B
Belinda
Guest
Dear Gnosis, your points are well articulated and I appreciate knowing some of your background too as how we develop often explains where we are. I suspected you might be a college student as it is not uncommon for you to have a more universal acceptance of sprirituality at your age and level of education. I was exactly there at your age. But that was 25 years ago and several university degrees ago. I do not say this to imply that I am somehow better educated or have more “authority” to speak, only that I am at an entirely different developmental stage of belief in God than you. Professionally, I specialize in developmental psychology and thus every stage of life is important in understanding development in each area of life, including spirituality. We are speaking from two different stages of life. Yours is valid at your stage. I would think that you will continue to change and grow and become more “specialized” in your faith as well as in your career. That is the normal path we take in life. Increasing our knowledge and understanding constantly. What an exciting time we both have ahead of us. I am only middle-aged so suspect that my spirituality is still in its adolescence. It makes growing older and exciting event rather than something to dread.
- Yes my faith is serving me in a manner that your faith cannot possibly do. Everyone’s faith serves them according to their needs. My Catholicism is particular to me and unlike any other Catholic. My relationship with the Trinity is “personal”. If you were Catholic, your experience would also be unlike mine although we might be able to connect in some ways.
- Yes, but my beliefs, I must humbly state, I did not make up, but were revealed by God. This is what most people don’t understand about the “arrogance” of people who “push” their faith. We are very humble because we have realized that we would be nothing without Jesus. That it is Him who is moving us, Him who has the words, Him who we proclaim, not ourselves. This is what gives us the so called “arrogance” to proclaim the truth.
- As a student, you must accept that truth leads you somewhere and error leads you nowhere. Let me give you an analogy. I can learn my multiplication tables correctly or incorrectly, one leads me to mathmatical truth, the other to error. It is sad if people refuse to use logic in spirituality. Why would we throw out laws that work in every other realm of life but want to “feel” our way in the area of religion. As a student of religion, you are in the business of studying with a method.
- Never think that Catholicism is an exclusive religion. As you study religion, read Papal bulls. This is clarified as late as 1894 by the pope at that time. He speaks clearly of the universal church and how people of different faiths can be redeemed by Jesus through “baptism of desire” even if they have never heard of the name of Jesus. True Catholicism is not what most people think, even some Catholics. Only those people who hear of the faith in Jesus, believe it to be true, and reject it anyway, are condemned.
- I assumed you had not commited to a faith by the description of yourself that you gave in your first e-mail. I assumed that you considered yourself “on a journey” but not yet commited to a path. It appeared that you were still deciding what was the best path to take and were exploring many options. I apologize if I misinterpreted. It is difficult to communicate this way and get the full essence of who someone is, isn’t it.
- That we assert there is one universal church implies that we are all connected through the one True God and how we express it is extremely diverse. There are many different liturgical churches within Catholocism which is a recognition that people express their faith according to different cultural influences, spiritual influences, etc. If everyone on earth decided by popular vote that something was not true, it does not change the fact of whether that thing were true or not. If everyone on earth decided to reject the church of Jesus, it would not change the fact that Jesus established a Church for us to be a part of his Body.
- The fact that I think they are in error does not not mean that it is what they think. They have the right to be wrong. They have the right to think that I’m wrong, and frequently do. The basic tenent that I must constantly reassert it that there is an Objective Truth, that humans can know, if we accept the revelation of God, and use our logical brains that God gave us so that we can know him. He allows us to seek and find him but we must have a method. I think I’ve found mine. I guess we will know for sure in Heaven. Right now we’ve got faith.