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DeepBlueSea
Guest
Nope. But I love reading encyclicals and homilies, and thanks for the suggestion.DBS, have you read our Holy Father’s magnificent encyclical, Deus Caritas Est? It’s simply sublime!
Nope. But I love reading encyclicals and homilies, and thanks for the suggestion.DBS, have you read our Holy Father’s magnificent encyclical, Deus Caritas Est? It’s simply sublime!
Love ya for acknowledging that! :hug1:After reading it about five more times, I think I’m seeing how you are connected this one-sidedness with original sin. I’m not inclined to agree just yet, but I think I got your point.
Well, there are acts that are objectively sinful. Gravely sinful. But I don’t know whether I would say that they are objectively “mortal” sins because, as we’ve stated, we don’t know the degree of a person’s intent and knowledge.OK, help me with the terminology here. Are there acts are are objectively mortal sins regardless of intent and knowledge? That’s what I thought you said. If you didn’t, then I’m chasing a straw man.
Others oughtn’t be doing it either. That’s above our pay grade.I don’t wonder whether Person A commits mortal sin; it isn’t my job and I’m happy to let others do it.![]()
Certainly atheists are moving towards God when they perform acts of selfless love, without knowing the existence of God.But the reason it’s important for this discussion, is that if a person may move away from God without even knowing of the existence of God, then doesn’t it make sense that a person may move toward God – such as by performing acts of selfless love – without knowing the existence of God?
Or does God dodge out of the way when someone who doesn’t believe in Him does kindness?
Oh, we’re not talking about kindness, Alan. Some of the kindest people I know are atheists.Alan
So you’d like to think.Such evidently cannot be provided by your bleak world view.
On another thread I asked a similar question, and found out that there are those who do say this. That whether the atheist knows it or not, every time they do something good, they can only do that because of God working through them. So when the atheist does bad, it’s because she’s an atheist, when she does good, it’s because of God working through her.then doesn’t it make sense that a person may move toward God – such as by performing acts of selfless love – without knowing the existence of God?
No doubt.So God works through a Catholic priest, God works through Linda Norgrove.
Yes.But the Catholic priest wins the high diving competition in self sacrifice.![]()
It would be funny, if it wasn’t so churlish, and insulting and offensive to the memories of both Saint Max Kolbe and Linda Norgrove and the many great women like her.
I don’t see anything insulting whatsoever, Sarah.Sarah x![]()
Once I was watching George Carlin, and there was a pretty hot button-ish topic he started to talk about. He said, “they say you can’t joke about this. Well, you can joke about anything; it just depends on how you frame the joke.”It would be funny, if it wasn’t so churlish, and insulting and offensive to the memories of both Saint Max Kolbe and Linda Norgrove and the many great women like her.
Assertion without explanation as to why it is relevant to my argument. I doubt that you comprehend your own argument, let alone mine.So you’d like to think.
But the evidence of the work of the likes of MSF with displaced populations in war zones says otherwise.
Sarah x![]()
That’s highly quotable!I doubt that you comprehend your own argument.
That’s right, my poor little brain - it amazes me everyday I can manage to get safely through to nightfallI doubt that you comprehend your own argument, let alone mine.
Well, that is the real question, isn’t it? Is selfless love even possible, let alone a desirable ideal? And if it is those things, it its exercise only possible for those who are Christian believers? That seems like a lot to prove - or a lot to assume with the statement, “Only Christians are capable of selfless love.”You seem to contradict yourself here.
First, you question whether it is necessary to believe in Christ in order to do an act of selfless love. Second, you question whether any selfless love is possible. So how can it be possible that one who does not believe in Christ can do a selfless act when no one can do a selfless act?
I don’t think the goal of feeling good in the here and now ever really gets a guernsey with religious believers, to be honest. The querying of motivation is what is under discussion. The claim has been made, in no uncertain terms, that Christian martyrs for charity are solely and entirely motivated by disinterested human love for their fellow humans, and that only Christian faith can be behind that kind of love - if that kind of love even exists. You have done a fair job of questioning the purity of such motivation in this post.Also, in your example of St Maximillian Kolbe, I doubt that he did it in order to go to heaven. I am sure he was pretty confident of his own salvation whether he did it or not. So did he do it to feel about himself. I doubt it. He was in the concentration camp for quite sometime already. For him to feel good about anything in that place is itself a miracle. St John of the Cross talked about the Dark Night of the Soul. The Catholic teaching is that there is no guarrantee that doing a selfless act will make one feel good at all, much less in a Nazi concentration camp!
Selfless love is the highest form of love. It is more than infatuation, admiration, affection, in that degree of order.
It is the highest form because it is pure, simplistic and it endures. It is manifested regardless of circumstances and its expression is consistent towards all.
Not a lot of people know how to love. Of those people who know how to love, only very few achieve this highest form of love.
