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How the Qur’an Differs from the Tanakh and the Bible

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  1. The Question Behind the Comparison All three texts — the Qur’an , the Tanakh , and the Bible — speak of one God, creation, revelation, and moral life. Yet they differ profoundly in origin, structure, and purpose . Understanding those differences helps us see not division, but distinct ways of hearing the Divine. 2. The Tanakh: Covenant and History The Tanakh (Hebrew Scriptures) is the foundation of Jewish faith. It tells the story of God’s covenant with Israel — a relationship expressed through law, prophecy, poetry, and wisdom. Written primarily in Hebrew (with some Aramaic) Composed over centuries, from roughly 1200–100 BCE Structured in three parts: Torah (Law) , Nevi’im (Prophets) , and Ketuvim (Writings) Emphasizes God’s faithfulness, justice, and the call to holiness through covenant life The Tanakh ends with Israel’s return from exile — a story still open, awaiting fulfillment within history itself. 3. The Bible: Covenant and Fulfillment The Christian Bible includes ...

How Opposites Argue — and How They Can Settle Differences Gently: Thinkers vs. Feelers in Conflict

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  When Thinkers and Feelers argue, they’re not just disagreeing about what’s right — they’re disagreeing about how rightness is defined . Thinkers trust logic and fairness. Feelers trust empathy and harmony. Each believes they’re being reasonable; each feels the other is missing something vital. Why They Argue Differently 1. Different Decision Filters Thinkers analyze. Feelers empathize. Research in personality psychology shows that Thinkers tend to use impersonal criteria — consistency, evidence, principle — while Feelers use personal criteria — impact, relationship, meaning. So when a Thinker says, “That’s not logical,” and a Feeler says, “That’s not kind,” they’re both defending integrity — just through different lenses. 2. Emotional Expression Thinkers often under‑express emotion to stay objective. Feelers often over‑express emotion to stay authentic. Studies on emotional intelligence suggest that Thinkers may appear detached under stress, while Feelers may appear over...

What the Bible Means by “Truth”

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  Few words in Scripture carry as much weight as truth . Yet its meaning shifts subtly across the biblical story—from covenant faithfulness in the Hebrew Scriptures to divine revelation in Christ in the New Testament. The word never loses its moral depth, but it grows in scope: from trustworthiness to ultimate reality . 🌿 In the Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament) The Hebrew word most often translated as truth is ’emet , meaning firmness, reliability, faithfulness . Truth here is not about factual precision but about trustworthiness —the kind of reliability that holds a covenant together. God’s character: God is true because He is faithful to His promises. “All His works are done in truth” (Psalm 33:4). Human integrity: To “walk in truth” means to live faithfully and honestly. Covenant context: Truth and mercy ( ḥesed we’emet ) often appear together—steadfast love and faithfulness describing God’s dependable relationship with His people. In short, truth in the Hebrew Scripture...