Yezidi Fan Club
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2022
I was always turned off by religious discussion as a boy. To me, it seemed like all Christians did was hold up meal time so we could perform the customary prayer.
I believe the various forms preaching takes makes people recoil from the faith as well.
These could be the musings of another saintly sinner. Nobody clings to the cross like a man who grew up without a father, and I often feel like a skunk putting on perfume. If this helps one person maybe it was all worth it.
The written word is my favorite way to communicate, though it can be dangerous insofar as a way to transmit experience and wisdom. It is likely a good thing that we can see who is saying the things being said now. The switch in recent years from text based to video based talk discussions makes me want to study how either forms of communication affect the individual.
Since talk and verbal discussion tends to take the form of either fencing, swindle, or amusement, with everything I just wrote, let's jump into this.
1. Blessed is he who has not seen yet still believes.
Understanding is wisdom born of experience that one has as an individual accepted as true and beneficial for themselves, not merely as a dogma. But in order to understand raw traditional wisdom, it must first be accepted on faith that doing so will take the individual to a place they want to go.
You want some real advice because you don't find the spiritualist parables of the New Testament to your liking? Read Proverbs.
All of this has been said better by others throughout the last several centuries at least but I figure we can compile things here. Any input would be welcome.
I believe the various forms preaching takes makes people recoil from the faith as well.
These could be the musings of another saintly sinner. Nobody clings to the cross like a man who grew up without a father, and I often feel like a skunk putting on perfume. If this helps one person maybe it was all worth it.
The written word is my favorite way to communicate, though it can be dangerous insofar as a way to transmit experience and wisdom. It is likely a good thing that we can see who is saying the things being said now. The switch in recent years from text based to video based talk discussions makes me want to study how either forms of communication affect the individual.
Since talk and verbal discussion tends to take the form of either fencing, swindle, or amusement, with everything I just wrote, let's jump into this.
1. Blessed is he who has not seen yet still believes.
Understanding is wisdom born of experience that one has as an individual accepted as true and beneficial for themselves, not merely as a dogma. But in order to understand raw traditional wisdom, it must first be accepted on faith that doing so will take the individual to a place they want to go.
You want some real advice because you don't find the spiritualist parables of the New Testament to your liking? Read Proverbs.
All of this has been said better by others throughout the last several centuries at least but I figure we can compile things here. Any input would be welcome.