Suudy
Active member
Sitting in our Catachumen discussion (we are dismissed after the homily during mass), we discussed prayer. A retired priest moderates the meeting, and our discussion drifted towards free will and prayer.
It started with a discussion of miracles and prayer associated with them. Frequently the priest (call him Father Steve) mentioned that he believes that no miracles can violate the laws of nature. I frequently argue (in the academic sense) about this, citing the Eucharist of a miracle that violates the laws of nature, i.e. bread and wine becoming Christ’s flesh and blood. Continuing, he said that by the very act of granting us (and the entire universe) free will, he is prohibited from interfering with the very rules he put in place. To do so would be tyranny.
Given this, someone asked why we should pray if God can’t do anything about it. (Note that the reason Father Steve believes God can’t do anything about it is because of the free will of the universe and man.) His answer is that it is for the person doing the praying, not the recipient. It evokes change in the person doing the praying, but cannot do anything for the recipient.
Now the interesting part of our conversation. I asked about prayer for the souls in purgatory. Since purgatory is not really a place, but more of a state, there are no laws of nature to violate. I asked him if prayers for the dead were useful to the dead. Since those in hell cannot be saved, prayer for them is meaningless. Similary for those in heaven, since they are already in heave, there is no need to pray for them. However, and please correct me if I am wrong, those in purgatory are helpless. They cannot pray for themselves nor pray for others. It seems our prayers are the most useful.
Father Steve’s reply? We are in purgatory now, and hell is a vacant place. I don’t know if hell is vacant or not (I hope it is), but the suggesting that this is purgatory seems contradictory to what the Catechism teaches. I got tired of arguing these points with him, so I dropped the issue.
Any thoughts on these ideas? Anyone heard anything of the sort? I’m not exactly sure what to think of this. He is a priest, and seems a well educated one at that.
Thanks,
Suudy
It started with a discussion of miracles and prayer associated with them. Frequently the priest (call him Father Steve) mentioned that he believes that no miracles can violate the laws of nature. I frequently argue (in the academic sense) about this, citing the Eucharist of a miracle that violates the laws of nature, i.e. bread and wine becoming Christ’s flesh and blood. Continuing, he said that by the very act of granting us (and the entire universe) free will, he is prohibited from interfering with the very rules he put in place. To do so would be tyranny.
Given this, someone asked why we should pray if God can’t do anything about it. (Note that the reason Father Steve believes God can’t do anything about it is because of the free will of the universe and man.) His answer is that it is for the person doing the praying, not the recipient. It evokes change in the person doing the praying, but cannot do anything for the recipient.
Now the interesting part of our conversation. I asked about prayer for the souls in purgatory. Since purgatory is not really a place, but more of a state, there are no laws of nature to violate. I asked him if prayers for the dead were useful to the dead. Since those in hell cannot be saved, prayer for them is meaningless. Similary for those in heaven, since they are already in heave, there is no need to pray for them. However, and please correct me if I am wrong, those in purgatory are helpless. They cannot pray for themselves nor pray for others. It seems our prayers are the most useful.
Father Steve’s reply? We are in purgatory now, and hell is a vacant place. I don’t know if hell is vacant or not (I hope it is), but the suggesting that this is purgatory seems contradictory to what the Catechism teaches. I got tired of arguing these points with him, so I dropped the issue.
Any thoughts on these ideas? Anyone heard anything of the sort? I’m not exactly sure what to think of this. He is a priest, and seems a well educated one at that.
Thanks,
Suudy