"Autobiographies of great nations are written in three manuscripts – a book of deeds, a book of words, and a book of art. Of the three, I would choose the latter as truest testimony." - Sir Kenneth Smith, Great Civilisations

"I must write each day without fail, not so much for the success of the work, as in order not to get out of my routine." - Leo Tolstoy

I have never believed that one should wait until one is inspired because I think the pleasures of not writing are so great that if you ever start indulging them you will never write again. - John Updike

"The life of every man is a diary in which he means to write one story, and writes another; and his humblest hour is when he compares the volume as it is with what he vowed to make it." - J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan

Poetry is the shadow cast by our streetlight imaginations." - Lawrence Ferlinghetti


[Note - If any article requires updating or correction please notate this in the comment section. Thank you. - res]


Sunday, January 11, 2026

R.E. Slater - A Visual of the Christian gospel



A VISUAL OF THE CHRISTIAN GOSPEL

Love at the Center; Life in Motion

by R.E. Slater


The gospel is not a doctrine,
nor creed to defend -
but a pattern of love,
learning how to move.


INCARNATION
God-with-us, fully present
COMPASSION ◄─┼─► ③ JUSTICE
Love embodied │ Love structured
in mercy │ in right relation
LOVE
(The Living Center)
TRANSFORMATION ◄─┼─► ⑤ FORGIVENESS
New creation │ Restored
within history │ relationship
RESURRECTION
Hope beyond death,
life renewed for all



LOVE, AS THE CENTER

“God is love.”

Love is not merely one theme among others—it is the interpretive key that holds all six movements together. Remove love, and the gospel fractures. Keep love central, and the whole becomes luminous.


THE CENTER IN SIX MOVEMENTS

① Incarnation - God-with-us
The gospel begins not with escape from the world but with presence within it. God enters history, body, vulnerability, and relationship.

② Compassion - Love felt and enacted
Jesus reveals a God who suffers with creation. Healing, table-fellowship, and solidarity define holiness.

③ Justice - Love made social
The gospel is not private salvation alone. It confronts oppression, restores dignity, and reorders communities toward the common good.

④ Transformation - New life already unfolding
Salvation is not only future-oriented. Hearts, minds, relationships, and systems are renewed here and now.

⑤ Forgiveness - Reconciled relationship
Not legal erasure but relational repair. Forgiveness restores communion—between God, neighbor, self, and creation.

⑥ Resurrection - Hope that outlasts death
The final word is not violence, failure, or entropy, but creative life renewed—for persons, peoples, and the cosmos.


How to Use This Hexagram

  • Meditatively: Sit with one point at a time, then return to the center.

  • Theologically: As a non-reductive summary of Christian faith.

  • Visually: As a diagram, poster, or illuminated manuscript-style illustration.

  • Practically: As a diagnostic—Which movement is missing in our theology or church?


Below is a version of the Living Gospel. Designed not to be read, but to be entered. To function as a sacred instrument reading music where direction changes meaning, and motion generates insight.
A LIVING GOSPEL
as a rule of movement, not as a static creed

INWARD
From the edges of the soul inward towards the heart - This is the path of incarnation.

Incarnation → Compassion → Justice → Transformation → Forgiveness → Resurrection → Love
  • God enters the world
  • God feels the world
  • God reorders the world
  • God renews the world
  • God reconciles the world
  • God outlives the world’s death
  • And is revealed as Love
An inward reading discloses what God is.
Presence condenses into essence.
Multiplicity converges into Love.

OUTWARD
From the center of the soul outward towards the world  - This is the path of mission.

Love → Incarnation → Compassion → Justice → Transformation → Forgiveness → Resurrection
  • Love refuses abstraction
  • Love becomes embodied
  • Love becomes merciful
  • Love becomes just
  • Love becomes creative
  • Love becomes reconciling
  • Love becomes hope beyond death
An outward reading discloses what love can do.
Essence becomes action.
The center radiates life.

CLOCKWISE
From the spiral of historical becoming encompassing time, growth, and life's processes.

