Fruitful Years:
Of Theodore Marmaduke
The Odes of Ferguson
A Tale of Seven Kings
The Myth of Subang
A Meditation on Keat's Fall of Hyperion
Transubstantiation
The Muse of the Arabica
The American God
The Children's Crusade
Prince Absalom
O Pilidod Grass, Spread 'pon the Breadth of the Mountain Valleys
Erin O'Conner
The Flying Dutchman and the St. Brier
The Love of Ellavine
The Ballad of Maddok
A Body of Evidence
What I've Seen of Love
Four Musings on Evolution and the Bible
Autobiographical Pieces
Jack Rogers
Storyhouse:
The Odes of St. Clause
Heaven's Imaginings
The City of God
The Jude Play
The Psalter of the Broom
Tall Tales
The Wisdom of B. K. Neifert:
Collected Maxims
Hyper Modernity
Meditations on Logos
The Little Book of What I Believe
My Politics
Laws of Wisdom---an Essay
A Complete Analysis of Paradise Lost
Visual Demonstrations of Basic Math Concepts
My Collected Writing Collections:
Utopia: A World Without Us
The American Civil War
The Elf in Manhattan
The Most Bitter Thought
The Jude Responses
The Tragedy of Joan of Arc
The Ascent of Death
The Jet Car
Man and Wo
Artemis XX
The Third Reich
Ayin and Athrin
Cyrus Versus Caesar Battle Royal
The 90s
My Best Short Stories
Haikus
Songs
Nature's Portraits
Bread of Harvest:
The Master Key: The Orb of Fortuna and Wine of Kairos
The Prose Mythos
Anthem Louise Alcott
Flirtations with A'te:
Why I'm a Christian
Prose Poems
Animal Fables
Nature's Symbols (A Year's Worth of Nature Poetry)
A Collection of Some of My Best Poems (2017 - 2025)
Young Shadows:
The Odes of Brittos
Fairyland:
Prester John
Hymn of the Dark Crusade
Purchase a Copy of My Books Here
https://www.amazon.com/author/broomcrownnewpeace
Category: Uncategorized
A Midrash is an Interpretation of Scripture. It is not Scripture.
The Greatness of the 20th Century Was Being Subversive Was Acceptable, and Led to Great Leaps Forward. The Perversness of the 21st Century, Is Subversiveness Gets You Investigated, and Targeted by Various Groups Composed of Three Letter Acronyms.
Elisha’s Bear’s Jaw Moved, and I Saw a Star, It Was No Longer There… God Is Real.
My Study Habits
1. Start with a question.
a. When you're doing a project for school even, starting with a question can be the best beginning. You want to know something, learn that one thing in your class.
2. Find numerous sources with a credible ethos expounding upon your question, trying to answer it.
a. Find dozens if not hundreds of people to give you an answer. Listen to all of them, and derive from all of it a meaning.
b. There was once a treasure that was found, by simply asking millions of people where it was, and then taking the bulk data, and finding a location through analyzing it. Studying is like that, where you'll find many different views, to find the location.
3. Synthesize an answer. Find the truth, using all the data you collected, and synthesize an answer.
a. By using all the information--even information you disagree with is helpful, as it can find avenues for new areas of learning, and even your opponents can have hidden gems wrapped up in their disagreements--you can find a good answer.
4. Test your answer.
a. Don't just be happy with your answer, ask people in every day about your answer. Discuss with people the answer. Talk to people. Have dialogues. Get opinions from people who are more advanced than you are, and people who know nothing of the topic.
5. Revise your answer based on the testing.
a. Revising your answer, gives you more correct analysis. Always be asking people, and actively listening. Don't assume your knowledge is complete, but rather get knowledge from every source.
6. Write down your entire process.
a. From start to finish, document your entire process. Get the wrong answers, and then find when they've reached the nuance to where they're correct, and don't stop revising your answer, just because you think you know it.
7. Be humble. And have good faith.
a. No one has complete knowledge. So listening to many people, and gathering insights from many people, all having studied and come to answers too, you build upon it to a correct solution.
