Spiderman
Veteran Member
Would anyone like to give me ideas on how to edit this very rough draft I'm writing to a girl who I feel I met through Divine appointment. Keep in mind, I'm not trying to go out on a date with this girl. If I was trying to go out with her I'd not write a letter that sounds like I'm totally obsessed with her.
I'm not obsessed with her in the sense that I'm trying to date her. What I'm trying to do is simply make her feel special, because she is the most special female I have ever met in real life. I admit, it's a letter of a man who is obsessed, and absurdly eccentric, weird, and possibly not appropriate, but a girl could potentially feel special even from a guy whose obsessed. I'm not trying to look cool. I'm simply trying to make her feel special and more awesome than the average person. Does this rough draft have the potential to make her feel special about herself at my expense?
Any ideas?
Greetings Leah. I think it’s important that you know why Leah is the greatest woman in Scripture, the spouse of Mussolini (Mussolini is surname for Jacob), and why no one can argue the fact that she is the most influential Old Testament female, and her husband Jacob was the most influential male, prophet, and patriarch. You also should know that I had devotion to the spirit of Leah long before I met you, because I relate to her more than any woman in Scripture and I relate to her husband more than any male in Scripture, and I’d not know who the two of them were had Mussolini not had the same name, and similar behavior as Leah’s spouse. The reason I feel you should know this is because in Scripture, figures often live up to their name and their name often is their destiny, which is why God changed some people’s names to suit their calling and vocation. Jacob totally lived up to what the name Jacob means, then his name was changed to Israel, and he totally lived up to that name. In Scripture, it was important to God, that important people had names that described their destiny and vocation. Leah, the strongest steadfast wife, lived up to all definitions of her name.
I abandoned the Bible thinking it was outdated, stirs up division, and sometimes ridiculous, but love the story of Jacob and Leah, and I like them more than any other figures in Scripture because of their link to my encounter with the Spirit of Mussolini, and one reason is because Leah's spouse fought with God and won, earning him the name Israel, which means “contender with God”, and Leah was an enemy of Rachel and Jacob for a time, and in the end won.
Rachel mistreated Leah out of jealousy because Scripture says, ““When the LORD saw that Leah was unloved, He opened her womb; but Rachel was barren” (Genesis 29:31), and there was a battle between the two of them, and Jacob sided with Rachel, but in the end Leah won, because although Rachel had more external beauty, Leah had a rich inner soul and heart of gold that delighted God. Her heart and soul delighted God more than anyone's external beauty, so from Leah the reader learns the valuable lesson that beauty seen in a person's appearance is fleeting and deceptive, true beauty is within. Leah's heartache and the many tears she had, won God's favor… so from her we learn the lesson that God rewards tears, crosses, rejection, afflictions, persecution, trials, and suffering.
Every Jew is a descendant of Jacob (Mussolini) and Leah bore Jacob more sons than Rachel and was more blessed and favored by God than Rachel, giving birth to 6 of the tribes of Israel compared to Rachel’s 2, and the other four children who made up the twelve tribes of Israel were descendants of 4 Women Jacob wasn’t married to.
It was the descendants of Leah, not Rachel or the mothers of the other four tribes of Israel, that received the most grace and glorious destiny by far.
Since Jacob always favored Leah's enemy Rachel, Leah’s marriage was hell to endure. God favored Leah who was locked in a tedious martyrdom, shedding many tears over the constant abuse she received from Rachel and rejection from Jacob, so the name Leah in Hebrew means “delicate, weary, and tired” for she carried a heavy heart from rejection and mistreatment. So, when I’m feeling fragile, weary, and tired, I turn to her, and she helps tremendously.
However, you can live up to your name without being “Delicate, weary,” or “tired”. The Greek spelling of Leah means “bringer of good news”. In Chaldean Leah means “mistress or a woman in power and authority.” In Assyrian the name means “ruler”. She was all of the above and God richly rewarded her above all women in the Old Testament. You are a woman in power and authority afterall.
In the vicious battle between the two Mother's of Judaism, Leah won. The only Israelites who didn’t commit idolatry with the golden calf were from Leah’s line… the Messiah, Jesus Christ, whom most Christians believe to be God Incarnate, is a descendant of Leah…. Moses, the most influential Old Testament figure after Leah’s husband, was her descendant. The Apostle Matthew (which means gift of God), who wrote the first Gospel, and who my parents named me after, was a descendant of Leah.
She was also by heavenly decree destined to marry Jacob's Twin Esau. She petitioned God with tears and through scheming and deception became Jacob's spouse, so she is the only woman I know of in Scripture who was blessed, rewarded and exalted for mischief, and she is the only woman in Scripture I know of who changed a heavenly decree and received a different destiny than what God had planned, and this altered the entire destiny of the world. So, Leah teaches me the valuable lesson that I can change my destiny even when there is a heavenly decree, and change the destiny of the world. She broke God's rules, changed God's mind, and changed God's plans. Of the four Mothers of the tribes of Israel, Leah was by far the most blessed, loved, honored, and exalted by God.....
