All posts by Mike Zonta

The True History Behind ‘The Plot Against America’

HISTORY | MARCH 16, 2020 (smithsonianmag.com)

Philip Roth’s classic novel, newly adapted by HBO, envisions a world in which Charles Lindbergh wins the 1940 presidential election

Charles Lindbergh, Walter Winchell and Franklin D. Roosevelt (L to R) are among the public figures fictionalized in Philip Roth’s The Plot Against America. Photo illustration by Meilan Solly / Photos via Getty Images

Meilan Solly

Meilan Solly

Associate Editor, History

The Plot Against America unfolds in a world much like our own. Set in Newark, New Jersey, on the eve of World War II, Philip Roth’s 2004 novel finds its protagonist, a fictionalized version of the 7-year-old author himself, leading a banal existence punctuated by nightly radio news broadcasts, dinners with his all-American Jewish family and neighborhood excursions undertaken to fill the halcyon hours of summer vacation. Then, the writer-narrator recounts, “[T]he Republicans nominated Lindbergh and everything changed.”

What follows is an alternate history penned in the same vein as Philip K. Dick’s The Man in the High Castle, a 1962 novel recently adapted for television by Amazon Studios. Like High CastleThe Plot Against America—the subject of a new HBO limited series of the same name—poses the age-old question of “What if?” But while the former depicts a world in which the Axis powers won the war, the latter places its departure from the historical record prior to the conflict’s peak, envisioning a virulently isolationist United States that nevertheless ends up entangled in international affairs.

Seamlessly blending truth and imagination, The Plot Against America pits aviator Charles A. Lindbergh against incumbent Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the 1940 presidential election. Voters’ choice, argues the Spirit of St. Louis pilot and fervent “America Firster” in a trailer for the series, is not between Lindbergh and Roosevelt, but “between Lindbergh and war.”

Roth’s account of a celebrity-turned-politician winning the presidency on a platform of fearmongering and “othering” proved more prophetic than he could have predicted.

“It’s a story of an American dystopia,” explains “The Plot Against America” showrunner David Simon to Variety’s Will Thorne. “It seems startlingly prescient in that it anticipates a politician who seizes upon a very simple message and is able to activate the worst fears and impulses of a significant number of Americans. He gets them to relinquish not only power, but some of the most essential bulwarks of self-governance.”

While the Roth family, renamed the Levins in the HBO show, and many of the characters mentioned in The Plot Against America are based on real people, much of the narrative is entirely contrived. From the true extent of Lindbergh’s anti-Semitic views to the rise of the “America First” movement, here’s what you need to know to separate fact from fiction ahead of the six-part series’ March 16 premiere.

Is The Plot Against America based on a true story?

Philip and Sandy Levin
Philip (left, portrayed by Azhy Robertson) and his older brother, Sandy (right, portrayed by Caleb Malis) HBO

As Roth wrote in a 2004 essay for the New York Times, “To alter the historical reality by making Lindbergh America’s 33rd president while keeping everything else as close to factual truth as I could—that was the job as I saw it.”

The main conceit of The Plot Against America is a fictional Lindbergh presidency. Set between June 1940 and October 1942, the novel opens with the aviator’s unexpected bid as the Republican Party’s nominee and proceeds to envision how the war would have unfolded if the United States had not only stayed out of the fight, but colluded with the Axis powers and instituted Nazi-inspired restrictions on Jewish Americans’ freedom.

Roth’s book features prominent public figures—including Roosevelt, gossip columnist Walter Winchell, non-interventionist Democratic senator Burton K. Wheeler, New York City Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia, industrialist and avowed anti-Semite Henry Ford, and German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop—in roles ranging from key players to cameo appearances. In line with the author’s goal of adhering to reality whenever possible, sentiments shared by these individuals are actual quotes or plausible fabrications built on the existing historical record.

Philip Roth
Author Philip Roth in the Newark, New Jersey, neighborhood where he grew up Photo by Bob Peterson / The LIFE Images Collection via Getty Images

Lindbergh, for example, really did accuse Jews of being “war agitators.” He also cautioned against “the infiltration of inferior blood” and “dilution by foreign races.” He did not, however, declare, as he does in the book, that with the German invasion of the U.S.S.R., “Adolf Hitler has established himself as the world’s greatest safeguard against the spread of communism and its evils.”

