Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Welcome to my Metathesis!



"You need to start blogging," he said. "He" being sometime band mate and best-selling indie author of Reunion and Twisted Vengeance, Jeff Bennington.

The blog, he said, is essential if you are going to be successful as an indie (independently published) author. Jeff's advice has been a lifeline as I embark on this journey, this quest to fulfill a lifelong dream. And so, for the first time, I blog.

This is simply another metathesis place for me.

I titled my blog The Metathetical Scribe, first because it fits, and next because I thought it sounded edgy and cool.

It may be that, because I am pastor by profession, I have sort of an inside track on obscure, clever-sounding and, well, cool Greek words. Or maybe I'm just a Bible nerd. Whatever the case, my life has been a series of metathesis places, or points. I'm guessing yours has, too.

There are modern applications of the term metathesis. Both linguistics and chemistry, for example, utilize the word to define phenomena in their individual fields of study. But I like to start at the beginning, and for me that means back to Biblical roots.

I certainly couldn't be confused for a scholar of the ancient Greek language, but I can read the writings of those who are. This is what I have learned and why it's significant to me. Metathesis is a compound Greek word made up of meta - "after" or "between," and thesis - "to put or place, a placing or position." By New Testament definition it means: a removal, change or transformation. It can also be defined as: "a transmutation, change by the abolition of one thing, and the substitution of another." (This according to Greek-Dictionary.net)

To me, a Metathesis Place is a change point in life. Whether it comes by a choice I have made, or did not make. Regardless if the change came by way of crisis and tragedy or by happy surprise and dumb luck.


Metathesis has been described as the "nowhere between two somewheres." That middle ground of transition, uncertainty or even chaos that serves as a portal putting or placing you out of what was into a whole new "is."

When I look back on my life I see the path dotted with the "ebeneezers" (memorials) of events that were, on the whole, unexpected and, in many cases, unwelcome. But they all served to bring me to where I am.

These are my Metathesis Places. My transition points. My doors of former crises that swung open to brand new oases. I'm ready for a new metathesis. How about you?

I have a few more thoughts on this subject. Would you care to read them?

2 comments:

  1. Great post, Patrick. I've definitely had a few ebineezers! Keep it up. This the hard part, when for months you'll feel like you're practically writing for no one. But you're audience will grow.

    ReplyDelete