S
Spock
Guest
Sure. No problem at all. You correctly said that this is not “blind” faith, there is a good reason to believe it.Suppose I am a person with a severe peanut allergy and I would like to eat a chocolate bar. I look in the chocolate bar aisle in the store for one that has the “peanut free logo on it”. Now I do not know for sure that, just because there is a “peanut free” logo on it that there will be no peanuts. However with my reason I come to hold the notion that the people that it is not in the companies best interest to kill customers, and there are most likely safety regulations in place.
So therefore I hold the notion that there are no peanuts in the chocolate bar on faith. Think about it now Spock, my life is depending on the fact that there are no peanuts in this chocolate bar. What happens if this chocolate bar was accidently made in the same machine that makes the Oh Henry bars. The answer is "surely they would have regulations to prevent that, especially if they were going to present it as “peanut free”, but these are the words of the faithful man.
This is not blind faith, because I use reason to decide whether such a notion is worthy of belief. Thus I trust my life to this notion through fides et ratio – faith and reason.
Well, I certainly did not “experience” God, even when I was a believer. Nevertheless, the process is not the same. If you would doubt the label on the chocolate bar, you could perform some chemical analysis and find out for yourself if it contained peanut or not. The possibility of this step in missing here. There is no “final” expert, who can perform the “analysis”. It is all based on “faith”.Thus we take the same approach to belief in God, yet there is a difference because we are supplemented by the divinely infused virtue of faith, and also we have the immediate experience of God that allows us to form a basic metaphysical belief.