What Chapter 6535 (Six Thousand Five Hundred and Thirty Five) said
The man with brown hands smiled and said: "What is the principle of using the Lord?"
The man with gray hands said: "Just use the principles recognized by the Lord himself."
The man with brown hands said: "What you want to say is that even when others think there is no reason to explain, the user can also express the truth he believes in? Is this what you mean?"
The man with gray hands said "hmm" and said: "That's what I just meant. But if you think about it carefully at this moment, the user may not necessarily have accepted the truth he said, right?"
The man with brown hands smiled and said: "Yes. It doesn't matter whether the master believes in the truth he is telling. What is important is that the master speaks the truth."
The gray-hand man said: "The user sometimes talks about truths that he doesn't recognize."
"Don't say he believes it. Sometimes he doesn't recognize the so-called truth he talks about." The brown-handed man said.
The man with brown hands smiled and said: "It's okay for people like us to be duplicitous in those days. The owner doesn't have as much helplessness as we do, right?"
The gray-handed man said: "His duplicity has made us more helpless, right?"
The man with brown hands said: "It's more than just a lot more helpless!"
"Well, sometimes, when he talks about truths that he himself doesn't recognize, we will be punished more and more severely." The gray-handed man said.
"What good does it do Himself to use the Lord to punish us more and more severely?" said the brown-hand man.
"Sometimes it just makes us more afraid of him." The gray-handed man said.
The man with brown hands said: "Is it a big difference whether we are afraid of him or not?"
"At least the difference is quite big for us, right?" the gray-handed man asked.
"What about him?" asked the brown-hand man.
"The difference is big for us, does it mean the difference is big for him?" asked the man with gray hands. "That's not necessarily true," the brown-handed man said. "After all, when we are afraid, we may not do better than when we are not afraid, nor may we do worse than when we are not afraid."
"From this point of view, it seems that it doesn't bring him any benefit if he sometimes says truths that he doesn't agree with?" the gray-handed man asked.
The man with brown hands said: "It looks different when you look at it from another angle."
The man with gray hands said: "Tell me about it."
The man with brown hands said: "If he sometimes makes us afraid by saying things he doesn't agree with, will his sense of control over us become stronger?"
"This is possible," said the Gray-Hand Man, "but is it really a practical benefit to him to have a stronger sense of control over us?"
"You can forget it," said the brown-hand man.
The gray-hand man asked: "His stronger sense of control over us is just a change in his feelings, right?"
The man with brown hands said: "Yes. I think sometimes, when people's feelings change, the effect of doing things will also change."
The man with the gray hand said to the man with the brown hand, "That applies to me right now."
"Do you want to emphasize that it's you at this moment?" the brown-hand man asked.
"Of course." Gray Hand Man said, "I used to make tools of that nature. Even if my feelings have changed, I still have to do what the owner says, so that the effect of my work will not be affected by my own feelings as much as possible."
"You have always been able to do it before, and you can do it now." The man with brown hands said.
"Being able to do it and being willing to do it are two different things." Gray Hand Man said, "Now I am no longer willing to be like that when I was a tool of that nature. Now I would rather let the effect of what I do be affected by my feelings."
(End of chapter)