, the Muslim Leagues politics in Punjab mutated into becoming what, decades later, the famous French philosopher Michel Foucault would call political spirituality

Punjab, where the Muslims had a slight majority, was a region where tensions between the Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs were high. Major radical Hindu and Muslim religious groups were also headquartered here. The Unionist Party (UP) tried to keep things in check by distributing influential positions to prominent leaders from Punjabs main religious communities. The League was weak in Punjab. Nevertheless, due to the efforts of the partys student and youth wings, the Leagues programme did manage to attract certain Muslim middle-class sections in urban Punjab, a majority of Muslims resided in the provinces rural and peri-urban areas. Most of them were under the sway of large land-owning Barelvi pirs and radical Islamist groups.

During the campaigning phase of the 1946 polls, the Muslim Leagues politics in Punjab mutated into becoming what, decades later, the famous French philosopher Michel Foucault would call political spirituality. Before we investigate exactly what he had meant by this, we must first explore what happened in Punjab.

As tensions between Punjabs three main religious communities continued to increase, the INC began to support Islamist groups that had rejected the Leagues Muslim nationalism. These groups declared it to be anti-Islam and secular. They attacked the Leagues core leadership as being merely nominal Muslims who were Westernised and knew nothing about the theology of Islam. They claimed that they were responding to the Leagues Islamic propaganda against UP.

The League thought otherwise. To counter propaganda against Jinnah, the League unleashed clerics and ulema who had broken away from pro-INC Islamist parties such as the JUI-H. Clerics and followers of pirs were also activated once they decided to ditch UP and support the League. According to Ian Talbot (in the journal Modern Asian Studies, 1980), the pro-League ulema presented Jinnah as a saint of sorts, who was battling Muslim heretics and Hindus to create an Islamic state.

Talbot wrote that a majority of rural Muslims in Punjab hadnt even seen Jinnah. Yet, they were made to imagine him as a spiritual leader who was a true Muslim compared to the ulema who were castigating him as a wine-drinking secularist who had no knowledge of Islam. This was actually true. To Jinnah, a Muslim nationalist state was not a theocracy but a modern nation-state in which Indias Muslim minority would become a majority and pursue its economic interests in a more fluent manner.

It was during this campaign that claims of creating a new Madinah and the slogan Pakistan ka matlab kya: La illaha illAllah were heard for the very first time. These claims and slogan were products of Islamists who had joined the Leagues election campaign in the Punjab. The League managed to win the largest number of seats in the province, followed by INC and UP. The pro-League Islamists were so successful in usurping the rhetoric and doctrines of anti-League Islamists that outfits such as the Ahrar were wiped out in the election.

But this success constituted a problem that still haunts Punjab to this day. The Leagues message was moderate in Sindh and almost socialist in East Bengal. But it became increasingly Islamist in Punjab. When riots broke out between Hindus and Sikhs on the one side, and Muslims on the other in Punjab, most Muslims in the province saw this as a battle between Islam and kufr.

The League had no plan whatsoever to create a theocracy. Nor a socialist state, for that matter. It was to be a state based on high authoritarian modernism i.e. when a state believes that every aspect of society can be improved through robust centralisation and rational and scientific planning. The Islamic aspect in the context of Pakistan was to remain limited to Muslim majoritarianism and nationalism. This created confusion in Punjab, that had witnessed an emotional election campaign with Islamist messages galvanising Muslims to vote for a new Madinah and violence that was perceived as a cosmic war between good and evil, Islam and infidelity.

During a League convention in Karachi, soon after the creation of Pakistan, a man stood up and asked Jinnah whatever had happened to the slogan Pakistan ka matlab kya: La illaha illAllah? Jinnah asked the man to sit down, then explained that no such resolution was ever passed by the party (to make Pakistan an Islamic state). Jinnah scoffed that some people might have used (this slogan) to gain votes (in Punjab).

This success constituted a problem that still haunts Punjab to this day. The Leagues message was moderate in Sindh and almost socialist in East Bengal. But it became increasingly Islamist in Punjab. When riots broke out between Hindus and Sikhs on the one side, and Muslims on the other in Punjab, most Muslims in the province saw this as a battle between Islam and kufr

Jinnah had underestimated the impact of the Islamist rhetoric used in Punjab during the election, and the manner in which the mad violence that had erupted was perceived by the Punjabi Muslims. Conditions that had formulated these perceptions were not addressed. They continued to resurface: the 1953 anti-Ahmadiyya movement in Punjab; the even more violent anti-Ahmadiyya movement of 1974, centred in Punjab; the emergence of Deobandi sectarian militant outfits and anti-Shia violence, with their core area of action being Punjab; and recently, the rise of the militant Barelvi Sunni party the TLP. What is more, according to data, between 1992 and 2021, over 70 percent of incidents of mob violence and lynchings (against persons accused of committing blasphemy) have occurred in Punjab.

On Political Spirituality

Political spirituality is a term that was coined by the late French philosopher Michel Foucault in 1978. Foucault was one of the earliest exponents of postmodernism, a late 20th century movement that was characterised by an emphasis on relativism and subjectivity as opposed to absolutism and objectivity. It declared the death of modernity and the birth of a postmodern world in which new ideas and realities were emerging outside the absolutist concepts and truths established by rationalist post-17th century European philosophers, and even by science.

Postmodernists posited that realities which do not meet the established criteria of objective and scientific truths were not untruths. They insisted that these untruths were truths according to the subjective realities that they existed in. To postmodernists, these subjective realities needed to be studied from outside the economic, social and political frameworks enacted by absolutist/objective ideas.

Postmodernisms immediate roots lay in the so-called New Left movement that had begun to surface when Soviet troops invaded Hungry in 1956 to brutally crush protests against the Soviet-backed regime in Budapest. New Left leaders and scholars began to intensely critique the politics of pro-Soviet communist parties in Europe and of contemporary Marxism.

Their aim was to refurnish Marxism with issues that went beyond class struggle. Therefore, the New Left not only took to task post-World War II capitalism, consumerism and new forms of US and European imperialism, but also lambasted Stalinism and/or Soviet communism for being imperialist, dictatorial and oppressive.

The ideas of the New Left were largely expressed during the worldwide student uprisings of the late 1960s. One of the most intense was the 1968 student revolt in Paris. For a moment, students pushed the conservative Gaullist regime in France to the brink of collapse. Instead of marching to the tune of the ageing pro-Soviet communist parties, many young men and women were carrying pictures of the Chinese communist ideologue and leader Mao Zedong.

The figure of Mao Zedong fascinated various young ideologues of the New Left. Mao, after leading a communist revolution in China in 1949, had announced a Cultural Revolution in 1966 to completely weed out counter-revolutionaries, not only from society, but also from within the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC). Mao unleashed mobs of young men and women on the streets of Chinese cities.

Rampaging mobs attacked people accused of being bourgeois. Thousands of Chinese were killed or committed suicide after being humiliated for becoming decadent and harbouring bourgeois thoughts. The economy came to a standstill and millions of students dropped out of educational institutions to take part in the carnage. But since the countys borders were tightly shut, much of what came out of China as news was designed to present the Cultural Revolution as an event that had galvanised a whole people to oust clandestine agents of capitalist decadence, manipulative bureaucrats and corrupt party officials. What is more, Mao had also cut ties with the Soviet Union.

