Grace?

Joseph Tracy brook7 at sover.net
Mon Aug 7 22:07:10 CDT 2017


If so it suggests to me that our fictions, our myths can free themselves from the past and lead us toward something better.  A grace not given from  some separate above but coming out of our questions and conscience and human needs to be tasted moment by moment in what is.. 
> On Aug 7, 2017, at 3:36 PM, Thomas Eckhardt <thomas.eckhardt at uni-bonn.de> wrote:
> 
> Oh, this is very nice.
> 
> Yes, I suggest, Gottfried is flying toward grace. But his ascent will be "betrayed to Gravity" and we will witness his and the rocket's descent on the final page of the novel. For the /Inconvenience/, however, no such descent is envisaged. Is it possible that the boys manage to escape?
> 
> Echoes indeed.
> 
> On 8/5/2017 6:22 PM, Krafft, John M. wrote:
>> If observing/perceiving/understanding things to be exactly as they are
>> is grace in AD, compare this passage from the end of GR. Surely
>> Gottfried isn't flying toward grace, is he?
>> 	This ascent will be betrayed to Gravity. But the Rocket engine, the
>> deep cry of combustion that jars the soul, promises escape. The
>> victim, in bondage to falling, rises on a promise, a prophecy, of
>> Escape....
>> 	Moving now toward the kind of light where at last the apple is
>> apple-colored. The knife cuts through the apple like a knife cutting
>> an apple. Everything is where it is, no clearer than usual, but
>> certainly more present.
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