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Saturday, June 13, 2026

The Law of the Land vs. The Law of the Heart

Scripture Reading: Ezekiel 16:49-50

"Now this was the sin of your sister Sodom: She and her daughters were arrogant, overfed and unconcerned; they did not help the poor and needy. They were haughty and did all these things detestable to me."

Beloved,

We live in a world that is obsessed with legality. We measure our morality by our statutes, our codes, and our policies. We convince ourselves that if we have a law for it, if it has been debated in a chamber, signed by a pen, and printed in a ledger, then it is "right."

But there is a terrifying chasm between being legal and being righteous. There is a haunting distance between a state that strictly follows its own laws and a state that is recognized by the world—and by God—as a pariah.

A pariah is more than just an enemy. A pariah is an outcast, a social leper, a nation that has so hardened its heart that it has become an island of cold isolation. How can a state be a nation of laws and yet find itself in the wilderness of isolation?

1. The Trap of Legalistic Arrogance

The Bible tells us that Sodom was not necessarily a place of anarchy. It was a place of arrogance. It had its own social order. It had its own way of doing things. The men of the city didn’t think they were "lawless"—they thought they were the masters of their own domain.

When a state becomes so convinced of its own supremacy that it closes its gates to the "stranger, the fatherless, and the widow," it may be obeying its own laws, but it is violating the foundational Law of Humanity. When a state decides that its borders are not for the protection of the vulnerable, but for the hoarding of comfort and the exclusion of the "other," it creates a society that is technically orderly but spiritually bankrupt.

You can pass a law that denies mercy. You can codify the exclusion of the poor. You can write statutes that justify the oppression of the outsider. But the world—and history—has a way of looking at such a nation and realizing that it has lost its soul.

2. The Verdict of the "Other"

Why does the world look at certain nations as pariahs? It is because, deep down, the human conscience recognizes when a law has been used as a shield for cruelty.

When the Prophet Ezekiel speaks of Sodom, he does not mention a lack of police. He mentions a lack of concern. A nation becomes a pariah when it becomes "unconcerned." When a state’s laws are designed to insulate the comfortable from the cries of the suffering, it signals to the rest of the world that this nation has stopped seeing other human beings as images of God.

We see this today: Nations that are technically stable, economically thriving, and legally rigorous, yet they are shunned. Why? Because the world recognizes that they have replaced the law of love with the law of the fortress. They have treated the stranger not as a guest, but as a threat. And when you treat the vulnerable as a threat, you invite the judgement of history.

3. The Call to Higher Statutes

As Christians, we are citizens of two realms. We live under the laws of our land, and we are called to be good citizens. But we also live under the Law of the Kingdom—a law that demands we love our neighbor as ourselves.

If our state’s laws contradict the Law of God—if they demand that we turn our backs on the hungry, the foreigner, or the oppressed—then we find ourselves at a crossroads. A state that is a pariah to the world is often a state that has forgotten the most basic biblical mandate: We were all foreigners in the land of Egypt.

The danger of becoming a pariah is that it breeds a false sense of victimhood. A nation that is shunned by the world often tells itself, "They hate us because we are right." But Scripture warns us that often, they hate us because we have become "haughty." We have become so full of ourselves that we have no room for God’s children.

Friday, June 12, 2026

The Language-Creation Confusion: How Humans Mistake Naming for Reality

 J. Rogers, SE Ohio

Abstract

Humans systematically confuse language with creation—both in ancient creation myths where naming brings things into existence, and in modern mathematics where we treat mathematical descriptions as the universe itself. This paper traces this fundamental confusion from primordial cosmogonic myths through to contemporary mathematical ontology, arguing that the universe exists independently of language, concepts, and mathematics, while we habitually mistake our descriptions for reality.

1. Introduction

The first verse of the Tao Te Ching states: "The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao. The name that can be named is not the eternal Name. The nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth." This ancient insight reveals a fundamental confusion that permeates human thought: we mistake language for reality.

This paper examines how humans confuse language for creation in two domains:

  1. Ancient creation myths where naming literally creates things

  2. Mathematics where we treat mathematical descriptions as the universe itself

The central thesis: the universe just is, independent of language, while we confuse our descriptions for what exists.

2. Naming as Creation in Ancient Myths

2.1 The Mechanism of Naming

In creation myths worldwide, naming is not merely descriptive—it is generative. The act of naming brings things into existence:

TraditionGod/DeityNaming Creates
Egyptian (Memphite)PtahPtah devises creation in mind, then articulates names to manifest them
Genesis (Biblical)God"God said, 'Let there be light'—and there was light"
BabylonianMardukMarduk names the stars—they exist
Hindu"Namā" (name) and "Rūpa" (form) are linked—naming creates form
Kabbalah (Jewish)GodGod used the Torah as framework for creation; Hebrew letters are fundamental components

In these myths:

  • Naming = creation

  • Word = reality

  • Language = universe

2.2 Naming as Metaphysical Power

Naming is "always a symbolic act of power. A name does not merely designate; it fixes a person's position, role, and mode of presence." In abstract sciences, this becomes "purer"—naming constructs "a model of reality." To name is to "distinguish, to give form, to include something within an order of differences, and thereby to gain power over the prediction of events."