Young leftist activists and intellectuals outside China romanticised Mao as a man of admirable impulse and revolutionary genius, who was inspiring millions of people to smash the tyranny of rational bureaucrats and the scheming bourgeoisie. But as New Left movements began to fail and recede, the horrific truths about the Cultural Revolution began to trickle in. The heroic communist superman was no better than Stalin, Mussolini or Franco. He wanted to hang on to power, even if that meant unleashing mindless mobs on imagined enemies.

When Mao finally came under increasing criticism in European leftist circles for flouting human rights and instigating violence, Foucault declared that the idea of universal human rights was meaningless because the concept of rights changed from culture to culture. He wrote that specific philosophers were needed to explore specific cultures and specific truths. This was, of course, an attack on the whole concept of the universal principles of human rights that were a product of the Enlightenment. A rejection of the concept of universality in any field would become an important plank of postmodernism, replaced by the exploration of specific understanding of specific cultures about their specific truths.

Fascination with Mao among many European intellectuals eventually fell away. In fact, by 1977, when the last remnants of the 1960s radicalism had called it a day, Foucault suddenly became a champion of universal human rights. Thus began a shift in the new European left that moved from eulogising those who had crossed the Rubicon and inspired millions to partake in acts of collective passion, to becoming relativist cultural beings, detached from realpolitik and divorced from ideologies woven from meta-narratives.

However, the earlier fascination with Mao could not stop postmodernists from continuing to applaud expressions of impulse and iconoclasm. Of course, it was conveniently overlooked at the time that just before he announced the Cultural Revolution, Mao had begun to be censured by his contemporaries within the CPC for imposing unscientific economic policies that had created devastating famines in the countryside and killed millions of people. So what better way to wipe out critics by declaring them as counterrevolutionaries, then getting them humiliated, tortured and even killed by mindless mobs?

But men such as Foucault had had their fill of Marxism, in all its forms. To them, it was yet another expression of rebellion that was rooted in the European paradigms of revolution, largely formulated by events such as the 18th century French Revolution. This is why Foucault, who was once so excited by the organic nature of Maos Cultural Revolution, completely ignored the 1979 socialist Sandinista Revolution in Nicaragua. Instead, in search of all things new and exotic, he got extremely interested in the events taking place in Iran.

The centrality of God and Church had begun to recede during the outbreak of the Enlightenment. Modernity in this respect reached a peak in the mid-20th century. But in the 1970s, religion was making a comeback. Especially in the Muslim world. Foucault and his early postmodernist contemporaries had understood Nietzsches bermensch as a spiritual being, but quite unlike the religious leaders who had begun to water-down their faith so that it could fit the paradigms of modernity.

So, Foucault became smitten by the charismatic Shia cleric Ayatollah Khomeini.

Foucault travelled to Iran twice in 1978. He closely studied the writings of the Iranian scholar Ali Shariati. Shariati is widely hailed as the father of Irans 1979 revolution, even though he died two years earlier. He was suspected to have been poisoned by the Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavis secret police.

Shariati was not a cleric. In fact, just as the New Left had done in the West, Shariati reworked Marxism so it could be liberated from dogma and was able to address a wider range of issues. Shariati did this by expressing reworked Marxist ideas in the language of revolutionary Shiism. He projected these ideas as being already present in the events of the Battle of Karbala (680 CE) when Husayn (AS), the grandson of Islams Prophet (PBUH), refused to give allegiance to the caliph Yazid because Husayn considered him to be a tyrant and a usurper.

In his writings from Tehran, Foucault claimed to be witnessing the birth of powerful ideas that Western intellectuals had not known about

Khomeini adopted this narrative and worked it to mean a passionate and fearless uprising against the tyrant and usurper (the Shah) and the establishment of an Islamic theocracy navigated by pious men. This meant Shia clerics, of course. This was Khomeinis interpretation of Shariati. But the fact is, it was a Shia version of what Sunni Islamists such as Pakistans Abul Ala Maududi (d. 1979) and Egypts Sayyid Qutb (d. 1966) had already conceptualised as a way to oust the modernist and Marxist ideas that had become prevalent in Muslim societies and were supposedly undermining the supremacy of Islam.

To Foucault, an atheist, Christianity had been overcome by secularism because it became decadent, corrupt and devoid of any spirituality. This, to Foucault, had left the rational West spiritually bankrupt. So, here he was now, in a non-Western country, watching a mighty revolution unfold that was being shaped by what Foucault called political spirituality.

In his writings from Tehran, Foucault claimed to be witnessing the birth of powerful ideas that Western intellectuals had not known about, or thought did not exist. As he saw Khomeini push the limits of rationality and cross the Rubicon in declaring the creation of a theocracy that had shunned secular ideas from both the left and the right, Foucault wrote that this had the potential of creating new forms of creativity.

He excitedly declared that political spirituality had the potential of destroying Western philosophy and even engulf Western politics that had been under the sway of Enlightenment ideas for far too long. Foucault did not hide his enthusiasm of being at the epicentre of a new kind of revolution, which he claimed was unlike any other. To Foucault, the revolution was a passionate onslaught against the idea of modernity that had been imposed on spiritual societies such as Iran.

For Foucault, the audacity of challenging military might by anti-Shah protesters demonstrated a sacrificial disposition. The fact that the protesters and their leaders were unconcerned by how they would be judged by the democratic/capitalist West and the communist powers impressed Foucault, who understood the uprising as a completely new phenomenon, because it was taking place outside the context of established political and ideological norms. Foucault felt that it was entirely being driven by a political manifestation of spirituality that was inherent in Islam, or at least in how Shariati had defined Islam.

Although there is no evidence that Foucault ever studied the violence in Punjab during Partition, or commented on it, one can suggest that too was an expression of political spirituality. During the violence, Muslims in Punjab demonstrated a sacrificial disposition and thus the constant reminder by many in Pakistan of how our elders sacrificed their lives to make Pakistan. Secondly, the mob violence and lynchings in Punjab (by Muslims as well as Hindus and Sikhs) during Partition suggests that those involved thought little or nothing about how they will be judged by those pleading for a return to sanity. The British were clearly shaken. As Foucault might have put it, they were trying to understand the audacious nature of communal violence through European historiographies.

Indeed, in India, communal violence had become endemic ever since the late 1920s, but the violence that took place during Partition was unprecedented. Had Foucault studied it, he could have been a bit more measured in his understanding of the Iranian Revolution. But whereas the sacrificial acts of revolution driven by the emotionalism of religion did manage to give the Muslim League an important win in Punjab, in Pakistan it was quickly suppressed by the state.

What if it had been allowed to roll on? The result might have been a theocratic state such as one enacted in Iran. But the aftermath, too, would have have been similar. Iran became an Islamic Leviathan a totalitarian theocracy headed by clerics who, to eliminate all opposition, had to unleash a reign of terror through mass executions. By rejecting the two devils, the US/West and Soviet Union, and then getting embroiled in a war with Iraq and proxy wars with Saudi Arabia in Lebanon and Pakistan, Iran was left internationally isolated. And the internal carnage continued. In the late 1980s, Iran carried another round of mass executions and then instigated violence in other Muslim countries by accusing the West of promoting blasphemy against Islams holy personages (the Satanic Verses affair).

