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I was often told that he Bible was a Hebrew book and it should be read like a Hebrew. They meant that Hebrews and Greeks, or westerners, think differently. so unless you think like a Hebrew you will miss much. To most, this means that you learn as much about Hebrew culture as you can. However, facts of culture do not change the process of thinking. One learns to think differently through the gift of the Holy Spirit as you see others think differently in applying the word of God. <ref> </ref>
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I was often told that the Bible was a Hebrew book and it should be read like a Hebrew or you will miss much of the meaning. They did not mean that we simply have different cultures but that the very process of thinking is different. The West has been influenced greatly by Greek philosophy and logic. Greek thinking might be crudely summarized as placing great emphasis on the law of non-contradiction. The Hebrew process is in 'tasting' the words in rich and deep metaphor.  
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Unfortunately, in the Greek church (established by Christ through the missionary journey of Paul and descended through the Catholic churches, the Protestant Reformation, the Restoration movement, Evangelicalism and even the post-evangelical churches), substitute learning factual knowledge of the culture of the Hebrews instead of actually learning how to think Hebrew.
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=References=
 
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Revision as of 16:20, 2 October 2016

I was often told that the Bible was a Hebrew book and it should be read like a Hebrew or you will miss much of the meaning. They did not mean that we simply have different cultures but that the very process of thinking is different. The West has been influenced greatly by Greek philosophy and logic. Greek thinking might be crudely summarized as placing great emphasis on the law of non-contradiction. The Hebrew process is in 'tasting' the words in rich and deep metaphor.

Unfortunately, in the Greek church (established by Christ through the missionary journey of Paul and descended through the Catholic churches, the Protestant Reformation, the Restoration movement, Evangelicalism and even the post-evangelical churches), substitute learning factual knowledge of the culture of the Hebrews instead of actually learning how to think Hebrew.



References