Most people (such as me) fail to know how to love because of the circumstances, conflict of interest, conceited intention, confusion, fear of unrequited love and disappointment. Even when I learn to love, it only lasts temporarily and it is subjected to my emotional state and the external environment that influences me. My ability to love is thus subjected to external factors, which by nature is inconsistent and could not achieve the highest form of love.
The kind of love the Christ profess, however, comes from within. It originates from a heart of purity and simplicity. Its internal origin thus frees itself from being subjected to external fluctuation, which is why it stays consistent and endures.
The only reason a heart could stay pure and simple is because it always tends towards God, the origin of all that is pure and simple. It originates from God and it ends towards God.
Long story short, love of Christ is the beginning of selfless love. Thus, Christian faith is necessary for selfless love.
I don’t know who you believe has made that claim, but I have not read that proclamation by any Christian on this thread, to be sure!The claim has been made, in no uncertain terms, that Christian martyrs for charity are solely and entirely motivated by disinterested human love for their fellow humans,
Indeed. We need only look to Christ, accepting the help of St. Simon, to see the truth in what you say.Selfless love knows how to accept gifts of love, too. When we need help, others like to help in ways they can. When they offer, and we need the help, refusing the help denies them of an intended act of mercy. Accepting gifts is itself humbling.
Yep.One can become resentful or even self-accusing – or one can learn gratitude. When you learn gratitude, you will see that what you do for others is also a great gift to them. Of course that’s a simplification, but for me it works like that.
Wrap any of the characters in my story above with a “Christian” or “non-Christian” label, and I keep the same opinion. Giver or receiver can be identified with whatever social/religious group; we’re on this planet together. It takes trust to look out for others and let them look out for us. When they are in different groups we know they think differently, so they aren’t as predictable and it’s hard for some people to get used to that in a friendship. But we are all made the same way – whether in the image of God, or if you don’t believe in God then at least in our genetic blueprint. What we believe about shapes our world views and colors our experiences, but doesn’t change our origin.
True.Alan
Me: an agnostic on this.PS who thinks this thread will make it to the “1000+ post” condition?
Statements such as, “Only a Christian can reach the height of selfless love demonstrated by Kolbe” are quite unequivocal, if indirect, assumptions of motivation.I don’t know who you believe has made that claim, but I have not read that proclamation by any Christian on this thread, to be sure!
No Christian here ought to be professing what another Christian’s motivation may be.
That being the case, why assume that Christian faith is necessary at all, just because there is a prominent example of a man who happened to be a Christian offering to die in place of another? The possible additional motivations behind Kolbe’s action have been speculatively discussed already; whence the assumption that the essential ingredient was Christian faith? It might, for example, be true to say that, “Only a person who has had enough of their earthly suffering and longs for the afterlife (or for oblivion) can volunteer to die in another’s stead.” This says nothing about Christian faith or about selfless love, but provides a potentially valid explanation of the behaviour nonetheless.And, it must be stated, even if she did, to say that another Christian is “solely and entirely motivated” by anything is, well, a bit over-reaching.
No, not motivation. Ability.Statements such as, “Only a Christian can reach the height of selfless love demonstrated by Kolbe” are quite unequivocal, if indirect, assumptions of motivation.
I assume it based on the (lack of) evidence.That being the case, why assume that Christian faith is necessary at all, just because there is a prominent example of a man who happened to be a Christian offering to die in place of another?
Because the “essential ingredient” of Kolbe was, of course, his Christian faith.The possible additional motivations behind Kolbe’s action have been speculatively discussed already; whence the assumption that the essential ingredient was Christian faith?
Sure. If you could provide some evidence for this motivating factor?It might, for example, be true to say that, “Only a person who has had enough of their earthly suffering and longs for the afterlife (or for oblivion) can volunteer to die in another’s stead.” This says nothing about Christian faith or about selfless love, but provides a potentially valid explanation of the behaviour nonetheless.
Since his personal beliefs were, well, Christian, what he did was quite consonant with his personal beliefs and as such we venerate what he did, not view them as “less”.To open yet another branch of this discussion - one that may get us to the 1,000+ post mark (who knows?) - if Kolbe was simply seeking a way out that squared with his personal beliefs (suicide not being an option, obviously) does this lessen our estimation of his action?
Of course? As in goes without saying? It isn’t like we can do controlled experiments.Because the “essential ingredient” of Kolbe was, of course, his Christian faith.
Sure. If you could provide some evidence for this motivating factor?
Do we have evidence that the Christian faith was THE “essential ingredient?”Else you have as much evidence for that as you do for the flying spaghetti monster.
It does open the possibility that he felt no particular love for the man whose place he took, though. Unless you have privileged access to his state of mind at the time, you are left to making assumptions along with the rest of us.Since his personal beliefs were, well, Christian, what he did was quite consonant with his personal beliefs and as such we venerate what he did, not view them as “less”.