Of the work’s central characters, most are dramatized versions of real people. Young Philip (played by Azhy Robertson in the HBO series) and his immediate family members borrow their names from Roth’s actual relatives: Herman (Morgan Spector), family patriarch and insurance salesman; his mother, Elizabeth, or “Bess” for short (Zoe Kazan); and older brother, Sandy (Caleb Malis). But while Philip’s cousin Alvin (Anthony Boyle) and aunt Evelyn (Winona Ryder) play major roles in both the book and the show, neither has a direct real-life counterpart. Lionel Bengelsdorf (John Turturro), a conservative rabbi who attracts the Jewish community’s ire for his steadfast support of Lindbergh (Ben Cole), is also fictional.

What time period does The Plot Against America cover?

The novel’s alternate timeline is fairly straightforward, particularly toward the end of the novel, when Roth shifts from a first-person narrative to a day-by-day, newsreel-style account. Lindbergh soundly defeats Roosevelt in the November 1940 presidential election and, just weeks after his inauguration, meets Adolf Hitler to sign a so-called “Iceland Understanding” guaranteeing peaceful relations between the U.S. and Germany. A similar “Hawaii Understanding” paves the way for Japan’s unimpeded expansion across Asia.

The Jews of America find themselves subjected to increasing anti-Semitism and thinly veiled restrictions on their livelihood. The Office of American Absorption, established to encourage “America’s religious and national minorities to become further incorporated into the larger society,” indoctrinates Jewish teenagers by sending them to the country’s rural heartland for summer “apprenticeships”; an initiative dubbed Homestead 42 similarly relocates urban Jewish families, framing forced relocation as a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

Some, like Philip’s parents, are convinced the government is attempting to “lull [Jewish Americans] to sleep with the ridiculous dream that everything in America is hunky-dory.” Others, like his aunt Evelyn and older brother, decry these fears as the result of a “persecution complex.” Needless to say, the Roth parents prove correct in their assessment of the situation, and before the end of the book, readers are treated to a dystopian vision of a country plagued by pogroms, fascist totalitarianism and the unmitigated reversal of the very rights Herman Roth previously cited as exemplars of America.

Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf
The fictional Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf (John Turturro) attracts the Jewish community’s ire for his support of Charles Lindbergh. HBO

But The Plot Against America’s break from history is only temporary. By December 1942, Lindbergh has been vanquished, FDR is back in office, and the U.S.—reeling from a surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor—has entered the war on the Allies’ side. Despite this late arrival, the Americans still manage to secure victory in Europe by May 1945.

In truth, the “America First” mentality that enables Roth’s version of Lindbergh to win the presidency was fairly widespread prior to Pearl Harbor. At its peak, the America First Committee, founded by a group of isolationist Yale University students in 1940, swelled to 800,000 members recruited from all regions of the country. Lindbergh emerged as the movement’s biggest proponent, but other well-known figures were also involved with the committee: Among others, the list includes Walt Disney, Sinclair Lewis, future president Gerald Ford and future Supreme Court justice Potter Stewart.

America Firsters argued against U.S. involvement in the war, presenting themselves as the “pinnacle of American patriotism and American traditions,” says Bradley W. Hart, author of Hitler’s American Friends: The Third Reich’s Supporters in the United States. Members emphasized defense over offense and attempted to paint themselves as patriots “interested only in preventing” the number of “gold star mothers”—those whose children died in service—from growing, according to Hart. Though many members held anti-Semitic sentiments and sympathized with the Nazis, such opinions became an increasing liability as the war in Europe raged on.

America First Committee meeting
General view of a large crowd attending an America First Committee (AFC) rally circa 1941 in New York City Photo by Irving Haberman / IH Images / Getty Images

During the first half of the 20th century, anti-Semitism was fairly widespread across the United States, manifesting at “every level of society and across the country,” writes historian Julian E. Zelizer in theAtlantic. Automotive titan Henry Ford published a propaganda paper blaming “the Jews” for all of society’s ills, while radio personality Father Charles Coughlin regularly spouted anti-Semitic sentiments to his audience of some 30 million weekly listeners. Even institutions like Harvard, Yale, Columbia and Princeton enacted anti-Semitic policies: As Zelizer writes, all four universities imposed quotas on the number of Jewish students admitted.

