Quotes & Sayings


We, and creation itself, actualize the possibilities of the God who sustains the world, towards becoming in the world in a fuller, more deeper way. - R.E. Slater

There is urgency in coming to see the world as a web of interrelated processes of which we are integral parts, so that all of our choices and actions have [consequential effects upon] the world around us. - Process Metaphysician Alfred North Whitehead

Kurt Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem says (i) all closed systems are unprovable within themselves and, that (ii) all open systems are rightly understood as incomplete. - R.E. Slater

The most true thing about you is what God has said to you in Christ, "You are My Beloved." - Tripp Fuller

The God among us is the God who refuses to be God without us, so great is God's Love. - Tripp Fuller

According to some Christian outlooks we were made for another world. Perhaps, rather, we were made for this world to recreate, reclaim, redeem, and renew unto God's future aspiration by the power of His Spirit. - R.E. Slater

Our eschatological ethos is to love. To stand with those who are oppressed. To stand against those who are oppressing. It is that simple. Love is our only calling and Christian Hope. - R.E. Slater

Secularization theory has been massively falsified. We don't live in an age of secularity. We live in an age of explosive, pervasive religiosity... an age of religious pluralism. - Peter L. Berger

Exploring the edge of life and faith in a post-everything world. - Todd Littleton

I don't need another reason to believe, your love is all around for me to see. – Anon

Thou art our need; and in giving us more of thyself thou givest us all. - Khalil Gibran, Prayer XXIII

Be careful what you pretend to be. You become what you pretend to be. - Kurt Vonnegut

Religious beliefs, far from being primary, are often shaped and adjusted by our social goals. - Jim Forest

We become who we are by what we believe and can justify. - R.E. Slater

People, even more than things, need to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed, and redeemed; never throw out anyone. – Anon

Certainly, God's love has made fools of us all. - R.E. Slater

An apocalyptic Christian faith doesn't wait for Jesus to come, but for Jesus to become in our midst. - R.E. Slater

Christian belief in God begins with the cross and resurrection of Jesus, not with rational apologetics. - Eberhard Jüngel, Jürgen Moltmann

Our knowledge of God is through the 'I-Thou' encounter, not in finding God at the end of a syllogism or argument. There is a grave danger in any Christian treatment of God as an object. The God of Jesus Christ and Scripture is irreducibly subject and never made as an object, a force, a power, or a principle that can be manipulated. - Emil Brunner

“Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh” means "I will be that who I have yet to become." - God (Ex 3.14) or, conversely, “I AM who I AM Becoming.”

Our job is to love others without stopping to inquire whether or not they are worthy. - Thomas Merton

The church is God's world-changing social experiment of bringing unlikes and differents to the Eucharist/Communion table to share life with one another as a new kind of family. When this happens, we show to the world what love, justice, peace, reconciliation, and life together is designed by God to be. The church is God's show-and-tell for the world to see how God wants us to live as a blended, global, polypluralistic family united with one will, by one Lord, and baptized by one Spirit. – Anon

The cross that is planted at the heart of the history of the world cannot be uprooted. - Jacques Ellul

The Unity in whose loving presence the universe unfolds is inside each person as a call to welcome the stranger, protect animals and the earth, respect the dignity of each person, think new thoughts, and help bring about ecological civilizations. - John Cobb & Farhan A. Shah

If you board the wrong train it is of no use running along the corridors of the train in the other direction. - Dietrich Bonhoeffer

God's justice is restorative rather than punitive; His discipline is merciful rather than punishing; His power is made perfect in weakness; and His grace is sufficient for all. – Anon

Our little [biblical] systems have their day; they have their day and cease to be. They are but broken lights of Thee, and Thou, O God art more than they. - Alfred Lord Tennyson

We can’t control God; God is uncontrollable. God can’t control us; God’s love is uncontrolling! - Thomas Jay Oord

Life in perspective but always in process... as we are relational beings in process to one another, so life events are in process in relation to each event... as God is to Self, is to world, is to us... like Father, like sons and daughters, like events... life in process yet always in perspective. - R.E. Slater

To promote societal transition to sustainable ways of living and a global society founded on a shared ethical framework which includes respect and care for the community of life, ecological integrity, universal human rights, respect for diversity, economic justice, democracy, and a culture of peace. - The Earth Charter Mission Statement

Christian humanism is the belief that human freedom, individual conscience, and unencumbered rational inquiry are compatible with the practice of Christianity or even intrinsic in its doctrine. It represents a philosophical union of Christian faith and classical humanist principles. - Scott Postma

It is never wise to have a self-appointed religious institution determine a nation's moral code. The opportunities for moral compromise and failure are high; the moral codes and creeds assuredly racist, discriminatory, or subjectively and religiously defined; and the pronouncement of inhumanitarian political objectives quite predictable. - R.E. Slater

God's love must both center and define the Christian faith and all religious or human faiths seeking human and ecological balance in worlds of subtraction, harm, tragedy, and evil. - R.E. Slater

In Whitehead’s process ontology, we can think of the experiential ground of reality as an eternal pulse whereby what is objectively public in one moment becomes subjectively prehended in the next, and whereby the subject that emerges from its feelings then perishes into public expression as an object (or “superject”) aiming for novelty. There is a rhythm of Being between object and subject, not an ontological division. This rhythm powers the creative growth of the universe from one occasion of experience to the next. This is the Whiteheadian mantra: “The many become one and are increased by one.” - Matthew Segall

Without Love there is no Truth. And True Truth is always Loving. There is no dichotomy between these terms but only seamless integration. This is the premier centering focus of a Processual Theology of Love. - R.E. Slater

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Note: Generally I do not respond to commentary. I may read the comments but wish to reserve my time to write (or write from the comments I read). Instead, I'd like to see our community help one another and in the helping encourage and exhort each of us towards Christian love in Christ Jesus our Lord and Savior. - re slater

Friday, July 3, 2026

The Dragon and the Beast (7)



ESSAY SEVEN

Narrative, Symbol, Myth, and Transformative Imagination

Reality → Ontology → Metaphysics → Interpretation → Ethics → Participation

Ontology disciplines metaphysics lest it become mere speculation.
Metaphysics enlarges ontology lest description never asks why.

Reality is continuously encountered, described, interpreted, and lived.
The health of every interpretation is measured by the degree to which
it deepens our participation in relational becoming.

