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FrancesDS
Guest
I am not a philosopher by any means, but I am in a discussion group with several non-Catholics currently. They are primarily people who go to a nondenominational church. We are meeting weekly for the Truth Project.
We are discussing Philosophy & Ethics this next week.
In preparing for this, I have been reading about different worldviews including Relativism, Rationalism, Subjectivism, and PostModernism to name a few.
In my reading, it seems to me that for non-Catholics, without having the Church as your foundation for truth, it is much easier to fall into a trap of being skewed by some of these worldviews. Correct me if I am wrong with this line of thinking…
Even though they are against all of these worldviews, they still seem to creep in to their way of thinking…Those in my group seem to be relative with their beliefs, even if they do not realize it. They are somewhat rational and subjective with their beliefs, again even if they do not realize it. And they even have some postmodernism tendencies (that there are no absolute truths) at times it seems.
They believe what they do because of the influence of those around them. They all say the Holy Spirit guides them in their interpretations of Scripture, yet all believe something different while all believing what they believe is right. They jump around to churches based on finding a pastor whose beliefs agree with their own, stating that the Holy Spirit guides them. They do not feel that the disunity among Christians is something that will be worked out in this life, but, even though it is not ideal, it is okay because we all believe in God and Jesus which is the most important. They tell me that there is no religion or church in existence now that has the fullness of truth. No one knows all of the truth that Jesus came and revealed to us they tell me. They believe as long as in their heart they feel what they believe is truth, then that is what counts.
And in our discussion about the Bible alone, when it came to discussing how is one to know what is the truth when they interpret Scripture using Scripture alone – I asked how is one to know, just based on the Bible alone, if the Eucharist, for example, is symbolic or, as I believe, as a Catholic, that it is the Real Presence. Who was right because both of us say that the Holy Spirit has guided this interpretation? Their response was, well that is not all that important anyway. They resonded that as long as they believed and accepted Jesus, they were saved. They received all graces and all gifts possible when they were baptized with the spirit. They do not need anything more. So for them, it was not important to really discuss interpretation differences such as the Eucharist.
It seems that with all of these worldviews out there, without the Church, these ways of thinking could easily creep in. With the Church, I have a foundation for the truth. I know what is truth because the Church has been guided by the Spirit with the promise that hell would not prevail against it. But without it, I would be susceptible to lies.
To use abortion and contraception as an example, I know these are wrong because of what the Church teaches. Without the Church as a foundation, it would be easy, I think, to rationalize an opinion otherwise or to bring relativism and subjectivism into my decisions (which is what I think many Christians do). Without the Church, the world would have the potential to corrupt my way of thinking without myself even realizing it…
Just a thought.
Any comments?
Frances DS
We are discussing Philosophy & Ethics this next week.
In preparing for this, I have been reading about different worldviews including Relativism, Rationalism, Subjectivism, and PostModernism to name a few.
In my reading, it seems to me that for non-Catholics, without having the Church as your foundation for truth, it is much easier to fall into a trap of being skewed by some of these worldviews. Correct me if I am wrong with this line of thinking…
Even though they are against all of these worldviews, they still seem to creep in to their way of thinking…Those in my group seem to be relative with their beliefs, even if they do not realize it. They are somewhat rational and subjective with their beliefs, again even if they do not realize it. And they even have some postmodernism tendencies (that there are no absolute truths) at times it seems.
They believe what they do because of the influence of those around them. They all say the Holy Spirit guides them in their interpretations of Scripture, yet all believe something different while all believing what they believe is right. They jump around to churches based on finding a pastor whose beliefs agree with their own, stating that the Holy Spirit guides them. They do not feel that the disunity among Christians is something that will be worked out in this life, but, even though it is not ideal, it is okay because we all believe in God and Jesus which is the most important. They tell me that there is no religion or church in existence now that has the fullness of truth. No one knows all of the truth that Jesus came and revealed to us they tell me. They believe as long as in their heart they feel what they believe is truth, then that is what counts.
And in our discussion about the Bible alone, when it came to discussing how is one to know what is the truth when they interpret Scripture using Scripture alone – I asked how is one to know, just based on the Bible alone, if the Eucharist, for example, is symbolic or, as I believe, as a Catholic, that it is the Real Presence. Who was right because both of us say that the Holy Spirit has guided this interpretation? Their response was, well that is not all that important anyway. They resonded that as long as they believed and accepted Jesus, they were saved. They received all graces and all gifts possible when they were baptized with the spirit. They do not need anything more. So for them, it was not important to really discuss interpretation differences such as the Eucharist.
It seems that with all of these worldviews out there, without the Church, these ways of thinking could easily creep in. With the Church, I have a foundation for the truth. I know what is truth because the Church has been guided by the Spirit with the promise that hell would not prevail against it. But without it, I would be susceptible to lies.
To use abortion and contraception as an example, I know these are wrong because of what the Church teaches. Without the Church as a foundation, it would be easy, I think, to rationalize an opinion otherwise or to bring relativism and subjectivism into my decisions (which is what I think many Christians do). Without the Church, the world would have the potential to corrupt my way of thinking without myself even realizing it…
Just a thought.
Any comments?
Frances DS