I thought this post quoted directly below contained an excellent analogy:
If Hitler was indeed so Catholic, I wonder why He bothered killing all those Catholics then?
Logical =/=, disconnect.
Logical =/=, disconnect , =
Just like a USB storage device when it becomes become logically disconnected: the device is still plugged in, but is invisible from the operating system - strikingly similar to the sinner who has turned his back on God’s grace.
And the question being asked is a most logical one , considering that
sin separates us from God and that
The Eucharist (God) separates us from sin .
Yet it would appear some have difficulty in comprehending that God’s grace can still be resisted because of free will - despite the indelible mark the Holy Spirit puts on each of our souls at Baptism.
I find it troubling that anyone - regardless of their (lack of) belief would think that it is human nature to contracept, it is human nature to abort, it is human nature to divorce, it is human nature to commit adultery,it is human nature to use drugs, it is human nature to murder and it is human nature to rape (BTW it is “Catholic nature” to include
aborting with
murder - we don’t do the* illogical disconnect* on that one ).
Sin is a departure from the will of God. That’s not rocket science. However one individual seems to be incapable of differentiating between being a Catholic and being a sinner.
it would appear they could afford to cut down on the Catholic diss a little - maybe get themselves a bible instead and try to get up to speed on what we really believe - instead of sorely misrepresenting our beliefs. Being a Catholic also means believing these words of our Blessed Lord :
w/ footnote incl]
*** "Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but underneath are ravenous wolves. By their fruits you will know them. Do people pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles? Just so, every good tree bears good fruit, and a rotten tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a rotten tree bear good fruit.
Every tree that does not bear good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire. So by their fruits you will know them**.
- footnote: [15-20] Christian disciples who claimed to speak in the name of God are called prophets (⇒ Matthew 7:15) in ⇒ Matthew 10:41; ⇒ Matthew 23:34. They were presumably an important group within the church of Matthew. As in the case of the Old Testament prophets, there were both true and false ones, and for Matthew the difference could be recognized by the quality of their deeds, the fruits (⇒ Matthew 7:16). The mention of fruits leads to the comparison with trees, some producing good fruit, others bad.