Thing that we should think once in life










when I was child, I only see myself 

I didn't have eyes for anyone else 

I'm getting older, My eyes are on others











 In my 20s was when I started to see my parents as human beings

I became to see their flaws, and to accept their flaws as it is 

put myself in their shoes, and start to understand who they are

and feel how they felt when they gave birth to me, were raising me and were young

I'm now at that age and I know what they were like

You start to have more empathy for them and you are more mature about the situation

I think many people don't have real meaningful conversations with their parents

something that you might be missing out on is getting to know your parents' life story

How was their childhood, how was growing up, what were their struggles?

these questions are what you can while they're alive

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The Figurative Sea, Fishermen, Net, Fish, and Ship — Reading the World Through Biblical Symbols

Lesson 11 of the Shincheonji Online Bible Seminar Many readers of the Bible have paused at passages describing seas, fishing nets, ships, and fish, sensing that these images mean more than they first appear. Why does Scripture repeatedly return to scenes of fishermen casting nets into the sea? Why do major prophetic events unfold on ships, rivers, or vast waters? Lesson 11 of the Shincheonji Online Bible Seminar takes a closer look at these familiar images and invites viewers to read them not as simple stories, but as carefully layered symbols that describe the spiritual condition of the world and humanity’s place within it. The seminar begins by exploring the figurative meaning of the sea. While the physical sea is a place where many waters gather, its water cannot sustain life. In the same way, the Bible describes a spiritual sea—a world filled with countless voices, teachings, and doctrines. Drawing from passages such as Daniel 7 and Revelation 17, the lecturer explains that the sea...