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God as Rock in Abrahamic Faiths

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  Calling God a Rock is a major divine epithet. It carries a cluster of meanings: strength, protection, permanence, reliability, and life‑giving power. Christianity inherits this imagery directly. Islam does not commonly use “Rock” as a divine name, though it shares the underlying ideas of God as steadfast, unshakeable, and protective, expressed through different metaphors. 🪨 1. Why “Rock” in the Bible? The Hebrew Bible uses ṣūr (“rock”) as a formal title for God. A major scholarly study identifies four core functions of this epithet: Protective agency — God as fortress, refuge, shelter Strength — God as unmovable, reliable, unassailable Ontological status — God as the stable ground of existence Creator — God as the one from whom life and sustenance flow (e.g., water from the rock) This is why verses like: “The LORD is my rock and my fortress” (Ps 18:2) “Trust in the LORD forever, for the LORD is an everlasting rock” (Isa 26:4) are so central. The metaphor is not casual — i...

How Opposites Offend Each Other — and How They Can Avoid Doing That: Rationals (Judgers) vs. Irrationals (Perceivers)

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  Rationals and Irrationals rarely clash over goals — they clash over how to get there . Rationals trust structure and closure. Irrationals trust flexibility and flow. Each believes they’re being responsible; each feels the other is being careless. Offense arises when order and spontaneity collide. How They Offend Each Other 1. The Rational’s Control Rationals (Judgers) plan, organize, and decide early. They feel secure when life is predictable. To Irrationals, that control can feel suffocating — as if the Rational doesn’t trust them to adapt. When a Rational says, “We need to decide now,” the Irrational may hear, “You’re unreliable.” How it offends: The Irrational feels micromanaged or judged. The Rational feels ignored or disrespected for their effort to create stability. 2. The Irrational’s Flexibility Irrationals (Perceivers) keep options open. They feel alive when life is spontaneous. To Rationals, that flexibility can feel chaotic — as if the Irrational doesn’t car...

How Hinduism Differs from Buddhism

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  Hinduism and Buddhism share ancient roots in India and a reverence for the sacredness of life. Both seek liberation from suffering and the cycle of rebirth. Yet they diverge sharply in how they understand the self, the divine, and the path to freedom. 1. Shared Origins, Divergent Paths Buddhism arose within the world of Hindu thought. Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, was born into a Hindu culture and drew from its spiritual vocabulary — karma, dharma, and moksha. But he reinterpreted them radically, turning inward from ritual toward direct insight. Hinduism sees liberation through union with the Divine. Buddhism sees liberation through awakening to reality as it is. 2. The Nature of the Divine Hinduism teaches that ultimate reality is Brahman — infinite, eternal, and the source of all existence. The divine is both immanent and transcendent, expressed through many deities. Buddhism does not center on a creator God. The focus is on Dharma — the truth, the law of existence — and ...