scared:
My biggest problem is I am not sure God exists so how can I be faithful and obedient if he doesn’t exist?
Read this:
peterkreeft.com/topics/first-cause.htm
Then consider the following: Jesus exists. There is absolutely no doubt about this, despite certain recent “controversies” in the courtrooms of Italy.
Now Jesus said He was the Son of God, one with God (“I and the Father are one”).
There are two, and only two possibilities:
- Jesus is who He says he is, namely, God, ergo, God exists.
- Jesus spent 3 years of His public ministry duping people and lying for no apparent reason, then, to really convince them of these “lies,” He underwent a gruesome Passion which consisted of Roman soldiers peeling the flesh off His bones with horseflesh whips, pressing thorns into His head, and then driving rusted iron nails through His hands and feet before leaving Him to hang on a piece of wood for three hours. To advance this theory, one must also accept that all the foregoing saints that followed Christ and His Church are all liars or manaical idiots who also allowed themselves to be martyred, killed, and persecuted while devoting their lives to the grand conspiratorial lie of a fairy tale.
Consider #1. Consider #2. I think you can figure out which is the right one.
I could take them drop them off and sit in the car and wait.
Rather than sitting in the car, why not go in with them? Even non-Catholics attend Mass. Attendance will not kill you. You give the impression that some sort of evil will happen when you set foot inside a building of worship.
What am I torn about? I can’t just go and practice my faith like normal, I don’t have faith.I am not sure God exists.
This is faith.
Being unsure but living a life as though He is there is perhaps the essence of faith. Some of the people who saw Jesus do His great miracles even struggled to believe, hence the prayer, “I believe’ help thou my unbelief.”
C.S Lewis said that there are moments when the believer is assaulted with thoughts of how there cannot possibly be a world after this one, that this is all, we will die and there will be nothing. But he urged constancy. Practice your faith and it will come back to you.
Giving up is inexcusable. Practicing your faith (Mass, the sacraments, prayer, etc.) is the way of having God give it back to you.
The struggle is some of what Jesus referenced when He said “Take up your cross and follow Me.”
I am very close to renouncing my faith, I have written, but not sent a letter to the Bishop. I have even asked my priest to dispense me from Sunday/Holy days of obligation until I can inform the Bishop. He hasn’t responded, but earlier he told me to leave the church
Why would you do this? What good would it accomplish to leave the Church? Consider once more a logical proposition:
- Even if you are unsure, you must recognize the possibility that staying in the Church and trying to regain your faith will mean your salvation.
- Leaving the Church will never merit you salvation.
So in #1, even for a doubter, salvation is possible. In #2 it is not.
I find it hard to believe that a Catholic priest told you to “leave the Church.” Is that really true? If so, he should perhaps consider finding another occupation. Understand that this was a terrible thing to say.
Why not contact one of the apologists or priests at Catholic Answers by phone or e-mail? I can tell you this: they certainly won’t tell you to leave the Church, and they may well be God’s instrument to helping you regain your faith.
However, if I don’t go they don’t go. That’s why I am so torn.
There is no reason to be torn. By beginning this thread it is clear that you know what the right answer is. If you thought not going was a good option, you would not have asked the question.
You already know you must go. What is it that makes you resistant to continuing the effort? Why are you tempted to “renounce your faith” without a struggle? You don’t need to visit a religious order–as mentioned, there are people on this very website who can be of help.
It isn’t getting any better either, although I have continued to go to mass, I am increasingly becoming more angry and resentful when I am there, how can this be healthy for my kids to see, at first it was easy to hide, not so much anymore,
What about the Mass makes you angry? Unless you are quite literally standing in the pew seething with visible anger, in what way would this be harmful to your children?
I think some suggestions have been made to you here. It is up to you to use them and begin.