The America First Committee’s efforts culminated in a 1941 speech Lindbergh delivered at a rally in Des Moines, Iowa. The aviator accused three groups—the British, the Roosevelt administration and American Jews—of “agitating for war.” Predicting that the “Jewish groups in this country … will be among the first to feel [war’s] consequences,” he argued that the “greatest danger to this country lies in [Jews’] large ownership and influence in our motion pictures, our press, our radio and our government.”

Critics roundly condemned Lindbergh’s words as anti-Semitic. Writing for the New York Herald Tribune, columnist Dorothy Thompson expressed an opinion shared by many, declaring, “I am absolutely certain that Lindbergh is pro-Nazi.” Republican presidential nominee Wendell Willkie called the speech “the most un-American talk made in my time by any person of national reputation.”

The America First Committee officially disbanded three days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

Why Charles Lindbergh?

In May 1927, 25-year-old Charles A. Lindbergh skyrocketed to fame after completing the first successful non-stop, solo transatlantic flight. (As Bess tells her husband in a “Plot Against America” trailer, “To most people, there’s never been a bigger hero in their lifetime.”) Dubbed “Lucky Lindy” and the “Lone Eagle,” he became an international celebrity, garnering his influence to promote the field of aviation. In 1929, he married Anne Morrow, daughter of a prominent American financier and diplomat; shortly after, the couple welcomed a baby boy, whose kidnapping and murder three years later sparked a media circus.

Overwhelmed by the publicity, the family fled to Europe. While living abroad, Lindbergh, acting at the U.S. military’s request, made multiple trips to Germany to assess the country’s aviation capabilities. He was impressed by what he encountered: As historian Thomas Doherty says, Nazi Germany shared Lindbergh’s admiration of “Spartan physicality” and aviation-centric militarism. In 1938, the American hero attracted intense criticism for accepting—and later declining to return—a medal from Nazi military and political leader Hermann Göring.

After moving back to the U.S. in April 1939, Lindbergh became a key figurehead of the America First movement. He spoke at rallies, denouncing the war as a European affair with no relevance to the U.S., and soon shifted from isolationism to outright anti-Semitism. Among his most patently bigoted remarks: Western nations “can have peace and security only so long as we band together to preserve that most priceless possession, our inheritance of European blood” and “It seems that anything can be discussed today in America except the Jewish problem.”

Radio broadcaster Walter Winchell emerged as one of Lindbergh’s most steadfast critics, updating Lindy’s “Lone Eagle” nickname to the “Lone Ostrich” and arguing that the aviator gave up the country’s goodwill to become the “star ‘Shill’ for the America First Committee.” Roth’s fictionalized Winchell takes a similarly irreverent approach, decrying Lindbergh as “our fascist-loving president” and his supporters as “Lindbergh’s fascists.” But while The Plot Against America’s version of Winchell defies the reviled commander-in-chief by staging his own presidential bid, the real journalist never ran for office.

Charles Lindbergh and Burton K. Wheeler
Charles Lindbergh (right) and Senator Burton K. Wheeler (left) at a May 23, 1941, “America First” rally in New York Getty Images

During the 1930s, Lindbergh and his other Plot Against America presidential rival, Franklin D. Roosevelt, were arguably the two most famous men in the country. But while many respected the pilot, few viewed him as a viable political candidate. According to Hart, an August 1939 poll found that just 9 percent of Americans wanted Lindbergh, whose name had been raised as a potential alternative to Roosevelt, to run for the nation’s highest office. Of these individuals, less than three-fourths (72 percent) thought he would actually make a good president.

Though Roosevelt personally supported America entering the conflict, he “hedged and waffled on war” while campaigning during the 1940 presidential race, says Susan Dunn, author of 1940: FDR, Willkie, Lindbergh, Hitler—The Election Amid the Storm. “At the same time that he was speaking against American involvement in war,” adds Dunn, “his administration was preparing for possible war” by instituting a peacetime draft and formulating lists of priorities in the event that war broke out. Like Roosevelt, his real-life Republican opponent, businessman Wendell Willkie, was an interventionist and anti-fascist, though he, too, toned down these views on the campaign trail.

There was no love lost between Roosevelt and Lindbergh: The president likened the pilot to the “Copperheads” who had opposed the American Civil War, labeling him a “defeatist and appeaser.” Lindbergh, in turn, called the Roosevelt administration one of three groups “agitating for war” and accused it of practicing “subterfuge” to force the U.S. into “a foreign war.”