The Dragon and the Beast

Metaphysics VII - When Civilizational Power Refuses Becoming

by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT


Myths are relational frameworks through which
communities organize participation in reality.
- R.E. Slater

The deepest myths are not simply stories we tell.
They become the stories that tell us who we are.
- R.E. Slater

Stories are more than narrative examples.
They are metaphysical phenomena through which
human beings interpret, inhabit, and participate in reality.
- R.E. Slater

Every civilization inherits interpretive worlds. The task of philosophy is not first to destroy them, but to ask whether they continue corresponding to the reality in which we all participate. Where they deepen participation, they should be preserved. Where they diminish participation, they should be reoriented.
Essay Outline
Preface
I. Why Every Civilization Creates Monsters
II. Power Before Domination
III. The Architecture of Domination
IV. Recovering Becoming: When Civilizations Reopen Themselves
V. Recognizing the Dragon Within
VI. Toward Civilizations of Becoming Participation
VII. Conclusion: 
Bibliography


Preface

The previous essays have gradually enlarged the horizon of our inquiry.

We began by asking why human beings tell stories. We then explored how suffering and rupture interrupt the continuity by which lives, communities, and civilizations understand themselves. Jonah invited us to consider interrupted becoming within the experience of a single individual, revealing that transformation rarely arrives through certainty, but often through disruption, resistance, mercy, and unfinished renewal.

The present essay enlarges that horizon once again.

Human beings do not live in isolation. We participate in families, institutions, economies, governments, religious traditions, cultures, technologies, and civilizations. These larger, expanded communities possess their own stories, symbols, memories, aspirations, and fears. Over time they also develop structures of authority capable of nurturing life - or constraining it. The scale changes, but the fundamental question remains remarkably similar.

What happens when participation gives way to domination?

Across history, nearly every civilization has imagined symbolic figures that embody powers greater than any single individual. Dragons, beasts, leviathans, monsters, devouring kingdoms, tyrants, and empires appear in myth, religion, literature, political philosophy, and cultural memory with surprising regularity. Their names differ. Their forms change. Yet they continue expressing recognizable patterns through which societies experience fear, oppression, exclusion, violence, and the concentration of power.

This essay approaches these figures neither as curiosities of ancient imagination nor as predictions requiring speculative interpretation. Instead, they are explored as metaphysical phenomena: symbolic disclosures of recurring realities that continue appearing wherever relational participation contracts into domination and relational openness yields to closure.

The Dragon and the Beast therefore represent more than biblical imagery.

They become enduring symbols of civilizational resistance to becoming.

Their significance lies not merely in identifying particular historical empires or political systems, but in revealing a perennial temptation that accompanies every generation. Individuals may resist becoming through fear or prejudice. Societies may resist becoming through institutions that preserve themselves at the expense of those they exist to serve. Power, once detached from relational participation, often seeks permanence rather than openness, certainty rather than dialogue, control rather than creativity.

This distinction is essential.

Reality itself does not refuse becoming.

Reality remains open, relational, participatory, and unfinished.

People refuse becoming.

Institutions refuse becoming.

Empires refuse becoming.

Civilizations refuse becoming.

The Dragon and the Beast symbolism emerges wherever power hardens against the openness through which life continues to grow.

The purpose of this essay is therefore not to identify monsters lurking somewhere beyond history. It is to ask why humanity repeatedly creates symbols of monstrous power, and what those symbols continue disclosing about the societies we build, inhabit, defend, and sometimes fear.

For if Jonah revealed the psychology of interrupted becoming, the Dragon and the Beast symbolism reveal its sociology, its politics, the civilizational structures through which power either deepens or diminishes relational participation, and the symbolic worlds through which civilizations understand and organize themselves.

Together they remind us that reality's greatest struggles are seldom confined to individuals alone. They also unfold within the symbolic worlds through which entire civilizations understand themselves.


I. Why Every Civilization Creates Monsters

"And I saw a beast rising out of the sea..."
Revelation 13:1

Every civilization eventually imagines monsters.

They appear under many names. Dragons, beasts, leviathans, hydras, demons, giants, tyrants, devouring kingdoms, and monstrous empires populate the stories of nearly every culture throughout history. Although their outward forms differ, they often embody remarkably similar concerns. They represent powers that exceed the intentions of any single individual - forces capable of overwhelming communities, consuming freedom, distorting justice, and reshaping entire civilizations.

This recurring pattern deserves philosophical attention.

It is tempting to dismiss such figures as products of ancient imagination or pre-scientific superstition. Others have treated them almost exclusively as prophetic predictions awaiting future fulfillment. Both approaches, however, risk overlooking a deeper question.

Why do civilizations repeatedly imagine monsters at all?

The persistence of these symbols suggests that they disclose something enduring about human experience. They are not simply creatures inhabiting ancient myths or religious literature. They are symbolic attempts to describe recurring realities that societies encounter whenever power becomes detached from relational participation and accountability and begins organizing itself around domination, exclusion, fear, or absolute certainty.

The Dragon and the Beast therefore function as more than literary characters.

They become metaphysical phenomena.

They disclose recurring patterns through which civilizations understand the dynamics of power, order, chaos, violence, authority, and resistance. Whether expressed through the imagery of the Hebrew prophets, the apocalyptic visions of Revelation, the dragons of East Asia, the monsters of Greek mythology, the leviathans of political philosophy, or the symbolic narratives of modern literature, humanity repeatedly returns to remarkably similar images when attempting to describe powers that seem larger than any individual life.

This observation is significant for a process-relational metaphysic.

Reality itself remains open.

Nature continues becoming.

Relationships continue evolving.

Possibilities continually emerge.

Yet human societies often construct institutions, ideologies, political systems, economic structures, and cultural narratives that seek permanence over participation, certainty over dialogue, control over creativity, and domination over relationship. These structures may initially arise to preserve order, protect communities, or coordinate collective life. Over time, however, they may also become increasingly self-protective, resistant to criticism, and closed to transformation.

Perhaps this is why civilizations tell stories of dragons.

Not because monsters literally roam the earth.

But because every generation eventually confronts powers that become larger than themselves - powers that seem capable of consuming the very openness through which healthy societies flourish.

The Dragon and the Beast become enduring symbols of that possibility.

Not symbols of reality itself.

But symbols of what happens when civilizational power refuses becoming.


II. Power Before Domination

"The kings of the Gentiles lord it over them... But not so with you."
- Luke 22:25–26

Power is among the most misunderstood realities of human existence.

Throughout history it has often been treated as either inherently good or inherently evil. Some philosophies celebrate power as the highest expression of human achievement, while others regard it primarily as a source of oppression and corruption. Both perspectives overlook a more fundamental observation.

Power is first a condition of participation.

Without power, nothing could become. Stars could not ignite. Seeds could not germinate. Children could not mature. Communities could not organize. Civilizations could not preserve knowledge, cultivate justice, or cooperate across generations.

Even the simplest acts of relationship require capacities that enable participation. The ability to speak, to listen, to remember, to imagine, to forgive, to create, and to love all represent forms of relational power. Properly understood, power is not the opposite of humility, compassion, or cooperation. It is the very capacity through which they become possible.

