“Why,” the mother asked, “do you
find it in me to support those enemies of theirs?!”
“It's because,” Julie, one her four
children, answered, “there's no point in pretending, otherwise, for
you, that they are loyal with us!”
“I agree!” her son Dean said. “And
moreover they wouldn't be the one's to be loyal with, even enough for
there to be a nuisance for you in that we accuse them!”
The two other siblings seemed to agree
as well.
“I support them only to the extent
that they are good people! So to the extent you don't support my
loyalty to them, then you have an disloyalty towards God and care for
Jesus!”
Julie looked at her. She found her to
be amusing, or so it seemed. Dean and the two others looked at her,
and wondered if she was going to say something. She didn't at first.
Instead her brother Charlie asked her: Is it that she talks Jesus
you're laughing at, or is it that she's totally wrong about what
moral is and that she still keeps on insinuating that even Jesus is
with her about this?”
“It's because she speaks Jesus!”
Julie answered. “And it's also because she speaks moral as if she
really knew what she was up to!”
Charlie looked at her. He couldn't
figure out if she by speaking Jesus meant to mention him at all, or
to pretend he was even part of the whole conspiracy that he felt
their mother had.
Dean also looked at her. He found her
to be smart at saying what there was to say, but not smart enough at
saying exactly what one should to such a woman as the one they had in
their mother.
The forth sibling, Anton, stood for
that the mother was sort of with Jesus and sort of with the mentioned
enemies. He did not think that Jesus were with those enemies of the
people that stood for him. Thereby he concluded that since they
didn't stand for Jesus the way he knew his mother to, she must be
loyal with them for the sake of an advantage over the sort of people
who weren't much of loyal with Jesus.
The mother looked at her four children.
She seemed to be indifferent to what they wanted to believe her to
be. At the same time, though, she stood there with an air of that she
wouldn't be the woman to be anything but well-liked, by anyone -
including her children - who cared not to expect the devil's
sophisticated attitude to be his or her ally for it. for the sake of
seeming innocent she said: “I thereby see in her that she is loyal
with Jesus only on the surface! We shall thereby from here on dismiss
her from most of our family loyalties with her!”
Dean looked at Julie, then he said: “I
can't see much of a reason to be disloyal with her just for that!”
“Me neither!” Anton said.
Charlie looked at the two of them, then
said: “I will be loyal with my family, but not with the parts of it
that speak ill of the rest of us.”
The mother looked at them and sighed
with an air of grandiloquence. She also radiated something of love
for her family. It was not until she smiled that the four siblings
understood where she was coming from: “I cannot see in my family
that they have as much loyalty with God as I have! I can, though, see
in them that they do not care for caring for idolatrous people. It
seems, perhaps, that I wold be the one to care too much for such
people?! But what I have in them is not to see me as a believer in
masses of different loyalties, but to view me as a friend of their
loyalties to that I can lead them to become Christian some day.”
Julie sighed. “Mom! You don't have to
be Christian in order to be well-liked among them! It is not they who
will be happy when they one day discover you have simply been trying
to lead them into Christianity! They will not be loyal with Christ!
They are as heathen as the people of the sunshine route of the
Quat-Evinhoe constitutional establishment!”
The mother looked at her and answered:
“I will have nothing to do the people of Quat-Evinhoe! But I will,
I assure convince some of these new friends to eventually become
Christian! They will, I assure you, love Christian ideology just as
much as we all should be doing by now, because I have seen it in them
that they are almost as Christian as Dean and his friends.
Dean looked at the others. “I cannot
see why they all seem to be faking that they are about as I! I cannot
see in them that they are anything better at being a Christian than
those people who never see any light at all when they are ... on the
other side!”
