
Prophets, Laws & the Architechture of Order Ike Baker & Sky Mathis
Aetherica · Sky Mathis
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Show Notes
the first 30 min of This section starts with Sodom & Gomorrah as a launchpad, but quickly becomes a bigger conversation about: Catastrophe as myth + archetype: even if a meteor/airburst or high-heat event did occur, the deeper point is the symbolic pattern: judgment, rupture, flight, the taboo of "looking back," transformation (Lot's wife as salt). Two "Gods" problem: the contrast between the warlike, contractual Yahweh/El (Old Testament tone) and the transcendent, aid-oriented Christ-current (New Testament tone), framed in a quasi-Gnostic/Marcionite way. Historicity vs meaning: archaeology might be interesting, but Ike's stance is that literal proof isn't the main prize—the "archetypal essence" still works whether the story happened as written or not. Prophecy as a technology of tradition: prophets appear at social peaks/declines; prophecy is linked to bondage/exile cycles, political downfall, and the messianic arc. Law as civilizing containment: commandments, Hammurabi, Ma'at, etc. as "order against chaos," with the extra layer that ancient rulership was generally seen as divinely sanctioned. Archons / planetary powers / divine favor: "favor" is framed as alignment with a power (often archonic), and "worship" is redefined as honor, not groveling.