The confusion: we gain power over prediction through naming, so we mistake naming for creation itself.

3. The Language Veil

3.1 Linguistic Consciousness Separates Us from Reality

"When we enter linguistic consciousness in early childhood, a veil of language—a symbolic and conceptual system—separates us from the direct experience of ourselves, nature, Dao—the mystery/unity beyond words."

The name "tree" gives us a "false sense of knowledge and power"—"Oh that's a tree"—but "the specific living being we call a 'tree' is deeper and wider in its spiritual, genetic and evolutionary being than the label 'tree' can suggest."

3.2 Naming Limits

"If you can name it—you limit it to the confines of the word." The "everything-at-onceness of energy-space-time generating creation from moment to moment—can't be summed up in a word, but because we must use words, we call it 'Dao'."

The universe is pre-conceptual. Language is conceptual.

4. Mathematics as Specialized Language

4.1 Mathematics Inherits the Confusion

Mathematics is "a special kind of language." But mathematics inherits and amplifies the language-creation confusion:

Mathematical ClaimWhat It Actually Is
"The universe is mathematical"The universe is not mathematical
"Numbers exist"Numbers are concepts
"Constants are fundamental"Constants are conventions
"X (dimensionless ratio) is real"X is a mathematical tool
"The ratio is invariant"The ratio is a description

4.2 Mathematical Platonism

Platonism holds that "numbers and other mathematical objects... enjoy existence as abstract objects in the realm of ideal form." A circle drawn on paper is "imperfect"—but in the "platonic realm there is a perfect circle."

The confusion: mathematical objects exist in our concepts, not in the universe.

The universe has:

  • No numbers

  • No ratios

  • No digits

  • No mathematics

  • No X

The universe just is.

5. The Fundamental Confusion

5.1 What We Do vs. What's True

What We DoWhat's True
Say "mass exists"Mass is a word
Say "X is real"X is a concept
Say "energy is fundamental"Energy is a description
Say "constants are fixed"Constants are conventions
Say "the ratio is invariant"The ratio is a mathematical tool
Say "the universe is mathematical"The universe is not mathematical

We think:

  • Words = reality

  • Concepts = what exists

  • Math = the universe

  • Language = the Tao

But it's the opposite:

  • Words ≠ reality

  • Concepts ≠ what exists

  • Math ≠ the universe

  • Language ≠ the Tao

5.2 The Root Error

The system teaches:

  • "Mass is real."

  • "Energy is real."

  • "Constants are fundamental."

  • "The universe is mathematical."

But the truth:

  • "Mass is a word."

  • "Energy is a word."

  • "Constants are conventions."

  • "The universe is not mathematical."

We confuse language for the universe.

6. The Line Drawn

6.1 What the Universe Is vs. How We Describe It

What the Universe IsHow We Describe It
Pre-conceptualConceptual
No XX is a concept
No ratioRatio is a concept
No digitsDigits are concepts
No mathematicsMath is a tool
No languageLanguage is a tool
Just isWe say
RealityDescription
The TaoThe name of the Tao
EternalTold

6.2 The Ultimate Distinction

What the universe is:

  • Has no X

  • Has no ratio

  • Has no digits

  • Has no concepts

  • Has no mathematics

  • Has no language

  • Just is

How we describe it:

  • Use X (concept)

  • Use ratio (concept)

  • Use digits (concept)

  • Use concepts

  • Use units

  • Use constants

  • Use mathematics

  • Use language

  • Use sayings

7. Conclusion

The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao. The name that can be named is not the eternal Name. The nameless is the eternally real.

Ancient creation myths taught that naming creates. We inherited this confusion and amplified it in mathematics, where we now treat mathematical descriptions as the universe itself.

The truth: the universe just is, independent of language, concepts, and mathematics. Everything we say—including X, the ratio, the digits, mass, energy—is conceptual. The universe is pre-conceptual.

We confuse language for creation.

This is the fundamental confusion. And recognizing it is the deepest insight.

Key Insight

We've drawn the ultimate line: between what the universe is (pre-conceptual reality) and how we describe it (conceptual language). This is the insight that collapses the entire language-creation confusion.

The universe has no X. No ratio. No digits. No mathematics. No language. It just is. Everything we call "real" is still conceptual—including X itself.

That's why "the Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao."

The Law of the Land vs. The Law of the Heart

Scripture Reading: Ezekiel 16:49-50 "Now this was the sin of your sister Sodom: She and her daughters were arrogant, overfed and unconc...