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The eternal you.


The Eternal You

The Eternal You, by Carroll E. Simcox (Crossroad, 192 pp., $7.95)

THE REV. Carroll Simcox's books have a way of flowing one from another. In this, his 17th published volume, he picks up one of the threads from Prayer, the Divine Dialogue (1985), and spins it out in quite a different way. He calls the new book a "theme with variations,' and true to the musical form he has borrowed, he begins with a statement of the theme in full brass: ". . . a conviction, a passionate intuition . . . [that] you, I, all human beings, indeed all things animate and inanimate inanimate /in·an·i·mate/ (-an´im-it)
1. without life.

2. lacking in animation.


in·an·i·mate
adj.
, visible and invisible, are eternal.' His clue comes from a Wordsworth poem that speaks of belief "ripening ripening

said of meat. See curing.
 into faith, and faith become a passionate intuition.' Since matters like resurrection, eternity, and infinity do not fall into the provablefact category, Simcox believes the proper place to go for guidance is the inspired intuition of the poets, rather than the arguments and guesses of theologians. Each of the 17 brief chapters is a variation on the theme of existence in the eternal mind of God. His chapter on "Musements' is a short, poetic (and illuminating il·lu·mi·nate  
v. il·lu·mi·nat·ed, il·lu·mi·nat·ing, il·lu·mi·nates

v.tr.
1. To provide or brighten with light.

2. To decorate or hang with lights.

3.
) restatement Restatement

A revision in a company's earlier financial statements.

Notes:
The need for restating financial figures can result from fraud, misrepresentation, or a simple clerical error.
 of the final deduction he arrives at in the book on prayer. In "Relaxing about Antinomies' he handles the problem of roadblocks, the reconciliation of seeming contradictions that have bothered us all, in typical Simcox fashion: "There came a point in my life when I could hear God saying to me something that came through in our primitive tellurian vernacular ver·nac·u·lar  
n.
1. The standard native language of a country or locality.

2.
a. The everyday language spoken by a people as distinguished from the literary language. See Synonyms at dialect.

b.
 as this: "I wish you'd leave all this reconciling of things to me, since you are so hopelessly unequipped Adj. 1. unequipped - without necessary physical or intellectual equipment; "guerrillas unequipped for a pitched battle"; "unequipped for jobs in a modern technological society"  for it, and that you would use whatever influence you have with your fellow fussers and worriers to persuade them to do likewise. I know what I'm doing. I'll go over it all with you when you get Home . . .''
COPYRIGHT 1986 National Review, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1986, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Kelley, H.N.
Publication:National Review
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Aug 15, 1986
Words:314
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