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Themis, Titan Goddess

November 22, 2013 , , , , , ,

Themis

Themis on Delphic tripod

Themis is the Titan goddess of law, order, and prophecy. She gave birth to the Horae, the seasons, who determine the timing of all things in this world and beyond.  The scales of justice are associated with her.  The oracle at Delphi was founded by Themis and her mother Gaia.  both of them are in associated with prophecy.  She was an early bride of Zeus, and acted as his councilor, instructing him in divine law.  Man made law often is in direct conflict with divine law.  Themis defends her mother Gaia, the earth.  In this age of eco-consciousness and efforts to both save and restore natural resources in peril, Themis is the pure spirit of ecology.  She defends the beings, all the animal, mineral, and vegetable offspring of the Earth.  In the War of the Titans, she took the side of the Olympians.  She was the most important goddess in the first generation of Olympians. Today her significance is as a defender of our earthly mother.  Can you think of people or institutions that embody divine justice?

What do you think?

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From my perspective, the only person would be Jesus Christ. But, He was man and God. If we look at mortals only, Abraham Lincoln comes readily to my mind. But, he was mortal and could not always do the divine. When it comes to institutions? The Church? Institutions may also provide the divine occasionally but they are run by mortals so they cannot always do that. Flashes of the divine? Glad that God has given us the gift of repentance.

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frederick (rick) rehfeldt

November 22, 2013

THE OTHER HISTORIC DEATH ON NOVEMBER 22, 1963
Cultural Commentary Published on Thursday, 21 November 2013 05:45 Written by Jim Denison
Anyone my age or older can tell you where they were when they heard that President Kennedy had been shot. Few know that C. S. Lewis, the best-known theologian of the 20th century, died an hour earlier.

The similarities between the two are remarkable. Both were known to family and friends as “Jack.” Both were second sons. Both attended preparatory schools before enrolling in prestigious universities: Lewis at Oxford, Kennedy at Harvard. Both were decorated war veterans: Lewis was wounded in 1918 during the Battle of Arras; Kennedy survived the destruction of his Navy boat in 1943 and earned a Purple Heart for his heroics.

Both suffered tragic personal losses. Lewis’ mother died when he was nine; Kennedy’s older brother died while serving as a Navy pilot in 1944, his sister Kathleen was killed four years later in a plane crash, and his two-day-old son Patrick died on August 9, 1963. Both were famous authors: Kennedy won a Pulitzer Prize for Profiles in Courage, while Lewis wrote 40 books in his lifetime. More than 20 collections of his essays, letters, and poems have appeared after his death; his books have sold more than 200 million copies.

Both struggled with their faith. Lewis was a nominal Christian before his mother’s death, leaving the faith under the influence of an atheist tutor. He returned to belief in God in 1929 and made his commitment to Christ two years later. Kennedy was a life-long Catholic, but he struggled to reconcile his faith with aspects of his personal life and public policies.

Here’s one more similarity: neither could have imagined their impact 50 years after their deaths. John Kennedy established the Peace Corps, the NAVY Seals, and the Green Berets. His leadership was instrumental for the civil rights movement and the resolution of the Cuban Missile Crisis. He inspired a new generation of Americans to engage in public service; his example still calls us to “ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country.”

Since C. S. Lewis’ death 50 years ago, more than 100 books have been written about him and his writings. By the centennial of his birth in 1998, there were four major biographies of Lewis, six collections of reminiscences, eight surveys of his fiction, and six others devoted specifically to The Chronicles of Narnia. Next to Scripture, the book that has influenced me most is Lewis’ Mere Christianity. Next to the Apostle Paul, Lewis has been the most important theologian in my life and faith.

We cannot measure the eternal significance of present faithfulness. How can you be sure that your life today will count for eternity? Let’s close with my favorite C. S. Lewis quote: “Aim at heaven and you will get earth thrown in. Aim at earth and you get neither.”

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frederick (rick) rehfeldt

November 22, 2013

Wow, Rick, I also love CS Lewis…could it be genetic??? a love of justice and truth? They were both idealists, but as he notes, if you don’t think idealistically, you may end in the gutter.

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mermaidcamp

November 22, 2013

yes, cousin Pamela, it must be the genes! Also, a priest once told me we come closer to truth when we give people the benefit of the doubt. The piece by Jim Denison reminded me of that admonition from long ago.

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frederick (rick) rehfeldt

November 23, 2013

would the pope count?

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London-Unattached.com

November 23, 2013

pardon me for not touching that…

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Frederick Edward rehfeldt

November 23, 2013

I am into this pope and do think he is swinging the pendulum closer to the center for the Catholics. He has a giant task, so I love his first tweet/statement…he asked for everyone to pray for him.

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mermaidcamp

November 23, 2013

A flash of the divine!

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Frederick Edward rehfeldt

November 23, 2013

Love this. it’s so cool. Definitely appeals to my mythology bent

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Stevie Wilson (@LAStory)

November 24, 2013

1 notes

  1. Irene, Goddess of Peace and Spring | mermaidcamp reblogged this and added:

    […] campaigns, therefore a time when peace was hard to achieve. Irene is a daughter of Zeus and Themis, one of the Horai. Along with her sisters she rules natural timing and seasons. Her season is […]

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