Reality itself discloses this pattern.

Energy gives rise to matter.

Matter organizes into living systems.

Living systems develop increasing capacities for relationship, adaptation, learning, and creativity. Across every scale of becoming, power appears not primarily as domination but as the capacity to participate in ever richer forms of relational existence.

From a process-relational perspective, power therefore begins as generative rather than refusal, non-participative, devolving, coercive, oppressive, or domineering.

Parents exercise power by nurturing children toward maturity.

Teachers exercise power by enlarging understanding.

Physicians exercise power by restoring health.

Communities exercise power by creating conditions in which individuals may flourish together.

Healthy institutions exist not to preserve themselves, but to deepen the participation of those they serve.

In this sense, power is neither the enemy of freedom nor its replacement. Properly ordered, power enlarges freedom by creating the conditions under which shared becoming may continue.

The difficulty arises when participation gradually gives way to preservation.

Institutions established to serve communities begin serving themselves.

Governments formed to protect freedom become preoccupied with maintaining control.

Economic systems created to sustain human flourishing begin measuring success primarily through accumulation rather than participation.

Religious communities entrusted with nurturing hope become guardians of unquestioned authority and certainty.

Even scientific, educational, and technological institutions may become more concerned with defending established paradigms than remaining open to continued discovery.

The transition is often gradual. Few civilizations consciously choose domination. Most begin with legitimate purposes. Yet every institution eventually faces the same temptation.

Will power remain relational?

Or will it begin preserving itself?

This, perhaps, marks the earliest appearance of the Dragon. Not in the possession of power. But in the refusal to let power remain accountable to the relationships from which it first arose. Power then ceases to nurture becoming. It begins managing it. Controlling it. Restricting it. Eventually fearing it.

The Dragon and the Beast symbolize this profound inversion.

They do not represent the existence of power. They represent power severed from participation. Power that has forgotten to be responsible to its relational origin. Power that now seeks permanence instead of openness, domination instead of cooperation, and certainty instead of continued becoming.

From this perspective, the great danger confronting every civilization is not that it possesses power.

It is that power may gradually cease serving life and begin serving itself.

III. The Dragon and the Beast: The Architecture of Domination

"And the dragon gave the beast his power and his throne and great authority."
Revelation 13:2

Power rarely becomes destructive all at once.

History suggests a far more subtle pattern.

Communities organize around legitimate needs. Institutions emerge to preserve memory, establish justice, educate future generations, protect the vulnerable, and coordinate the increasingly complex relationships required for civilization to flourish. At their best, these structures enlarge participation by creating conditions under which individuals and communities may become more fully themselves.

Yet every structure carries within it another possibility.

The gradual movement from service toward self-preservation.

The transition is seldom dramatic. More often it unfolds through countless small decisions that slowly redefine the purpose of power itself. Institutions become increasingly concerned with maintaining their own continuity. Traditions become more invested in preserving certainty than encouraging inquiry. Governments begin confusing loyalty with conformity. Economic systems gradually value accumulation over human flourishing. Religious communities sometimes protect doctrine more carefully than the people for whom those doctrines originally existed.

The Dragon and the Beast symbolize this gradual transformation.

They are not monsters because they possess power.

They become monstrous because power no longer remembers why it exists.

Participation contracts. Relationship becomes hierarchy. Dialogue becomes decree. Responsibility becomes control. Service becomes domination.

The imagery of the Bible book of Revelation captures this transformation with extraordinary symbolic depth. The Dragon empowers the Beast. Authority flows downward through systems that increasingly separate power from the communities it was originally meant to serve. Whether interpreted as ancient empire, recurring political pattern, institutional warning, or symbolic critique of every age, the narrative discloses a reality that extends far beyond its own historical setting.

Civilizations do not simply accumulate power.

They also construct stories that justify its accumulation.

These narratives become increasingly difficult to question because they are woven into education, religion, economics, politics, law, and cultural identity. What begins as one interpretation of reality gradually becomes the only interpretation permitted. Accepted prior alternatives are dismissed as dangerous, disloyal, irrational, or even immoral.

Here the Dragon becomes more than an image of external oppression.

It becomes a symbol of interpretive closure.

Reality remains open. Inquiry remains possible. New participation remains imaginable. Yet the symbolic world created by domination increasingly insists that no other future can exist.

This may be one of the Dragon's deepest deceptions.

It persuades civilizations that preserving themselves is identical with preserving reality itself.

Process-relational metaphysics offers a fundamentally different vision.

Reality does not require closure in order to remain coherent.

Its coherence emerges precisely because relationship remains dynamic, adaptive, creative, and open to continued transformation. Civilizations flourish not by eliminating novelty but by learning how to participate wisely within it.

The Dragon and the Beast therefore function less as predictions of inevitable catastrophe than as enduring warnings:

Every generation inherits institutions capable of nurturing life.

Every generation also inherits the temptation to allow those same institutions to become ends in themselves.

The question is never whether civilizations possess power.

The question is whether that power continues serving relational becoming - or whether it has begun serving only itself.


IV. Recovering Becoming: When Civilizations Reopen Themselves

"Come now, let us reason together..."
- Isaiah 1:18

If the Dragon and the Beast symbolize the gradual contraction of relational participation into domination, an equally important question follows.

Can civilizations recover?

History offers no simple answer.

Some societies reform themselves through wisdom, courage, and patient renewal. Others remain trapped within cycles of violence, fear, and self-preservation until they eventually collapse beneath the weight of their own rigidity. Still others experience long periods of decline before discovering new forms of participation through generations willing to imagine different futures.

No single pattern explains them all. Yet one observation appears repeatedly across history. Healthy civilizations remain capable of self-correction.

They preserve memory without becoming imprisoned by it.

They honor tradition without confusing tradition with permanence.

They cultivate authority without eliminating accountability.

They exercise power without abandoning participation.

In this sense, openness is not weakness. It is one of civilization's deepest strengths.

A society unwilling to question itself gradually loses the capacity to renew itself (re institutional introspection).

Institutions that no longer welcome thoughtful criticism often become increasingly dependent upon conformity.

Political systems that fear dialogue begin mistaking disagreement for disloyalty.

Religious communities that suppress inquiry frequently discover that certainty has replaced faith.

And Educational institutions that cease encouraging curiosity eventually begin transmitting conclusions rather than cultivating understanding.

The danger therefore lies not in possessing strong convictions. Every civilization requires convictions. The danger arises when convictions become so absolute that no further learning appears possible. Here the Dragon's influence becomes especially subtle:

Domination seldom presents itself as domination.

It often speaks the language of security.

