R
RPRPsych
Guest
I agree with you fully on this. This is the legitimate province of social psychology, cognitive psychology, and so on.I understand what you mean. But that is not exactly what I am getting at.
What I am trying to say is that there are certain truths, which are not religious truths, that are established regarding how people are attracted to something, how people learn, evaluate etc.
Not necessarily true. The pagan faiths were extremely clear and visible during the first 300 years of the Church, while early Christians often had to meet in secret; however, you or I would be hard put to find a Jupiter-worshipper these days.Something that is universally agreed upon and practiced is that unless something is clearly heard and visible, it just does not spread.
Maybe I’m a foolish idealist, but I’d like to believe that spreading the Gospel is worlds apart from the manipulations of advertisers, who often create false needs and perceptions to sell a product. The Gospel is not a matter of marketing.This is the same policy used by Advertisements.
In strict behavioural psychology, this is perhaps true. But what of the grace of God, particularly prevenient grace?It is also a universal fact that one cannot bring about an attraction to something different by performing actions that reinforce what that other person already believes.
The foolishness of God is greater than the wisdom of man.Now, given these universal truths, the approach chosen by the Church to evangelize seems ineffective. They are contrary to what we know from history as well as any other field of study regarding how ideas or following of a person is made heard or spread.
I’d respectfully disagree. I submit that the Church, guided by the Spirit, is knowingly or unkowingly performing those actions which would lead to the salvation of the most souls. If the entire Church became like the SSPX (for example), the bleeding that’s happening in Latin America and Asia, where Catholics turn Evangelical or Pentecostal, would merely get worse.(which I disagree is even the goal. I think it has been made clear that the goal is co-existence too many times to the exclusion of conversion)
I agree with the first statement. But our intellect is sometimes not equal to certain mysteries. Would any devout Jew have believed that God would call Cyrus, a pagan, his “servant”? God’s ways are not necessarily our ways.With respect to God’s plan, God works through you and me. When we see that the mission of the Church is to make sure that everyone recognizes Christ as God and savior of the world, we must use our intellect and means to do just that.
My contention is that the inferiority is only apparent. Other methods might have worse consequences.How can we settle for something that our intellect says is inferior and is more apt for co-existence than conversion?