H
HardRockGTR
Guest
Here’s a hypothetical situation:
Assume I, a non-Christian, have many Christian friends and family to whom their creed is very important. One day, the friends in question decide to organize a gathering at the local chapel to pray for the souls in purgatory in order to help deliver them to heaven. If I join in out of solidarity and NOT out of faith, because I know it matters to them, do my “prayers” actually help out the souls in purgatory?
In other words, I know that religion is important to my friends, and so, because I care about my friends, I go with them to pray. In my mind, however, I’m not praying to anything, I’m just saying words, but my intention is to feel like I’m doing some good for my friends. Does this solidarity, coupled with my “non-prayer”, in the end, help the souls in purgatory anyway, or am I just taking up space? Does faith matter more than the work itself in this case?
Assume I, a non-Christian, have many Christian friends and family to whom their creed is very important. One day, the friends in question decide to organize a gathering at the local chapel to pray for the souls in purgatory in order to help deliver them to heaven. If I join in out of solidarity and NOT out of faith, because I know it matters to them, do my “prayers” actually help out the souls in purgatory?
In other words, I know that religion is important to my friends, and so, because I care about my friends, I go with them to pray. In my mind, however, I’m not praying to anything, I’m just saying words, but my intention is to feel like I’m doing some good for my friends. Does this solidarity, coupled with my “non-prayer”, in the end, help the souls in purgatory anyway, or am I just taking up space? Does faith matter more than the work itself in this case?