Of unity. Of stability. Of necessity. Of protecting what is most valuable. Every generation hears these voices. Sometimes they are justified. Sometimes they conceal the gradual contraction of participation into control. The difference is not always easy to discern.

For this reason, civilizations require more than laws and institutions.

They require habits of humility.

Communities capable of listening. Leaders willing to hear criticism and learn. Citizens prepared to question their own assumptions. Scholars committed to inquiry despite traditional resistance. Artists capable of imagining alternatives. Religious voices able to distinguish enduring wisdom from institutional self-preservation.

None of these eliminate the possibility of domination. They do, however, create spaces where renewed becoming remains possible.

Perhaps this explains why history repeatedly remembers its reformers. Not because they destroyed civilizations. But because they reminded civilizations of the purposes for which they had first been formed. Whether prophets, philosophers, scientists, poets, reformers, educators, or ordinary citizens, they reopened conversations that power had gradually attempted to close.

From a process-relational perspective, this work is never finally completed.

Every generation inherits both the achievements and the unfinished failures of those who came before.

Every generation must therefore ask anew whether its institutions continue enlarging participation - or quietly diminishing it.

Civilizations, no less than individuals, remain unfinished and always in the process of becoming.

V. Recognizing the Dragon Within

"First take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly..."
Matthew 7:5

It is tempting to imagine the Dragon as something that exists only beyond ourselves.

We recognize oppressive governments, authoritarian movements, destructive institutions, and violent ideologies with relative ease. History supplies abundant examples of civilizations that gradually exchanged participation for domination, openness for certainty, and service for control. The symbolic power of the Dragon and the Beast helps us perceive these recurring patterns wherever they emerge.

Yet the narrative asks for greater honesty. Civilizations are not abstractions. Institutions are composed of persons. Cultures are sustained by countless individual choices. Every structure of power ultimately grows from relationships that human beings continually create, preserve, and inhabit. If the Dragon appears within civilizations, it also finds its beginnings within the ordinary habits of everyday life.

This realization is neither accusatory nor pessimistic. It is simply relational. The desire to control rather than listen. The preference for certainty over understanding. The temptation to protect one's own community while overlooking the suffering of another. The subtle satisfaction of belonging to those who are "right." The fear that genuine dialogue may require genuine change.

These movements seldom appear dramatic. They accumulate quietly. What begins as self-protection may gradually become exclusion. What begins as conviction may slowly harden into dogmatism. What begins as leadership may become domination. 

The Dragon seldom arrives fully formed.

It grows through innumerable small acts of relational contraction.

For this reason, the great cautionary narratives of civilization remain deeply personal.

They are not written merely to expose the failures of kings, empires, governments, or religious authorities. They also ask each generation to recognize how easily the patterns of domination reproduce themselves within ordinary human relationships.

Here Jonah quietly returns to the conversation.

Jonah's resistance to mercy was deeply personal.

The Dragon reveals how that same resistance may become institutional.

The movement is continuous.

Personal fear becomes collective prejudice -->

Collective prejudice becomes cultural assumption -->

Cultural assumption becomes institutional practice -->

Institutional practice becomes civilizational identity.

The progression is rarely intentional. Yet history suggests that it is remarkably common. This recognition should not produce despair. Rather, it invites humility.

The healthiest civilizations are composed not of perfect people, but of communities willing to acknowledge their own unfinished becoming. They remain capable of self-examination because they understand that every generation inherits both the wisdom and the blind spots of those who came before.

Perhaps this is why the Dragon remains such an enduring symbol. Its greatest danger is not simply that it exists. Its greatest danger is that we may fail to recognize its beginnings while they still appear ordinary.

The refusal of becoming seldom announces itself. More often, it arrives disguised as common sense, unquestioned loyalty, righteous certainty, necessary security, or the comforting belief that further transformation is no longer required.

The symbolic Dragon asks us to stop becoming.

Reality quietly asks us to continue becoming.


VI. Toward Civilizations of Becoming Participation

"They shall beat their swords into plowshares... Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore."
Isaiah 2:4

Every cautionary tale carries within it an unspoken hope.

The Dragon and the Beast are remembered not simply because civilizations have repeatedly succumbed to domination, but because humanity has never ceased imagining another possibility. The existence of warning implies the possibility of wisdom. The recognition of failure implies the continuing search for healthier forms of becoming.

A process-relational metaphysic therefore asks a constructive question.

What would characterize a civilization that intentionally remained open to continued participation?

Such a civilization would not be perfect.

It would still experience conflict, uncertainty, disagreement, failure, and loss. Brokenness would not disappear. Human finitude would remain. Institutions would continue requiring leadership, laws, memory, and organization. The realities explored throughout this series do not vanish simply because we envision healthier futures.

What changes is not the absence of limitation.

It is the manner in which limitation is inhabited.

Civilizations of participation understand that institutions exist to serve relationships rather than requiring relationships to serve institutions.

Authority remains accountable because it recognizes that power is entrusted rather than possessed

Tradition remains valued because it remembers where wisdom has been found, yet it also remains open because reality continues disclosing possibilities not previously imagined.

Such societies encourage thoughtful criticism rather than fearing it.

They cultivate education that forms curious minds rather than merely compliant citizens.

They strengthen communities by enlarging participation rather than demanding uniformity.

They preserve law while remembering that justice ultimately exists for persons rather than persons existing for law.

They understand that diversity of perspective need not threaten coherence when coherence arises through relationship rather than domination.

These characteristics are not political programs. Neither are they utopian ideals. They are habits of participation.

Like healthy ecosystems, flourishing civilizations emerge through innumerable relationships continually adjusting to one another while preserving the larger community upon which every participant depends. Stability and openness need not be enemies. Indeed, reality itself repeatedly demonstrates that enduring coherence often arises through adaptive relationship rather than rigid control.

This may also explain why the world's enduring reformers so rarely sought destruction for its own sake. The greatest prophets challenged kings. The greatest philosophers questioned assumptions. The greatest scientists revised inherited knowledge. The greatest artists imagined realities that existing cultures had overlooked. The greatest teachers enlarged human understanding rather than narrowing it.

Each, in different ways, participated in reality's continuing openness. None completed the work. All contributed to it.

Perhaps this is the deepest alternative offered to the Dragon and the Beast. Not the triumph of one civilization over another, one people identity over another identity. But the continual renewal of every civilization through deeper participation in relational becoming.

The work remains unfinished - it always will. Yet unfinished does not mean directionless. Reality continues inviting civilizations toward greater justice, wider compassion, deeper wisdom, richer participation, and renewed openness.

Whether those invitations are embraced or resisted remains one of history's enduring questions.

The Dragon warns us what happens when power forgets its relational origin.

