Practical commitment
From what I understand, the reason for your religious commitment probably stems from God. And God's will is for each person to progress according to what they have - a Jew in Judaism, a Christian in Christianity, etc.
I would be happy if you could explain to me why the God you chose is not like Aristotle's God, and not like the various types of Gods who really do not require action on the part of man? Supposedly a God who deals with trifles...
In addition, where do you think the line of demarcation is between my attempt to seek the desired deed – apparently God was satisfied with that… How do you evaluate such a thing?
And does it really sit in the heart that that divine being wants us to fulfill commandments and undergo suffering (and receive a reward for it? If you agree with that..).
No. My understanding is that God's will is that we do what is right. But He is forgiving toward those who do not understand what is right, at least as long as they inquire in a reasonable way.
I don't have a universal line that determines when clarification is reasonable. You decide for yourself and your heart knows whether to bend or to bend.
I dedicated a book to my choices, the first one, and you can read everything there.
I don't think that what settles on my heart is relevant. There are quite a few things I don't understand about God's leadership. But there are good considerations in favor of committing to His will and that it is indeed His will. If I don't understand, it depends only on me.
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