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Reason: None provided.

You seem to be coming to the rescue of one who failed. I was responding to someone who took a false position. I state the existence of eternal principles. That's a pretty solid position that renders guesses moot.

The A.I. style 'take' on Fiedler in place of the information provided is a tell.

So I'll let A.I. respond to the term 'gilgul'.

Gilgul (gilgul neshamot) is the Jewish concept of reincarnation, a cyclical process where a soul is reborn into new bodies to complete its tikun (rectification) and atone for past transgressions before reaching its ultimate spiritual level. This esoteric doctrine is central to Kabbalistic Judaism, particularly Hasidic Judaism, though it is not considered essential to traditional Judaism and was historically rejected by some prominent Jewish thinkers. The term originates from the Hebrew word for "wheel," reflecting the cyclical nature of the soul's journey.

Actually 'glagal' - (h(wei) - Circle/wheel/rotation association to Yahweh

https://communities.win/c/Unspoil/p/142AwNU9UH/unspoil-part-1-yahweh/c

https://scored.co/c/Christianity/p/141YkrZ2mH/testimony-13-feb-22/c.

You'd ridicule someone who said they'd 'take a look' at the bible and leave it open, but pretend to be able to understand and critique it anyway.

Now read the book so that where we go one, we go all.

149 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

You seem to be coming to the rescue of one who failed. I was responding to someone who took a false position. I state the existence of eternal principles. That's a pretty solid position that renders guesses moot.

The A.I. style 'take' on Fiedler in place of the information provided is a tell.

So I'll let A.I. respond to the term 'gilgul'.

Gilgul (gilgul neshamot) is the Jewish concept of reincarnation, a cyclical process where a soul is reborn into new bodies to complete its tikun (rectification) and atone for past transgressions before reaching its ultimate spiritual level. This esoteric doctrine is central to Kabbalistic Judaism, particularly Hasidic Judaism, though it is not considered essential to traditional Judaism and was historically rejected by some prominent Jewish thinkers. The term originates from the Hebrew word for "wheel," reflecting the cyclical nature of the soul's journey

https://communities.win/c/Unspoil/p/142AwNU9UH/unspoil-part-1-yahweh/c

https://scored.co/c/Christianity/p/141YkrZ2mH/testimony-13-feb-22/c.

You'd ridicule someone who said they'd 'take a look' at the bible and leave it open, but pretend to be able to understand and critique it anyway.

149 days ago
1 score