The president’s distaste for Lindbergh continued well beyond the United States’ 1941 entry into the war. Though the pilot attempted to volunteer for the Army Air Corps, he was blocked from doing so and forced to settle for a consulting position with Henry Ford’s bomber development program. Later in the war, under the auspices of United Aircraft, he was stationed in the Pacific theater, where he participated in around 50 combat missions despite his official status as a civilian.

Lindbergh’s reputation never fully recovered from his pre-war politics. Once the aviator accepted a medal from Göring, says Doherty, “the universal affection Americans had for Lindbergh dissipates, and people divide[d] into camps. There are still a lot of Americans that will always love Lindbergh, … but he becomes an increasingly provocative and controversial figure.”

Charles Lindbergh enrolls in America First Committee
Charles Lindbergh (left) enrolls as a member of the America First Committee. Getty Images

Whether the pilot actually came to regret his comments is a point of contention among scholars. Though his wife later claimed as much, he never personally apologized for his comments. Roth, writing in 2004, argued that “he was at heart a white supremacist, and … did not consider Jews, taken as a group, the genetic, moral or cultural equals of Nordic white men like himself and did not consider them desirable American citizens other than in very small numbers.”

Though Lindbergh is The Plot Against America’s clearest antagonist, his actual actions, according to Roth, matter less than what “American Jews suspect, rightly or wrongly, that he might be capable of doing”—and, conversely, how supporters interpret his words as permission to indulge their worst instincts.

As Roth concludes, “Lindbergh … chose himself as the leading political figure in a novel where I wanted America’s Jews to feel the pressure of a genuine anti-Semitic threat.”

Meilan Solly

Meilan Solly |  | READ MORE

Meilan Solly is Smithsonian magazine’s associate digital editor, history.AMERICAN HISTORYAMERICAN PRESIDENTSBASED ON A TRUE STORYFRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELTJUDAISMMEDIANAZISRELIGIONTELEVISIONWORLD WAR II

Sun Conjunct Jupiter – Move Like Jagger

Astro ButterflyApr 10

On April 11th, 2023 Sun is conjunct Jupiter at 21° Aries.

Sun-Jupiter conjunctions are very sought after, because Jupiter is the “great benefic” in astrology.

Why is Jupiter the “great benefic”? Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system. It’s the planet of coherence – Jupiter is what everyone agrees on. When we have a Jupiter transit, things make sense. There’s a sense of flow and unity.

When the Sun (our identity) is conjunct Jupiter, – who we are as individuals, and our life purpose starts to make sense to us.

Sun Conjunct Jupiter – Move(s) Like Jagger

Sun conjunct Jupiter makes me think of the “Moves Like Jagger” – a Maroon 5 song about Mick Jagger (the frontman of Rolling Stones); Jagger happens to have a Sun-Jupiter conjunction in his natal chart.

Mick Jagger is not referenced by chance. He does move well. He’s a natural.

His distinctive dance moves have become iconic, and an important part of the band’s live performances for decades. Many fans consider Jagger’s dancing to be a key part of the Rolling Stones’ appeal.

Similarly, we “move like Jagger” when we’re in tune with ourselves. When we act naturally, other people relax and start dancing with us. When we’re in tune with ourselves, we’re in tune with the world.

Sun conjunct Jupiter is in a way the opposite of the Sun-Chiron transit we had a few days ago. Sun conjunct Chiron’s role is to point to our duality, where we feel conflicted and at cross purposes:

“There are all these things about myself I find difficult to reconcile. I’m open minded but I’m also very conservative. I want freedom but I also value loyalty and predictability. I want to move overseas but I don’t want to leave my family behind” – that’s Chiron.

Jupiter instead focuses on what’s consistent:

“I’ve always loved singing. Perhaps it’s time to do something about it”.

Sun conjunct Jupiter will help us gain a sudden clarity about who we are and what our purpose in life is.

Sun Conjunct Jupiter – Connect With Your Inner Aries

The Sun-Jupiter conjunction happens in Aries – the first sign of the zodiac.

Aries is the spark of life – is what makes things come into existence. When we connect with our Aries energy, we’re fully present. We are in touch with ourselves.

We naturally know when to act, and when not to act. We just ‘know’ whether the opportunity that presents itself it’s good for us or not. We don’t feel obliged to say yes to things that don’t make sense to us.

The opposite of Aries energy is being indecisive and second guessing everything – which is the result of being disconnected from our gut instinct and intuition.