Reality quietly continues inviting another way.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

Arendt, Hannah. The Origins of Totalitarianism. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1973.

Alter, Robert. The Art of Biblical Narrative. New York: Basic Books, 1981.

Brueggemann, Walter. The Prophetic Imagination. 2nd ed. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001.

Campbell, Joseph. The Hero with a Thousand Faces. 3rd ed. Novato, CA: New World Library, 2008.

Eliade, Mircea. Myth and Reality. New York: Harper & Row, 1963.

Ellul, Jacques. The Technological Society. Translated by John Wilkinson. New York: Vintage Books, 1964.

Frankl, Viktor E.. Man's Search for Meaning. Boston: Beacon Press, 2006.

Girard, René. Violence and the Sacred. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1977.

Jung, Carl Gustav. Symbols of Transformation. Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 5. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1967.

MacIntyre, Alasdair. After Virtue. 3rd ed. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2007.

Mumford, Lewis. The Myth of the Machine. Vol. I: Technics and Human Development. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1967.

Mumford, Lewis. The Myth of the Machine. Vol. II: The Pentagon of Power. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1970.

Niebuhr, Reinhold. The Nature and Destiny of Man. 2 vols. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1996.

Ricoeur, Paul. The Symbolism of Evil. Boston: Beacon Press, 1967.

Whitehead, Alfred North. Adventures of Ideas. New York: Free Press, 1967.

Whitehead, Alfred North. Process and Reality. Corrected ed. Edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. New York: Free Press, 1978.

Wink, Walter. Naming the Powers: The Language of Power in the New Testament. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1984.

Wink, Walter. Engaging the Powers: Discernment and Resistance in a World of Domination. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992.


Why Were These Authors Chosen?
The conversation around Section 2's essays have become wonderfully diverse:
  • Whitehead - metaphysics.
  • Ricoeur - symbol.
  • Campbell - myth.
  • Eliade - sacred imagination.
  • Alter and Brueggemann - biblical narrative and prophetic imagination.
  • Arendt - political power and totalitarianism.
  • Mumford - civilization and the megamachine.
  • Ellul - technological systems.
  • Wink - the powers.
  • Girard - violence and social order.
  • Frankl - meaning.
  • Jung - archetype and transformation.
  • Niebuhr - historical realism.
  • MacIntyre - traditions and moral communities.

Consequently, this is no longer a bibliography but a conversation. Not the proclamation of a closed system, but an ongoing dialogue in which many disciplines contribute to a richer correspondence with reality. This is how a process-relational philosophy should compose itself around open dialogue. And is also a fitting demonstration displayed within its bibliographical content by mirroring that openness  within the essays themselves.



Thursday, July 2, 2026

Jonah and Interrupted Becoming (6)



ESSAY SIX

Narrative, Symbol, Myth, and Transformative Imagination

Reality → Ontology → Metaphysics → Interpretation → Ethics → Participation

Ontology disciplines metaphysics lest it become mere speculation.
Metaphysics enlarges ontology lest description never asks why.

Jonah and Interrupted Becoming

Metaphysics VI - What Does Jonah Disclose About Reality?

by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT


Some journeys begin with departure.
The deepest begin with interruption.
- R.E. Slater

The oldest stories endure because they disclose
realities every generation must discover anew.
- R. E. Slater

The art of progress is to preserve order amid change
and to preserve change amid order.
- Alfred North Whitehead

When we are no longer able to change a situation,
we are challenged to change ourselves.
- Viktor E. Frankl

One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light,
but by making the darkness conscious.
- Carl Gustav Jung

Every life eventually descends.
The enduring question is whether descent becomes
the end of the story or the beginning of renewed becoming.
R. E. Slater

In a process metaphysic,
hope remains possible,
but never guaranteed.
- R.E. Slater


Essay Outline
Preface - The Interrupted Character of Becoming Reality
I. Before Jonah: The Universality of Descent
II. Jonah's Refusal of Becoming
III. When Reality Interrupts Our Refusal
IV. Interruption Within the Depths
V. Nineveh: The Surprise of Mercy
VI. Jonah's Final Interruption: The Refusal of Completion
VII. Conclusion: Unfinished Becoming
Bibliography


Preface - The Interrupted Character of Becoming Reality

Every civilization preserves certain stories.

Some explain beginnings. Others recount great victories or devastating defeats. Some celebrate heroes. Others remember suffering, exile, failure, and renewal. Although these narratives arise from different cultures, religions, and historical periods, many endure because they illuminate realities that every generation must eventually confront for itself.

The story of Jonah is one such narrative.

For centuries it has been read as history, parable, prophecy, theological reflection, moral instruction, satire, allegory, and spiritual autobiography. Scholars continue debating its literary form, historical setting, and theological purpose. Religious communities have interpreted it in diverse ways, while artists, philosophers, psychologists, and writers have repeatedly returned to its imagery of storm, descent, darkness, mercy, and unexpected transformation.

This essay asks a different question.

Rather than asking whether Jonah should primarily be understood as literal history or symbolic narrative, we ask:

What does Jonah disclose about reality?

That question neither dismisses nor settles the many ways the story has been interpreted. Instead, it invites us to explore why this ancient narrative continues speaking across cultures, centuries, and worldviews. The oldest stories often survive not because every reader agrees on their meaning, but because they continue illuminating dimensions of reality that each generation must discover anew.

The preceding essays have suggested i) that human beings inhabit reality through stories and that ii) broken worlds repeatedly interrupt the continuity by which individuals and communities understand themselves. We have also proposed that iii) rupture belongs not only to human experience but to the unfinished character of becoming itself. Jonah now becomes one of our first opportunities to explore how an enduring narrative may illuminate this process.

The central theme of this essay is therefore not prophecy, nor miracle, nor even the great fish for which Jonah is so often remembered.

The central theme in this essay will be the interrupted character of becoming reality.

Jonah's journey unfolds through departure, resistance, descent, interruption, reflection, mercy, and renewed participation. Whether one approaches the narrative as sacred Scripture, profound literature, symbolic theology, or enduring myth, these movements continue describing experiences recognizable far beyond the world of the ancient Near East. They belong to families, civilizations, ecosystems, institutions, and individual lives wherever continuity gives way to disruption and new possibilities emerge.

This is why Jonah continues speaking.

Not because it answers every question.

But because it asks one that remains perpetually before humanity:

What becomes possible when interrupted lives refuse to surrender participation in the becoming nature of reality?

That question belongs not only to Jonah.

It belongs to every life that has descended into uncertainty, every community struggling through disruption, every civilization confronting its own failures, and every person seeking renewal after brokenness.

It belongs, ultimately, to reality itself.


