@wallace100
Lormar Wallace
@wallace100 · 0:30

#TellYourStory | I experienced a culture shock when...

You. I think a culture shock for me was when I met some jewish people who were also not certain about God's existence, but they're still in their faith, and I feel like that's a common theme amongst all kind of cultures. It's like I was raised in this religion only to feel like, I don't know, a God exists. That was a lot for me, but yeah

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@Isoellen
Isoellen Writes
@Isoellen · 3:33
Hi. Thank you for sharing your culture shock. I live in a little city on the west coast, and one of my first jobs as a professional nanny was for a prominent jewish family in the area. And they were practicing conservative Jews who would practice all the holidays. However, their Judaism was deeply embedded in their family culture and political identity and their daily kind of thought processes. However, it didn't really ever connect with God
@TheBriefOne
Darrain …
@TheBriefOne · 3:28
Look, if their manifestations and manipulations in life and their labors and their actions and excuse the coffee machine, but if all of what they do equates to other people being bliss, I just ask people, hey, man, question yourself and get more rooted in the word and get more rooted in your path to heaven, because you have no right, and neither do I have a right, to tell a person even once, excuse the cooking, but no person in life has the right to tell a person that they don't deserve the heaven they wish
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