J
Jubilarian
Guest
Yes you are right about faith . Nevertheless, Atheists say things that I do understand, and this topic is one of them.
Good luck.Yes you are right about faith . Nevertheless, Atheists say things that I do understand, and this topic is one of them.
There is much more to it. We do not by any means necessarily chose the way we will die. What if a person is struck by lightening, or an airplane crashes into their house, or they are killed in a traffic accident resulting from the negligence of another, or they suffer an incurable disease or are aborted while in their mother’s womb?Jesus spoke about this very thing when He stated:
If anyone would come after me, let him/her:
There are three possible ways to DIE:
- Deny himself,
- take up his cross,
and- follow Me.
- give up your instinctive resonse to defend your
right to a painless death.- give ourselves for another person or a cause which is altruistic.
OR:- Die the best way, as Christ chose, ACCORDING
to God’s Merciful, Righteous and Just way, the
perfect FITTING way, just as each time you look at
a crucifix, Jesus was MADE to die on a Cross, there
is a PERFECT WAY for each one of us, too, which
is God’s holy merciful, right and just way!!!
good point. As to prayer, I will remain perplexed about how it works. Why pray if the outcome is already known by God? Unless you go so deep as to say God knew you were going to pray , hence a particular event comes to pass.There is much more to it. We do not by any means necessarily chose the way we will die. What if a person is struck by lightening, or an airplane crashes into their house, or they are killed in a traffic accident resulting from the negligence of another, or they suffer an incurable disease or are aborted while in their mother’s womb?
Where is the choice in any of that? It happens many times every single day.
This is an interesting point, and perhaps ‘difficult’ would be a better word. A core Carholic belief is free will. God is omniscient. He knows everything there is to know, and therefore He knows the outcome for each of us. What the Cathoilc faith does not believe in is predestination. While God knows everything, He has given us free will. He knows the outcome, but the outcome is the result of our actions. It is not determined by God. If we decide to do something either moral or immoral, He knows it and He also know what will result. But what we will do is of our own free will.good point. As to prayer, I will remain perplexed about how it works. Why pray if the outcome is already known by God? Unless you go so deep as to say God knew you were going to pray , hence a particular event comes to pass.
To clarify… Love is MORE than an emotion, it is a PERSON!!!Love is an emotion and that we can please God would seem to reveal something of His nature.
This is an excellent response, thank you. Since God knows the result of our actions, would it be fair to say that he knew our eternal destination before the world began?This is an interesting point, and perhaps ‘difficult’ would be a better word. A core Carholic belief is free will. God is omniscient. He knows everything there is to know, and therefore He knows the outcome for each of us. What the Cathoilc faith does not believe in is predestination. While God knows everything, He has given us free will. He knows the outcome, but the outcome is the result of our actions. It is not determined by God. If we decide to do something either moral or immoral, He knows it and He also know what will result. But what we will do is of our own free will.
To say that God has a plan for each us really isn’t Catholic belief. God is also omnipotent, or all powerful. He gave to us the free will to determine our own outcome, be it salvation or condemnation. This outcome is not God’s choice. It might seem heretical to say such a thing, but it is not. It is not God’s choice only because He chose to give us free will. We can pray to God and seek to save ourselves. And God knows whether or not we will do this. But He has given to us the free will to decide what the choice will be. This is God’s true plan, and it is about everything, which is to say it is about our temporal existence.
Why God created this plan and our souls is a mystery, or at least it is for me. But that He wants us to please Him–indeed to love Him–by behaving in what He has determined (with good reason) is a moral way is clear enough. Love is an emotion and that we can please God would seem to reveal something of His nature.
Yes, I believe so.This is an excellent response, thank you. Since God knows the result of our actions, would it be fair to say that he knew our eternal destination before the world began?
‘Infinity’ and ‘eternity’ do not mean the same thing. ‘Eternity’ is often defined as having a beginning but no ending. This would apply, for example, to our souls which were created by God. This concept is not so difficult to comprehend.I understand your points and I did not think you were espousing predestination . I always had trouble with embracing the commonly spouted words, “God has a plan for your life” however. I need to do some more study on that.