Incarnation → Compassion → Forgiveness → Transformation → Justice → Resurrection
  • Presence awakens empathy
  • Empathy opens reconciliation
  • Reconciliation enables change
  • Change demands justice
  • Justice anticipates renewal
  • Renewal overcomes death
A clockwise reading reveals the gospel as evolving faith.
It matures. It bends history.
Slowly, toward healing.

COUNTERCLOCKWISE
From prophetic reversal comes prophetic critique, disruption, and judgment-as-healing.

Resurrection → Justice → Transformation → Forgiveness → Compassion → Incarnation
  • Hope confronts despair
  • Justice unmasks violence
  • Transformation disrupts stagnation
  • Forgiveness dismantles cycles of blame
  • Compassion dissolves distance
  • Incarnation abolishes separation
A counterclockwise reading reveals the gospel as resistance.
The future interrupts the present.
Grace overturns fear-based religion.

VERTICAL AXIS (UP / DOWN)
From Transcendence ↕ Immanence:
  • Upward: Incarnation → Resurrection
  • God enters matter; matter is lifted into life.
  • Downward: Resurrection → Incarnation
  • Eternity returns to dwell among the vulnerable.
The vertical axis refuses escape theology.
Heaven is not elsewhere. It is here.
It descends and abides.

HORIZONTAL AXIS (LEFT / RIGHT)
From Ethics ↔ Relationship:
  • Leftwards: Compassion → Forgiveness
  • The healing of persons.
  • Rightwards: Justice → Transformation
  • The healing of systems.
The horizontal axis prevents moral distortion.
There can be no justice without mercy.
There can be no mercy without loving justice.

THE STILLED CENTER
From the stilled center comes that which doesn't move - yet moves all things.

LOVE is not -
sentiment,
command,
demand,
nor reward.

But relational energy
indwelt with divine lure -
toward greater beauty,
deeper connection,
and shared becoming.

All directions originate from Love's center.
All movements return to it's core theme.
Love is the coda that revives.

EMBODIMENT PRACTICE
  • Meditation: Sit at the center; breathe one movement per breath.
  • Liturgy: Read one direction per season of the church year.
  • Ethics: Ask which vector your theology overemphasizes—and which it neglects.
  • Art: Render the visuals as stained glass, illumined manuscript, or kinetic diagram.

Rose Window . Famous stained glass window inside Notre Dame Cathedral.
Paris
 is a photograph by Bernard Jaubert which was uploaded on July 10th, 2014.

A BECOMING CONCRESCENCE

Presence enters becoming.
Becoming feels the many as one.
The many respond becoming more, together.
The "more together" are lured into deeper harmony.
Deeper harmony bends order without force.
Without force justice learns patience.
Patience releases the past.
The past is carried forward transformed.
Transformed life refuses final endings.
Final endings open unto wider relations.
Wider relations feels the many as one.
The many respond, becoming more.
Becoming enters presence.
Presence enters becoming.
This is love's liveliness.


R.E. Slater
January 11, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved



 

Notre Dame's rose windows date back to the 13th century. (Wikimedia Commons: Krzysztof Mizera)

ANOTHER GOSPEL HEXAGRAM
As A Poem You Walk Through

INCARNATION God steps inside the world flesh-breathed ▲ │ COMPASSION ◄─────┼─────► JUSTICE hands that heal │ tables overturned tears are shared │ dignity restored │ ▼ ✚ LOVE ✚ the still-burning center not command, not fear, but the gravity of relation ▲ │ TRANSFORMATION ◄─────┼─────► FORGIVENESS old skins loosen │ debts released new hearts grow │ wounds unbound │ ▼ RESURRECTION life refusing the last word hope with a pulse

🔄 CLOCKWISE (BECOMING)
God arrives → feels → forgives → changes → reorders → outlives death → and returns as love
[A slow spiral. History learning how to heal.]

🔁 COUNTERCLOCKWISE (INTERRUPTION)
Hope breaks in → justice awakens → change disrupts → forgiveness disarms → compassion dissolves distance → God refuses to stay away
[A prophetic reversal. The future interrupts the present.]

⬇⬆ INWARD (CONTEMPLATION)
Many movements fold into one truth: Love is what remains when fear is gone.

