The Top 3 Reasons Everyone Should Read Blogs

Photo: Marya

A couple of my friends have told me that Pedantic Posts is the only blog they read. I was shocked that these very intelligent people don’t take advantage of this relatively new communication medium. I personally only started reading blogs a few years ago (and thought the word “blog” moronic at the time), but since have come to realize how valuable they are as a source of information. Here are the top 3 reasons:

An opportunity to hang out with people much smarter than you
Some incredibly smart people are willing to share their thoughts online for everyone to enjoy. Individuals such as marketing guru Seth Godin, venture capitalist Fred Wilson, serial entrepreneur Marc Andreesen, and the capricious Tim Ferriss. No matter the subject that interests you, there is probably an expert blogging about it.

You may be blessed to hang around brilliant individuals in both your business and personal life. Even if this is the case, odds are you only discuss the same handful of things over and over again, which leads us to the next reason to read blogs.

Exposure to new ideas
One of the first things I learned about via blogs was polyphasic sleep (where you sleep 20-30 minutes every 3-4 hours). While I am not personally interested in drastically changing my sleep schedule, I enjoyed reading about this new idea. I realized there are people in this world doing interesting things and sharing them in the form of short posts that take less than 10 minutes to read.

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The Jefferson Bible – Who Has Time to Read the Whole Bible Anyway?

Photo: Robert Paul Jr.

Regardless of your religious beliefs, you have to admit the Bible is huge, hard to read, and contains some ridiculous stories with outdated ideologies — talking donkeys, people turning into pillars of salt, sexism, and stoning other religions … whether you believe those stories wholeheartedly or dismiss them as parables from which we are to learn is up to you. Unfortunately all the aforementioned shortcomings have resulted in most people, even those you would describe as religious, never picking up the Bible to read it all the way through. This is unfortunate not in a religious sense, but because it is the only account of the life of Jesus, one of the best role models of all time. How are supposed to learn about this man? Which parts of the Bible are actually important and not outdated or unbelievable? How are we to know which passages to skip over? Luckily Thomas Jefferson took care of this for us.

The third president of the United States?
The same. Jefferson created what we now call “The Jefferson Bible: The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth” by thoroughly reading the Bible and cutting out the passages he deemed important to paste in his shortened version of the bible. What were his criteria? Mainly it was based upon the passage’s demonstration of Jesus’s teachings and authenticity.

He didn’t believe the Bible was authentic?
Nope. Jefferson was a deist who believed the four evangelists were grossly unqualified to write the account of the life of Jesus. He thought the authors made up or greatly exaggerated numerous elements including the virgin birth, walking on water, rising from the dead, and being the son of God. Despite the perceived fallacies Thomas Jefferson realized the importance of learning from the core teachings of this great man.

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