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Papa's Last Words: They Lied About God
Papa's Last Words: They Lied About God | R H Ben-Shalom
2 posts | 1 read | 1 to read
Who is God...really? Where is God amid all the Christian denominations? Why does He seem to change so drastically between the Old and New Testament and now? Did God change, or did the people change?An incendiary undertaking, Papa's Last Words: They Lied About God removes cultural biases to present a raw look at the differences between mainstream beliefs and what is written in the Bible. Those differences are the key to answering a vault's worth of questions. The book challenges mainstream concepts, begs for unbiased thinking, promotes Berean study habits, encourages fearless questioning, and appreciates peaceful and logical disagreement.Surviving his parents and grandparents at thirty-four, Ben-Shalom knows firsthand that tomorrow is not guaranteed. He saw faith giants with the anointing who turned away from the Christ, and he knew that he needed to arm his children with knowledge not taught on Sunday mornings. If today was his last day, this book would be his last words to them, his most valued words about the dearest matter: God.This book: - Reveals God within the rift between Judaism and Christianity- Tackles the inconsistencies in mainstream concepts- Upholds first century Christianity- Is for Christians who perceive a disharmony between modern doctrines and the BibleThe information in this book has already changed lives, honing relationships with God through a love for truth, and it is now finally available to the public.Ben-Shalom assures you treasures unlocked in areas of Christianity that many others take for granted and delivers answers where clichs have failed.Do not miss this opportunity to delve deeper into the mysteries of God!
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BookDadGirlDad
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A strong title for a strong book. The main premise of this book is for each person to take stock of what they believe and hold it up to the truth of the Word of God. Our first source is the Word and listening to the Spirit. Men get it wrong. The author deftly points out errors across the spectrum of Judaism and Christianity. If you don't want your beliefs challenged, don't read this book. I found it refreshing and enlightening.

Jenniebooks Do you have this in your collection? Tanach: The Torah, Prophets, Writings: The Twenty-Four Books of the Bible 2y
BookDadGirlDad @Jenniebooks No I don't....yet 2y
Jenniebooks When it becomes available for download, I will share with you 2y
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BookDadGirlDad @Jenniebooks Very cool. Thank you 2y
Jenniebooks May I ask questions about faith? 2y
BookDadGirlDad @Jenniebooks Sure. I don't mind questions as long as it is the sharing of info and not debate. 2y
Jenniebooks If your parents were not Jewish, would you pick this for yourself? Most things are debatable. 2y
BookDadGirlDad @Jenniebooks Not sure I understand. My parents are not Jewish. I am a Torah observant Gentile believer in Jesus the Christ. That flips a few lids. I guess I am close to Messianic Judaism minus some rabbinical influence. And yes, most things are debatable. I've seen many of those debates devolve into name calling and worse. 2y
Jenniebooks Wow. I‘ve heard of Jews for Jesus. Is that close to your beliefs? 2y
BookDadGirlDad @Jenniebooks I'm not overly familiar with that organization. I would be considered part of the "Hebrew Roots" movement. 2y
Jenniebooks Awesome. I like that you flip heads… Would you say it is neoconservative? And you are a rebel with a cause? 😁 2y
BookDadGirlDad My beliefs are on the conservative side. I am something of a rebel. I've never quite fit in and like to do thing counter to the mainstream 2y
Jenniebooks @BookDadGirlDad I don‘t fit in either for many reasons .that is a gift.
Forgive me for my ignorance going forward. Do you worship at temple or church? I love Torah. Haven‘t read too much on New Testament but plan to.
2y
BookDadGirlDad @Jenniebooks I've only gone to a synagogue one time to see Joshua Aaron in "concert". I guess you would say I go to a "church". The liturgy we say is done in Hebrew and English 2y
Jenniebooks I would go to both if I could if I wasn‘t scared of Jesus on the cross. Are you fluent in Hebrew? Do you have a Kosher diet? 2y
BookDadGirlDad @Jenniebooks What scares you about that? That's something I don't think I've heard. I wish I was fluent in Hebrew. As for "kosher", I do follow the Lebitical food laws. I don't know or follow any of the rabbinical guidelines. So no pork, shellfish, etc for me 2y
BookDadGirlDad @Jenniebooks What scares you about that? That's something I don't think I've heard. I wish I was fluent in Hebrew. As for "kosher", I do follow the Levitical food laws. I don't know or follow any of the rabbinical guidelines. So no pork, shellfish, etc for me 2y
Jenniebooks I‘ve never met him but he shouldn‘t have died for me. That would also relieve Jewish people of their supposed guilt. 2y
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BookDadGirlDad
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I don't know where I heard about this book. I am sure this is going to be an....interesting....sabbath read. I've glanced thru it briefly. Some knowledge of Hebrew names will be helpful, but the author does provide a resource to help. Plenty of annotation and Scriptural reference