⬆⬇ OUTWARD (MISSION)
Love refuses stillness → is embodied → becomes mercy → becomes justice → becomes renewal → becomes hope


A NEW GRAVITY


07                            God enters the body of the world
16                        and never leaves it. Learning its weight,
25                    its hunger, its touch, its miseries, joys and deeps.
34                Hands open. Wounds visible. Tears which run speaking aloud.
43            Mercy walks barefoot through dust and dirt, tables and long nights.
52        The crooked is made answerable, the crushed lifted towards dignity's poetry.
61    Love insisting that systems bend always towards the vulnerable, poor, and oppressed.
72        What was closed loosens. What was dead relearns breath. What was shut opens.
83            Old hatreds fall away. Renewal begins. Redemption is felt. Life heals.
94                Old enmities are released. Blame dissolves. Guilts fly away.
105                    The past is forgiven. The present enables the future.
116                        Love arises where life is spoken, not death.
127                            Hope resurrects from the grave.

                                            LOVE
                                    becomes the new gravity,
                                    holding all life gently,
                                            LOVE

127                            Hope resurrects from the grave.
116                        Love arises where life is spoken, not death.
105                    The past is forgiven. The present enables the future.
94                Old enmities are released. Blame dissolves. Guilts fly away.
83            Old hatreds fall away. Renewal begins. Redemption is felt. Life heals.
72        What was closed loosens. What was dead relearns breath. What was shut opens.
61    Love insisting that systems bend always towards the vulnerable, poor, and oppressed.
52        The crooked is made answerable, the crushed lifted towards dignity's poetry.
43            Mercy walks barefoot through dust and dirt, tables and long nights.
34                Hands open. Wounds visible. Tears which run speaking aloud.
25                    its hunger, its touch, its miseries, joys and deeps.
16                        and never leaves it. Learning its weight,
07                            God enters the body of the world



R.E. Slater
January 11, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved

*written as a mirror, feeding back
upon itself ,with no real starting
point, except that of convention.


ENTERING BECOMING
God entered
the world's becoming -
not as force, but as presence.

Feeling the world
each wound a nexus -
each joy retained.

Love's reordering bends
history’s rigid lines -
in patient persuasion.

What is, becomes more
than it was; a new novelty -
born from shared response.

Release loosens the past
renews relationships -
healed in time.

Life is never erased
but carried forward -
lively transformed.

Love is the new allure
of harmony holding -
the many as one.

Life is never erased
but carried forward -
lively transformed.

Release loosens the past
renews relationships -
healed in time.

What is, becomes more
than it was; a new novelty -
born from shared response.

Love's reordering bends
history’s rigid lines -
in patient persuasion.

Feeling the world
each wound a nexus -
each joy retained.

God entered
the world's becoming -
not as force, but as presence.


R.E. Slater
January 11, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved

*written as a mirror, feeding back
upon itself ,with no real starting
point, except that of convention.


Thursday, January 1, 2026

R.E. Slater - Poetic Variations on a Theme


Two Egyptian Porphyry Vases. The Cataracts of the Nile and the Ruins of Thebes
(Zwey Ägyptische Porphyr Vasen. Die Cataracten des Nilus und die Ruinen von Theben).
From 
Entwurf einer historischen Architektur ("A Plan of Historical Architecture")


Two Egyptian Porphyry Vases

From Entwurf einer historischen Architektur
("A Plan of Historical Architecture")

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT 5.2


What endures is not what conquers,
but what learns to remain,
to participate in meaning,
and learn identity.



Introduction

The engraving commonly titled "Two Egyptian Porphyry Vases" (also captioned, Zwey Ägyptische Porphyr Vasen. Die Cataracten des Nilus und die Ruinen von Theben; translated: "Two Egyptian Porphyry Vases. The Cataracts of the Nile and the Ruins of Thebes.") is a representative example of late eighteenth‑century neoclassical visual culture. Produced as part of the architectural compendium Entwurf einer historischen Architektur ("A Plan of Historical Architecture"), the image occupies a space between archaeology, architectural pedagogy, and philosophical reflection on history. It does not merely document ancient artifacts; rather, it constructs a vision of antiquity shaped by Enlightenment ideals of order, reason, and continuity.

