find a black-suited minister grinning good-naturedly and offering Bayle a duplicate of what he was drinking, vodka on the rocks.
Seeing that both of Bayleâs hands were full with a glass of bourbon and a bottle of Budweiser â Bayleâs condition of coming already broken almost as soon as he had come â âOh, dear, I see that youâre already fully occupied,â the minister frowned. âNot to worry,â he said, broad smile of before promptly reappearing. He emptied the contents of one drink into that of the other and placed the empty glass on the bar top. âA double play!â he said, clinking Bayleâs glass, expertly sipping down a good third of the three fingers of alcohol in his own. Bayle cautiously sipped his own Wild Turkey without saying a word and seriously considered whether he had only imagined the Greek.
âSo whatâs it going to be then?â the minister said, his face now suddenly serious, even stern. âKnowledge or belief? Which one is it that rules your tender soul? And donât try to sell me any of that Hegelian dialectism nonsense. As they say in my businessâ â he tugged at his white clerical collar â âyou canât serve two masters. Which is it?â He drank again, eyes slightly narrowed and never leaving Bayleâs. Bayle, more than a little baffled, could only sip.
âOh, what a bloody ass I am,â the minister said, all affability again. He wiped his free hand on his black trousers before presenting it to be shaken. âCharles Warren. Actually, the Reverend Charles Warren, but Iâd be very happy if you would just call me Chuck.â
Still a little overwhelmed, Bayle, by instinct, offered over his beer-holding hand.
âAh ha, putting your best hand forward!â Warren said. He took the bottle of Budweiser from Bayle and put it on the bar beside his empty vodka glass.
âBayle,â Bayle said, shaking-hand free now and meeting Warrenâs. âPeter Bayle.â
âOh, I know who you are, Peter. You donât mind if I call you Peter, do you?â
âNo, no, not at all ....â Bayle said, shaking his head no, as puzzled-looking as before.
âOh, I get it,â Warren said. âI know you but you donât know me. Gotcha. Just like poor old Job down there on the farm. Letâs grab a seat, shall we? Itâs really not as mysterious as it all might at first appear. Which, incidentally, is just what Job found out in the end, isnât it?â
âYes, but what
did
Tillich mean, exactly, by Ultimate Concern? Collecting baseball cards? Sniffing womenâs used underthings? Belief in an omniscient, all-powerful Being? I mean, really, Peter, letâs narrow down our terminology here a little bit, what?â
The Reverend Warren, in his part-time capacity as the Warriorsâ team minister, had heard through Samson about Bayleâs philosophical background almost as soon as Bayle arrived in town and hoped that he and Bayle could, âYou know, banter on a bit about the Ontological Argument and what notâ because âone does get a bit starved out here in the territories for really meaty conversation.â
St. Louis-born one year after Bayle, Warren had attended Christâs College, Oxford, on a full scholarship and almost completed his doctoral thesis on Aquinas after an outstanding undergraduate career at Washington University when he was called back home to Missouri during his fatherâs fatal battle with leukemia. His mother falling infirm shortly after her husbandâs death, Warren, an only child and his motherâs solebenefactor, entered the local Baptist ministry because, as he explained it to Bayle, âFirst, I thought I could get paid to talk about Aquinas and Anselm all day long â Wrong! â and second, the Catholics, my first choice, though impressed by my academic background, wanted me to go to school for another five
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