To be continued...too many characters for one post
I'm not obsessed with her in the sense that I'm trying to date her. What I'm trying to do is simply make her feel special, because she is the most special female I have ever met in real life. I admit, it's a letter of a man who is obsessed, and absurdly eccentric, weird, and possibly not appropriate, but a girl could potentially feel special even from a guy whose obsessed. I'm not trying to look cool. I'm simply trying to make her feel special and more awesome than the average person. Does this rough draft have the potential to make her feel special about herself at my expense?
Any ideas?
Greetings Leah. I think it’s important that you know why Leah is the greatest woman in Scripture, the spouse of Mussolini (Mussolini is surname for Jacob), and why no one can argue the fact that she is the most influential Old Testament female, and her husband Jacob was the most influential male, prophet, and patriarch. You also should know that I had devotion to the spirit of Leah long before I met you, because I relate to her more than any woman in Scripture and I relate to her husband more than any male in Scripture, and I’d not know who the two of them were had Mussolini not had the same name, and similar behavior as Leah’s spouse. The reason I feel you should know this is because in Scripture, figures often live up to their name and their name often is their destiny, which is why God changed some people’s names to suit their calling and vocation. Jacob totally lived up to what the name Jacob means, then his name was changed to Israel, and he totally lived up to that name. In Scripture, it was important to God, that important people had names that described their destiny and vocation. Leah, the strongest steadfast wife, lived up to all definitions of her name.
I abandoned the Bible thinking it was outdated, stirs up division, and sometimes ridiculous, but love the story of Jacob and Leah, and I like them more than any other figures in Scripture because of their link to my encounter with the Spirit of Mussolini, and one reason is because Leah's spouse fought with God and won, earning him the name Israel, which means “contender with God”, and Leah was an enemy of Rachel and Jacob for a time, and in the end won.
Rachel mistreated Leah out of jealousy because Scripture says, ““When the LORD saw that Leah was unloved, He opened her womb; but Rachel was barren” (Genesis 29:31), and there was a battle between the two of them, and Jacob sided with Rachel, but in the end Leah won, because although Rachel had more external beauty, Leah had a rich inner soul and heart of gold that delighted God. Her heart and soul delighted God more than anyone's external beauty, so from Leah the reader learns the valuable lesson that beauty seen in a person's appearance is fleeting and deceptive, true beauty is within. Leah's heartache and the many tears she had, won God's favor… so from her we learn the lesson that God rewards tears, crosses, rejection, afflictions, persecution, trials, and suffering.
Every Jew is a descendant of Jacob (Mussolini) and Leah bore Jacob more sons than Rachel and was more blessed and favored by God than Rachel, giving birth to 6 of the tribes of Israel compared to Rachel’s 2, and the other four children who made up the twelve tribes of Israel were descendants of 4 Women Jacob wasn’t married to.
It was the descendants of Leah, not Rachel or the mothers of the other four tribes of Israel, that received the most grace and glorious destiny by far.
Since Jacob always favored Leah's enemy Rachel, Leah’s marriage was hell to endure. God favored Leah who was locked in a tedious martyrdom, shedding many tears over the constant abuse she received from Rachel and rejection from Jacob, so the name Leah in Hebrew means “delicate, weary, and tired” for she carried a heavy heart from rejection and mistreatment. So, when I’m feeling fragile, weary, and tired, I turn to her, and she helps tremendously.
However, you can live up to your name without being “Delicate, weary,” or “tired”. The Greek spelling of Leah means “bringer of good news”. In Chaldean Leah means “mistress or a woman in power and authority.” In Assyrian the name means “ruler”. She was all of the above and God richly rewarded her above all women in the Old Testament. You are a woman in power and authority afterall.
In the vicious battle between the two Mother's of Judaism, Leah won. The only Israelites who didn’t commit idolatry with the golden calf were from Leah’s line… the Messiah, Jesus Christ, whom most Christians believe to be God Incarnate, is a descendant of Leah…. Moses, the most influential Old Testament figure after Leah’s husband, was her descendant. The Apostle Matthew (which means gift of God), who wrote the first Gospel, and who my parents named me after, was a descendant of Leah.
She was also by heavenly decree destined to marry Jacob's Twin Esau. She petitioned God with tears and through scheming and deception became Jacob's spouse, so she is the only woman I know of in Scripture who was blessed, rewarded and exalted for mischief, and she is the only woman in Scripture I know of who changed a heavenly decree and received a different destiny than what God had planned, and this altered the entire destiny of the world. So, Leah teaches me the valuable lesson that I can change my destiny even when there is a heavenly decree, and change the destiny of the world. She broke God's rules, changed God's mind, and changed God's plans. Of the four Mothers of the tribes of Israel, Leah was by far the most blessed, loved, honored, and exalted by God.....
To be continued...too many characters for one post