This essay situates the engraving within its historical, intellectual, and artistic contexts, examining how objects, landscape, and human figures collaborate to articulate a neoclassical philosophy of history - one that continues to inform modern aesthetics and institutional symbolism.

Historical Context: Enlightenment Historicism and Architecture

During the late eighteenth century, European intellectual life was marked by an intense engagement with history as a systematic and comparative discipline. Architecture, in particular, became a privileged medium through which historical knowledge could be organized and transmitted. Pattern books and architectural atlases proliferated, offering engraved plates that cataloged buildings, ornaments, and artifacts from across civilizations.

Georg Christian Freundt's book, Entwurf einer historischen Architektur, belongs squarely within this tradition. Meant to be a historical survey of architectural orders, decorative motifs, and structural precedents it presents Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and later European forms, which are assembled into a visual archive intended to educate taste and guide contemporary practice.

Within the Freundt's compendium is included engraved plates of artifacts, urns, vases, and ornamental objects from past ancient civilizations. The engraving of the two porphyry vases reflects this ambition: to isolate exemplary objects while embedding them within a carefully staged historical landscape.

*Neoclassicism was a Western European cultural movement, prominent in the 18th and early 19th centuries, that revived the art, architecture, and ideals of classical antiquity (ancient Greece, Rome, and Egypt) as a reaction against the emotion of the Baroque and Rococo periods, emphasizing order, logic, simplicity, clarity, and moral themes, reflecting Enlightenment values. It is manifested in literature, visual arts (painting, sculpture, architecture) with clean lines, balanced compositions, and historical/mythological subjects, and even in music, seeking rational beauty and civic virtue.  


Egypt as Origin and Authority

In the eighteenth‑century European imagination, Egypt functioned as both historical origin and symbolic foundation. Long before the advent of modern Egyptology, Egypt as a land and a culture, was re-imagined through classical authors, biblical narratives, travelers’ reports, and artistic speculation. It was believed to be the cradle of architecture, geometry, and sacred knowledge.

The urn engraving capitalizes on this perception. The ruins of Thebes and the cataracts of the Nile do not aim at topographical accuracy; instead, they evoke a mythic Egypt - a place of monumental beginnings. By situating the vases within this setting, the image asserts Egyptian material culture as a source of enduring authority, preceding and legitimizing later architectural traditions.

*The Ruins of Thebes - Thebes, once the monumental capital of ancient Egypt during the Middle (c. 2040 - 1750 BCE) and New Kingdom (c. 1550 - 1070 BCE) periods, is today known through its vast and evocative ruins spread along the east and west banks of the Nile near modern Luxor. Temples, pylons, colossi, and tomb complexes - most notably Karnak and Luxor - testify to centuries of religious, political, and architectural ambition. In antiquity and later European imagination, the ruins of Thebes came to symbolize both the zenith of imperial order and the inevitability of decline, standing as enduring witnesses to humanity’s attempt to render permanence from stone within a world governed by time. 


*The Cataracts of the Nile -  The Nile River contains several stretches of powerful, fast-flowing rapids known historically as the (Six) Cataracts of the Nile, formed where the river passes over shallow beds of granite and broken rock, creating strong currents, islets, and turbulent channels. Concentrated primarily in southern Egypt and Sudan, these cataracts long served as natural boundaries and serious navigational hazards in antiquity, shaping trade routes, political frontiers, and cultural exchange along the river. In the ancient imagination, the cataracts symbolized both the life-giving force and untamed power of the Nile - locations where order yielded briefly to chaos before the river resumed its steady, sustaining flow.




Nero's Red Porphyry Stone Tub in the Vatican

Porphyry and the Politics of Material

The choice of porphyry is significant. In antiquity, porphyry was among the most valued stones, prized for its durability, rarity, and imperial associations. Roman emperors reserved it for monuments, sarcophagi, and symbols of sovereign power. In neoclassical representation, porphyry thus functioned as a visual shorthand for permanence and legitimacy.

