Changes

From Nordan Symposia
Jump to navigationJump to search
704 bytes removed ,  22:18, 2 January 2008
no edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:  
Oftentimes, we think of '''dialogue''' perhaps as a better conversation, but there is much more to it. Genuine dialogue is a conversation with a center, not sides. It is a way of taking the energy or our differences and channeling it toward something that has never been created before. It lifts us out of polarization and into a greater common sense, and is thereby a means for accessing the intelligence and coordinated power of groups of people.[http://trinitize.blogspot.com/2007/07/dialogue.html#links]
 
Oftentimes, we think of '''dialogue''' perhaps as a better conversation, but there is much more to it. Genuine dialogue is a conversation with a center, not sides. It is a way of taking the energy or our differences and channeling it toward something that has never been created before. It lifts us out of polarization and into a greater common sense, and is thereby a means for accessing the intelligence and coordinated power of groups of people.[http://trinitize.blogspot.com/2007/07/dialogue.html#links]
 
----
 
----
  −
To finite man [[truth]], [[beauty]], and [[goodness]] embrace the full [[revelation]] of [[divinity]] reality. As this love-comprehension of [[Deity]] finds spiritual expression in the lives of God-knowing mortals, there are yielded the fruits of divinity: [[intellectual]] peace, social progress, moral satisfaction, spiritual joy, and cosmic [[wisdom]]. The advanced mortals on a world in the seventh stage of light and life have learned that love is the greatest thing in the universe--and they know that God is love.[http://www.urantia.org/cgi-bin/webglimpse/mfs/usr/local/www/data/papers?link=http://mercy.urantia.org/papers/paper56.html&file=/usr/local/www/data/papers/paper56.html&line=180#mfs]
  −
   
A '''dialogue''' (sometimes spelled '''dialog''' (n., v.) The Columbia Guide to Standard American English.  1993 is a reciprocal [[conversation]] between two or more [[Entity|entities]]. The [[Etymology|etymological]] origins of the word (in [[Greek language|Greek]] διά(diá,through) + λόγος(logos,word,speech) concepts like ''flowing-through meaning'')) do not necessarily convey the way in which people have come to use the word, with some confusion between the prefix διά-(diá-,through) and the prefix δι-(di-, two) leading to the assumption that a dialogue is necessarily between only two parties.[[http://www.bartleby.com/68/17/1817.html]]
 
A '''dialogue''' (sometimes spelled '''dialog''' (n., v.) The Columbia Guide to Standard American English.  1993 is a reciprocal [[conversation]] between two or more [[Entity|entities]]. The [[Etymology|etymological]] origins of the word (in [[Greek language|Greek]] διά(diá,through) + λόγος(logos,word,speech) concepts like ''flowing-through meaning'')) do not necessarily convey the way in which people have come to use the word, with some confusion between the prefix διά-(diá-,through) and the prefix δι-(di-, two) leading to the assumption that a dialogue is necessarily between only two parties.[[http://www.bartleby.com/68/17/1817.html]]
  

Navigation menu