A
allisonP
Guest
Maria,
It has been my experiance that loving is a choice.
I have never meant to imply on here that it was not.
I do think that sometimes it is easier to love then at other times.
Loving someone who has deeply hurt you is not easy to do.
Yet because Christ loved us enough to save us, we will love or truly try to.
It is the love of God in those that his spirit resides in that compells us to love, or tells us that we must try to love, even our enemies.
Allison
MariaG:
It has been my experiance that loving is a choice.
I have never meant to imply on here that it was not.
I do think that sometimes it is easier to love then at other times.
Loving someone who has deeply hurt you is not easy to do.
Yet because Christ loved us enough to save us, we will love or truly try to.
It is the love of God in those that his spirit resides in that compells us to love, or tells us that we must try to love, even our enemies.
Allison
What I have found is that most believe when a person is following Christ, love, the works, *naturally *flows from those who love Christ. While most Catholics tend to feel that the love, the works, is a conscious choice to accept the grace made available to accomplish the job.
The problem I have found with the first attitude is when a job comes up that you really don’t want to do, you feel like there is something wrong with you, maybe that you are backsliding or something just because you don’t “naturally” want to do the job that you know the Holy Spirit has laid on your heart.
Try asking if they believe a person must “walk the walk” after they are saved.
God Bless,
Maria