Perhaps it may turn out a sang,
Perhaps turn out a sermon.

-- R. Burns Epistle to a Young Friend

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Of Mice and Men

Paul Coughlin discusses the fact that masculinity is unwanted. Read the whole thing (and see the references to thumos below), but he concludes:
All of us—and especially men—must lay claim to thumos so that God’s grace in us can construct a new and dynamic person. Most of us will never fight a physical battle against an enemy; we will use our thumos, or not, for moral courage against both the evil spirit of the age that erodes human dignity and also against our own tendency to take the easy way through life, which halts spiritual growth. We must harness thumos to rise above the mediocre, trivial, social-club Christianity in which we too often find ourselves, shaking off the fearful and uninformed critics who worship comfort instead of truth. Because a shift is taking place: God is calling his people to fight for justice, and more and more of them are answering the call.

We have flexed compassion the world over to combat poverty and disease. But one of the most underreported reasons people’s lives are so desperate isn’t that they don’t have the ability to feed and educate themselves—it’s that others oppress them, rob them, maim them, and enslave them. Many don’t need more bags of rice—not ultimately. They, like the estimated twenty-seven million people in actual slavery, like the 160,000 kids who stay home daily from American schools for fear of being bullied, need justice to rain down upon them from the hands of righteous people who will fight on their behalf. That’s right, fight—one of evangelicalism’s most feared words and even more feared actions. We need the men to move first—that’s almost always how it works.


The concept of thumos is explained here, and in this Weekly Standard review of Harvey Mansfield's book Manliness:
"Manliness," [Mansfield] says, "is a quality that causes individuals to stand for something." The Greeks used the term thumos to denote the bristling, spirited element shared by human beings and animals that makes them fight back when threatened. It causes dogs to defend their turf; it makes human beings stand up for their kin, their religion, their country, their principles. "Just as a dog defends its master," writes Mansfield, "so the doggish part of the human soul defends human ends higher than itself."

Every human being possesses thumos. But those who are manly possess it in abundance, and sometimes in excess. The manly man is not satisfied to let things be as they are, and he makes sure everyone knows it. He invests his perception of injustice with cosmic importance.

4 comments:

walt said...

Mushroom -

The Santa Rosa plum is supposedly self-fertile, and is used as a pollinator for other varieties. But it's still suggested to have two plums, perhaps if only to attract more bees.

One problem with plums is that they bloom early, and sometimes the bees aren't flying. Bees don't fly until temps average 55°.

Google is loaded with such data if you wish to pursue it.

JWM said...

Excellent post, as always. As I've mentioned before, your stuff doesn't leave me without some healthy discomfort. Always an occasion to take a look at my balance.

JWM

mushroom said...

Thanks, John.

Walt, thanks for the feedback. I thought that was the case, that they would self-pollinate -- I have a nectarine that does OK. And apples starting to come on. I actually had two of the Santa Rosas -- one succumbed to something last summer. I'd say it's the blooming time.

Sal said...

Good one, Mushroom.
Nice sync! You, Bob and Van are simultaneously 'speaking to my condition'.
In my search for social change via gardening and food production, I find no one who isn't an ecofanatic and/or leftist of some sort.
They have thumos alright, but it's mis-directed.
Understanding their mind is a help in sorting the wheat- actual useful information- from the chaff- wrong-headed philosophy and tactics.