As reports of summary executions, political repression and the degradation of the status of women started pouring out after the revolutions victory, Foucault gradually stopped discussing Iran. After glorying it as a product of political spirituality that the West could not comprehend, he remained quiet about the atrocities that this kind of politics often triggers. He even remained quiet when homosexual people began being rounded up and executed. Foucault was homosexual himself, but one who was now back in Paris. He was vehemently criticised for remaining silent and even for being naive.

Political spirituality, therefore, was no different than the anti-religious impulse of the murderous Jacobins in revolutionary France or the atheistic disposition of the Khmer Rouge who killed millions of people in Cambodia between 1975 and 1979. There was nothing unique about political spirituality, because it took the same trajectory that all violent upheavals often do.

A source of everyday power

Postmodernism had developed such a reactionary attitude towards how history was studied (especially of dialectical materialism) that Foucault completely undermined how most violent uprisings emerging from whatever ideology turn out. Violence becomes part of the polity. It becomes a source of everyday power.

This became a norm of sorts in Pakistan, mostly in Punjab. Islamist groups were suppressed during the first two-and-a-half decades of the country. They developed a seething hatred of the modernist elites who had tried to quash the religious sentiments unleashed during the 1946 election campaign in Punjab and by the communal violence that followed. The eruption of the 1953 anti-Ahmadiyya movement and then the more successful 1974 anti-Ahmadiyya movements in Punjab is when the suppressed sentiments once again came to the surface. In 1974, they were appeased by the state and government in the hope that they would weaken when given space in mainstream scheme of things. The opposite happened. The mainstream got radicalised.

This process accelerated when the state too began indulging in political spirituality. A paradox emerged. The more the state attempted to co-opt and monopolise the impulse and emotion of radical Islamism, the more radical society became because it saw the states acknowledgment and practice in this context as the disposition to adopt, mostly for the sake and attainment of everyday power.

Religious, sectarian and sub-sectarian violence increased manifold. But there was only so much that the state and non-Islamist politicians could appease, monopolise or usurp. If a space to express political spirituality was lost to the increasingly Islamising state, Islamist groups formulated newer and even more militant and violent expressions and spaces to push the boundaries of rationality to which the state was still bound.

The Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) did this by exhibiting audacious levels of militancy, sending suicide bombers to explode in marketplaces, mosques and schools, and playing football with the heads of soldiers belonging to the Pakistani military that they had captured and then executed. In a 2018 essay for the Journal of Strategic Studies, the forensic psychologist Karl Umbrasas writes that terror outfits who kill indiscriminately can be categorised as apocalyptic groups. According to Umbrasas, such groups operate like apocalyptic cults and are not limited by socio-political and moral restraints.

Such groups are thus completely unrepentant about targeting even children. To them, the children, too, are part of the problem which these groups believe they are going to resolve through a cosmic war. The idea of a cosmic war constitutes an imagined battle between metaphysical forces: good and evil, God and Satan, Islam and kufr. Suicide bombers, imagining themselves as soldiers in this cosmic war, exhibit the sacrificial disposition of political spirituality that Foucault was so smitten with.

On the other hand, the TLPs audacity in this context can be found in the crass tone that their leaders unapologetically use in their speeches, and more disconcertingly, in the emotional fulfillment that its followers seem to get from brutalising alleged blasphemers.

A majority of mob lynchings and assassinations of those alleged to have committed blasphemy have taken place in Punjab. One wont be wrong to assume that Islamist violence here is the echo of the 1946-47 communal violence. It is an echo that has only gotten louder. The states response, ever since the late 1970s, lies in the mistaken belief that it can lessen the impact of this echo by monopolising it through certain appeasing policies, laws and rhetoric. This has only emboldened those the state wants to keep in check.

On the other hand, the continuing phenomenon of Islamist violence, especially mob lynchings in Pakistan (particularly in Punjab) hasnt been studied as deeply as it should. Such studies can be problematic if conducted by institutions of higher education in Pakistan. But many Pakistani academics operating in universities in Europe, and especially in the US, havent done a stellar job either.

If a space to express political spirituality was lost to the increasingly Islamising state, various Islamist groups simply formulated newer and even more militant and violent expressions and spaces to push the boundaries of rationality to which the state was still bound

The audacious and sacrificial 9/11 attacks in the US and the manner in which they impacted the Muslim diaspora in the West saw many Muslim academics in the US adopt postmodernist and post-secular ideas. This was in response to the criticism that Muslims began to attract after the attacks.

A most surreal scenario appeared in some of the top Anglo-US universities and think-tanks. As US troops invaded Afghanistan, and Pakistan became a frontline state aiding the US against militant Islamists, and as Westerners grappled to understand as to why a group of pious Muslims would ram planes into buildings full of ordinary people, a plethora of young Muslim academics were given space on campuses and in think-tanks to explain to the Americans what had transpired.

The surreal bit was that this space was provided despite the fact that the academics were wagging their fingers at secularism, liberalism and what they saw as enforced modernity. These were not Islamic modernists of yore who would try to demonstrate that things such as democracy and secularism were inherent in Islam. Nor were they insisting that radical Muslim states needed to be secularised. Instead, they were postmodernist caricatures, drenched in lifestyle liberalism and operating in Western institutions, but looking for a third way to define Muslims outside the Western secular contexts.

They claimed that contemporary cultural traditions and exhibitions of piety in Islamic societies had a rational base, but that this rationalism was according to a societal ethos that was different from the secular ethos of Western modernity. This fascinated their Western patrons but, at the same time, Islamists gleefully adopted such narratives as well.

For example, many US-based Pakistani feminist-academics criticised their Pakistan-based contemporaries for facilitating attacks on Muslim culture by insisting on promoting secular and modernist feminist narratives. Ironically, this is exactly what conservatives and Islamists in Pakistan accuse the liberals of doing. It can also lead to rationalising the ways in which Islamist violence is used, not only by apocalyptic groups, but also by common Muslims to exercise everyday power.

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Foucaults Political Spirituality, Punjab And TLP - The Friday Times

Did COP26 Have Spiritual Implications? Yes, Says One Attendee. – ChristianityToday.com

A lot was at stake last month in Glasgow, Scotland during the UN Climate Conference (COP26).

The summit brought together the nations of the world to drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissionsto keep the crucial threshold of 1.5C of warming in reachand move financial support pledged to the countries most harmed by climate change.

Based on these goals, COP26 fell short. Yes, there were achievements considered unlikely even a few years ago, including coalitional pledges to reduce methane, end deforestation, quit coal, and leave oil and gas behind. And its procedural accomplishments may spur greater results in future years. But in light of how ambitiously countries of the world needed to act, and how little projected warming decreased based on their updated pledges, the conference was a letdown. (Here is a thorough recap.)

