I don't think it says that in The Bible. It's a Benjamin Franklin quote.
No
That quote is not in the Bible; it is usually attributed to Benjamin Franklin.
no you dont need to No. God will hear you regardless of what you wear.
The quote "believe half of what you see and none of what you hear" is attributed to Edgar Allan Poe. It is a reminder to not always trust what is presented to us visually or verbally, and to approach information critically.
Benjamin Franklin.
Benjamin Franklin
It needs no answer, it is exactly what it is. But if you do need an answer all you have to do is think about it. What you see with your own eyes sometimes is not exactly what is happening ,but, what you "think" is happening, so, believe half of that. As for the other half of the question, believe nothing of what you hear because it is gossip, plain and simple.
Hindus hear chanting of holy Namas in mandir.
Rule number 1: Don't believe anything you hear. Rule number 2: Believe only half of what you see.
It means that everything is not always black and white.U can not always go by what u see.And dont believe everything u hear cos not every one tells the trued all the time.
There are two: 1) The Holy Bible, and 2) The Holy Tradition. The Orthodox Church views the Holy Bible as being very important, and equal with the Holy Tradition (ie. the unwritten and oral traditions of Jesus Christ and the Church). The Holy Scriptures are a collection of Books of the New Testament that came out of the Holy Tradition of the Early Christian Church. The Bible did not just appear out of thin air, it was revealed by God and later put together by the holy Fathers of the Orthodox Church. At the time when Jesus Christ established His Church in Jerusalem in 33 AD, there was no Bible. There were only the Old Testament scriptures. So for the first few centuries of its existence, the Church had no New Testament Scriptures at all, and for at least the first 500 years, there was no printed Bible as we have today. Most people could not even read or write and there was certainly no printing press at that time. The people would hear the Scriptures and hold the traditions they were taught by the priests and bishops at that time (2 Thess 2:15). Christ says, "blessed are those who hear the word of God and keep it" (Luke 11:28).
all i can say is believe half of what you see and NONE of what you hear. it might come in handy.
not in the bible