Jiang says Ezekiel receives God's message literally by having the scroll stuffed into his mouth and eaten, guaranteeing a prophet who can deliver the message exactly.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Accuracy
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "No, no, no. What God did was take the scrolls, right? The scrolls carry his message. And then what did God do? He stuffed..."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "No, no, no. What God did was take the scrolls, right? The scrolls carry his message. And then what did God do? He stuffed..."
Key Notes
Jiang counters that if God wants to deliver a message to people, accuracy would appear to matter more than anything else.
The student answers that there may be no single right answer and that personal transformation matters more than accuracy or end-result.
Timestamped Evidence
"No, no, no. What God did was take the scrolls, right? The scrolls carry his message. And then what did God do? He stuffed..."
"Don't you think accuracy matters more? Like, if God wants to deliver a message to his people, don't you think, like, accuracy matters? Right?"
"...it's the idea that it's not the end result or the accuracy. There's not a right answer, but it's the individual transformation and the..."
"...make predictions about the world. Okay? Depending on our predictions the accuracy of our predictions we can then go back and refine this model...."
"...little silly. But so how would you assess your your own accuracy of your predictions generally? How do you give yourself an assessment of..."
"...make certain assumptions about how things develop. And depending on my accuracy, then I can go back and refine these models and frameworks. And..."
"...work out, if it actually happens, then a model, there's some accuracy to our model. Okay? We'll have to refine our model, but there's..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
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Related Topics
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