S
scameter18
Guest
From what I have been able to surmise from Catholic theology, the Bible, the Catechism, etc., God does not directly cause every single movement and event in existence, unlike polytheistic deities were believed to. For example, pagans believed that every star’s celestial movement was directly caused or “pushed” by a specific deity. Deities controlled all of nature in this way. Other systems, some even monotheistic (such as Muslims) believe similarly. But Catholicism seems to believe in laws of nature which God instituted, but that control nature without His direction continuous causality.
God does, however, have the power to do anything in nature He desires, but these actions are “miraculous”, meaning, outside the norm of natural occurances. For example, in a miraculous healing, God would heal a disease that the Church and scientists have proven to be incurable by natural means, and that heals randomly without any visible cause or explanation - other than God Himself.
The Church also teaches that everything we have and experience is “sustained” by God, because without God’s creative will the universe could not exist. But despite this “sustaining”, God still does not directly cause natural events without a miracle, which by its very nature must be rare in order to be spectacular.
But with the teachings of Catholic prayer, we are also supposed to pray to God for the things we need, for health, protection, happiness; and to pray for others, both spiritually and physically, in their bodies, minds and experiences of natural life. For example, we would pray for the safe travel of a loved one on a plane trip, or for peace in the Middle East, or for the healing of diseases.
By praying in this way, for God to cause a change in the physical universe (excluding prayers specifically for spiritual things, like forgiveness of sins), do we not go against the Catholic conviction that God does not directly cause or intervene in nature unless He does so miraculously, which is very rare? I understand the spiritual value of praying in hope, of fostering that hope in ourselves and a reliance on God. But since miracles are quite rare and we cannot know when or how they will happen (their primary purpose being to lead people to Him anyways), why do we pray this way?
God does, however, have the power to do anything in nature He desires, but these actions are “miraculous”, meaning, outside the norm of natural occurances. For example, in a miraculous healing, God would heal a disease that the Church and scientists have proven to be incurable by natural means, and that heals randomly without any visible cause or explanation - other than God Himself.
The Church also teaches that everything we have and experience is “sustained” by God, because without God’s creative will the universe could not exist. But despite this “sustaining”, God still does not directly cause natural events without a miracle, which by its very nature must be rare in order to be spectacular.
But with the teachings of Catholic prayer, we are also supposed to pray to God for the things we need, for health, protection, happiness; and to pray for others, both spiritually and physically, in their bodies, minds and experiences of natural life. For example, we would pray for the safe travel of a loved one on a plane trip, or for peace in the Middle East, or for the healing of diseases.
By praying in this way, for God to cause a change in the physical universe (excluding prayers specifically for spiritual things, like forgiveness of sins), do we not go against the Catholic conviction that God does not directly cause or intervene in nature unless He does so miraculously, which is very rare? I understand the spiritual value of praying in hope, of fostering that hope in ourselves and a reliance on God. But since miracles are quite rare and we cannot know when or how they will happen (their primary purpose being to lead people to Him anyways), why do we pray this way?