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@matthewgallaway
Saturday afternoon at the park.
It's odd that so many theologies treat divinity as stable and unchanging. Like why can't the nature of God change? Feels to me like god would be the most changingest thing there is.
Human brains are pretty clingy and impermanence is a major cause of suffering for them so makes sense we'd see stability and unchangingness as an important attribute in the divine. Buddhism obviously addresses this, but more modern forms of Process Theology and Liberation Theology involve change and development and god working in relational ways.
Just a recommendation for anyone interested in the ‘God Is Change’ idea to check out Octavia Butler. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Parable_of_the_Sower_(novel)&wprov=rarw1
Parable of the Sower (novel) - Wikipedia
Biking in Manhattan north of the GWB.
Dogwoods blooming in Western Penna.
Fort Tryon Park, yesterday afternoon.
Forsythia season at Fort Tryon Park is something I look forward to every year, and this year didn’t disappoint. We spend so much money in our country building highways, sports stadiums, and shopping malls instead of building gardens and parks and other public spaces where everyone is equal and you can get a sense of how fleeting and eternal life can seem at the same time.
Moss on rocks, Highbridge Park, just north of 155th Street.