By depicting Egyptian vases carved from porphyry, the engraving subtly aligns Egyptian civilization with imperial continuity. The material bridges temporal gaps, suggesting an unbroken lineage of authority from ancient Egypt through Rome and into modern Europe. The vases become more than decorative objects; they serve as material witnesses to civilizational endurance.


Composition and Visual Order

The composition of the engraving reflects neoclassical ideals of balance, clarity, and rational order. The two vases flank the scene, anchoring the foreground with monumental weight. Their differing forms - one more elaborately ornamented, the other more vertically restrained - invite comparison without disrupting symmetry.

Between them unfolds a layered spatial recession: terrace, cascading water, middle‑distance ruins, and distant horizon. This ordered progression mirrors Enlightenment conceptions of history as intelligible and structured rather than chaotic. Even ruin is rendered legible, subordinated to compositional harmony.


Human Figures and Enlightenment Spectatorship

The inclusion of seated human figures introduces a crucial interpretive dimension. These figures are not laborers or worshippers but observers and interlocutors. One gestures toward the ruins, directing attention and modeling interpretation.

They function as stand‑ins for the viewer - embodying Enlightenment ideals of contemplation, instruction, and rational discourse. Antiquity is not encountered as an overwhelming or mystical force but as something to be studied, discussed, and understood. The past becomes accessible through reasoned observation.


Engraving Technique and Reproducibility

The plate is executed as a copper engraving, the dominant medium for architectural illustration in the period. Fine cross‑hatching creates tonal depth, while precise line work ensures clarity when printed at varying scales.

This technical precision served an epistemic purpose. Engravings were designed for circulation, study, and reuse. Their reproducibility allowed images like Two Egyptian Porphyry Vases to shape architectural education far beyond the original publication, embedding a standardized vision of antiquity into European visual culture.


Between Archaeology and Imagination

From a modern perspective, the engraving occupies an ambiguous position between documentation and invention. It predates systematic archaeological excavation and therefore reflects conjectural reconstructions rather than empirical accuracy. Yet this imaginative quality is not a flaw within its original context.

For neoclassical audiences, the goal was not faithful reconstruction but historical coherence. The engraving synthesizes fragments - objects, ruins, landscape - into a persuasive narrative of origin and continuity. It presents history not as a series of ruptures but as a harmonized whole.


Modern Afterlife and Cultural Persistence

Because Entwurf einer historischen Architektur entered the public domain and circulated widely, its images became detached from their original scholarly framework. Plates like Two Egyptian Porphyry Vases reappeared as decorative prints, educational illustrations, and later as set dressing in film and television.

FYI. The appearance of the engraving in President Siebert’s office on The Big Bang Theory TV show exemplifies academic seriousness, institutional authority, and historical depth - qualities still culturally associated with neoclassical imagery.


Conclusion

Two Egyptian Porphyry Vases is not merely an image of ancient artifacts; it is a visual philosophy of history. Through material symbolism, compositional order, and Enlightenment spectatorship, the engraving articulates a vision in which the past is stable, instructive, and aesthetically unified.

Its continued resonance demonstrates how neoclassical representations of antiquity have shaped modern assumptions about knowledge, authority, and tradition. Even when encountered casually - as in a TV screen as a set-piece hung on a wall behind a desk - the engraving carries with it centuries of intellectual aspiration, quietly affirming the enduring power of historical imagination.


Select Bibliography
  • Rykwert, Joseph. The First Moderns: The Architects of the Eighteenth Century. MIT Press.

  • Vidler, Anthony. The Writing of the Walls. Princeton Architectural Press.

  • Marchand, Suzanne. Down from Olympus: Archaeology and Philhellenism in Germany. Princeton University Press.

  • Haskell, Francis. History and Its Images. Yale University Press.




POETIC VARIATIONS ON A THEME

Two Egyptian Vases


Two heavy, red stone vases, stand
as monuments to time’s passage,
each framing a once great, now ruined,
empire, flown away as water on a river.

These mighty ruins had marked
a younger time, now grown old,
lying upon a river older than history,
remembered as lessons to the living.

That humanity lives and dies -
its purchase of time flows uneven
like water between sky and stone,
with no strength to remain.