EXAMPLE: You hear a song for the first time. When you’re connected to your Aries energy, you just know whether you like it or not. Your body will tell you: you start humming. You start moving.

When you’re not connected to your Aries energy, you look for other clues to decide whether you like the song or not: how popular the artist is; whether other people like it; what music critics have to say about the song. Or you start ‘liking’ just because you heard it 20 times on the radio and you got used to it.

When we’re not connected to our Aries energy we don’t know who we are. When we don’t know who we are, we miss opportunities, or make choices that are not necessarily a good fit for us.

Symptoms of being disconnected from your Aries energy are: procrastination, self-sabotage, a vague sense of dissatisfaction, worrying about what other people think of you, not knowing what to do with your life.

If your life is not what you’d like it to be, that’s perhaps because you don’t know who you are.

Thankfully, the Sun-Jupiter conjunction in Aries will help you connect with the Aries energy (that we all have in our chart) – so you can gain clarity about who you are, what you want, and what you should do next.

Everyone will benefit from this energy. Even if (in fact, especially if) you’re not attuned to your Aries gut instinct, pay attention to any thoughts, feelings, events that arise when Sun is conjunct Jupiter.

When Sun is conjunct Jupiter in Aries, ask yourself:

  • What’s non-negotiable about who I am? What is consistent about my passions and interests?
  • What comes naturally to me? Who I enjoy being? What I enjoy doing?
  • Knowing who I am, what should I do next? What’s the natural, obvious next step?

Tarot Card for April 11: The Three of Wands

The Three of Wands

This card – Lord of Virtue – represents our trueness to our own inner needs and inspirations. It represents a point of inner balance where we are clear about the things we want to create in our lives, and confident in our ability to make our dreams come true. Out of this clarity and confidence arises a new quality of self-reliance and happiness.

We develop a new understanding of our virtues, our skills, our talents; we have a better view of what we have to offer and what we need in return. We become more aware of ourselves, and more in harmony with the Powers of Light.

When this card comes up in your reading, it is important that you cast aside doubts and fears, refusing to fall back into old habits. Instead you must turn your face to the future, trusting in your own power, making no compromises. Trust yourself, and everything else will fall into place.

The Three of Wands

(via angelpaths.com and Alan Blackman)

Love After Love

Love after Love    


The time will come
When, with elation
You will greet yourself arriving
At your own door, in your own mirror
And each will smile at the other’s welcome, 

And say, sit here.  Eat.
You will love again the stranger who was your self,
Give wine.  Give bread.  Give back your heart
To itself, to the stranger who has loved you 

All your life, whom you ignored
For another, who knows you by heart.
Take down the love letters from the bookshelf,
The photographs, the desperate notes,
Peel your own image from the mirror.
Sit.  Feast on your life. 

Derek Walcott (1930-2017)
Saint Lucian Poet  

 AN OPPORTUNITY FOR DAILY REFLECTION BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE SCHOOL OF PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY

Mind-Blowing Facts About Our Reality | The Secrets of Quantum Physics | Spark

Spark Sep 30, 2022 #Spark#physics Professor Jim Al-Khalili traces the story of arguably the most important, accurate and yet perplexing scientific theory ever: quantum physics. The story of quantum physics starts at the beginning of the 20th century with scientists trying to better understand how light bulbs work. This simple question soon led scientists deep into the hidden workings of matter, into the sub-atomic building blocks of the world around us. Here they discovered phenomena unlike any encountered before – a realm where things can be in many places at once, where chance and probability call the shots and where reality appears to only truly exist when we observe it.

(Submitted by Ben Gilberti, H.W., M.)

Save the Date: 4/20/23


Save the date for mycelium, wonder, awe, inspiration, beauty & visual healingIn preparation for Earth Day, we’ll be kicking up energy into full gear on April 20th (4/20) at 4pm PST, with two joyful hours full of celebrating YOU on The Louie Channel.

 Join us for our official launch party on 4/20!
(FREE, of course) 

We’re doing something really special here – gathering extraordinary friends, both new and old, to drop in and connect deeply on subjects of the earth, discovery of the soul, and hopeful songs of the spirit. 

It’s a party with purpose – the very best kind. We can’t wait to see you there along with all of our community, catching the wave of gratitude and unveiling a new form of positive content to the world.

Tell your friends they’re invited!

Already subscribed? Great! Just jump on to The Louie Channel and join us. on 4/20 at 4p PST.

