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inocente
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I would think most of us know Christ in the same way we know anyone else. We don’t go looking for logical proofs for the existence of our mother. A proof isn’t a mother. We can never know our mother by looking at a proof of her existence. Not only is a proof redundant, it isn’t her.It may be your claim that Jesus never speaks of proofs, but he certainly implements them all of the time. Read the article that I cited in my last post.
The problem with insisting on faith alone is that there is no need to ever specify what it is that you have faith in.
If the truth is important, then knowing what is consistent with the truth is a key element of following or living by the Truth. To claim one must merely have “faith” as an undefined expectation in terms of what precisely that faith involves leaves open numerous possibilities. Reasoning allows greater clarify in terms of Who you have faith in along with providing some guidance as to when and why a mountain might need to be moved from here to there. Or do you suppose God will provide all the prompts, via a large TelePrompTer in the sky, and leave none of the determining up to you?
I have never, by the way, witnessed you moving a mountain from here to there, so I am skeptical that you know of what you speak or that you have faith of the specific kind required to move mountains. Or even that you know what it takes to obtain that kind of faith.
It certainly cannot be merely a generic “faith” with no defined object that magically produces the power to move mountains, can it? I have faith that the chair I am sitting on will hold me, does that mean that little faith allows me to move mountains? It hasn’t yet produced that level of transcendent energy, but I’ll keep working on it.
Well, no really. Moving mountains doesn’t really interest me, unless “mountain” is a metaphor for my lack of resolve to do good or the will of God.
Man, as far as I can tell, is a rational animal. That involves doing the right things for the right “reasons.” Determining the right things is a matter of having a good heart. The right reasons is a matter of having a good head. Moving mountains willy nilly or “just 'cause” and for no good reason (there is that word again) doesn’t strike me as all that important in the bigger scheme of things.
So, I guess if your goal is to move mountains, then go ahead and work on your “faith” in order to obtain such power over the created order. I have no such ambitions. For me, knowing the truth and living it simply and completely is sufficient.
I would say, as an end in itself, knowing God (the Truth) is much more desirable than having faith in God, no? In other words, faith could be a vehicle for coming to know God, but, ultimately, it is the apprehending, knowing or “coming face to face” with God, the Truth, that is the important thing.
It is because we are separated from God by a shadowy veil that faith is required, but when that veil is removed, knowing and loving will completely displace faith.
In the meantime, faith and reason are both means of coming to know God. Two wings working in tandem.
Faith and love are forms of nonverbal reasoning, which often can’t be put into words. But that doesn’t make them less valuable or silly, as if the only real knowledge must be verbal. We are not computers, we can see truth in abstract art or wordless tone poems, we don’t need everything to be in words and numbers.
Perhaps some men belittle non-verbal reasoning as too girly, and at the extreme, sufferers of Asperger syndrome might need some form of argumentation as they have big problems with interaction and nonverbal cues and so on. But the rest of us just know Christ without any of that. Faith is a gift. Don’t Catholics call faith a theological virtue, along with hope and charity? Is a proof a virtue? Nope, don’t think so.
I don’t agree that reasoning excludes the non-verbal, to me that’s like scientism in trying to limit where we are allowed to find knowledge.
As far as faith moving mountains, Jesus said it, so it’s not something to be brushed aside as an embarrassment. Are you saved by your logical proofs or by the gift of faith? A mustard seed of faith moved that particular mountain for you, while a mountain of proofs could not.