Some recent posts by Myself on Israel's contemporary missions and behaviors and their reasons for them created some excitement on some campuses recently, or so I overhear.
This is a new find and another Sovrumano first so I wanted to make a better record of the finding then I have of some other firsts in the past.
And the finding, I believe, is this: Israel's idiosyncratic experience as slaves working for a Buddhist by the name of Hammurabi is what is defining and carving contemporary missions out of the ether to define what they do and don't do; what they like and don't like, to this day.
I have stated in the past that Abraham's missions for his proteges were from fancy not from data science. That doesn't mean that they cannot be good ones. I was just musing that that was likely the case. But this recent reflection of Mine really fleshes the idea out in a tangible way such that anyone can see where four principle motives by today's Israelites are likely coming from, and that would be the Israelite's experiences working for Hammurabi.
This is a "walking podcast", meaning it was recorded while I was out and about and on the go.
I hope you like it.
-Christ Titus
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