So civilizations come and go.
They shape. They mold.
They listen to the past,
to pass away incomplete.


by R.E. Slater
January 1, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved



The ruins of Thebes before one of the Nile's cataracts


Silent Witnesses

We were not made to speak,
but to wait, watch, and listen.
Before your questions,
before words are spoken,
we first learned stillness.

Our red stone stand silent,
we waits without urgency,
watching rivers forget their shapes,
the mighty come and go,
and gods change their grammar.

Carved as ornate stone vases,
we are mute in our duties,
watching, remaining, silent -
touched by human eyes,
pondering our meaning.


by R.E. Slater
January 1, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved



Giza Pyramids and Sphinx Engraved: An 18th-Century Egyptian Vista, 1782


Stillness as Becoming

Though we vases are unmoving,
we are events extended in time -
Porphyry is not frozen identity,
but pressure remembering itself,
held by matter agreeing to cohere,
for a time, for a little while longer.

The moving river below us is not
our opposite in its turbulence,
but our daily, steady companion -
for form and flow are not rivals;
but alternating, constructed stories
in the same cosmic sentence.

The ruins behind us are not failures.
They were once processes completed,
released for duty, function, and flair.
Nothing around us escapes becoming -
not stone, not water, nor even memory.

Our witness are not to permanence,
but to the faithfulness of our being;
remaining as we are long enough
to offer ourselves to what comes next.
For even stillness participates in living.


by R.E. Slater
January 1, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved



From Alexandria to the Second Cataract


What Remains

Not the river,
though it keeps returning.

Not the stone,
though it learned how to wait.

Not the city,
which mistook duration for destiny.

What remains
is the space where we each have met -
in the pause where form did not resist change,
and change did not rush to erase form.

Here, weight became listening,
motion learned reverence.

We vases did not survive history;
we participated in history -
holding together just long enough
for memory to find a shape.

Nothing ever lies finished -
Even ruin continues its work.
Even stillness overcomes.

And we explorers,
arriving late in time,
stand briefly our watches,
looking longer than we expected -
becoming part of life's interval too.

So the old world continues apace:
not by triumph, but by balance;
not by certainty, but by offering shape
to whatever comes after us.


by R.E. Slater
January 1, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved



The Hypaethral Temple at Phila called The Bed of Pharaoh Land, a coloured lithograph


The Persistence of Relation
(a processual version)

"Two Egyptian Red Porphyry Vases"
are not substances preserved against time;
but evidential societies of occasions
having achieved sufficient coherence
to endure, to last, to become witnesses.

Nor is red porphyry-stone mere inert matter,
but become patterned experiences
formed of pressure once long ago,
by heat, and mineral memory -
to be concresced into
form and function,
beauty and art, and
repeatedly renewed in its relation
to the becoming world and viewer.

Nor is the river below mere flux;
it is endless creativity ever in motion -
a primordial advance against time
refusing finality.

Nor do the stoned ruins signify decay -
but completed occasions,
their subjective aims being fulfilled,
their objective immortality
proceeding ever forward as influence.

Nothing in Freundt's engraving stands alone.
Each element prehends the others:
 - stone feels water,
 - water shapes ruin,
 - ruin instructs the eye,
 - even the eye becomes part of the event.

Nor is God absent here -
not as perceived coercive Designer,
but as enduring Lure towards harmony,
whose persuasive aim
 - that invites stone to hold,
 - rivers to flow,
 - and history to become
without demanding permanence.

What remains, then,
is not cold, rigid, stasis -
but faithful repetition
as the restless capacity of a world;
which gathers multiplicity
into momentary order,
then releases it again
forwards to further plurality
in ceaseless cycles of evolving.

And finally, neither
does the engraving show eternity.
Rather, it demonstrates it -
 - as relational endurance,
 - as timeless beauty surviving,
 - not by completing a story,
 - but by ever moving with story,
everlastingly.


by R.E. Slater
January 1, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved




Ruins of the Palace of the Emperor Diocletian
at Spalatro in Dalamatia, along the Adriatic coast
of modern-day Croatia, 1764