So, if you’ve been following from the beginning (I’m grateful for anyone who reads my stuff on here), I haven’t done so well with this book… but I guess that’s because I didn’t have many interesting observations on mostly the second half… and I’ll have to write in a private scenario, offline, why this is the case. I also have work in just 11 hours, so I can’t say much anyway… but I guess I can tell I have a lot to learn still. But I will say this: the difficulties of life are capable of hampering my brain 🧠 so that I don’t get to think as much good as I’d like to. I hope you can read this… even though I’m grateful for the provisions I’ve received, I’ll always remember the difficult stuff of the last three years. And I need to recognize that even when I’m finished with the rest of this four-translation project, I’ll still be incomplete of knowledge. I also don’t expect to actually grow in life, with or without reading more translations… for I know that there’s enough ridiculous content to surround me, and I can’t win with whomever pushes that stuff. Hopefully someone at the Fry’s store becomes Christian, though, customer or staff.
Simply put, even the best of rescue stories can backfire (see Jude 5), and it doesn’t seem likely that glory actually happens anyway. It’s great when someone becomes Christian, but I’m realizing that even radical believers can be led astray into false movements of any kind, like nationalism and fake charities of any sort. I want to spend more time on here, but I can’t find much on Jesus’ point of view in the next three books, or even with the next several or so after that (though Judges 4 is an underrated masterpiece!) But… seeing someone wrestle with anything in chapters like Leviticus 18 reminds me of my youth. If God wills, I’ll begin writing on that book soon.