Thankfully, thats not all there is to say. Based on what I witnessed in Glasgow, I want to share some observations that I hope are helpful as we move forward from the event:

At COP26, I saw my neighbors who are most harmed by climate impactsIndigenous people, Black and brown people, disabled people, women, and young peoplemost creatively and consistently pressing negotiators for greater ambition. Indigenous people overcame great obstacles to participate in talks and lead marches. Delegates from small island states spoke truth to power. East African church leaders shared about how they educate their congregants to care for creation (despite contributing only 3% of global emissions). I was repeatedly struck by how much those of us who live in high-polluting countries and lead less-affected lives owe to this collective effort.

Besides the many activists of faith present with secular organizations, Christian groups were well represented. They carried their banners through the rain for hours during the Peoples Climate March. They performed peaceful demonstrations in the delegate zone. They attended daily prayer and worship services throughout the week, gathering to receive Gods and one anothers sustenance for their advocacy. In short, in Glasgow I witnessed a convergence of the global church, uniting in the struggle for a healed creation. This might surprise some who are used to climate politics in the U.S., where white evangelicals have polled lowest on climate concern of any religious group. My time at COP26 reminded me that the global church is, in fact, mobilized on creation care.

At COP26, loss and damagedisaster aid, or compensation for harm caused by planet-warming activitieswas a top demand of 136 countries. High-income countries were also supposed to provide Climate Finance to help developing countries adapt. Neither really happenedthe U.S., EU, and others weakened loss and damage to a mere dialogue. Wealthy states delayed real action and maintained the status quo without consequence.

Of course, figuring out what is owed to whom is contentious. But to not honor agreements or make amends for harms is to shirk responsibility, leaving the people already most impacted and least responsible even more vulnerable. This trend, if continued, will deepen climate apartheidseparating those who can afford to adapt to the ravages of a changed climate from those who cant. Governments of high-polluting countries, like the U.S., will not change tack and make restitution without constituents like us pressuring them.

At this COP compared to past ones, climate change was spoken of in moral terms, reflecting an understanding of how we got into this crisis and its consequences on real people. This is thanks to environmental justice trailblazers, but also regular peopleespecially people from most affected communitiesconnecting the dots, seeing what is at stake, and speaking the truth. Truth-telling at a COP reached a new level in Glasgow. Throughout COP26, advocates called out greenwashing and reminded delegates that pledges are not results. Going forward, as climate solutions are proposed and evaluated, it is important for Christians to follow their lead, critically asking how proposals relate to practice and how they will affect people, and then speaking truthfully from that knowledge.

COP26s slick professional appearance and decorum masked the uncomfortable reason there have been decades of these conferences: the slow violence that is climate change. As we see more climate effects on life and livelihood, particularly on the most vulnerable, and how those who have power and comparative security are choosing to respond, even after decades of delay, it is becoming clearer how the climate crisis is built on and continues injustices that do bodily harm to our neighbors. This slow violence is perpetuated by industries, countries, and institutions in which most of us unwittingly participate.

This is not to provoke unproductive personal shame; its to place the climate crisis in an old story. Climate destruction is sin playing out on a planetary level: humans rebelling against Gods intentions for creaturely life and refusing to responsibly care for all weve been entrusted with, in ways that harm ourselves and our neighborseven if we dont directly see or intend them. What often seems normal, natural, or necessary to us can harm others who are out of our sight, mind, or concern. Once we do see, we are called to change course with Gods help.

Not all sin is inadvertent; sometimes people and groups of people willfully decide to put power and profit over people. At COP26, governmental delegates and activists targeted this: namely, the continued burning of fossil fuels (the primary cause of climate change). Even though key language was watered down in the final pact, and despite the industrys massive unofficial representation on the grounds, fossil fuels were finally named in the international climate agreement.

It was short on details and urgency, but COP26 at very least retraced the writing on the wall: the fossil fuel era will end, sooner or later. With all the air pollution deaths and other suffering it causes, this will be a victory for nearly everyone, despite inevitable transitional pains. But how quickly and justly this shift happens is unclear and consequential. Regular people like us can help hasten it through advocacy (toward elected officials and utility providers), money (consumer choices and investments), and culture.

What I saw at COP26 confirmed that the climate crisis is also a political, economic, public health, and racial justice crisis. Of course, its also a spiritual crisis. While I was at the COP, Gus Speths enduring observation often came to mind: I thought that with 30 years of good science we could address these problems, but I was wrong. The top environmental problems are selfishness, greed, and apathy, and to deal with these we need a spiritual and cultural transformation. We certainly do. Clearly, we need Gods help to move away from the selfishness, greed, and apathy that tempts us in uncertain and fearful times and toward faith, hope, and love.

All over Glasgow, I saw signs reading the world is looking to you, COP26. Now the conference is over, the signs have come down, and the news has turned to other worthy concerns. And we must move forward from COP26. But how?

If you, like me, were also looking to COP26 to alleviate the burden to act, to prove that leaders have finally put us on the right track and climate change no longer requires sustained collective efforts, we have to face reality: it did not. After COP26, we remain largely where we were before COP26: within the decisive decade to drastically reduce emissions and thereby save untold lives, which requires each of us to help to the extent we can. We are in danger. And only we who are alive today can do anything to change the perilous course were on. This is both a weighty responsibility and an opportunity to serve.

The challenges are real, but they do not negate the call to act faithfully. There have never been so many ways to do so. There are many solutions available to protect livesour own and othersand responsibly manage the gifts of creation. We dont need to be a politician or scientist or attend a COP to do our bit, as the Scots say. Each of us can practice climate leadership in ways we uniquely can (including at work), and in ways most of us can: talking about climate, taking collective political action to stop the beating and robbery, and of course, caring for those harmed on the road.

Regardless of its results, COP26 was always going to require new climate Samaritans stepping forward, stepping up, and stepping into solidarity with their neighbors. As we step forward into an unknown climate future, good news: we do so together, as part of a global body.

Nate Rauh-Bieri attended COP26 as part of the Christian Climate Observers Program. He attended Wheaton College (B.A.) and Duke Divinity School (M.Div.) and lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

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Did COP26 Have Spiritual Implications? Yes, Says One Attendee. - ChristianityToday.com

The call of awakening – The New Indian Express

A moment comes in everyones life where we have a transcendent experience or a revelation in which we become aware that there is something more to this life. Suddenly, amidst the daily rituals of life like waking up, getting dressed, going to work, eating and sleeping, we get a glimpse that there is a higher purpose in this world. That moment of realisation can come at any time in lifesome have it when they are young whereas some have it at a later stage in life. Whenever it comes, it leaves us transformed. We begin to question who we are, why we are here in this world, where do we go when we die, and what our purpose in life is.

The spiritual thirstIt is developed in everyones life at one point or the other. Most people pursue these questions briefly and then get caught up in this world. These questions may resurface during loss, suffering or times of pain, but are quickly forgotten again. Some of us, however, have an unquenchable thirst to seek these answers and pursue them further. Once these burning questions arise, there is no turning back. We are restless until we find the solutions. The moment we turn our eyes towards the Lord, the Lord comes to our help. As the hunger to find the answers, to experience more of this divine ecstasy and joy grows in us, we begin to search for answers everywhere.

