V
Victorious
Guest
I’m glad you get a lot out of reading the lives of the saints. Do you think their Catholic faith had anything to do with their ability to make a difference in the world?I have a lot of respect for Catholicism, and I enjoy reading about the lives of saints. I find it comforting to know that people like this lived and made a difference in the world. I have a strong desire to dedicate my own life to helping others, of living a simple life of charity. It’s not glamorous, but it’s something that I feel called to do, and I can do no less.
One of the really nice things about God is that He is humility itself. Because He is Humility itself, He condescends to take from us whatever we can give Him at the present moment. Then – because He is also Mercy itself – He does the rest. As a former pastor of mine used to say, God loves us just as we are, but too much to leave us where we are. Do not, then, be too quick to judge people who turn to God simply because they fear damnation. That’s the best they can give at the present moment, and frankly, that’s all He needs.I know that most Christians would still say that I’m being deceived by Satan, but I have to do what I think is right. What else can I do? I think it would be unconscienable to switch religions because of the threat of hell, rather than out of love.
Actually, when I read the Old Testament, I don’t see a vengeful God. I see a God dealing patiently with His stubborn and headstrong people: repeatedly warning them of the consequences of their failure to mend their ways, and giving them chance after chance to straighten up. I also see God stooping to accommodate His people, realizing that they needed to learn by experience why some of the things they wanted weren’t good for them. For example, He actually obeyed their wish not to deal with Him face to face, but only through intermediaries such as Moses. He also gave them a king, even though He didn’t want them to have one, and He warned them what a human king would do with his power. And I don’t think it was really God who wanted all the picky rules associated with the Mosaic law. Rather, I suspect the people wanted the rules as a way of holding God at arm’s length. But God accepted this – I believe because He so wanted a relationship with them that He would rather do it through picky rules than not at all. But, being a God of justice, He held them to what they wanted.I have read most of the Bible, and I honestly don’t think I could love the God portrayed in the OT. He’s nothing like the patient and loving Deity that I know.
But the Bible isn’t just any book: it’s the inspired Word of God. How can we become better people without some objective standard against which to measure ourselves? This amounts to thinking that we don’t need God – which is contrary to your stated position.I suspect if people had to choose between believing what they have experienced firsthand vs what is written in a book, the majority would choose to believe their own experiences.