Charlie and Anton exchanged glances for
a few moments, then Anton said: “I don't get it! Firstly you,” he
indicated his Dean and his mother, “stand for seeming Christian in
the sense that you stay loyal with being clear on what is morally
smart in sense of authority! Secondly you tend to pretend that I am
not loyal with the notions of being moral, just because I'm not as
impressive about it! Thirdly you look at Julie as sort of not to be
viewed as smart at being distinct and pronounced at what she is of
clear on what is real and what isn't! But then you also pretend I am
not to be seen as clear on what is smart for us all to be apparent
and evidently sincere about - and that without me being disloyal
with my family or anything that we all want to be presented as!”
His mother looked at him and answered:
“It is not to our benefit to seem loyal with seeming responsibility
for seeming clarity of sincerity! It is not to our benefit to pretend
to be loyal with just about anything that is clear on seeming adapted
enough to standards of love and understanding! It is not to our
advantage to pretend as if something about those who are subordinate
as if they were good enough to be seen as anything but parsimoniously
into faking that they are worthy of our attention!”
Julie looked up :”Now I finally get
that part! You seem to be good enough for worthiness of superb
quality! But that's just because you don't view worthiness as much
else than power or at least the ability to empower oneself to seek
obvious worths in one's vicinity and so.”
Charlie looked at the mother and said:
“Perhaps you then can understand that I also am within the vicinity
of worths for the sake of seeing in oneself that one is of value that
is unbreakable! Perhaps you and the others,” he looked at his
siblings, “can find in me to be of worth to you! The sense it makes
to fake that I am not moral is what it seems to be that goes with the
notion of them to be the assumptions about worth that we should want
to get into contact with!”
Anton looked at Charlie and then their
mother. “If you really feel we are not to be viewed as sincere
unless we are of value for those who take for granted we are not
Christian, then how come we all should to tend to unfrock Julie and
perhaps others of us? How come we aught to be a family that unfrocks
just about anyone except those who are not Christian for the sake of
Christianity?!”
His mother looked at him and said:
“It's not in your business to be regarding them as none-Christians!
It is in our business to care for morals in the sense that wakes the
Christian spirit in them all! Thereby I declare it to be nonsense
that you all should be distrusting me about my value for this family
for the sake of reassuring ourselves against those who find
themselves not to be part of Christ's faith! I declare, thereby,
there be no discussion about your sister! And I declare there be no
further responsibility towards her!”
Julie looked at her mother as if for
the first time. Then she stated: “I should have said this to begin
with: I is not true that my mother is ever a good-hearted woman! And
I should have shown that she wasn't, even for our neighbours! Now
that you are pretending that I aught be excommunicated, now that you
pretend I'm something of a misfit, now you have really showed who is
the bad person of our family!”
Her three brothers looked at her. After
a while Charlie spoke. “It isn't, of course, only one person who is
the devil of a given context! It is she, not we, who should, though,
be seen as the bad person who wants to excommunicate someone for
tending to obstruct Jesus from emphasizing his existence so very
much! So, I look at the situation and it becomes clear that she is
the bad person among us who doesn't even care to excommunicate those
who never see Jesus as their superior in the first place! Now how
come you, mom, want to see her as worse than that?!”
“There isn't any way to view Jesus as
a smart person if one doesn't excommunicate at least those close to
oneself to the extent they don't pertain to that being a moral thing
to view Jesus as!” With that she ended the discussion by saying:
“From now on we shall not anymore say to one another that there are
any notions of there not being Christ, not unless there is reason to
believe unbelievers will, if we chose not to, learn, sooner or later,
how to believe!”
She left them to themselves by going
upstairs. The three brothers looked at their sister and Anton said:
“I guess this sort means you are to be viewed as not with us
anymore! I wonder if she is going to fake that you need to be treated
at a correctional facility or something!”
Julie looked at him. “I guess they,
she and dad, sooner or later will! That is, if they don't
immediately, I think they will when they find that I still can be
talking to for example you!” With that she left her three brothers
and went upstairs to her room, carefully avoiding having to face her
mother on the way there. ...
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