Anonymous ID: ba85f8 Sept. 4, 2024, 3:42 a.m. No.21530683   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>21530586

>school ‘sex education’ programs

These words should never be combined in the same sentence.

Schools should stick to simple Biology. Then the kids would know the difference between a Man and a Woman.

Anonymous ID: ba85f8 Sept. 4, 2024, 3:49 a.m. No.21530699   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0709 >>0710

>>21530687

 

The Bible nowhere gives a physical description of what Jesus looked like during His incarnation. The closest thing we get to a description is in Isaiah 53:2b, “He had no beauty or majesty to attract us to Him, nothing in His appearance that we should desire Him.” All this tells us is that Jesus’ appearance was just like any other man’s – He was ordinary-looking. Isaiah was here prophesying that the coming suffering Servant would arise in lowly conditions and wear none of the usual emblems of royalty, making His true identity visible only to the discerning eye of faith.

 

https://www.gotquestions.org/Jesus-look-like.html

Anonymous ID: ba85f8 Sept. 4, 2024, 4:11 a.m. No.21530731   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0733 >>0737

>>21530665

 

The spiritual practice of meditation is not unique to Christianity. Many non-Christian religions and secular groups practice meditation. However, when the Bible speaks of meditation, as it often does, it is not the kind of meditation that seeks to disengage, silence, or empty the mind, as in Transcendental or Buddhist forms of meditation. The Scriptures teach meditation that actively engages the mind for the purpose of understanding God’s Word and putting it into practice. How can we meditate on God’s Word so that it produces in us fruitful and holy lives before God?

 

In the ancient Hebrew world, meditation always involved exercising and engaging the mind. Thomas Watson, a seventeenth-century Puritan minister, devoted much of his life to biblical meditation, both practicing it and teaching about it. He aptly defined the discipline in his book Heaven Taken by Storm as “an holy exercise of the mind, whereby we bring the truths of God to remembrance, and do seriously ponder upon them, and apply them to our selves.”

 

By Watson’s definition, we can meditate on God’s Word by bringing to memory His truths. Remembering requires active, cognitive recall of what we know about God from His Word: “On my bed I remember you; I think of you through the watches of the night” (Psalm 63:6). According to Psalm 1:2, a blessed, fruitful, and righteous person delights in the Word of the Lord “and meditates on his law day and night.” This meditation is constant (“day and night”) and focused on God’s Word (“his law”). We meditate on God’s Word by filling our minds with it day and night.

 

. . . more

 

https://www.gotquestions.org/meditate-on-Gods-Word.html

Anonymous ID: ba85f8 Sept. 4, 2024, 4:27 a.m. No.21530759   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0761

>>21530737

You need to meditate on this passage and then you will understand it.

I can't understand it for you.

 

Proverbs 1:6 Context

 

3To receive the instruction of wisdom, justice, and judgment, and equity; 4To give subtilty to the simple, to the young man knowledge and discretion. 5A wise man will hear, and will increase learning; and a man of understanding shall attain unto wise counsels: 6To understand a proverb, and the interpretation; the words of the wise, and their dark sayings. 7The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge: but fools despise wisdom and instruction. 8My son, hear the instruction of thy father, and forsake not the law of thy mother: 9For they shall be an ornament of grace unto thy head, and chains about thy neck.

Anonymous ID: ba85f8 Sept. 4, 2024, 5:23 a.m. No.21530889   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>21530843

>Do you hate Yoursefl so much you can’t stand to be alone without thinking for even an hour?

It's called Sleep, and I do it for several hours every night. Sometimes even during the day.