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The biblical story is portrayed as a continual journey—of wandering, searching, leaving, and returning—where faith is an ongoing pilgrimage of the heart rather than loyalty to a fixed shrine. Drawing on Abraham Joshua Heschel’s idea in God in Search of Man, George suggest that God is actively seeking humanity, patiently respecting human freedom while waiting for our return. In Gospel of Luke chapter 15, Jesus portrays God like a father who refuses to measure worth by sin or goodness, instead affirming that his children have always belonged to him and extending forgiveness even before it is asked.
By George StullThe biblical story is portrayed as a continual journey—of wandering, searching, leaving, and returning—where faith is an ongoing pilgrimage of the heart rather than loyalty to a fixed shrine. Drawing on Abraham Joshua Heschel’s idea in God in Search of Man, George suggest that God is actively seeking humanity, patiently respecting human freedom while waiting for our return. In Gospel of Luke chapter 15, Jesus portrays God like a father who refuses to measure worth by sin or goodness, instead affirming that his children have always belonged to him and extending forgiveness even before it is asked.