8. Making connections.
a. Make connections with everything else you've learned, and don't just isolate the knowledge into one context. Connect it to everything else you know, and learn through making webs of contexts.
Argument Through Number
It’s not “Things are real, therefore God exists.” Neither is it “God says this is good, therefore He exists.”
So, the reason we know God exists from Mathematics, isn’t because they’re real, but because they’re so intricate, and so complex, but also impossible to have not been designed. Like, study Euclid for a few days, you’ll understand the argument from Math a lot better than abstractions about Algebra.
Like, why do these things work this way? Why does a number used for Cosine or Sine shape an exact formula for a triangle? Always? Why does tangent get you to a singular point? Why? Why does calculus work? But we know it does… and that’s a lot like faith, actually. Calculus is a leap of faith. We know the answer—because we study the pattern—but obviously you can’t reach the limit without division. Even division is a leap of faith. There’s no way to divide, beside through trial and error, and simply understanding the answer. Unlike Subtraction, Multiplication and Addition, Division’s the only one where you have to make a leap to the answer. And that’s also why I think some Biblical phrases talk about “Dividing” the truth.
But you understand through that that there’s a design in the fabric of the universe. It’s not “It’s real, therefore we know.” It’s “Wow, that looks designed.”
My Pithy Thoughts on Different Beliefs
Do you want to know why I’m not an Atheist? Because I feel ethics are inherently visible in the real world, and beyond human judgment.
Do you know why I’m not a Hindu? Because I believe Castes are abhorrent, and are an excuse to make people miserable.
Do you know why I’m not a Muslim? Because they teach violence as part of their faith.
Do you know why I’m not a Buddhist? Because I think the real world is able to be understood, and isn’t a product of our mind.
Do you know why I’m not a Pagan? Because their gods are petty and cruel, and sometimes outright teach people to do the worst things imaginable.
Do you know why I’m not a Sikh or Bahi? Because I think people do rotten things, and need forgiven, and only Christianity has that covered.
Do you know why I’m not a Jew? Because its law, though perfectly just, would kill me.
Do you know why I’m a Christian? Because Christ taught perfect moral ethics, and died for us.
Do you know why I’m not a Pythagorean? Because I think humans have violent streaks, and eating meat is good for us, and so are violent stories.
Do you know why I’m not a Confucian? Because though it aligns with everything I believe perfectly, Christ died for us and gave us a hope, when we’ve blatantly failed.
Do you know why I’m not a Taoist or Mozi? Because though it aligns perfectly with my beliefs, I think Christ is paramount to raise and therefore give us hope, as this life cannot satisfy.
Do you know why I’m not Zoroastrian? Because I can’t believe evil and good are coequal.
Ultimately, Christ is the only wise or good God. And the only answer to life’s pointless suffering.
The True Artist Lives By His Art, or Dies. He Does No Harm to Anyone for not Receiving Him.
Leviticus 19:20
19:20 And whosoever lieth carnally with a woman, that is a bondmaid, betrothed to an husband, and not at all redeemed, nor freedom given her; she shall be scourged; they shall not be put to death, because she was not free.
21 And he shall bring his trespass offering unto the Lord, unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, even a ram for a trespass offering.
22 And the priest shall make an atonement for him with the ram of the trespass offering before the Lord for his sin which he hath done: and the sin which he hath done shall be forgiven him.
Word to meditate on is "Scourged."
[H1244] (biqqoreth/bik-ko-reth) from 1239;
properly, examination, i.e. (by implication)
punishment:--scourged. see H1239
[H1239] (baqar/baw-kar) a primitive root;
properly, to plough, or (generally) break forth, i.e.
(figuratively) to inspect, admire, care for, consider:--(make) inquire (-ry), (make) search, seek out
Myer’s Briggs
On my best days an INFJ.
On my worst days an INTP.
On my normal days an INFP.
Could I ever be an INTJ? What would that look like?