The divine questRead about the life of any of the great saints and mystics, and you will find some life-transforming experience that awakened their spiritual quest and then they pursued their quest. When we get the call of awakening, something familiar resonates in us. We feel like something that we have forgotten for a long time is suddenly recalled. We may read something in a book about God and the soul, and suddenly tears may spring to our eyes. It is like we suddenly remembered our true Home is somewhere else. Maybe we are listening to music and the sound of a flute, a violin, or a harp may move us to tears. There are certain sounds that may remind us of a much higher music we once heard. We may meet someone who is in tune with God, and suddenly we find in their eyes something very familiar. We may feel great peace and solace in their presence. Our soul may suddenly recognise someone who is in tune with God. During such moments, our heart starts to soar like a bird. It is not actually happiness of the heart, but of the soul.

Our soul has been imprisoned in this body and mind for aeons. It has been crying to be heard. Our soul is waiting for us to awaken so that the soul can be freed from its imprisonment. Finally, when we experience the call of awakening, the soul is in ecstasy. The soul sees the chance of its freedom. One can experience the soul as an internal ecstasy and joy.

Seeking the answersIf we wish to find spiritual answers, we need to go within ourselves and experience our soul. The Lord has been waiting for aeons for us to awaken. We are soul, a part of God, and our highest purpose in life is to experience our soul and experience God.Many saints and mystics have taught us that by sitting in silence we experience ourselves as soul. Whether we call it meditation, concentration or inversion, the aim is the sameto experience our real self and to experience God.

Meditation is the meansBy meditation, we feel the love, peace, and stillness that are within ourselves by experiencing our soul which is our true self. It can be practiced by people of any age, faith, or belief. It is the process of experiencing our soul by taking our attention away from the world outside and focusing it within. Meditation is the highest form of prayer and unlocks the gates to the reservoir of untapped knowledge wisdom that we carry within us. This knowledge answers all our spiritual questions about the mysteries of life and death.

The author is a renowned spiritual leader working towards inner and outer peace. He can be contacted at http://www.sos.org

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The call of awakening - The New Indian Express

Sunday Scripture reading, Jan. 9, 2022: New spiritual resolutions – Catholic News Service

The Baptism of the Lord

1) Is 42:1-4, 6-7 or 40:1-5, 9-11Psalm 29:1-4, 9-10 or 104:1-4, 24-25, 27-302) Acts 10:34-38 or Ti 2:11-14; 3:4-7Gospel: Lk 3:15-16, 21-22

As a new year begins, our television, phone and computer screens are flooded with commercials advertising new diets, exercise equipment, gym memberships and self-help books. The start of a new year creates in us a desire to begin anew.

New Years resolutions are made in the hope of making better our health, daily habits, relationships and communities. We may have already broken a few resolutions by now, but they motivate our desire for a better world.

A new year also offers a fresh opportunity to renew ourselves spiritually. And among the spiritual resolutions we could make is to strive to live out daily the meaning of our baptism.

We are all called, by virtue of baptism, to ongoing conversion of life, perseverance in prayer and selfless witness to the Gospel in our homes, places of work, neighborhoods and communities of faith.

We live our baptismal vocation at home, in the workplace and in our communities of faith. The renewing strength and wisdom we need to witness to Jesus Christ is rooted in graces we first received at baptism. Living out our baptism can be a good spiritual resolution in this new year.

The feast of the Baptism of Our Lord focuses our gaze on the sacred moment when Jesus is baptized by John the Baptist in the Jordan. Scripture recounts that at his baptism Jesus saw the heavens open, and the Holy Spirit descended upon him, in the form of a dove.

The heavenly voice of God the Father is heard saying, You are my beloved Son, with you I am well pleased (Lk 3:22). By his baptism in the Jordan, Jesus sanctifies all the waters of baptism.

God, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are present at Jesus baptism. And our baptism is an invitation into the Trinitarian mystery of God, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. This foundational event in Jesus life calls to mind the gift of new life we received at the foundational moment of our baptism.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church speaks of baptism as the unrepeatable sacrament of initiation that incorporates a person into new life in the Trinitarian mystery of God, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, in whose name every Christian is baptized.

At baptism we receive forgiveness of original sin and all personal sins, birth into the new life by which man becomes an adoptive son of the Father, a member of Christ and a temple of the Holy Spirit (No. 1279).

The grace we received at baptism is not a thing of the past, a nice family memory from infancy or childhood. Rather, baptism is the foundation of new life in Jesus Christ lived today and every day in the light of Gods love and mercy. The new year is a perfect time to resolve to rely more on Gods grace, first received at baptism.

Jesus baptism in the Jordan began his public ministry as the son of God incarnate whose life, death and resurrection inaugurated the kingdom of God on earth.

Our baptism into Jesus Christ strengthens us with graces for daily conversion of life and Christian witness. As we strive to give joyful and humble witness to our new life in Jesus Christ, the grace of our baptism moves us now to pray, speak to me, Lord.

Reflection Question:

How will you live the meaning of your baptism as you ponder the Baptism of Jesus?

Sullivan is a professor at The Catholic University of America.

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Sunday Scripture reading, Jan. 9, 2022: New spiritual resolutions - Catholic News Service

If there is any country that is mother of spirituality, culture, democracy, it’s India: Om Birla – Devdiscourse

Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla on Saturday said that if there is any country that is the mother of spirituality, culture and democracy, it is India. Addressing at the International Gita Festival here today, Birla said, "Democracy has not come only after Independence, but has always been a part of our way of lives and our culture. Be it spirituality, religion, culture, or democracy, India is known to be the mother of all of this. If there is a mother of all of this, it is India."

The LS Speaker further said that if there is any country in the world where there is peace through spirituality and religion as a medium, it is India. "If there is any country in the world where there is peace through spirituality and religion as a medium, then it is India. This is why India has always been a Vishwa Guru in the world," he said.

"We call India a Vishwa Guru because even today, due to its spirituality and culture, India shows the way of Humanity to the world. It is the land of Lord Ram that shows us the path to living an ideal life. It is also a land of Lord Krishna which inspires us to perform our work. The land of Kurukshetra, on the basis of knowledge in Bhagavad Gita, shows the way to live life," he added. Talking about the Bhagavad Gita, Birla said that each and every 'shloka' of the Gita directs us to live our lives in the right manner.

"A person who lives in the present is following Bhagavad Gita's path. Each and every 'shloka', chapter of the Gita directs you to live your life in the right manner, helping you come out of any difficulty," he said. (ANI)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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If there is any country that is mother of spirituality, culture, democracy, it's India: Om Birla - Devdiscourse

Idol Worship: The Brooklyn Museums Important New Warhol Show Casts the Pop Artist in a Spiritual Light – artnet News

Andy Warhol famously instructed an interviewer to just look at the surface of my paintings and films and me, and there I am. Theres nothing behind it. But its been a long time since the pioneering Pop artist has been seen simply as an empty cipher. In the years since his death in 1987 Warhol has been reborn many times. The ever-multiplying Andys include social critic Andy, queer Andy, proto-postmodern Andy, reality TV Andy, and commercial Andy.

