E
Edward_H
Guest
There’s some point at which our prudence should kick in steering us away from threads of endless speculation about rather picayune matters of our faith or the Bible, if even that.
We don’t have to know everything. We don’t have to understand everything.
“what if a martian arrived…”
“what would we call the first female pope…”
“If a person had a sex change operation, what if they then converted, why couldn’t they one day be the pope…”
We use our intelligence, our memory, and our imagination to come to know God and to help us do the good (using our will) out of love for God.
Curiosity is in fact, classically studied, a vice, not a virtue.
It leads to superficiality, trendiness, lightness, no depth, skating from one topic that moves us to another (eventually anxiousness, haughtiness, pride, lack of interior peace - because they don’t really know anything!)
Studiosity or studiousness is the virtue, a strength of character in a person that helps them to go into the depth of a matter, seeing the essence, internalizing the essence, SO THAT they can do good.
We don’t have to know everything. We don’t have to understand everything.
“what if a martian arrived…”
“what would we call the first female pope…”
“If a person had a sex change operation, what if they then converted, why couldn’t they one day be the pope…”
We use our intelligence, our memory, and our imagination to come to know God and to help us do the good (using our will) out of love for God.
Curiosity is in fact, classically studied, a vice, not a virtue.
It leads to superficiality, trendiness, lightness, no depth, skating from one topic that moves us to another (eventually anxiousness, haughtiness, pride, lack of interior peace - because they don’t really know anything!)
Studiosity or studiousness is the virtue, a strength of character in a person that helps them to go into the depth of a matter, seeing the essence, internalizing the essence, SO THAT they can do good.
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