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The Call of God: Hearing the Sacred Across Traditions

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Every faith, in its own language, speaks of a call — a summons from the sacred to awaken, to act, to love. Whether heard as the voice of God, the whisper of the Spirit, or the pulse of universal consciousness, this call invites humanity into relationship with something greater than itself. Though the words differ, the longing is shared. Judaism: The Call as Covenant In Judaism, the call of God is relational — a covenant between the Divine and the people. It’s not merely a summons to belief but to responsibility . The Hebrew prophets heard God’s voice as a call to justice, mercy, and remembrance: “Hear, O Israel.” Listening itself becomes sacred. The call is not abstract; it’s embodied in ethical action — feeding the hungry, welcoming the stranger, repairing the world ( tikkun olam ). To hear God is to respond with deeds. Christianity: The Call as Invitation to Love For Christians, the call of God is personal and transformative — “Follow me.” It’s a call to relationship through Christ,...

Daily Excerpt: An Afternoon's Dictation (Greenebaum) - Part One, Call to Interfaith, Chapter Four

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  Today's book excerpt comes from  An Afternoon's Dictation  by  Steven Greenebaum . This book has been in the Amazon top 100 among interfaith and ecumenical books on many occasions. PART ONE: THE CALL TO INTERFAITH CHAPTER FOUR   The call of Interfaith in no way rejects religion. It is a call to realize that our spiritual traditions are living, breathing entities that change over time, as does all of life. Still, “Seek truth in the commonality of religions, which are but the languages of speaking to Me. Worship not the grammar” took some living with. I began to imagine a sacred mountain for humanity. At the mountaintop dwelt the call of the sacred, the commonality that would hold the truths to living a meaningful life to which all of our sacred traditions seek to point us. Our differing spiritual traditions would be diverse paths up this sacred mountain that our differing eras and cultures had found helpful. The “grammar,” then, is the particular ritual and...