Andy Warhol: Revelation, currently on view at the Brooklyn Museum, homes in on Catholic Andy. Originally organized for the Warhol Museum by its chief curator Jos Carlos Diaz and overseen in its Brooklyn incarnation Carmen Hermo, the exhibition draws a line from Warhols religious upbringing as a Byzantine Catholic (he later took up Roman Catholicism) through the twists and turns of his career to his last major undertaking, a set of over 100 paintings based on Leonardos Last Supper.

This is touted as the first exhibition to explore this aspect of Warhols work. However, it is not exactly a new takethe catalogue references both art historian John Richardsons paean to Warhols secret piety in his 1987 eulogy and Jane Daggett Dillenbergers 1998 tome The Religious Art of Andy Warhol.

I will modestly add here the chapter I devoted to Warhols Catholicism in my 2004 book Postmodern Heretics: The Catholic Imagination in Contemporary Art. Another precursor is Arthur Danto, whose ideas about the transfiguration of the commonplace hover without attribution in labels that discuss Warhols sculptures of Heinz Ketchup and Delmonte Peaches boxes.

Installation view for Andy Warhol: Revelation, at the Brooklyn Museum, November 19, 2021-June 19, 2022. (Photo: Jonathan Dorado, Brooklyn Museum. Artworks by Andy Warhol 2021 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. /Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

But if the idea of a Warhol immersed in spiritual concerns has been around for some time, newly unearthed materials from the archives of the Warhol Museum have deepened the case. Discoveries include an unfinished film that would have been funded by the Catholic Church, a never completed series of images of nursing mothers, a set of drawings of angels by Warhols mother Julia Warhola, as well as religious objects, letters, and clippings that give context to the snippets of text and found images that appear in Warhols paintings.

In addition, the show leans heavily on recent scholarship by Warhol Museum curator Jessica Beck that places Warhols late Last Supper paintings in the context of his terrified response to the concurrent AIDS Epidemic. These materials, combined with revelations first made by Richardson of Warhols regular church attendance, his financial support of a nephews studies for the priesthood, and his participation in a soup kitchen provide a picture of Warhol much at odds with more familiar representations of the artist as an indifferent societal mirror or cultural sieve.

Installation view for Andy Warhol: Revelation, at the Brooklyn Museum, November 19, 2021-June 19, 2022. (Photo: Jonathan Dorado, Brooklyn Museum. Artworks by Andy Warhol 2021 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. /Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

The show opens with a wealth of materials that underscore the degree to which religion saturated Warhols childhood. On display are holy cards, religious statuettes, and crucifixes from his home, several religious paintings borrowed from his childhood church, and even a painting by a very young Warhol in which his childhood living room is presided over by a prominent cross.

The show then builds its case with thematic sections that consider other aspects of Warhols debt to Catholicism. One set of works and ephemera consider his rather problematic relationship with women. These include his obsession with Marilyn Monroe and Jackie Kennedy, whose portraits have long been seen as counterparts to the Byzantine icons of his childhood; his friendship with Candy Darling, Warhol superstar and transgender icon; and his near assassination by Valerie Solanas, the Factory hanger-on and author of the SCUM Manifesto (a piquant acronym for the Society for Cutting up Men).

More surprising are drawings and photographs depicting breastfeeding mothers. Inspired, presumably, by the countless Renaissance paintings of the Madonna and Child, these were intended for a never realized painting series.

Installation view for Andy Warhol: Revelation, at the Brooklyn Museum, November 19, 2021-June 19, 2022. (Photo: Jonathan Dorado, Brooklyn Museum. Artworks by Andy Warhol 2021 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. /Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Another section documents Warhols 1980 visit to the Vatican and his five-second meeting with Pope John Paul II amid a throng of other worshipers. The exhibition ties this to a number of Warhol drawings of huge crowd scenes. A section documenting his borrowings from various Renaissance paintings (and pointing toward the late Last Supper paintings) tries to make the case for Warhol as a latter-day Renaissance man.

A section of an unfinished film originally destined for a 1968 Worlds Fair in San Antonio is comprised of poetic images of the setting sun accompanied by a crooning voiceover by Factory chanteuse Nico. Commissioned by the Catholic Church, it bears a striking resemblance to Paul Pfeiffers 2001 film Study for Morning after the Deluge, in which the rising and setting sun also becomes a metaphor for the cycle of life and death.

But most crucial for the exhibitions argument is a section titled The Catholic Body. Here the show ties the essential carnality of Catholicism, a religion whose doctrines, art, and literature center on very literal representations of the Word Made Flesh, to Warhols bodily obsessions and his conflicted existence as a gay man in a faith that condemns homosexuality.

Installation view for Andy Warhol: Revelation, at the Brooklyn Museum, November 19, 2021-June 19, 2022. (Photo: Jonathan Dorado, Brooklyn Museum. Artworks by Andy Warhol 2021 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. /Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Two works introduce these ideas. Richard Avedons iconic photograph of Warhols bared torso riven with the scars left by Solanass attack becomes, in this context, a modern-day version of the many Renaissance representations of the martyr Saint Sebastian, whose muscular arrow riddled torso has made him a gay icon.

A lesser known Warhol silkscreen painting from 198586 titled The Last Supper (Be a Somebody with a Body) also presents a juxtaposition of religious and homoerotic imagery, this time by layering images of the Christ from the Last Supper and an image, clipped from a newspaper ad, of a buff, half-dressed body builder.

Which brings us to the exhibitions centerpiece. Andy Warhol: Revelation pivots on Warhols Last Supper paintings. Arranged like a horseshoe, the layout leads one through the above-mentioned material to a voluminous quantity of Last Supper imagery. The Last Supper paintings were commissioned in 1984 by art dealer Alexander Iolas for display in a space in Milan across the street from Leonardos masterwork.

But Warhol went far beyond the confines of the original commission. He collected multiple images of the Last Supper, including a lenticular version and a very kitschy sculptural rendition documented here in polaroid photographs. And he used the imagery in many ways, including on a series of punching bags that were collaborations with Jean Michel Basquiat and in paintings emblazoned with logos or comprised of fragments of Leonardos mural.

Installation view for Andy Warhol: Revelation, at the Brooklyn Museum, November 19, 2021-June 19, 2022. (Photo: Jonathan Dorado, Brooklyn Museum. Artworks by Andy Warhol 2021 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. /Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

At the Brooklyn Museum, two full-scale versions of Warhols Last Supper are presented in an almost chapel-like space. They spread over opposite walls separated by a bench where, on the day I visited, visitors were obediently sitting in contemplative silence. This is a reminder of the ambiguity embedded in this workand for that matter, all of Warhols work.

Depending on which Andy they are highlighting, critics have tended to locate Warhols imagery on a scale that runs from blank irony to heartfelt sincerity. The Last Supper paintings pose a particular problem. Are they just another pop culture image, not unlike the like soup cans, dollar signs, or portraits of Chairman Mao, appropriated precisely because of their ubiquity and banality? Or are they vessels full of personal meaning?

In an essay referenced in the catalogue, Jessica Beck makes the case for the latter, arguing that these late paintings were created in an atmosphere suffused with the threat of AIDS. Many of Warhols friends and associates were dying of the disease. In response, Beck maintains that Warhol gave AIDS a facethe mournful face of Christ.

