Can people choose to be spriritual and live a loving life?

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But don’t you see! In your paradigm you* cannot tell him he’s wrong! He will simply throw your paradigm back in your face and rightly say, "You cannot tell me I’m wrong, for I’m using the very same method you are*. I pray. I study. I discern in my heart what God is telling me."

This is exactly why your paradigm is so wrong, Matt. It leaves room for odious spewings in the name of “prayerful reflection.”

You would not be able to defend a homosexual in a room with Fred Phelps.

What use is your paradigm, then, I respectfully ask?
Oh my PRMerger. After a discussion with this guy Phelps you seem so enamored with, when he throws it into my face, that is when I might then agree to disagree. Which is what I propose we do.
 
Oh my PRMerger. After a discussion with this guy Phelps you seem so enamored with, when he throws it into my face, that is when I might then agree to disagree. Which is what I propose we do.
As you wish.

:sad_bye:
 
Then why, rather than start a Church, didn’t Jesus just teach us to follow our conscience? And I disagree that you have gathered your knowledge of God strictly through your conscience. It was handed down to you and then you have chosen to pick this and throw away that. If all we were suppose to do is follow our conscience, the Bible should have been one sentence long.
Um… maybe I misunderstood in my theology class, but aren’t you behind a 16th century church teaching if you believe that a person’s conscience is not put there by God to lead people to him, regardless of religion?
 
Um… maybe I misunderstood in my theology class, but aren’t you behind a 16th century church teaching if you believe that a person’s conscience is not put there by God to lead people to him, regardless of religion?
I don’t believe this is what the poster was professing, TKP. Of course we believe conscience was put there by God to lead people to him. However, we must disagree about the “regardless of religion” part.

The Catholic Church has never taught that our religion doesn’t matter. In fact, that is a heresy called “indifferentism.”

It is addressed in an encyclical, Mirari Vos, by Pope Gregory XVI:

Indifferentism–This perverse opinion is spread on all sides by the fraud of the wicked who claim that it is possible to obtain the eternal salvation of the soul by the profession of any kind of religion, as long as morality is maintained.
 
Um… maybe I misunderstood in my theology class, but aren’t you behind a 16th century church teaching if you believe that a person’s conscience is not put there by God to lead people to him, regardless of religion?
I follow my conscience each and every day, but that conscience is informed by the revelation of Jesus Christ which I received from the Apostles through His Church. My conscience, on its own, cannot inform me of revealed truth. That is why it has been revealed. And yes, I agree that God speaks through our conscience and draws us toward truth and convicts us when we tend toward evil. But it cannot give us the truth revealed by God about himself. It can only nudge us in that direction. An uninformed conscience becomes dull and ultimately useless.
 
I will address your question, Ted, once you answer the few I’ve asked you in some pridian posts.

Specifically, as I asked here, is there another source for your beliefs about God besides your feelings about him? If so, please cite and provide a belief about God’s attributes that you derived from this source.
My Catholic education helped develop my beliefs, and I spend a good deal of time thinking and meditating on questions of faith and morals in an attempt to learn what God wants me to do. In fact I’ve become much more serious about that since leaving the Catholic Church; perhaps realizing that the Church doesn’t have all the answers led me to appreciate my own responsibility for seeking them.
Also, in the same post I asked you, based solely on your studies of Catholicism (and not by searching Google) if you could cite where Scripture is in the Mass?
The question is not relevant to this discussion.
 
My Catholic education helped develop my beliefs, and I spend a good deal of time thinking and meditating on questions of faith and morals in an attempt to learn what God wants me to do. In fact I’ve become much more serious about that since leaving the Catholic Church; perhaps realizing that the Church doesn’t have all the answers led me to appreciate my own responsibility for seeking them.
The question is not relevant to this discussion.
The Church that Jesus said that he was going to build does not have all of the answers? :confused:
 
The Church that Jesus said that he was going to build does not have all of the answers? :confused:
I don’t believe that the Bible, upon which the Catholic Church bases that claim, is necessarily an inerrant record of God’s communication with man. It has not been proven to be such.
 
I don’t believe that the Bible, upon which the Catholic Church bases that claim, is necessarily an inerrant record of God’s communication with man. It has not been proven to be such.
So, what religion, if any, are you?
 
I know people that believe there’s a God and live their life with kindness and compassion. They may have been raised Catholic or Protestant, but have chosen not to follow those faiths. They have chosen to live a good wholesome life knowing that there is a God, but they are not sure what God is.

They believe that all religions pray to the same God, and it’s a shame that so many wars are based on religion. They choose to not have any religion and choose to be spiritual.

Any thougths? Many good people feel this way.
Your post does not allow for much thought about this. We can recognize that there are people as you describe.

