This blog started as a place to collect favorite passages—saving them in a place where I can search for them again (and also offering them to others). As a simple and long-term contemplative exercise, I have organize these from the start under the three categories of beauty with priesthood, goodness with kingship, and truth with prophecy (more on these below). In being a collection of favorite passages, this blog functions as a digital commonplace book. Long histories of such collections—know as anthologia (“a garland”), florilegium (“a gathering of flowers”), silva rerum (“a forest of things”), and commonplace books—stretch back in time and have inspired me (although sadly short of the more tangible practices of a true commonplace book).
Desiderius Erasmus inspired the name for my blog. He appreciated the compiling of commonplace books (essential to his rhetorical theories in Copia: Foundations of the Abundant Style) and described this habit when writing about the daughters of his good friend Thomas More:
As they flit like so many little bees between Greek and Latin authors of every species, here noting down something to imitate, here culling some notable saying to put into practice in their behavior, there getting by heart some witty anecdote to relate among their friends, you would swear you were watching the Muses at graceful play in the lovely pastures of Mount Helicon, gathering flowers and marjoram to make well-woven garlands.
Flowers are a glorious image of abundance:
Yet I say to you that not even Solomon in all his glory clothed himself like one of these. (Matthew 6.29)
Authors, past and present, labored long to plant these fields and gardens in which we may wander freely. As a simple discipline amid these fields—to help me reflect on these passages and to make very basic connections between them—I place these passages into one of these three categories:
- Beauty and priests: Has to do with experiencing, seeing, attracting, displaying, enjoying, reverencing, protecting, and preserving qualities such as holiness, purity, glory and beauty. This also involves creating, cleansing, interceding, offering, feasting, thanking and praising within space and time through habitual cycles and patterns. (Neglect or disorder in this category leads to ugliness, blindness and idolatry.)
- Goodness and kings: Has to do with planing, building, judging and executing with qualities such as wisdom, justice, righteousness and goodness. This also involves contemplation, forethought, understanding of the human condition and a vision of human flourishing. (Neglect or disorder in this category leads to destruction, death and tyranny.)
- Truth and prophets: Has to do with teaching, demonstrating, confronting, exciting and giving hope with qualities such as insight, integrity, boldness, humility and truthfulness. This also involves learning, engaging, speaking, writing and longing. (Neglect or disorder in this category leads to ignorance, lying, flattery and fear-mongering.)
These three pairs come from lining up the classical triumvirate of ultimate values with the three offices of Adam and Christ (developed extensively across all of the scriptures as the universal and essential human callings). Since these categories are all fundamental to our humanness, most quotations will touch on all three in some respects. However, forcing myself to connect each quotation with just one of these three pairings, helps me to focus and interweave my initial responses to what I read. (Some further reading on these categories: here and here.)
After several years of only sharing passages from my reading, I started to add a fourth category with “my own writing.” These musings of my own are typically in response to my readings and are largely just “seed ideas” for possible future consideration and development. Starting in December of 2021, my own blogging will move to a project with some others at Jesus and the Ancient Paths while this Copious Flowers blog will remain a place for my virtual common-placing (if such a term is at all legitimate).
Jesse, thanks for letting me know of your site. I am liking what I am seeing here. I like how you are categorizing the human vocation along the three-fold office of prophet, priest, and king. These categories, I believe, really should influence our vision of human anthropology and teleology in God’s plan from the beginning of creation to the present, and into the eschaton (which presently we are participating in to some extent). I hope to develop something along these lines as a vision (in part) of what it means to educate Christianly. Thanks for sharing! (apologies as I have typed on iPod).
Thanks for stopping by. And I’d love to see anything that you develop regarding “what it means to educate Christianly.”
Thanks for sharing this with me, Jesse. As this is only my first visit, I cannot say I’ve explored it exhaustively. But I am enjoying what I’m seeing here. In fact, it does seem this is a place where you are endeavoring and desiring to know the Love of God – both for your ongoing edification and soul-filling, and for others.