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WmJackP
Guest
The concept of “faith” is bantered about as though everyone knows what it is and intentionally uses the word in phrases that conote that one truly experiences faith in this or that precept. I personally think we use language withot meaning and mis-use language as though we did.I am not a Roman Catholic, though I think I can contribute something on faith.
My faith, for me, is a way of looking at the world. It is not factual. It is not objective. It is not science, and it should not be confused with logic. It is not rational. Rather, it is a way of seeing. It is a way of trusting.
I believe that what Christianity has lost in modern, post-enlightenment times is the ability to see in any other way than a cold, calculating, rational way. We no longer read mythology as mythology. We read mythology as historical fact. We don’t look at our faith as one way of seeing the world. It is the absolute, factual truth, in the sense that mathematics is true, or proven hypotheses.
For me, the stories, the rituals, the Sacraments, the Virgin birth, the resurrection, and so forth, are windows into another way of seeing the universe and all of reality, and that way of seeing changes our heart and thus the way we relate to the universe and the rest of humanity. I don’t need my way of seeing to be “right” in the sense that 2 + 2 = 4 is a correct statement. I need it to pull me beyond myself, into transcendence, and to feel that transcendence become immanence. This is what the Eucharist is to me. The Sacred in humble, material bread.
This is faith for me. A form of trust. A way of seeing. A means of grace. I should also point out that faith had more than one meaning in ancient times, and unfortunately we tend to focus on only one interpretation.
Faith is assensus, faith as belief. This is the dominant emphasis today, but faith is more than mere assent, and it must also be pointed out that a dogma can be assented to as truth but interpreted in more than one way, not only literally.
Faith is fiducia. This is trust, radical trust in God, in the goodness of the universe. It takes a certain way of seeing to enter into this trust, to maintain a contemplative state even while in distress.
Faith is fidelitas. Faithfulness, fidelity. It is a commitment of the heart, loyalty.
And faith is visio. This is vision, and it suggests a way of seeing, as I’ve been explaining. It is how we see the whole of all that is.
Recognizing that faith has a defined (dictionary) meaning, I think we can say that it is consistent with “trust”; or, perhaps, valid to say that it operates as a basis of arriving at a belief in the absence of direct evidence
To be worthy of compelling one’s belief, however, faith must rely upon something grounded in reality, rather than upon the fanciful. For example, I can have faith that my dog won’t bite the mailman—because in the years I have known that mutt, its never bitten anyone. I have no direct evidence that my dog will not bite–I base my “faith” on past experience. Therefore it is reality based.
On the other hand, If I have no experience for a particular proposition, I can hardly have “faith” that justifies belief. For example, I cannot legtimately claim that I have faith that the moon is madeof blue cheese. I have no past experiences to that effect. I know of no reliable basis by which such can be true. Therefore, while, I might “hope” that the moon is made of green cheese, I can neither know that it does, nor, can I have “faith” that it does.
So for the poster who thinks that “faith” is a way of seeing without really knowing, I am not sure that is possible. It leaves one quite vulnerable to being foolish. There are people still looking for the culprit on the grassy noll or who think the mafia shot JFK. There are people who put stock in the belief that 9/11 was an inside job by the Bush administration. Rosswell N.M and the UFO crash landing of the 1940’s is another example? How about Bigfoot? The really pernicious examples though are the mystry religions. Islam and the beliefs which inspire jehad? Do Christians really think they are exempt from the foolisness which is bred from seeing without knowing?