Not yet subscribed? Subscription is FREE and gives you full access to a plethora of visual splendor from around the globe. For Earth Day, we’ll be granting full access to Gratitude Revealed, as well!

In gratitude,


 JOIN THE PARTY

(Contributed by John Atwater, H.W.)

Just One Thing … Be the Body

Just One ThingSimple practices for resilient happiness from Rick Hanson, PhD

If you’re looking to develop consciousness, love, and caring within yourself, you may want to check out the Awakening Joy online course from my good friend James Baraz. This 5-month course will help you motivate and empower yourself to make a better world in these challenging times.

Where do you live?
The Practice:Be the body.

Why?
As a kid, I was really out of touch with my body. I hardly noticed it most of the time, and when I did, I prodded it like a mule to do a better job of hauling “me” – the head – around.This approach helped me to soldier through some tough times. But there were costs. Many pleasures were numbed, or they flew over – actually, under – my head. I didn’t feel deeply engaged with life, like I was peering at the world through a hole in a fence. I pushed my body hard and didn’t take good care of it. When I spoke, I sounded out of touch to others, emotionally distant, even phony; my words lacked credibility, gravity, traction.Because of these costs, I’ve worked with this issue and come to appreciate the benefits of being aware of the body, coming down into it, inhabiting it – most fundamentally, being it.For starters, being the body is simply telling a truth. What we experience being – thoughts and feelings, memories and desires, and consciousness itself – is constrained, conditioned, and constructed by the body via its nervous system. The fabric of your mind is woven by your body.Further, being aware of your body and its signals gives you useful information about your deeper feelings and needs. Tracking your body’s subtle reactions to others also tells you a lot about them.Coming home to your body helps you feel grounded, and it gives you reassuring feedback that you’re alive and basically alright. It’s exhilarating to feel the vitality of the body, even sitting quietly, and to experience the pleasures of the senses.In particular, experiencing your body as a whole – as a single, unified gestalt in awareness, with all its sensations appearing together at once – activates networks on the sides of your brain. These lateral networks pull you out of the planning, worrying, obsessing, fantasizing, and self-referential thinking – “me, myself, and I” – that’s driven by another neural network in the middle of the brain. Consequently, abiding as the whole body draws you into the present moment, reduces stress, increases mindfulness, and lowers the sense of self to help you take life less personally.How?

First off, a caution: for some people, it’s disturbing to experience being the body. In particular, this is understandable and not uncommon for people who have chronic pain, a disability, or a history of trauma. If this applies to you, try these practices carefully, if at all.

But for most people, it feels good and brings value to be the body. And there are numerous ways to deepen the sense of this:

Let your attention wander through your body, like a gentle scout investigating its sensations.

See what it’s like to sustain awareness of your body for at least a few minutes in a row – and longer if you want. You could keep paying attention to your breathing, or to the feelings in your hands while doing dishes, or to the sensations in your feet and legs as you walk the dog.While doing everyday activities, routinely bring attention back to your body. What’s it feel like to be a body: answering the phone . . . watching TV . . . driving . . . typing . . . lifting a child . . . sitting in a meeting . . . stocking shelves . . . loading a truck . . . crawling into bed . . . ?As you speak, try to be aware of your chest . . . stomach . . . hips . . . arms and legs . . . hands and feet. How does this change your communicating, especially about things that matter to you?Experiment with sensing the body as a whole. Try to be aware of all the sensations of breathing in the torso, all of them present in consciousness as a unified whole, moment by moment. Let attention widen and soften to receive the whole torso as a single percept. In the beginning, it’s natural for this sense of the whole to last for only a second or two and then crumble; simply keep trying to regenerate it, and it will become stronger with practice. Next, open to a larger whole: all of the sensations of breathing throughout the body, appearing all together in awareness breath after breath. Then, see if you can go all the way out to include all body sensations, not just those of breathing.For a specified time – even just one minute – find a comfortable seat, let worries and plans fall away, and simply rest. Be aware of breathing and let everything else go. Nothing to do, nowhere to go, no one to be. Just sitting, abiding as a body breathing.
Wherever we go, whatever we’re doing, there’s always a doorway to a deeper sense of presence and peace: being the body.

(Contributed by John Atwater, H.W.)

Book: “Unsettling Truths: The Ongoing, Dehumanizing Legacy of the Doctrine of Discovery”

Unsettling Truths: The Ongoing, Dehumanizing Legacy of the Doctrine of Discovery

Mark CharlesSoong-Chan Rah

You cannot discover lands already inhabited.