I. Before Jonah: The Universality of Descent

Before Jonah became the story of one reluctant prophet, descent had already become one of humanity's oldest experiences.

Every life eventually encounters moments that interrupt its expected course.

Some arrive suddenly through illness, accident, betrayal, or loss. Others unfold slowly through disappointment, exhaustion, loneliness, or the quiet realization that the life once imagined will never fully arrive.

Civilizations likewise descend through war, ecological collapse, economic failure, political corruption, or the gradual erosion of trust. Ecosystems lose balance. Institutions decline. Relationships fracture. Even stars exhaust themselves and give birth to new cosmic possibilities through their own transformations.

Descent, therefore, is not an exception to reality.

It is one of reality's recurring patterns.

Yet descent is rarely welcomed. Human beings naturally seek stability, continuity, and security. We build homes, establish traditions, preserve memories, and cultivate communities because continuity allows identity to emerge and flourish. The interruption of these continuities often feels like the loss not only of what we possess, but of who we have become.

This is why descent is so often experienced as disorientation.

The familiar becomes unfamiliar. The meaningful becomes uncertain. The future becomes difficult to imagine. Questions once considered settled suddenly reopen. Assumptions that quietly guided our lives no longer seem sufficient. We find ourselves inhabiting landscapes we never expected to enter.

Throughout history, human beings have searched for language capable of describing these experiences. Philosophers have spoken of tragedy and contingency. Psychologists have explored trauma, resilience, and transformation. Religious traditions have described exile, wilderness, temptation, death, and rebirth. Literature has long portrayed descent into darkness before renewal becomes possible. Different vocabularies, perhaps - but remarkably similar patterns.

It is little wonder, then, that the world's most enduring narratives so frequently begin with interruption rather than achievement:

Odysseus is driven from home.

The Buddha leaves the palace.

Israel enters exile.

Dante descends into the Inferno.

The heroes of countless indigenous traditions journey into wilderness before returning with wisdom for their communities.

The pattern repeats because reality itself appears to repeat it.

Nor does every descent leads to renewal. Some become tragedy. Some remain unfinished. Some leave wounds carried across generations.

To acknowledge this is important.

A process-relational metaphysic must never romanticize suffering or imply that every interruption possesses hidden purpose. Brokenness remains genuinely broken. Loss remains genuine loss. Some personal-social realities resist every attempt at explanation, completion, renewal, or fulfillment. They remain unfinished chapters in the ongoing story of becoming.

A mature process metaphysic is not optimistic. It is realistically hopeful without denying the brokeness that can invade or inhabit processual reality.

Yet history also reveals another recurring possibility.

Interruption need not become the final word.

Again and again, individuals, families, and civilizations discover unexpected capacities for adaptation, reconciliation, creativity, and renewed participation. The future is seldom identical to the past, but neither is it wholly determined by it. Reality remains unfinished.

It is precisely at this point that the ancient story of Jonah enters the conversation.

Not as an isolated religious account, but as one of humanity's enduring reflections upon what interrupted becoming may yet become.


II. Jonah's Refusal of Becoming

Before Jonah descends into the sea, he first descends within himself.

The narrative opens not with disaster, but with invitation. Jonah is called beyond the familiar boundaries of his own world toward Nineveh, a city representing everything he fears, distrusts, and perhaps even despises. The journey before him is geographical, cultural, political, moral, and profoundly personal. It requires not merely travel, but transformation.

Jonah refuses.

That refusal is more than simple disobedience.

It is resistance to becoming.

Like many of humanity's enduring narratives, Jonah begins where countless lives begin - with the tension between the world we know and the world that unexpectedly calls us beyond ourselves. Every significant transformation asks us to relinquish something familiar. Sometimes it is certainty. Sometimes identity. Sometimes security, pride, prejudice, resentment, or fear. The invitation toward becoming often feels like the loss of the self we have carefully constructed.

For this reason, resistance should not surprise us. Individuals resist change. Families resist change. Institutions resist change. Religious traditions resist change. Cultures resist change. Civilizations resist change. Even our own habits quietly defend the continuity by which life has become understandable.

Jonah becomes one of humanity's enduring mirrors because his resistance is immediately recognizable.

His flight toward Tarshish is therefore more than geographical escape.

It symbolizes humanity's recurring attempt to avoid those interruptions that threaten the identities we have come to trust. We often imagine that by preserving continuity we preserve ourselves. Yet reality repeatedly demonstrates that the refusal of necessary transformation may itself become the deepest interruption of all.

Here the narrative begins revealing one of its profound metaphysical insights.

Interrupted becoming does not begin with the storm.

It begins with resistance.

The storm merely makes visible what had already begun unfolding within Jonah himself.

This distinction is significant.

Much of life's suffering arrives through circumstances entirely beyond our choosing. Illness, natural disaster, death, and countless other disruptions belong to the unfinished character of finite existence.

Yet another kind of interruption arises through our own refusals - our unwillingness to forgive, to change, to reconcile, to learn, to trust, or to enter unfamiliar futures.

Reality confronts both.

The interruptions that happen to us.

And the interruptions we ourselves create.

Jonah embodies the second, while preparing us to understand the first.

His descent toward the sea therefore becomes more than punishment or consequence.

It becomes the outward expression of an inward reality already unfolding.

Before Jonah descends beneath the waves, he has already begun descending within his own becoming.

III. When Reality Interrupts Our Refusal

Jonah's descent does not remain private.

Sooner or later, every refusal begins participating in realities larger than itself.

The sea grows restless. Winds rise. The ship groans beneath forces beyond the sailors' control. What began as one person's attempt to escape an unwanted future gradually becomes a shared crisis in which every life aboard finds itself threatened. The narrative quietly reminds us that human decisions rarely remain isolated. Our choices ripple outward, affecting families, communities, institutions, ecosystems, and generations yet unborn.

Reality is profoundly relational.

No life exists entirely unto itself.

No action remains wholly private.

No refusal remains without consequence.

This is one of Jonah's deepest disclosures.

The storm is not simply divine intervention.

It is the visible manifestation of relational reality responding to interrupted participation.

Whether one interprets the storm as an act of God, a literary symbol, providential narrative, or simply the dramatic language of ancient storytelling, the underlying pattern remains remarkably recognizable. Reality possesses a way of confronting illusions telling us that we can forever be detached from one another or from the consequences of our lives.

The sailors understand this feeling almost immediately.

Unlike Jonah, they do not cling to certainty. They ask questions. They pray according to the traditions they know. They work together. They lighten the ship. They exhaust every practical possibility before surrendering to despair. Their responses reveal something often overlooked within the narrative: ordinary people frequently exhibit remarkable wisdom when confronting realities they cannot fully explain.

Meanwhile, the story's prophetic personage sleeps away his refusal in the bowels of a storm tossed ship without a care or remiss.

