Again, how do you know that these personal experiences present the truth? Many people with different experiences have personal experiences that are in conflict. How do we know which personal experiences are true. If you say that each of these experiences is true to the individual having it, aren’t you endorsing relativism? If you are going to say only certain experiences are true, how do you determine which ones are true?
This is how you determine which ones are true…
Basically, Ammonius, you don’t Know anything.
You don’t *know *which ‘personal experiences’ are real. How could you. We don’t even know what ‘real’ is.
You can however decide to believe that reality is ‘real’, but you have no reason to believe it is.
Once you have decided to believe it is ‘real’ then you must discover what it is, and what it is - is its origin. And what is its origin? - well you don’t know - there are many theories. But since you have started on the assumption that it is ‘real’ then its origin must be ‘real’ to *you *also.
The origin of everything then, which also is real itself, is called The Truth.
And we don’t get to decide what the Truth is. We don’t choose it.
We look for it and trust and hope that we will recognize it when we find it.
Which was why I said - go out and have a look for yourself for Truth.
If you’re wondering if the Catholic way leads to the Truth, and how you can be sure that it does, is rather too cautious an attitude to take for men who are free-falling through space on a round ball of rock. Be heroic! get out there and test the truth of Catholicism yourself, instead of asking someone else to do it for you.
Theres loads of examples of the routes other people have taken on their quest for Truth, e.g.'s in books on the lives of the Saints.
Finally if Catholicism
is in fact found by you to be true, then by its very own nature you cannot be left in any doubt about it.
Bon Voyage!