Installation view for Andy Warhol: Revelation, at the Brooklyn Museum, November 19, 2021-June 19, 2022. (Photo: Jonathan Dorado, Brooklyn Museum. Artworks by Andy Warhol 2021 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. /Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

And yet, as the exhibition now moves down the other prong of the horseshoe layout, closing the show out with works that provide a Catholic context for some of Warhols more familiar imagery, one cant help feeling that interpretation is a little too pat. The exhibition consciously resists the tendency, evident both in the Richardson eulogy and the Dillenberger study, to present an overly sanctified Warhol free of the bedeviling contradictions that continue to make him such an elusive subject. But at the same time the approach here seems overly hermeneutic.

By that I mean that texts and images are treated like hidden messages to be deciphered as one might the theological exegeses embedded in Renaissance religious paintings or medieval manuscripts. Such an approach seems to dismiss the deliberate insouciance of Warhols own commentaries as well as the obvious ironies that underlie so many works. And it makes it necessary, to use just one example, to reframe the overtly blasphemous and sacrilegious references in Warhols film Chelsea Girls, screened in full here, as modernizations of Christs embrace of outcasts and misfits.

Installation view for Andy Warhol: Revelation, at the Brooklyn Museum, November 19, 2021-June 19, 2022. (Photo: Jonathan Dorado, Brooklyn Museum. Artworks by Andy Warhol 2021 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. /Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

It seems more true to the Last Supper paintings to acknowledge that they exist, like all Warhols works, in a continuum between irony and sincerity, partaking simultaneously of both. Warhol could be both vulnerable and cruel, spiritual and profane.

Perhaps it might have helped to delve a bit more into the contradictions between the carnal and the spiritual inherent in Catholicism itself. The section The Catholic Body starts to do this, but doesnt touch on the homoerotic overtones of Catholic stories and imagery that would have fired Warhols imagination. This is, after all, a religion whose central image is a near naked man on a cross.

Warhol was not alone in finding the mix of ritual, sensuality, and homoeroticism in Catholicism irresistible, even as its official dogma condemned his sexual being. Robert Mapplethorpe, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, and David Wojnorowicz are three gay artists whose work is increasingly being considered in terms of their Catholic upbringing. Of particular relevance to this exhibition is the way that Wojnarowicz used the face and body of the crucified Christ to denote suffering and to evoke societys callous disregard for the ravages of AIDS while also roundly condemning the Catholic Churchs complicity in the crisis.

Installation view for Andy Warhol: Revelation, at the Brooklyn Museum, November 19, 2021-June 19, 2022. (Photo: Jonathan Dorado, Brooklyn Museum. Artworks by Andy Warhol 2021 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. /Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Moving on from the Last Supper sanctuary, the show winds down with sections that bring us some of the more familiar aspects of Warhols work. In light of what has gone before, these now also take on a Catholic tinge. The Skulls, Shadows, Electric Chairs, and Death and Disasters evoke Warhols death obsession. A section titled The Material World: What We Worship offers a nod to his valorization of consumption, now seeing Warhol as the chronicler of the desires, hopes, and prayers of modern life. One series, Guns, Knives, and Crosses from 1981-81, makes a particularly ambiguous statement about the relationship of religiosity and violence.

Whatever its shortcomings, this is a thought-provoking and deeply researched show. And, given the way it foregrounds the tension between Warhols homosexuality and his Catholic faith, it must be added that it is also a brave one. These days it is easy to raise the censorious hackles of cultural arbiters from both ends of the political spectrum. By presenting a frank acknowledgement of the complexities of sexuality and faith, Andy Warhol: Revelation opens up new avenues in the often fraught discussion of the relation of art and religion.

Andy Warhol: Revelation is on view at the Brooklyn Museum, 200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, November 19, 2021June 19, 2022.

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Idol Worship: The Brooklyn Museums Important New Warhol Show Casts the Pop Artist in a Spiritual Light - artnet News

Explore Spiritual Warfare And Learn Defense Against The Forces Of Evil – WFMZ Allentown

LATROBE, Pa., Dec. 13, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ --Author Stanley Smith prepares readers to overcome challenges using a defense of spiritual power in Pastors in the Hands of an Angry God ($10.99, paperback, 9781619046016; $5.49, e-book, 9781619046023).

Smith offers a thought-provoking writing about battling spiritual warfare with the Word of God. Through this powerful teaching, Christian readers will learn to recognize attacks and become equipped with God's truth.

"With twenty years of study in this area and after being asked to leave two churches, I asked God what to do and the answer was to write this work," said Smith. "It is my feeling that we have taken a soft approach to this topic. I want to put the fire back in our pulpit, and reach the whole city."

At the age of sixteen, Stanley Smith accepted the Lord as his Savior at a Billy Graham meeting in Rockwell City, Iowa. After high school he contemplated going into the ministry but instead, decided to go to South Dakota State University to study mechanical engineering. Upon graduation, he became a design engineer; designing air tools, material-handling equipment, and quality-control equipment for several companies.

During his time in Michigan, he received the baptism of the Holy Spirit. After 30 years of being part of the engineering community, Smith retired and devoted his time to teaching in churches with much energy spent in the area of spiritual warfare. As a result, he was asked to leave the church. He continued studying spiritual warfare and wrote the manuscript for this book.

###

Xulon Press, a division of Salem Media Group, is the world's largest Christian self-publisher, with more than 15,000 titles published to date. Pastors in the Hands of an Angry God is available online through xulonpress.com/bookstore, amazon.com, and barnesandnoble.com.

Media Contact

Stanley Smith, Salem Author Services, (724) 771-1259, stanleysmith73@gmail.com

SOURCE Xulon Press

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Explore Spiritual Warfare And Learn Defense Against The Forces Of Evil - WFMZ Allentown

Need to spread spiritual intelligence, says Governor Koshyari – The Indian Express

Governor Bhagat Singh Koshyari on Sunday urged students to achieve their goals, make enormous progress in life but always remember the nation where they were born, where they spent their childhood. Contribute in making India a self-reliant nation and I believe graduates like you will do it, he said.

He was speaking at the 18th Graduation Ceremony of Symbiosis International (Deemed University) at Symbiosis Campus, Lavale, on Sunday. The Governor was the chief guest and Dharmendra Pradhan, Minister of Education, Skill Development and Entrepreneurship was the guest of honour for the function though he could not make it.

Dr S B Mujumdar, Chancellor, Symbiosis International (Deemed University) presided over the function.

Speaking further at the graduation ceremony, Koshyari said the present age is of artificial intelligence. Considering the great spiritual heritage of our Indian culture, we need to spread Spiritual Intelligence. The concept of Spiritual Intelligence will be an innovative idea not only for our country but for the whole world, he said.

The Governor said, Dr Majumdar started an organisation like Symbiosis with Global Ideology in mind. Today, Symbiosis has completed 50 years and has made a name for it internationally. We should be proud of our mother tongue. We must teach our children in their mother tongue. Dr. Mujumdar was educated in Marathi language and today he is the Chancellor of Symbiosis University. You should all follow his example.

