R
Randy_Carson
Guest
I’m sorry if you’ve been told you’re going to hell. While it may or may not be true, no Catholic can tell you that with certainty. However, we can tell you with certainty how to go to heaven. What you do with that information is up to you.Steve,
. The Jewish traditions were similarly handed down, were they not? Is it wrong for someone 3000 years later to question whether it was literal or metaphorical the stories of manna descending from heaven or Jonah being swallowed by a great fish?
. I grew up being told all of these stories were literal. I was also told that Santa Claus came through the chimney when we didn’t even have one, that the Tooth Fairy left me a dime under my pillow in exchange for a tooth, and that the earth was only 6000 years old. Then I was sent to school to study science, geology, and mathematics, expected to get A’s (cause mom was a teacher), and go back to Sunday school and repeat these old stories without my brain exploding.
. To top that off, I was told to love my enemies until it was time to go kill the gooks in Viet Nam and the whole thing started to unravel. My personal friends in Wounded Knee are descended from the few survivors who weren’t massacred, who were rounded up and taken to a church in Pine Ridge where, posted right over the cross, was a sign that said “Peace on earth, good will to men.”
. Oh, and the reason they live on the reservation is because somebody signed a piece of paper written “In the year of our Lord, 1868” at Fort Laramie because the buffalo were hunted to extinction in part of a campaign of genocide. Then, my same friends were beaten, locked up, and deprived of food by the folks at the Mission school. They, too, were told to reject their own “superstitious” beliefs and accept a new set, which they were not allowed to question.
All I am saying is that God gave me a brain and when I use it to raise reasonable questions, I am being told I’m going to hell. That really affects my perception of those who insist upon my reliance upon such things as are consistent with ancient story-telling traditions which, to me, make much more sense to my rational mind when a little leeway is allowed for logical use of my mind.
. And when the same folks telling me this say "Well, the Muslims have been wrong for 1400 years, the Hindus for 5000, years, and the Jews on much of their beliefs for 3 or 4000 years, but “our guys” are right for the past 2000, and they’re the only one’s right, while all the others are wrong.
No offense intended here, Steve. Just laying it out as it is. I hope that this is ok. Is it? Is it ok for my Indian friends to finally ask these questions? Is it Ok for my Buddhist friends to ask a question in class? How about a Baha’i? or a Muslim? I can tell you this. That in Iran, the Baha’is are going to jail, losing their jobs, and still getting killed for “daring” to ask questions and oppose the equivalent of the Pharisees, i.e., the mullahs, and paying a very, very heavy price for it. They are going through exactly what the early Christians went through…
It certainly sounds like you have seen a lot of difficult things in the course of your lifetime. How you respond to those difficulties is the key to your eternal future.
As for “our guys” getting it right for 2,000 years when all the others were “wrong” for far longer…well, rising from the dead has a way of separating someone from the crowd of pretenders to the throne, ya know?