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The P&G-owned medicinal brand created a heartwarming


video entitled ‘Learning to Love #TouchOfCare’, which tell
the story of an angry young man’s journey after rescuing
and adopting an abandoned child. Set in an impoverished
district in the Philippines, the video opens with Hernando,
unemployed young man, ragingly furiously against his
neighbors, including the screaming baby next door.
Unable to deal with the baby’s incessant cries, Hernando
enters the house in a fit anger, only to discover the baby
is alone and abandoned.
Once upon a time, there was a woman named Naomi. Naomi was
married to Elimelech and they had two sons, Mahlon and Kilion. They lived
in Bethlehem but they had to move because of famine, so they packed
their things and went to live in a foreign land called Moab.
A few years after the move, Elimelech died. Naomi was so sad, but
she had to keep living life. Her two sons got married to Ruth and Orpah.
For ten years, things seemed good, until both her sons did. Her life
seemed to have one funeral after another. Now she was all alone in a
foreign land.
Since her daughter-in-laws were so young, she told them to go
back to their homes. “Go back, each of you, to your home. May the Lord
show kindness to you, as you have shown to your head and to me,” then
she kisses them and they wept aloud. Orpah went away, but Ruth hugged
Naomi and said, “Don’t urge me to leave you or to turn back from you.
Wherever you go, I will go, and where you stay, I will stay. Your people will
be my people and your God my God.” (Ruth 1:16)
Naomi showed kindness to Naomi by staying with her, maybe
because Naomi, first showed kindness to her. So together, they packed
their journey to Bethlehem, Naomi’s first home. No one could believe
Naomi was back! Everyone said, “Is this really her, Naomi?” Naomi said,
“Don’t call me naomi, call me Mara.” Naomi felt like God made her life
bitter, almost everything had been taken away from her.
Naomi had his one relative, on Elimelech’s side of the family,
whose name was Boaz. Boaz was very wealthy and had large fields, Now, it
has custom of the day that after the harvesters went through the field,
poor people were allowed to take whatever was left. Ruth was one of
those poor people who gathered gain one day. When Boaz asked who she
was, his foreman told him.
In the Gospel of Luke, the parable is introduced by a question,
known as the Great Commandments:
Behold a certain lawyer stood up and tested him, saying, “Teacher,
what shall I do to inherit external life?” He said to him, “What is written in
the law? How do you read it?” He answered, “You shall love the Lord your
God with all your heart, will all your heart, with all your soul, with all your
strength, with all your mind; and love your neighbor as yourself.”
He said to him, “You have answered correctly. Do this and you will
live.” But he, desiring to justify himself, asked Jesus, “who is my neighbor?”
Jesus replies with a story: Jesus answered, “A certain man was
going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and he fell among robbers, who
both stripped him and beat him, and departed, leaving him half-dead. By
chance, a certain priest was going down that way. When he saw him, he
passed on the other side.
Based on a well-known story which in terms, of religion, is known to be taken from
the book of Genesis, King of Dreams centers on the life of Joseph, a “miracle child” with
the gift of interpreting dreams.
Because he was born to a barren woman, his parent dubbed him such and he
quickly became the favorite of his father, Jacob, much to the envy of his ten brothers,
after Jacob gives Joseph a beautiful coat; and after Joseph shares his dreams of the
brothers bowing down to him, they decided that they’ve had enough of it. So, one day, they
gang up on Joseph and sell him to slave traders, who in turn, take him to faraway Egypt.
There, he is sold to Potiphar, the captain of Pharaoh’s army. Even as a slave,
Joseph continues to stand out because of his hard work and Potiphar eventually comes to
notice this. As a result, he puts Joseph in-charge of his entire household. It is also where
he meets Asenath, his first love interest.
Potiphar’s wife also notices Joseph, but in a romantic manner. One night, after
attempting to “approach” him, he refuses her company and he is falsely accused of
harming her. Because of this, he is thrown into prison by Potiphar.
There, he meets Pharaoh’s baker and butler, whose dreams he interprets. After
they are released, Joseph is left there for a few more years until one day when Potiphar
released him because Pharaoh needs him to interpret a dream that has been torturing him
lately – as he heard from his butler.
Joseph interprets Pharaoh’s dream which resemble a famine of Egypt, and
because of this Pharaoh puts Joseph in-charge of the whole country and makes him
second most powerful man in the land. From here, Joseph meets Asenath again and they
may, and afterwards, he prepared the country for famine.
It is during this time when he is reunited with his brothers who come to Egypt for
food. After scheming upon way to reveal himself to them, as well as meeting his new
brother Benjamin, Joseph finally confesses himself after placing his cup in Benjamin’s sack
after a banquet; and there a heartwarming exchange of apologies and forgiveness occurs.
Afterwards, Joseph invites his whole family to live in Egypt and is reunited with his father
once more.

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