Enlightenment(רְאוּבֵן) – Telegram
Enlightenment(רְאוּבֵן)
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Forwarded from YearProgressET
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DON’T ABANDON OTHERS . . . OR YOURSELF

“As you move forward along the path of reason, people will stand in your way. They will never be able to keep you from doing what’s sound, so don’t let them knock out your goodwill for them. Keep a steady watch on both fronts, not only for well-based judgments and actions, but also for gentleness with those who would obstruct our path or create other difficulties. For getting angry is also a weakness, just as much as abandoning the task or surrendering under panic. For doing either is an equal desertion—the one by shrinking back and the other by estrangement from family and friend.”

—MARCUS AURELIUS, MEDITATIONS, 11.9
Enlightenment(רְאוּבֵן)
DON’T ABANDON OTHERS . . . OR YOURSELF “As you move forward along the path of reason, people will stand in your way. They will never be able to keep you from doing what’s sound, so don’t let them knock out your goodwill for them. Keep a steady watch on both…
As we begin to make progress in our lives, we’ll encounter the limitations of the people around us. It’s like a diet. When everyone is eating unhealthy, there is a kind of natural alignment. But if one person starts eating healthy, suddenly there are opposing agendas. Now there’s an argument about where to go for dinner.

Just as you must not abandon your new path simply because other people may have a problem with it, you must not abandon those other folks either. Don’t simply write them off or leave them in the dust. Don’t get mad or fight with them. After all, they’re at the same place you were not long ago.
I’ve been a bit busy lately, so I haven’t been as active as I wanted—especially in sharing more of the stoic philosophy I enjoy. But I’m excited to announce something new:


Shabbat Update.

Every weekend, I’ll share insights on technology, philosophy, and new inventions, and I’ll also be inviting people who are knowledgeable in specific topics to join the conversation.
Stay tuned—great things are coming.
EACH THE MASTER OF THEIR OWN DOMAIN
“My reasoned choice is as indifferent to the reasoned choice of my neighbor, as to his breath and body. However much we’ve been made for cooperation, the ruling reason in each of us is master of its own affairs. If this weren’t the case, the evil in someone else could become my harm, and God didn’t mean for someone else to control my misfortune.”
—MARCUS AURELIUS, MEDITATIONS, 8.56
Enlightenment(רְאוּבֵן)
EACH THE MASTER OF THEIR OWN DOMAIN “My reasoned choice is as indifferent to the reasoned choice of my neighbor, as to his breath and body. However much we’ve been made for cooperation, the ruling reason in each of us is master of its own affairs. If this…
The foundation of a free country is that your freedom to swing your fist ends where someone else’s nose begins. That is, someone else is free to do what they like until it interferes with your physical body and space. This saying can work as a great personal philosophy as well.


But living that way will require two important assumptions. First, you ought to live your own life in such a way that it doesn’t negatively impose on others. Second, you have to be open-minded and accepting enough to let others do the same. Can you do that? Even when you really, really disagree with the choices they’re making? Can you understand that their life is their business and yours is your own? And that you’ve got plenty to wrestle with yourself without bothering anyone else?
Shabbat Shalom
Forwarded from 3:16
ማርቆስ4፡35-41
በዚያም ቀን በመሸ ጊዜ፦ ወደ ማዶ እንሻገር አላቸው። ሕዝቡንም ትተው በታንኳ እንዲያው ወሰዱት፥ ሌሎች ታንኳዎችም ከእርሱ ጋር ነበሩ። ብርቱ ዐውሎ ነፋስም ተነሣና ውኃ በታንኳይቱ እስኪሞላ ድረስ ማዕበሉ በታንኳይቱ ይገባ ነበር። እርሱም በስተኋላዋ ትራስ ተንተርሶ ተኝቶ ነበር፤ አንቅተውም፦ መምህር ሆይ፥ ስንጠፋ አይገድህምን? አሉት። ነቅቶም ነፋሱን ገሠጸው ባሕሩንም፦ ዝም በል፥ ፀጥ በል አለው። ነፋሱም ተወ ታላቅ ፀጥታም ሆነ። እንዲህ የምትፈሩ ስለ ምን ነው? እንዴትስ እምነት የላችሁም? አላቸው። እጅግም ፈሩና፦ እንግዲህ ነፋስም ባሕርም የሚታዘዙለት ይህ ማን ነው? ተባባሉ።


#Churchሂዱ
@chrstian_316
13 Moreover, keep me from committing flagrant sins; do not allow such sins to control me. Then I will be blameless, and innocent of blatant rebellion.
14 May my words and my thoughts be acceptable in your sight, O Lord , my sheltering rock and my redeemer.
Psalm 19:13-14
FORGIVE THEM BECAUSE THEYDON’T KNOW
“As Plato said, every soul is deprived of truth against its will. The same holds true for justice,
self-control, goodwill to others, and every similar virtue. It’s essential to constantly keep this in your mind, for it will make you more gentle to all.”
—MARCUS AURELIUS, MEDITATIONS, 7.63
Enlightenment(רְאוּבֵן)
FORGIVE THEM BECAUSE THEYDON’T KNOW “As Plato said, every soul is deprived of truth against its will. The same holds true for justice, self-control, goodwill to others, and every similar virtue. It’s essential to constantly keep this in your mind, for it…
As he wound his way up Via Dolorosa to the top of Calvary Hill, Jesus (or Christus as he would have been known to Seneca and other Roman contemporaries) had suffered immensely. He’d been beaten, flogged, stabbed, forced to bear his own cross, and was set to be crucified on it next to two common criminals. There he watched the soldiers roll dice to see who would get to keep his clothes, listened as the people sneered and taunted him.