We also know what the Catholic Church teaches about non catholic christians, Jews, Muslims and other believers and non believers.

Is the point here that these people are not in agreement with catholic teachings, and are flawed? Without a doubt, that catholic answer is clear. What is the point of asking what anyone’s thoughts are on it then? Is the Catholic Church run by popular opinion? So, if we know it is not, then is this thread simply a venue to mock non catholics?
 
is this thread simply a venue to mock non catholics?
Hi Jam, I don’t find Serap to be mocking non Catholics at all. Actually quite the opposite in my reading of her posts. And trust me in my own discourses with her, she has been nothing if not kind. Peace.
 
2 Corinthians 5:7 We live by faith, not by sight.

You could live on faith alone and fail. You cannot attend confession and communion and Mass weekly, pray daily and fail. You would have to stop going in order to fail and stop praying.

… Which leads back to moving constantly to a perpetual State of Grace. So God can work though each individual. So His Flock will hear His Voice and Listen to Him.

Anyway thats how I see it.

God Bless, Gary
Although I agree with your point, and what you have to say, I have to point out that it is possible to participate in the Sacramental life and still fail. For example, there is one person on this thread who is fond of using the phrase “we walk by faith and not by sight”. However, unlike embracing in humility all the TEachings of the Church, he picks and chooses those that appeal to him, and uses this phrase to reject the rest. He maintains that it is not possible for us to know what God expects of us.

A person in such a frame of mind could participate in the sacramental llife of the Church yet remain in a state of dis-grace as a result of fundamental disobedience. No amount of prayers will save such a person, who will not confess many of their personal practices because they are not believed to BE sins.
 
No, I believe he would be wrong.
Fair enough, Ted. This is good. Yet not quite consistent with your paradigm.
From my conscience; I believe God speaks to each of us if we’re willing to listen.
Are you saying that if someone’s (say, Fred Phelps’) conscience tells him something about God that disagrees with your version of God, then your version of God is the correct one?

Thus, there is an absolute truth about our understanding of God?
 
My Catholic education helped develop my beliefs, and I spend a good deal of time thinking and meditating on questions of faith and morals in an attempt to learn what God wants me to do.
And in the end, after your meditation, you decide based on your feelings?

I just don’t understand what your canon is, that is, your “measuring stick”, your criterion, is for discerning what is Truth.

[quoteIn fact I’ve become much more serious about that since leaving the Catholic Church; perhaps realizing that the Church doesn’t have all the answers led me to appreciate my own responsibility for seeking them.
[/quote]

And where are the answers found, Ted? In the end, it would appear, from your feelings, no?
The question is not relevant to this discussion.
Fair enough. But your comment does lead to doubt regarding your understanding of Catholicism… 🤷
 
And in the end, after your meditation, you decide based on your feelings?

I just don’t understand what your canon is, that is, your “measuring stick”, your criterion, is for discerning what is Truth.

And where are the answers found, Ted? In the end, it would appear, from your feelings, no?
PR, no. As I would guess it if it was just feelings, Ted could do that without spending a “good deal of time thinking and meditating on questions of faith and morals” in an attempt to learn what God wants him to do.

It goes far deeper than just feelings PR. From CCC 1776, “His conscience is man’s most secret core and his sanctuary. There he is alone with God whose voice echoes in his depths.”

You can do “feelings” a whole lot quicker than the time Ted spends on faith and morals.

I feel like having ice cream today PR. And it didn’t take me much more time than a nanosecond to decide that! 👍
 
PR, no. As I would guess it if it was just feelings, Ted could do that without spending a “good deal of time thinking and meditating on questions of faith and morals” in an attempt to learn what God wants him to do.

It goes far deeper than just feelings PR. From CCC 1776, “His conscience is man’s most secret core and his sanctuary. There he is alone with God whose voice echoes in his depths.”

You can do “feelings” a whole lot quicker than the time Ted spends on faith and morals.

I feel like having ice cream today PR. And it didn’t take me much more time than a nanosecond to decide that! 👍
So, what is the canon that is used to determine what is true and what is not, after praying and meditating?
 
So, what is the canon that is used to determine what is true and what is not, after praying and meditating?
CCC 1782 has this to say about it. "Man has the right to act in conscience and in freedom so as personally to make moral decisions. “He must not be forced to act contrary to his conscience. Nor must he be prevented from acting according to his conscience, especially in religious matters.”

And long before that was written, the Apostle Paul had this to say. Rom 14:13, “Then let us no longer judge one another, but rather resolve never to put a stumbling block or hindrance in the way of a brother.” 19, “Let us then pursue what leads to peace and to building up one another.”

PR, let us not place a block in the way of one pursuing God. Peace.
 
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