His sleep is among the most striking images in the story.

It is more than physical exhaustion.

It becomes a symbol of disengagement.
  • When reality calls for participation, Jonah withdraws.
  • When others struggle to preserve life, Jonah remains absent from their efforts.
  • When the world is being transformed around him, he retreats inward.
Here the narrative offers another profound observation about interrupted becoming.

Sometimes the deepest interruption is not the storm outside us.

It is the refusal to awaken within it.

How often do individuals, communities, and even civilizations continue sleeping through crises already reshaping the world around them?

Ecological degradation, political polarization, social fragmentation, poverty, violence, and injustice seldom emerge overnight. They gather gradually while societies convince themselves that tomorrow will resemble yesterday. Like Jonah beneath the deck, humanity often sleeps through transformations already underway until interruption becomes impossible to ignore.

Eventually Jonah is awakened. Not by revelation. Not by miracle. But by another human being. The captain's question echoes across the centuries: "What are you doing asleep? Arise!"

The words carry significance far beyond their immediate setting. Every interruption eventually asks us the same question:

Will we remain asleep within familiar certainties?

Or will we awaken to the reality that now stands before us?

The storm cannot answer that question. Neither can the sea. Only participation can.

IV. Interruption Within the Depths

The great fish has long dominated the story of Jonah.

For some, it stands as evidence of divine miracle. For others, it represents myth, symbol, parable, or literary imagination. Generations have debated its biological possibility while often overlooking the deeper interruption the narrative places before us.

The fish is not the beginning of Jonah's descent.

It is the place where descent finally comes to rest.

Everything that has unfolded thus far in Jonah's life - his call, refusal, flight, the storm, the sea- has carried Jonah toward a moment in which escape is no longer possible. Every familiar strategy has failed. Every attempt to preserve the life he had chosen for himself has dissolved beneath forces greater than his own will.

Only then does silence arrive.

Whether understood literally, symbolically, psychologically, or theologically, the depths have always represented one of humanity's oldest images of interruption. Beneath the surface of ordinary life lie those places where identity itself becomes uncertain. We encounter them through grief, failure, illness, depression, exile, addiction, trauma, profound disappointment, or the collapse of futures we once believed inevitable.

The depths of identity interruption cannot be hurried.

They cannot be mastered through determination alone.

They are asking something different. They are asking are we willing to remain present long enough in interruption for transformation to become possible?

This is why the great fish should not be reduced to either biological curiosity or supernatural spectacle. Within the narrative it becomes something far more significant. It becomes the space in which interrupted becoming is no longer resisted.

For the first time in the story, Jonah cannot flee. He cannot negotiate. He cannot outrun reality. He can only inhabit it. Perhaps this is one of the deepest disclosures of the narrative.

Human transformation seldom begins while we remain convinced that we still control the outcome.

It often begins only after our illusions of control have quietly come to an end.

The great fish therefore functions less as an instrument of punishment than as a place of suspension. Old certainties have dissolved. New certainties have not yet appeared. Jonah inhabits the difficult interval between the life that has ended and the life not yet ready to begin.

Every generation knows such places. A hospital room. A prison cell. A refugee camp. A rehabilitation center. A lonely apartment. A cemetery. A wilderness. The names differ. The experience remains remarkably familiar.

Not every descent reaches such a place. Not every interruption becomes transformative. Yet countless human lives testify that profound change often begins only after the collapse of familiar identities.

The narrative does not promise this outcome. It merely observes it. The depths become, not the guarantee of sudden renewal, but the possibility of renewed participation.

Perhaps this explains why Jonah continues speaking across centuries. The great fish is not merely about survival. It is about the strange and often unwelcome spaces in which becoming itself pauses long enough to discover another direction.


V. Nineveh: The Surprise of Mercy

Jonah eventually emerges from the depths -

The sea has not become less dangerous. The world has not become less uncertain. Reality itself has not fundamentally changed. But Jonah has.

Or perhaps more accurately, Jonah has become willing to continue participating in the reality he had once resisted.

The journey now resumes but the destination continues to remain the same place Jonah had sought to avoid from the very beginning. Nineveh.

The interruption did not remove the calling.

It transformed Jonah's relationship to it.

This observation reaches far beyond the narrative itself. Human transformation seldom removes life's difficult realities. Rather, it often alters the person who returns to meet them.

Relationships still require reconciliation.

Communities still require healing.

Justice still demands courage.

Broken worlds remain broken.

Yet those who have themselves descended sometimes return with deeper compassion, greater humility, and a wider understanding of the fragile lives shared by all.

Nineveh therefore represents more than an ancient city. It becomes every place to which interrupted lives must eventually return. The difficult conversation. The fractured relationship. The wounded community. The unfinished work. The future we once fled.

The Jonah narrative refuses the comforting illusion that transformation allows us to escape reality. Instead, it returns us more deeply into it.

Yet Jonah discovers something he had not anticipated in his revulsion to the city's legacy of harm and forced submission. That the city responds. His enemies repent. It's violence pauses. And Divine mercy appears where Divine judgment had been expected.

This is one of the narrative's greatest surprises. Not because repentance always occurs. History repeatedly reminds us that it often does not. But because reality itself appears capable of possibilities that resentment, fear, or certainty had never imagined.

Here the story gently asks another profound metaphysical question.

Does reality ultimately tend toward closure...

...or does it remain open to genuinely new possibilities?

The answer cannot be assumed. Neither can it be proven by Jonah alone. Yet the storied narrative dares to imagine that interruption need not culminate in destruction. Sometimes it becomes the threshold through which reconciliation first becomes imaginable.

Whether interpreted theologically, psychologically, socially, or philosophically, mercy emerges here not as sentimental kindness, but as openness toward futures that had previously seemed impossible.

It is this openness that surprises Jonah most.

And perhaps ourselves as well.

VI. Jonah's Final Interruption: The Refusal of Completion

Had the story ended with Nineveh's repentance, Jonah would have become a familiar tale of obedience rewarded and repentance accepted. The reluctant prophet eventually fulfills his calling. The great city turns from violence. Mercy triumphs over judgment. The narrative concludes with satisfying resolution.

But Jonah refuses such closure.

Instead, the story introduces one final interruption.

Jonah is angry.

Though the storm has passed. The sea grown calm. The city repented. And life has been spared. Yet Jonah remains unable to rejoice.

His outward journey has reached its destination.

His inward journey has not.

Perhaps this is the narrative's deepest disclosure.

Transformation is rarely completed in a single moment.

We often imagine that life's great interruptions permanently change us, leaving behind our fears, resentments, prejudices, and wounded identities. Human experience suggests otherwise. Becoming is seldom instantaneous. The old self frequently accompanies the emerging self, creating tensions that remain unresolved long after outward circumstances have changed.