Whatever your religious inclinations, the words that Jesus spoke next—considering they came as he was subjected to unimaginable human suffering—send chills down your spine. Jesus looked upward and said simply, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”


That is the same truth that Plato spoke centuries earlier and that Marcus spoke almost two centuries after Jesus; other Christians must have spoken this truth as they were cruelly executed by the Romans
under Marcus’s reign: Forgive them; they are deprived of truth. They wouldn’t do this if they weren’t.


Use this knowledge to be gentle and gracious.
Btw today is Hanukkah.
So happy Hanukkah!!!
MADE FOR JUSTICE

“The unjust person acts against the gods. For insofar as the nature of the universe made rational creatures for the sake of each other, with an eye toward mutual benefit based on true value and never for harm, anyone breaking nature’s will obviously acts against the oldest of gods.”
—MARCUS AURELIUS, MEDITATIONS, 9.1.1
Enlightenment(רְאוּבֵן)
MADE FOR JUSTICE “The unjust person acts against the gods. For insofar as the nature of the universe made rational creatures for the sake of each other, with an eye toward mutual benefit based on true value and never for harm, anyone breaking nature’s will…
We say of the most heinous acts that they are crimes against nature. We consider certain things to be an affront against humanity, saying, “This violates everything we hold dear.” However much we differ in religion, upbringing, politics, class, or gender(male or female), we can come together in agreement there.

Why? Because our sense of justice goes marrow deep. We don’t like it when people cut in line; we don’t like freeloaders; we pass laws that protect the defenseless; and we pay our taxes, agreeing, in part, to redistribute our wealth to those in need. At the same time, if we think we can get away with it, we might try to cheat or bend the rules.

To paraphrase Bill Walsh, when left to our own devices, many of us individuals seek lower ground like water. The key, then, is to support our natural inclination to justice with strong boundaries and strong commitments—to embrace, as Lincoln urged a divided, angry nation to do, “the better angels of our nature.”
Enlightenment(רְאוּבֵן)
Btw today is Hanukkah. So happy Hanukkah!!!
Hanukkah (Ḥanukkah)—also called the Festival of Lights—commemorates a pivotal moment in Jewish history centered on religious freedom and rededication.
Historical Background
Time period: 2nd century BCE (around 165 BCE)
Place: Judea (modern-day Israel)
Ruling power: The Seleucid Greek Empire, under King Antiochus IV Epiphanes
Antiochus IV tried to impose Greek culture and religion on the Jewish population. He banned Jewish religious practices (like Sabbath observance and circumcision) and desecrated the Second Temple in Jerusalem, dedicating it to Zeus.
The Maccabean Revolt
A small group of Jewish rebels, led by Judah Maccabee and his family (the Hasmoneans), rose up against the Seleucid army. Despite being outnumbered and under-equipped, the Maccabees achieved a surprising military victory and reclaimed Jerusalem.
Rededication of the Temple
After reclaiming the Temple, the Jews cleansed and rededicated it—the word Hanukkah literally means “dedication.”
According to later Jewish tradition recorded in the Talmud:
There was only one day’s worth of ritually pure oil to light the Temple’s menorah.
Miraculously, the oil burned for eight days, long enough to prepare more.
This miracle is the spiritual heart of Hanukkah.
How Hanukkah Is Celebrated
Lighting the menorah (hanukkiah) for eight nights
Traditional foods fried in oil (like latkes and sufganiyot)
Games with a spinning top called a dreidel
Songs, prayers, and family gatherings
Core Meaning
Hanukkah celebrates:
Religious freedom
Resistance against oppression
Faith and perseverance
Light overcoming darkness
What does it mean to live in finite fragile life in infinite eternal universe??🤔🤔🤔
MADE FOR WORKING TOGETHER

“Whenever you have trouble getting up in the morning, remind yourself that you’ve been made by nature for the purpose of working with others, whereas even unthinking animals share sleeping. And it’s our own natural purpose that is more fitting and more satisfying.”
—MARCUS AURELIUS, MEDITATIONS, 8.12
Enlightenment(רְאוּבֵן)
MADE FOR WORKING TOGETHER “Whenever you have trouble getting up in the morning, remind yourself that you’ve been made by nature for the purpose of working with others, whereas even unthinking animals share sleeping. And it’s our own natural purpose that…
I f a dog spends all day in bed—your bed, most likely—that’s fine. It’s just being a dog. It doesn’t have anywhere to be, no other obligation other than being itself. According to the Stoics, we humans have a higher obligation—not to the gods but to each other. What gets us out of bed each morning—even when we fight it like Marcus did—is praxeis koinonikas apodidonai (to render works held in common). Civilization and country are great projects we build together and have been building together with our ancestors for millennia. We are made for cooperation (synergia) with each other.


So if you need an extra boost to get out of bed this morning, if you need something more than caffeine can offer, use this. People are depending on you. Your purpose is to help us render this great work together. And we’re waiting and excited for you to show up.