For the Greeks...
AN INTRODUCTION TO WHAT G-D WANTS FROM THE GENTILES
Related topics:
What can a Gentile do?
The Beautiful Noachide Life
Who Should Have a “Bible?”
What is Salvation?
Should I convert to Judaism?
Judaism today vs Judaism of the Avot
What You Don’t Know That You Don’t Know.
The Secret of Obedience
Imagine two men facing each other, pointing past one another. One is pointing at a tornado that is coming, and the other at a raging fire headed towards them. Each sees their own truth and is angry at the sight of the other’s hand. Each feels that the other’s hand is “wrong.” This may seem silly, but replace the tornado and fire with any modern issues, and the hands with words, and this scene describes how we often try to communicate.
We point past each other with our words, arguing as though we are looking at the same facts and experiences.
We want to prove our words are the right ones, instead of learning to look at what the other’s words are pointing at. Words are seductive, and for all their undeniable usefulness, they also can lead us away from understanding when we focus on them, when we make them more important than the truth they are meant to point at.
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Additional Reading
What can a Gentile do?
The Beautiful Noachide Life
Who Should Have a “Bible?”
What is Salvation?
Should I convert to Judaism?
Judaism today vs Judaism of the Avot
What You Don’t Know That You Don’t Know.
The Secret of Obedience
Imagine two men facing each other, pointing past one another. One is pointing at a tornado that is coming, and the other at a raging fire headed towards them. Each sees their own truth and is angry at the sight of the other’s hand. Each feels that the other’s hand is “wrong.” This may seem silly, but replace the tornado and fire with any modern issues, and the hands with words, and this scene describes how we often try to communicate.
We point past each other with our words, arguing as though we are looking at the same facts and experiences.
We want to prove our words are the right ones, instead of learning to look at what the other’s words are pointing at. Words are seductive, and for all their undeniable usefulness, they also can lead us away from understanding when we focus on them, when we make them more important than the truth they are meant to point at.
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" Auteur is a monthly book review publication distributed to 400,000 avid readers through subscribing bookstores & public libraries."