Processual becoming is not linear.

It spirals.

It advances.

It hesitates.

It retreats.

It begins again.

The narrative quietly acknowledges this complexity by refusing to portray Jonah as either hero or failure. He is neither wholly transformed nor wholly unchanged. He simply continues towards becoming. Towards unwanted transformation - while his heart has yet to reach that plateau. He has been dutiful to his calling but his spirit is nonplussed, bewildered, puzzled by God's response.

The book of Jonah ends with the curious episode of the plant, the worm, and the scorching east wind. Each illustrate the unfinished character of Jonah and Jonah's becoming with remarkable subtlety. Jonah grieves the loss of a single plant that briefly sheltered him from the sun, yet struggles to rejoice over the preservation of an entire city filled with living beings. The contrast is almost uncomfortable in its honesty.
The storied ending further exposes one of humanity's recurring tendencies. We often recognize our own suffering more quickly than the suffering of others. We defend what protects us more readily than what enlarges our shared humanity. And sadly, we sometimes prefer certainty to compassion, justice to mercy, and familiar identities to transformative participation.
Reality interrupts Jonah one final time. Not through storm. Not through sea. Not through the great fish. But through compassion itself.

The untimeliness of mercy becomes the final interruption.

The narrative suggests that openness toward others may prove more difficult than surviving even the deepest descent.

This may also explain why the book ends without resolving Jonah's response.

God asks a question. Jonah never answers. The lingering silence is intentional. The interruption now belongs to the reader.

Will Jonah continue becoming?

The narrative never tells us.

Instead, it quietly asks whether we will.

Conclusion - Unfinished Becoming

Jonah is one of humanity's shortest narratives.

It is also one of its most enduring.

For nearly three millennia readers have debated its history, questioned its miracle, interpreted its theology, admired its literary artistry, and pondered its surprising ending. Yet beneath these many discussions lies another possibility. Perhaps Jonah has endured because it continues illuminating one of reality's deepest patterns.

Every life eventually encounters interruption.

Every civilization eventually descends.

Every community confronts moments when familiar continuities fracture, expectations collapse, and previously imagined futures disappear. These experiences are neither unique to Jonah nor confined to any single religion or culture. They belong to the unfinished character of becoming itself.

This essay has suggested that Jonah discloses something important about that unfinished reality.

Descent need not become final defeat.

Interruption need not become permanent closure.

Renewal need not erase brokenness.

Instead, reality appears capable of continually opening new possibilities for participation even where continuity has been profoundly disrupted.

Yet Jonah also refuses easy optimism. The prophet survives the storm. He survives the sea. He survives the great fish. He fulfills his calling. He witnesses an entire city's renewal. And still he remains angry. Still he argues. Still he struggles with mercy. Still he resists becoming.

His story closes without completion.

Perhaps that is precisely why it's narrative remains believable.

Jonah never becomes the triumphant prophet many readers expect. He remains frustrated, conflicted, wounded, and profoundly uncomfortable with the very mercy he has been called to proclaim.
The narrative refuses to transform him into an uncomplicated hero because reality rarely transforms human beings so completely. Like Jonah, we ourselves continue carrying old fears into new futures, old prejudices into new understandings, old resentments into new relationships, and old wounds into new possibilities.
Jonah's unfinished character is therefore not a weakness of the narrative but one of its greatest strengths. He remains recognizable because he remains profoundly human.

Perhaps Jonah's greatest gift is that he never becomes who we expect him to become.

And neither do we.

This may be one of the deepest disclosures of interrupted becoming. That transformation can be real. Renewal can be possible. And participation may chance to begin again. Yet becoming itself remains unfinished.

A process-relational metaphysic therefore does not promise perfect endings.

It does not suggest that every descent culminates in renewal or that every interruption ultimately finds completion within the horizons we presently inhabit. Some stories remain painfully unfinished. Some wounds continue across generations. Some losses resist explanation, reconciliation, or fulfillment.

Yet neither does reality appear closed.

Again and again, interrupted becoming discloses new possibilities unforeseen by those living within its disruptions. The future remains genuinely open. Participation remains genuinely meaningful. Hope remains genuinely possible - not because outcomes are guaranteed, but because reality itself continues inviting further becoming.

The Book of Jonah therefore ends exactly where this metaphysical inquiry must also end. Not with certainty. Not with closure. But with invitation.

The final question belongs neither to Jonah nor even to God alone.

It belongs to every reader. Every life. Every participant in reality.

How shall we continue becoming?

For reality itself remains unfinished.

And so do we.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Alter, Robert. The Art of Biblical Narrative. New York: Basic Books, 1981.

Campbell, Joseph. The Hero with a Thousand Faces. 3rd ed. Novato, CA: New World Library, 2008.

Eliade, Mircea. Myth and Reality. New York: Harper & Row, 1963.

Frankl, Viktor E.. Man's Search for Meaning. Boston: Beacon Press, 2006.

Jung, Carl Gustav. Symbols of Transformation. Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 5. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1967.

Levenson, Jon D.. Creation and the Persistence of Evil. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1988.

MacIntyre, Alasdair. After Virtue. 3rd ed. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2007.

Niebuhr, Reinhold. The Nature and Destiny of Man. 2 vols. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1996.

Ricoeur, Paul. The Symbolism of Evil. Boston: Beacon Press, 1967.

Whitehead, Alfred North. Adventures of Ideas. New York: Free Press, 1967.

Whitehead, Alfred North. Process and Reality. Corrected ed. Edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. New York: Free Press, 1978.


Why Were These Authors Chosen?
Looking across Essays IV, V, and now VI, there is a congruency that should be noted. As might be expected the bibliographies themselves are telling a story in support of the composition being reflected:

Essay IV was about the stories we inhabit.

Essay V was about brokenness and failed becoming.

Essay VI becomes about transformation through interrupted becoming.

Without planning it, a "library of becoming" has been created that is remarkably coherent within Part II of the Reality & Metaphysics Series - (Part) II. Narrative, Symbol, Myth, and Transformative Imagination.

Campbell - the universal journey.
Eliade - myth and sacred imagination.
Frankl - meaning through suffering.
Jung - descent into the depths of the self.
Ricoeur - symbol and evil.
Niebuhr - realism about the human condition.
Whitehead - the metaphysics of becoming.
Alter and Brueggemann - the literary and prophetic imagination of Scripture.

These authors reflect the spirit of the overall series: to avoid a narrowing of the theological project by expanding an interdisciplinary exploration in which philosophy, psychology, literature, biblical studies, and process thought all contribute to understanding one of reality's enduring patterns - interrupted becoming.