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Thursday, May 18, 2006
Perhaps.

The process.

Something that has been vaguely negelected by humans, in whatsoever race that is to be ran. The focus is always on the end result. Always on the final objective. We're creatures that love to dwell on the past and aim greater at the future, yet rarely do we come to terms with an appreciation on the present. Yeah, many have realised this. And then they have moved on. But perhaps it stems from this ignorance of the essence of 'process' that potrays how mankind seems to lack a faculty to appreciate this essence - not only in terms of a race of course. It can be in terms of other things like, in the theology of sin.

There is always this stark contrast between the good and the evil. A juxtaposition between beauty and ugliness. And as we come to terms to understanding goodness, we recongise it as none of the impure. There is a sense of cleansing and renewal, only because there are stains that can be contrasted to the really clean. Perhaps, it is because of this standard that we admire as clean that induces in us an ability to hate the unclean. The awareness of the impurities give us a more concerte understanding of what God is about. Thats probaly how the thing about a 'balance' came into the picture. An intensity that induces an image of a pivoted lever see-saw. Varying degrees that demand a stright line rather than a heavy bias. That's what order's about probaly. Thats how the excitement gets in. Wheres the story without the bad guy? Where's the resolution without the villian? They are needed to prove points. To convey concepts (worldy, or whatsoever) that make worthy lessons.

Can we understand mercy without the process of rescue? Can we understand grace without the act of forgiveness? We can't. The light is only light when it is around to destroy darkness. Forgiveness can only be forgiveness when one did wrong.

So perhaps, as much as my finite mind can see it, the concept of sin is really a lot more deeper than what we scantly say it to be.


"Wo se wei diao, bu se wei yu" -- from my chinese assignment.
Roughly translated: I do it for the sake of fishing, not for the sake of the fish.



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