Oh boy. This is the kind of comment that forces one out of the Catholic Answers Forum. It is patronising, unhelpful, and essentially insulting.
It wasn’t intended to be. Yet, often in dialogue, one is forced to say one’s opinion, and that opinion may not be well received. This seems to be one of those instances.
I am a learner, a quester as I prefer to call it. I would prefer to be a Catholic, and struggle hard every day for appropriate but not knee-jerk understanding and revelation.
I’m glad, because if one does not seek, then one will not likely find.
I would prefer not to have to endure this kind of unnecessary confrontation and obfuscation when I think out loud.
I would prefer to come to a Catholic forum and not have to endure heretical claims contrary to Catholic doctrine. However, I don’t always get what I want.
Perhaps when you think a loud you will attempt to see things from our viewpoint, with the understanding that this is a Catholic community. You have chosen to think a loud within a Catholic community, and your contrary thoughts may not be very kind from a Catholic point of view.
After reading your post again, it still remains rather incoherent. If you can better clarify, and perhaps* stick to the point of this thread*, more meaningful dialogue might be possible. If your intent was simply to present a monologue unrelated to the inerrancy of the Bible, then perhaps starting your own blog might better suite your needs. I presumed, however, that you intended a dialogue related to the topic at hand.
My posting was not a matter of personal opinion, but considered analysis on the basis of my reading, learning and contemplation in matters of sociology, anthropology and science, and a life lived globally.
I’ve not found a sociology, anthropology, or science book which affirms a “physics” or even a “metaphysics” which God has no power to dispense. Nor have I found such a text which affirms that God does not directly interact with His Creation. It if did, the text would have gone far beyond to scope of the respective field of study, whose object is limited to the natural order.
(2) I do not tend to write incoherently, although one of my University professors in Canada noted that fuzzy writing indicates fuzzy thinking. My thinking is increasingly fuzzed by Forum anomalies, and perhaps this shows as incoherence. However, I understand what I am saying…
Does what you are saying have something to do with the inerrancy of the Bible, which is the topic of this thread? If not, perhaps you should begin a new thread which addresses the topics which you would like to discuss.
…[God] has clearly chosen not to intervene…
This is not so
clear to every human society that has existed since the dawn of human history. It is not clear to many respected and even Nobel-prize winning scientists. It it
clearly untrue to those who have personally experienced or witnessed God’s direct interaction in their lives and have seen the very personal miracles which have been attested to in every century of human history. Nor is it clear to me.
It is unfortunate that you have not been blessed with such miracles in your life. I pray someday you will. (BTW, I used to be a Deist, so I understand your view, but over time I’ve rejected the Deistic viewpoint, as it contradicts my reason, experience, and the trustworthy testimony of others).
We come to our beliefs from our experience, our reason, and the trustworthy testimony of others. Your first premise that God does not directly interact with his creation is contrary to the beliefs of most of humankind throughout the ages. It is unproved (and uncompelling), and so the reasoning based upon your first premise is equally unproved.
Laws are given for the “common good.” However, they are not intended for each and every particular good. This is why laws can be dispensed or waived by those who possess such authority. The theory that God can but doesn’t is speculative, and contrary to human experience. Thus, one need not accept that laws which are in effect
in general cannot in a
particular case be dispensed by the Divine Law-Giver.
… I would prefer it if you would not refer to my hard-won understandings as absurd.
We all have our own preferences. However, if your conclusions are in my opinion
unreasonable, unsound, or incongruous, then I think I’ve used the right word to describe them.
Perhaps merely hearing a contrary opinion offends you. However, you should understand that those who come to a Catholic community and profess that the reality of the Holy Eucharist is not true can be equally understood as offensive. Yet, if I’m to have any meaningful theological dialogue with those who profess theories contrary to Catholic doctrine, I’m simply going to have to learn to tolerate the offensive nature of heretical claims.