Metaphor comes from the Greek Meta, a passing over, or a going from one place to another, and phorein, to move or to carry. Metaphors carry us from one place to another, they enable us to cross boundaries that would otherwise be closed to us. Spiritual truths that transcend time and space can only be borne in metaphorical vessels whose meaning in found in their connotations - not in their denotations, the hard, factual, unidimensional casings of their historical reference.
For instance The End of the World, that great metaphor of spirituality that has been so explosively employed by those who have taken its denotative skin and thrown aside its connotative meat.
The End of the World is not a cataclysmic event to whose final judgement terror we draw ever closer. The End of the World comes every day for those whose spiritual insight allows them to see the world as it is, transparent to transcendence, a sacrement to mystery. The End of the World is, therefore, metaphoric of our spiritual beginning rather than our fiery ending.
For instance The End of the World, that great metaphor of spirituality that has been so explosively employed by those who have taken its denotative skin and thrown aside its connotative meat.
The End of the World is not a cataclysmic event to whose final judgement terror we draw ever closer. The End of the World comes every day for those whose spiritual insight allows them to see the world as it is, transparent to transcendence, a sacrement to mystery. The End of the World is, therefore, metaphoric of our spiritual beginning rather than our fiery ending.
Last edited: