According to the Bible it is. Hebrews 11:1 says
Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.
This is true. Now, when you emphasized “hoped for” in that description, you assume this automatically makes faith equivalent to “wishful thinking”, right? Now, by wishful thinking, I suppose you mean something like “thinking about something that you want to exist even though you have no evidence for its existence” or something like that, right? (correct me, if not). So, whenever you hope for something, that automatically means that the existence of that “something” is questionable and without evidence?
Well, here’s an example why that’s wrong. I can hope to make it back home when I’m, say, caught in a storm. I might not make it back home. That’s uncertain. What is certain, however, is that I have a home. So, just because I hope to get home, doesn’t mean that there is no evidence for the existence of my home. Likewise, when we hope to see the fullness of the truth of God one day, that doesn’t mean the truths of God (i.e. the truths that the faith tells us about) is without evidence. See my point?
Now, you could say, “Well, you have SEEN your home, and thus you know it exists. But that’s different from the faith, because there are unseen things in the faith that you hope to see.” Right. But that’s not necessarily a problem. Let’s use the example of the Mayflower. They had not seen the New World, but they had been told by reliable sources that it exists. So, when sailing over, they hoped to see it, even though they might not have made it. However, despite the fact that they had not seen it and despite the fact that they were hoping to see it, it is still true that they were right in believing that the New World existed.
This is similar to the Catholic faith. The theological virtue of faith
does give you a certain amount of supernatural data such that you are justified in believing certain truths that you have nonetheless not seen for yourself. Faith, for this reason, is called a kind of shadowy knowledge of God. It gives you some knowledge about God, but not all knowledge about God. You hope to have all that knowledge someday, but you are given at least some knowledge such that you have reason to believe that there is such a thing as the Beatific Vision, Jesus Christ, the Trinity, etc. (even though those realities are not yet seen by you … at the very least, not entirely).
Well, I hope that makes sense.
Yes, in some instances, sometimes for someone it may be beneficial. Now your turn. Show me that in every instance, for everyone, every time it is certainly beneficial. And not just “beneficial”, but the benefit outweighs the suffering, and the suffering stopped in the precise moment when the benefit became certain. It is a tall order, but you insisted. The podium is yours, and I am eagerly waiting for the rational (faithless) demonstration.
Oh, heck. I can’t demonstrate that. I already said that this point can only be understood by faith. It cannot be demonstrated. However, you nonetheless claim that it possibly could be true. Hence, the truths of the faith (or at least the one regarding suffering here) might be true because it’s not necessarily against reason. That’s all I can point out.
Yes, I object to that, but my objection is conditional. If you can answer my question above, I will retract my objection.
I’m not quite sure if your objection is rational. It sort of assumes the worst about God (which is tempting to do many times). However, IF God exists and He IS omniscient and omnipotent, then it would surely be in His power to make sure that “in
every instance, for
everyone,
every time it is
certainly beneficial” and that “the benefit outweighs the suffering.” Right?
Once again, faith cannot demonstrate the truth that all suffering is meaningful. The only thing that the apologist can do is show that is could be possible (i.e. that the doctrine does not necessarily contradict some truth known from natural reason).
Yes, it is possible. But the allegorical meaning in this case is not relevant. It either confirms the literal meaning (maybe expounds on it), or it contradicts it, in which case it should be discarded.
Why should it be discarded?
Are you against, for example, movies that are based on historical events, and yet do not depict everything that happened exactly as the movie presented it?