Injustice has plagued American society for centuries. And we cannot move toward being a more just nation without understanding the root causes that have shaped our culture and institutions.

In this prophetic blend of history, theology, and cultural commentary, Mark Charles and Soong-Chan Rah reveal the far-reaching, damaging effects of the “Doctrine of Discovery.” In the fifteenth century, official church edicts gave Christian explorers the right to claim territories they “discovered.” This was institutionalized as an implicit national framework that justifies American triumphalism, white supremacy, and ongoing injustices. The result is that the dominant culture idealizes a history of discovery, opportunity, expansion, and equality, while minority communities have been traumatized by colonization, slavery, segregation, and dehumanization.

Healing begins when deeply entrenched beliefs are unsettled. Charles and Rah aim to recover a common memory and shared understanding of where we have been and where we are going. As other nations have instituted truth and reconciliation commissions, so do the authors call our nation and churches to a truth-telling that will expose past injustices and open the door to conciliation and true community.

(Goodreads.com)

Three Days and Nights (from Good Friday to Easter Sunday)

by Paul F. Taylor on June 29, 2009 (answersingenesis.org)

Featured in Demolishing Supposed Bible Contradictions: Volume 1

If Jesus was to be in the grave three days and nights, how do we fit those between Good Friday and Easter Sunday?

[Editor’s note: This article was taken, with slight modification, from The New Answers Book 2.]

Powerful Answers to
Difficult Questions

 Each color-illustrated guide is packed with biblical and scientific answers to tough questions facing today’s culture.

LEARN MORE!

If Jesus was to be in the grave three days and nights, how do we fit those between Good Friday and Easter Sunday?

There are several solutions to this problem. Some have suggested that a special Sabbath might have occurred, so that Jesus was actually crucified on a Thursday. However, a solution, which seems to me to be more convincing, is that Jesus was indeed crucified on a Friday but that the Jewish method of counting days was not the same as ours.

In Esther 4:16, we find Esther exhorting Mordecai to persuade the Jews to fast. “Neither eat nor drink for three days, night or day” (NKJV). This was clearly in preparation for her highly risky attempt to see the king. Yet just two verses later, in Esther 5:1, we read: “Now it happened on the third day that Esther put on her royal robes and stood in the inner court of the king’s palace.” If three days and nights were counted in the same way as we count them today, then Esther could not have seen the king until the fourth day. This is completely analogous to the situation with Jesus’s crucifixion and resurrection.

For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth (

; NKJV).

Matthew 12:40

Now after the Sabbath, as the first day of the week began to dawn, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary came to see the tomb (

; NKJV).

Matthew 28:1

Then, as they were afraid and bowed their faces to the earth, they said to them, “Why do you seek the living among the dead? He is not here, but is risen! Remember how He spoke to you when He was still in Galilee, saying, ‘The Son of Man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again’” (

; NKJV).

Luke 24:5–7

If the three days and nights were counted the way we count them, then Jesus would have to rise on the fourth day. But, by comparing these passages, we can see that in the minds of people in Bible times, “the third day” is equivalent to “after three days.”

In fact, the way they counted was this: part of a day would be counted as one day. The following table, reproduced from the Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry (CARM) website, shows how the counting works.1

Day OneDay TwoDay Three
FRI
starts at
sundown on
Thursday
FRI
ends at
sundown
SAT
starts at
sundown on
Friday
SAT
ends at
sundown
SUN
starts at
sundown on
Saturday
SUN
ends at
sundown
NightDayNightDayNightDay
CrucifixionSabbathResurrection

This table indicates that Jesus died on Good Friday; that was day one. In total, day one includes the day and the previous night, even though Jesus died in the day. So, although only part of Friday was left, that was the first day and night to be counted. Saturday was day two. Jesus rose in the morning of the Sunday. That was day three. Thus, by Jewish counting, we have three days and nights, yet Jesus rose on the third day.

It should not be a surprise to us that a different culture used a different method of counting days. As soon as we adopt this method of counting, all the supposed biblical problems with counting the days disappear.

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Demolishing Supposed Bible Contradictions: Volume 1

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Footnotes

  1. Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry, “How Long Was Jesus Dead in the Tomb?” https://carm.org/bible-difficulties/how-long-was-jesus-dead-in-the-tomb/.