Dr Mujumdar in his presidential address, said that the Corona period was very challenging for all of us. Corona taught us many things, such as the unique importance of our health, our family relationships, spirituality, our interdependence and through this Corona showed us the harsh reality of our lives.

Dr. Mujumdar urged students to do 3 things teach innovation to your brain, compassion for your heart and passion for your stomach. If you follow these 3 things, you will be successful on all fronts of life.

Dr Vidya Yerawadekar, Principal Director, Symbiosis and Pro-Chancellor, Symbiosis International University gave opening remarks. Dr Rajni Gupte, Vice Chancellor, Symbiosis International University presented the annual report.

Dr Bhama Venkataramani, Dean, Academics and Administration, Symbiosis International University gave vote of thanks and Dr. Anita Patankar, Director, Symbiosis School of Liberal Arts and Deputy Director, Centre for International Education was the anchor of the programme.

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Need to spread spiritual intelligence, says Governor Koshyari - The Indian Express

Varanasi: Spiritual and structural rejuvenation – Times of India

In his autobiography, My Experiments with Truth, Mahatma Gandhi recounts his visit to Kashi in 1916 and writes, I went to the Kashi Vishwanath temple for darshan. I was deeply pained by what I saw there ... The approach was through a narrow and slippery lane. Quiet there was none. The swarming flies and the noise made by the shopkeepers and pilgrims were perfectly insufferable. Where one expected an atmosphere of meditation and communion, it was conspicuous by its absence. The Mahatmas observations were echoed by many in subsequent years as the city was subjected to neglect over a protracted period of time. After 240 years of neglect In the medieval period Kashi faced apathy, dereliction and destruction due to the various Turkic and Mughal invasions. The Kashi Vishwanath Temple was rebuilt by the Maratha queen Ahilyabhai Holkar between 1777 and 1780 and this was the last major rejuvenation the city witnessed. Now Kashi is seeing its first major transformation after 240 years. The journey required grit, determination, creativity, patience and consensus-building, and a lot of the credit accrues to Prime Minister Narendra Modis resolve to enrich the experience of those visiting Kashi. The Kashi Dham and various development projects being undertaken ensure that the spiritual capital of the world provides a seamless, holistic and immersive experience.

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Varanasi: Spiritual and structural rejuvenation - Times of India

ASIA/CHINA – Christmas lights are turned on: the Catholic community intensifies its spiritual journey and its works of charity – Agenzia Fides

Beijing (Agenzia Fides) - Yesterday, on the third Sunday of Advent, the Christmas lights, lights of hope, illuminated the different parishes of Beijing, with great emotion of the faithful, who were able to return to the churches after yet another restriction caused by COVID-19. Among these communities, the faithful of the parish of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, gathered in the courtyard of the church with lighted candles in their hands, whispering prayers with the melodious song of the parish choir Teodorico Pedrini. In this way, they paid homage to Fr. Teodorico Pedrini (CM, Fermo June 30. 1671 - Beijing December 10, 1746), a great Italian missionary, theologian and author of sacred songs, who founded and lived in this church during his stay in the capital of the Qing dynasty empire. It was an evocative moment, above all a strong moment of faith and missionary spirit, because the faithful transmitted the joy of the Christian message to all those who live in the area, offering a living and eloquent witness. The Chinese Catholics' path to Christmas has intensified in recent weeks also through concrete charitable works. On the feast of St.Francis Xavier, Patron of the mission in China, the Charity group of the parish of Aozhen, in the city of Ordos, Inner Mongolia, led by Fr. Qiqigeli, of Mongolian origin, and by the nuns, despite the sub-zero temperature, visited the county nursing home. In addition to Christmas gifts, they brought the Lord's Love to the elderly, through medical care, assistance and willingness to listen to them and spend a day with them. Finally, the parish priest gave the blessing to the elderly and the nurses and assistants. The Yongnian Basic Ecclesial Community in Shanghai was established 16 years ago by a group of immigrant workers from the diocese of Yongnian (now Handan), in the province of Hebei. Throughout these years of hard work, they have never neglected the life of faith and charitable commitment. During the liturgical celebration on the theme "Along the way of the beatitudes", on December 4, the members of the group confirmed their spirit of adherence to both the mother diocese of Yongnian and the diocese of Shanghai, which welcomed them. In addition to active participation in the life of the parish where they are guests and in the monthly community meeting, around Christmas, the members of the community have helped families in difficulty, donated blood, visited the elderly and the sick. They also financially supported the construction of the bishopric, the diocesan training center, the orphanage and the restoration of churches in various dioceses. (NZ) (Agenzia Fides, 13/12/2021)

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ASIA/CHINA - Christmas lights are turned on: the Catholic community intensifies its spiritual journey and its works of charity - Agenzia Fides

Author and Spiritual Teacher Iyanla Vanzant on Missing Loved Ones During the Holidays: ‘Make It a Celebration’ – Inside Edition

Acclaimed best-selling writer and spiritual teacher Iyanla Vanzant knows what it's like to grieve a loved one during the holidays.

"December 25th, Christmas day, 2003 at 10:18 AM, my daughter took her last breath," Vanzant told Inside Edition Digital. Her daughter Gemmia was 31 when she died of cancer."On Christmas day. And Christmas was her favorite holiday."

The author noted how difficult the holiday season can be when someone you love is no longer there.

"So the first year," she explained, "I started getting hysterical around Thanksgiving knowing that Christmas was coming and it would be my first Christmas without her, and I couldn't do it."

By year two, Vanzant says she turned her grief into a celebration.

"I made a different choice," she said. "And we don't think that even though the person may be gone or we have an empty chair. Or people that we don't necessarily want to be with are coming to sit at our table, we don't think we have a choice, but you get to choose how to move into every experience."

The holiday season can leave many feeling sad and vulnerable, especially people experiencing grief. But Vanzant does have advice on how to work through it.

"For those people who have that missing seat at the table, do everything you know they loved," she suggests.

"If they loved Easter eggs, put some Easter eggs under the Christmas tree. If they loved baking or whatever it was, cook that and have it in their name and share the joyful, happy memories. Choose to make it a celebration as opposed to a dismal memory."

She also suggests not to feel stuck in old traditions that no longer serve you.

"For people to be able to shift out of the habitual programming, to be able to shift out of the dysfunctional traditions, to be able to shift out of the self-denial and say, 'This is what I'm doing,' and be OK with that? Yay. Oh, joy. Oh, rapture. It's a good thing."

To honor her daughter, Vanzant has revived a body care company called Master Peace, founded by Gemmia. It helps continue her legacy.

"As a mom, to carry on my daughter's legacy and to be a demonstration to her daughter, my granddaughter, of what it's like to walk into, to carry a vision, it's humbling," she said. "It's humbling that the Creator would give me such a high calling."

And however difficult this season may be, Vanzant wants to remind people that they can get through the tough times.

"And whoever you are and wherever you are, you have been prepared by your challenges, your difficulties, your experiences," she said. "You have been prepared to walk through whatever this moment is."

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Author and Spiritual Teacher Iyanla Vanzant on Missing Loved Ones During the Holidays: 'Make It a Celebration' - Inside Edition